Where Does MEV Really Come From? Revisiting CEXDEX Arbitrage on Ethereum
Bence Lad\'oczk, Mikl\'os R\'asonyi, J\'anos Tapolcai

TL;DR
This paper revisits the origins of MEV revenue on Ethereum, highlighting the significance of CEX-DEX arbitrages and introducing a novel jump-inclusive AMM model that aligns closely with empirical data.
Contribution
It develops a discrete-time AMM model with stochastic jumps, providing a more accurate theoretical framework for understanding arbitrage profits and MEV sources.
Findings
CEX-DEX arbitrages require trading volumes comparable to major liquidity pools.
The jump-inclusive model better matches observed price data.
The model explains fundamental questions about MEV and arbitrage on Ethereum.
Abstract
A central question of the Ethereum ecosystem is where Maximal Extractable Value (MEV)revenue originates and to what extent it stems from harming unsuspecting users. It is acceptable if MEV arises from arbitrages between centralised and decentralised exchanges (CEX-DEX). Yet theoretical models have significantly underestimated the scale of these arbitrages, while empirical studies have highlighted their importance - though these remain conservative estimates, constrained by numerous debatable heuristic assumptions. Revisiting the theoretical model, we found that CEX-DEX arbitrages require trading volumes on the order of the total activity of major liquidity pools and yield profits comparable to MEV. Most prior AMM models utilised the Black-Scholes (BS) stochastic differential equation (SDE) - i.e., geometric Brownian motion - and assumed continuous price trajectories where asset prices…
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