Popularly referred to as Miner Extracted Value (MEV), the arbitrage strategy sees bots identify and target trades waiting in Ethereum mempools. The bots can use a few observed techniques to profit from the targeted trade. For one, a bot will find a profitable trade waiting in the mempool. Then it will copy that trade and up the gas price for its transaction. That way, a miner will package its copy trade before the original can go through.
“After scraping the Ethereum blockchain starting from the first block of 2020 (9193266), we’ve found a total of at least $314M worth (~540k ETH) of Extracted MEV since Jan 1st 2020,” a Medium article from research group Flashbots states.
The technique netted at least $57 million or 47,600 ETH in January alone and $107 million in the past thirty days, the Flashbots data shows. For example, this trade Flashbots points to continuously re-bid on a trade so as to protect it from trading bots that noticed it. The original trader was successful, but at the cost of the lurking bots wasting gas on a failed transaction and increasing congestion on the Ethereum blockchain.
One point of clarification about the data, Flashbots Alex Obadia told CoinDesk after publication of this article, is that organizing the numbers correctly remains difficult – it’s more art than science.
“The value we displayed is not from mempool snipers only,” Obadia said. “But anyone looking to perform liquidations or arbitrage, it is hard to identify whether an arbitrage trade was seized by a sender that found it in the mempool vs just found the price inefficiency and fired the trade.”
Trading bots create 'negative externalities' for Ethereum
That second point is more important than a first look may convey. Failed transactions generally increase the average transaction cost on-chain – a sore spot for Ethereum users who have suffered under $20-$30 average transaction fees – in addition to “bloating” the Ethereum by leaving traces of the failed transaction on the blockchain’s state. In other words, MEV creates negative externalities for Ethereum (or any smart contract blockchain).
It’s important to note that MEV is not always performed by miners but mainly by trading bots often run by market-making firms. In fact, there’s little evidence to suggest Ethereum miners have employed MEV techniques to date. Some Ethereum mining pools have even built custom networks to deter front running – a form of MEV – such as SparkPool’s Taichi Network.
Flashbots’ dataset is only a rough estimate of MEV, the research group warned, as identifying arbitrage bots requires active on-chain management. Flashbots said the group continues to update its methodology to better reflect real MEV values.
Credit: William Foxley