Dropped the first video on YouTube.
It’s a simple overview of the VoltArb scanner — how the interface looks and how real-time arbitrage opportunities are displayed across the system.
Video here :
https://t.co/NF5HD3TBv1
I’ll be covering different aspects of the system and market dynamics over time — arbitrage logic, execution reality, funding, and anything else worth breaking down.
Added GRVT (DEX perps) to the scanner.
Not widely tracked yet.
Interesting model — your margin doesn’t just sit idle, it keeps generating yield while you trade.
Systems like this tend to misprice early.
Already tracking it across the system.
Yesterday, Elon Musk said Asteroid will be the SpaceX mascot. The coin went wild.
First, I caught the pump with the detector, went in spot, took a 2X, and got out.
Then the real fun started 👇
I noticed in VoltArb Tracker that MEXC price moves first, and Aster lags behind.
It wasn't arbitrage anymore — it was pure flipping the lag.
While the market was digesting the news, I just sat there flipping the coin back and forth on the delay.
Now in VoltArb you can overlay two prices on one chart. You can literally see MEXC twitch and Aster catch up.
Sometimes trading is about speed. Sometimes it's about paying attention.
VoltArb gives you both.
🛰 Web : https://t.co/axLybxHE5b
🤖 Bot: https://t.co/ZFHPqY5tWf
The market is waking up after hibernation 🌱
And it's actually getting fun again.
I've been preparing for this for a long time.
Scanner, tracker, alerts, bot — all built over months, often late at night.
Thousands of hours of code and testing.
Today $ETHW printed a +9.57% spot-futures spread.
HTX spot $0.379 → MEXC futures $0.416.
The market decided to remember the mammoth — okay, we catch a good spread 🦣
All that work wasn't for nothing. Now's the time to use VoltArb properly.
⚡️ Scanner: https://t.co/axLybxHE5b
🤖 Subscription bot: @voltarb_pro_bot
More to come. Let's work 🔥
⚡️ $ARIA has been absolutely wild lately.
We saw plenty of setups across the board:
• Fair price anomaly
• Spot‑spot arbitrage
• Futures‑futures
VoltArb caught every single one of them in real time. Scanner → tracker → order books side by side. No delays, no hidden catches.
Pro gives you unlimited tracker, instant alerts, and your own Telegram bot.
ARIA won't be the last active token. Be ready.
👉 https://t.co/LZenVLpz21
VoltArb already scans 20+ exchanges in real time and shows executable arbitrage spreads — after fees, slippage, and transfers.
You can already spot opportunities and act on them — fast, precise, and slippage-aware.
Here's what's coming — a quick roadmap for VoltArb.
Phase 1 — Polish (now)
Fixing bugs, improving the tracker, and making onboarding smoother.
The foundation has to be solid before we build on top of it.
Phase 2 — Terminal mode
Execute trades directly from the tracker.
→ Select a spread
→ Hit one button
→ Both legs execute simultaneously
No switching tabs. No delays. No missed trades.
Starting with paper trading mode so everyone can test strategies with zero risk and help shape the product.
Phase 3 — Auto DEX-DEX bot (Solana)
Fully automatic arbitrage between liquidity pools.
Atomic transactions — the trade either completes in full or doesn't happen at all.
No leg risk, no stuck positions.
Flash loans, Jito bundles, sub-second execution.
This will be a Pro-exclusive feature.
More on why on-chain execution outperforms the centralized model:
https://t.co/MIdcYbB1AV
VoltArb isn’t going anywhere. It’s evolving.
Try it today → https://t.co/LZenVLpz21
Atomic operations in decentralized arbitrage: why on-chain execution outperforms the centralized model
In classical CEX-CEX arbitrage, a trader executes two independent trades on two separate platforms. This creates a fundamental problem — there is a time gap between the execution of the first and second leg. Within this gap, everything happens: price slippage, API failure, withdrawal delays, sudden verification requests. The trader is left with an open position on one exchange with no guarantee of closing it on another. This is called leg risk — and it is the primary source of losses in cross-exchange arbitrage.
Blockchain solves this problem at the architectural level.
On Solana, an arbitrage trade is a set of instructions within a single transaction. Buying a token in an Orca pool and selling it in a Raydium pool occurs in one block, in one slot (~400ms). If any instruction fails — the entire transaction is reverted. Tokens do not move. Wallet state does not change. The only loss is the gas fee, which on Solana is approximately $0.001.
This property is called atomicity — an operation either executes completely or does not execute at all. There is no intermediate state where one leg is filled and the other is not.
Risk profile comparison:
CEX-CEX arbitrage. Worst case: position is open, price moved against you, withdrawal is blocked. Potential loss — the entire trade amount.
DEX-DEX arbitrage. Worst case: transaction reverted. Loss — $0.001 fee + Jito tip ($0.01-0.05). Capital untouched.
The difference in risk is not quantitative. It is qualitative. These are two fundamentally different classes of operations.
Meanwhile, finalization speed on Solana (~400ms per slot) is comparable to order execution speed on centralized exchanges. And the absence of KYC, withdrawal limits, and dependency on exchange server uptime eliminates an entire class of operational risks.
The only advantage of the CEX model is liquidity. But as TVL in DeFi protocols grows, this advantage shrinks.
testing...
$285M in 12 minutes. A fake token worth a few thousand dollars. A few pre-signed transactions. Three weeks of preparation.
The next one is already being planned.
$285,000,000 stolen in 12 minutes.
Not a smart contract bug. Not a code exploit. A fake token worth $500, a few phone calls, and a governance takeover.
Here's how the Drift Protocol hack actually worked — and why DeFi keeps bleeding money. 👇
DeFi's unsolved problem is not code quality. It's governance architecture.
Who controls the admin keys? What's the timelock on critical operations? Can a Security Council be migrated without delay? How are oracle inputs validated for new markets?
These are not engineering questions. They are trust questions. And trust is exactly what decentralization was supposed to eliminate.