DEX
A DEX (decentralized exchange) lets users trade cryptocurrencies directly from their own wallets through smart contracts, with no company holding their funds or matching their trades.
How it works
Most DEXs use an automated market maker model. Instead of matching individual buyers and sellers, they price trades against pools of tokens supplied by liquidity providers, who earn a share of the fees. You connect a wallet, approve the trade, and the smart contract swaps one token for another and updates the pool — all on-chain.
Why it matters
A DEX is non-custodial and permissionless: you keep control of your assets and can trade tokens that no centralized venue lists. The trade-offs are paying gas fees, exposure to smart-contract risk, and slippage when a pool’s liquidity is shallow.
Example
Swapping one token for another through a liquidity pool, rather than placing an order on a company-run exchange, is a DEX trade.
Latest news

Meme Coin On-Chain Analysis: PEPE, WIF, and DOGE Holder Patterns That Signal Retail Sentiment
On-chain data from Glassnode and Nansen reveals how retail money moves through PEPE, WIF, and DOGE. Holder distribution, exchange flows, and wallet…

Coinbase Base Hits 2M Daily Active Addresses: Inside the L2 That Is Reshaping Ethereum’s User Layer
Coinbase's Base L2 has crossed 2 million daily active addresses — making it the most-used rollup in the Ethereum ecosystem. We look…

Solana DEX Volume Surpasses Ethereum for Third Straight Week: What the On-Chain Data Says
Solana's DEX ecosystem — led by Jupiter and Raydium — has overtaken Ethereum mainnet in weekly DEX volume for three consecutive weeks.…