UniSwap (UNI) Risks Falling Another 10% over Centralization Worries

UniSwap (UNI) Risks Falling Another 10% over Centralization Worries

Conceptual series: hands of puppeteer with rope

UniSwap’s native cryptocurrency, UNI, is at risk of continuing its downtrend by another 10 percent as the decentralized exchange undergoes its first governance vote.

Members of the UniSwap community claimed that whales with access to large quantities of UNI tokens are unanimously changing the network rules. The accusations followed the launch of the first proposal on UniSwap, dubbed as ‘Reduce UNI Governance Proposal & Quorum Thresholds,’ by Dharma.

UNI whales, as highlighted by DeFi expert Chris Blec. Source: UniSwap
UNI whales, as highlighted by DeFi expert Chris Blec. Source: UniSwap

The DeFi trading and lending platform suggested reducing the current proposal submission threshold to 3 million UNI from 10 million UNI. The suggestion entered a controversy after one of the UniSwap community members, David Felton, accused Dharma of enjoying too much control over the project’s governance model.

“Dharma, with its massive voting power of 15 million votes [in one address alone], already presents a threat to Uniswap’s sovereignty without this proposal, which will so powerfully entrench them in Uniswap governance they might as well just outright own the DEX,” – Mr. Felton wrote in a blogpost this Tuesday.

Demand Deficit

Other observers forwarded the centralization narrative by mentioning Gauntlet, a blockchain simulation platform with access to another 15 million UNI tokens. Some of them launched a campaign to vote against the Dharma proposal altogether.

“43m votes delegated,” tweeted Chris Blec, founder of DeFi Watch. “30m to Dharma & Gauntlet. D&G proposes lowering the quorum to 30m and vote YES. 13m eligible votes remaining. (You can’t vote if you didn’t delegate before the vote began.) And guess who controls half of the remaining votes?”

The findings lifted the appeal with which UniSwap attracted a strong user base: decentralization. With big players controlling most UNI governance tokens, any coalition between the two whales could negate the votes of many that are voting against them.

And the impact of such centralization may lead to lower demand for UNI tokens altogether.

UNI Breaks Key Support Range

The fears of centralization are also already visible across the UNI pairs.

The benchmark UNI/USD plunged by close to 20 percent right soon after UniSwap landed into the voting controversy. As it did, the pair broke below a crucial support level below $3.17 and now was targeting $2.89 for a potential rebound.

UniSwap is looking weaker near the $2.89 support. Source: UNIUSD on TradingView.com
UniSwap is looking weaker near the $2.89 support. Source: UNIUSD on TradingView.com

The fundamentals indicated a further downside correction in the UniSwap markets. It increased the UNI/USD’s potential to test $2.5, a support level from October 7, that stands about 10 percent below the current price levels.

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