The new update to TWAMM would allow splitting of large orders. Consequently, this would decrease the impact of sudden price swings on trades.
If you are an active liquidity provider or trader on the Uniswap [UNI] protocol, then you’d know that the most basic type of market making is the Time-Weighted Average Market Maker (TWAMM).
Uniswap defines TWAMM as the on-chain equivalent for keeping exchanges in line with market prices.
However, there has been a new update to TWAMM, and the Automated Market Maker (AMM) did well to disclose the details in a blog post on 7 October. According to Uniswap, the new update to TWAMM would decrease the impact of sudden price swings on large trades.
Uniswap further explained that market participants would be able to access price stability by splitting a large single swap into tiny bits. Although the TWAMM has been functioning since 2021, its role was only to help traders submit long-term orders over a fixed number of blocks.