Why $KMNO and $B2 Have Low Transaction Wear—The Actuarial Alpha Behind the Pick
If you’ve been wondering why smart money and on-chain actuaries are favoring $KMNO on Solana and $B2 on BSC, despite their modest visibility, the answer lies not in hype—but in frictionless trading mechanics.
While transaction attrition (or “wear”) often correlates with pool depth, most Alpha trades are modest—think $1,024 per move. That’s well within the capacity of any token with a $10M+ market cap. So why these two?
It’s all about transaction fees.
Open Orca for $KMNO or PancakeSwap for $B2 and you’ll notice something rare: a token liquidity fee set to just 1/10,000 (0.01%). That’s a fee structure typically reserved for stablecoins or blue-chip assets—not your average meme or midcap token.
Let’s break it down:
KMNO/USDC posted a 24h trading volume of $84.8M, yet LPs earned only $8,479. That’s basically saying: “We’re not here for commission, we want frictionless flow.”
Similarly, B2/WBNB saw $57.16M in 24h volume, with LP income of just $5,720.
For high-frequency strategies and actuarial-style models, this ultra-low fee structure means minimal slippage, higher efficiency, and near-zero wear per transaction—ideal for compounding micro-trades.
So while the rest of the market chases volatility, the quiet professionals are optimizing for one thing: frictionless throughput.