By introducing native ETH and wstETH transfer software to the platform, Wormhole has changed the ETH and wstETH movement pattern in countless EVM-oriented networks. This will facilitate achieving greater liquidity and cost-effectiveness.
Built on top of Uniswap v3, this new feature will revolutionize the transfer of ETH and wstETH across various EVM-based networks, making it more efficient and liquid than ever before. Gas-free transhipments take place along the destination chain. It is exceptionally intuitive to use.
Each blockchain contains a single xETH/wETH pool that allows transactions between wrapped (local) ether and xETH (wormhole ether). Because the pool functions as a standard Uniswap v3 pool, all participants are encouraged to use their preferred method of providing liquidity. Liquidity is concentrated in the center. Nevertheless, LPs impose various costs in the form of fees.
When ETH is transferred from Optimism to Base, it is first exchanged for Wormhole xETH on Uniswap. Then the xETH is reallocated to Base and ETH is again exchanged for conventional Base ETH on Uniswap.
All this is offered at the most minimal cost. The user initiated their transaction using standard ETH on Optimism and closed it using standard ETH on Base, providing improved acceleration and lower transaction fees.
Optimism, Base, BNB Chain, Avalanche, Polygon, and Ethereum are now all set to facilitate native-to-native ETH transfers at launch. Ethereum, Arbitrum, Optimism, Polygon and Base all support native-to-native Lido wstETH transactions.
Wormhole is the leading interoperability platform enabling scalable bridges and multichain applications. Wormhole offers developers the ability to connect to liquidity and consumers across more than thirty prominent blockchain networks.
This generates applications for DeFi, NFTs, governance and more. The extensive Wormhole network is used by both Circle and Uniswap and is reliable. It is credited with facilitating the transfer of over $35 billion through the use of over 900 million cross-chain messages.