Storm Trade is the first and, so far, only major derivatives DEX in the TON ecosystem. While STON.fi and DeDust split the spot-swap pie, Storm fills a gap TON DeFi long had to live with: opening a long or short with leverage without ever leaving Telegram. This review skips the hype — we break down the architecture, the risks, how perps differ from spot, and who this thing is actually for.
TL;DR — what to know
- Storm Trade is a perpetual DEX on TON, launched in 2023. Available as a Telegram mini-app and a web app via TON Connect.
- Architecture: dvAMM (dynamic vAMM) + omni-vault — a single shared liquidity pool across every market.
- Leverage up to 50x on crypto and up to 100x on forex. Markets: TON, BTC, ETH, SOL, ADA, AVAX, ATOM, plus tokenized stocks (AAPL, MSFT, NVDA), EUR/USD, XAU, XAG, oil.
- Funding rate accrues every 8 hours under a standard perp-exchange formula.
- Self-custodial: funds remain on your on-chain account, execution is off-chain with on-chain finality.
- Risks: smart contract, oracle, vault liquidity. Audit status — partial.
- Our catalogue write-up: the Storm Trade card in the DEX catalogue.
What Storm Trade is and why a TON perp matters
Before 2023, TON lived without on-chain derivatives. Anyone wanting to short TON or trade with leverage drifted to Binance, Bybit or dYdX — losing self-custody and handing volume to a centralised venue. Storm Trade plugged the gap: you stay native to TON, never bridge to a CEX, and still get a full perp engine.
Why this matters for TON DeFi maturity:
- Hedging. If you hold staked tsTON and worry about a TON drawdown, you can open a short hedge on Storm and keep the position delta-neutral.
- Cash-and-carry arbitrage. Spot-long TON on STON.fi plus short the TON perp on Storm when funding is positive — captures funding income with (ideally) zero directional risk.
- Access to outside markets. A TON holder gets exposure to BTC, ETH, SOL, equities and forex without converting to USDT and bridging to a centralised exchange.
- Maturity signal. A serious ecosystem cannot be just spot AMMs. On-chain derivatives mark the point at which TON DeFi catches up with Ethereum and Solana in feature parity.
How perps differ from spot DEXs — for beginners
If you have only ever used spot venues (STON.fi, DeDust, swap.coffee), it is worth laying out the difference.
Spot DEX:
- You actually buy the token. You bought a jetton — it lives in your wallet.
- Profit only on price up.
- No shorting.
- No leverage: $100 of USDT buys $100 of tokens.
- Gas — TON; pool fee — 0.04–0.30%.
Perpetual (Storm Trade):
- You do not buy the asset. You open a contract on the price difference.
- You can go long (profit up) or short (profit down).
- Leverage — your position is N times the collateral. $100 USDT at 10x controls $1,000 of exposure.
- Liquidation price — if the market runs against you, the collateral zeroes at a defined price.
- Funding rate — periodic payments between longs and shorts.
- No expiry: the position lives until you close it (hence “perpetual”).
It sounds like a casino — and partly it is, if you slap on max leverage without understanding. But perps are first and foremost a tool for hedging and informed speculation. If you trade spot and do not understand funding rate, do not start at 50x.
Storm Trade architecture: vault model, oracles, funding
dvAMM — dynamic vAMM
Storm does not use a classical order book like dYdX. Instead it runs a virtual AMM: the contract price is derived from an internal curve anchored to an external mark price pulled from oracles (Pyth, with Chainlink as a cross-check). “Dynamic” because the curve parameters adapt to open interest and volatility.
What this means in practice:
- Entry price hugs the oracle — no slippage from a thin book.
- No market makers required — the vault is the counterparty.
- But there is also no deep order book — a large position moves the internal contract price.
Omni-vault — one pool to back them all
Storm’s main innovation is the omni-vault (SLP pool). It is a single stablecoin deposit that acts as the counterparty to every open position on every market on the platform. When you open a TON long, the vault is effectively short TON on the other side. Simultaneously across all 20+ markets.
Why one shared pool instead of many:
- Capital efficiency: the same liquidity backstops every market.
- Risk diversification for LPs: a loss on one market is offset by a win elsewhere.
- Simpler for users: one deposit, one share, one APY.
Oracle and funding
Mark price comes from an aggregation of external oracles — critical, because an oracle depeg can cause cascade liquidations. Storm uses Pyth as the primary feed with a fallback set.
Funding accrues every 8 hours under the standard formula:
funding = (mark - index) / index * factor + clamp
If funding is positive — longs pay shorts (market is overheated long). If negative — shorts pay longs. Reading funding is the core technical skill of a perp trader; we cover it in its own section below.
What you can trade with leverage
The Storm Trade market list as of H1 2026:
| Category | Assets | Max leverage |
|---|---|---|
| Major crypto | BTC, ETH, SOL, TON | up to 50x |
| Mid-cap crypto | ADA, AVAX, ATOM, APT, DOT, MATIC, NEAR, LINK | up to 25x |
| Tokenized stocks | AAPL, MSFT, NVDA, TSLA, GOOGL | up to 10x |
| Forex | EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY | up to 100x |
| Commodities | XAU (gold), XAG (silver), oil | up to 50x |
The exact list and max leverages change periodically — check the live mini-app or the docs. Tokenized stocks and forex are Storm’s killer feature, absent on dYdX and GMX: access to global markets through a TON wallet is a unique value proposition.
Margin, leverage, liquidations — the practical bit
The most dangerous part of perp trading. Numbers help.
Say you have $100 USDT and you open a TON long at $3.00 with 10x leverage:
- Position size: 100 × 10 = $1,000 in TON (~333 TON).
- Initial margin: $100.
- Maintenance margin: ~0.5% of size = $5.
- Liquidation price: roughly $2.71 (a ~9.5% drop from entry).
If TON drops to $2.71, the position is force-closed and you lose all $100. If it drops to $2.85 (–5%), your current PnL is –$50 but the position is alive.
Safety rules:
- Never open at max leverage. At 50x liquidation hits on a 1.5% adverse move — a normal day’s TON volatility.
- Use stop-loss. Storm supports built-in stop orders — set one at position open.
- Don’t risk more than 2–5% of the portfolio in one trade. A run of 10% liquidations drains a stack faster than it feels.
- Watch funding. Holding a position long enough, funding will eat profits even if the market moves your way.
!Partial liquidation
Storm Trade supports partial liquidation — when the maintenance margin is threatened, part of the position is force-closed and the rest keeps trading. That cushions the blow but does not retire the rule “no leverage without a stop”.
Funding rate and how to read its signals
Funding rate is the market-sentiment thermometer. Spot DEXs have no such indicator — there is only price and volume. On a perp you see the internal positioning dynamic.
Positive funding (e.g. +0.05% per 8h ≈ 0.15%/day):
- More longs than shorts.
- Longs pay shorts.
- Signal: market overheated long, a correction may be near.
- Strategy: cash-and-carry. Spot long on a DEX + perp short = harvest funding with no directional risk.
Negative funding:
- More shorts than longs.
- Shorts pay longs.
- Signal: fear; reversal upward possible (short squeeze).
- Strategy: reverse cash-and-carry — spot short + perp long, but borrowing the spot side on TON is harder.
High funding (>0.3% per 8h ≈ 1%/day):
- A heavy skew — usually the end of a trend.
- Cash-and-carry is especially profitable if you have stablecoin capital.
Where to see funding on Storm: market tab → the “Funding 8H” block. The 30-day history lives in analytics.
How to be an LP in the Storm Trade vault
The fundamental difference from a spot DEX: as a Storm LP you are the counterparty to every trader, not just a passive liquidity provider earning fees.
The mechanics:
- You deposit stablecoins (USDT) into the omni-vault.
- You receive SLP tokens (your share of the pool).
- The vault holds the short side of every long and the long side of every short, across every market simultaneously.
- Income breaks down into:
- Trading fees (commission on every trader’s order).
- Funding payments (the vault receives funding from the overheated side).
- PnL on the aggregated position (if traders net-lose, the vault wins).
- A loss is possible if traders are net-profitable.
Historically perp exchanges pay LPs a net positive: the median trader loses money, especially at high leverage. But this is not a law — in strong trending moves with most positioned correctly, the vault can drawdown.
Storm Trade omni-vault APY in 2026 sits in the 8–25% APY range in USDT, swinging heavily with market conditions. Higher than passive yields, but the risk model is different: you hold the “house” position long-term, and the house does not always win.
iWhen the LP strategy bleeds
In a strong one-directional trend (TON up 30% in a week, say) longs collectively win and the vault drawdowns. As an LP, you pay. SLP is not a “set and forget” deposit — it is an active position that requires monitoring.
Risks: smart contract, oracle, LP liquidity, sequencer
Honest breakdown. Storm Trade is young and complex — more risk surface than a plain AMM.
1. Smart-contract risk. Audits are partial: the vault and settlement engine are reviewed, but not every individual market adapter. Normal for a 2–3 year-old protocol, but not Aave or Uniswap level.
2. Oracle risk. A bad Pyth tick for even a second can cascade liquidations and hurt the LP. Perp DEXs have seen this historically (see the Mango Markets blow-up on Solana). Storm’s defences: twin oracles, sanity checks — but no absolute guarantee.
3. Vault liquidity. If everyone exits SLP simultaneously, withdrawal caps or a NAV discount may kick in. Read the redemption terms before depositing.
4. Sequencer / off-chain execution. Part of Storm runs off-chain (matching and mark price calculation) with on-chain finality. That gives speed but adds a trust point in the team. Fully decentralised perps like GMX or Hyperliquid handle this differently.
5. Regulatory. Tokenized stocks and forex on a TON DEX is a grey area. Under regulator pressure some markets could be disabled.
Storm Trade vs Storm v1 — what changed
The current version (2026) is no longer the 2023 launch. Key upgrades:
- Omni-vault instead of per-market pools. V1 had separate pools per market, fragmenting capital. V2 unified everything.
- Lower minimum position sizes. You can now open from ~$10 USDT — the minimum was higher in v1.
- Expanded market list. Tokenized stocks and forex were added in v2.
- Reworked Telegram mini-app. Faster UI, one-tap limit and stop orders.
- Cash-and-carry-friendly: funding history analytics for arbitrage strategies.
The team keeps shipping updates — track their Twitter and docs.
Real experience: cost, gas, speed
What it feels like when you open a position via the Telegram mini-app:
- Gas: 0.05–0.15 TON to open (~$0.20–0.60).
- Trading fee: typically 0.05–0.10% of position size (not collateral).
- Speed: position opens in 5–10 seconds (off-chain match + on-chain confirm).
- Slippage: minimal on liquid markets (BTC, ETH, TON); can be noticeable on low-liquidity tokenized stocks.
Compared with a STON.fi spot swap: gas is comparable, Storm’s per-trade fee is lower, but holding a position adds funding. If you plan to hold more than a day, funding often outweighs the fee saving.
Storm Trade vs GMX vs dYdX — comparing perp models
To place Storm in the broader derivatives picture:
dYdX (Cosmos chain, previously Ethereum L2):
- Full order book.
- Deepest liquidity, largest volumes among perp DEXs.
- Steeper learning curve, no native TON integration.
GMX (Arbitrum, Avalanche):
- vAMM + GLP vault — the closest architectural cousin to Storm.
- Known for transparent economics and public LP PnL stats.
- No TON integration, crypto only.
Hyperliquid (its own L1):
- Fully on-chain order book.
- Very fast, but requires bridging capital off TON.
Storm Trade (TON):
- The only major perp DEX on TON.
- Unique tokenized stocks and forex.
- Telegram-native UX — the killer feature for TON holders.
- Shorter track record, shallower liquidity.
The logic is simple: if your capital and habits are already in TON, Storm makes sense. If you are willing to bridge — choose dYdX or Hyperliquid for volume, GMX for transparency.
Open Storm Trade
The only major perp DEX on TON. Telegram mini-app, leverage up to 100x, omni-vault.
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Who Storm Trade is for
Good fit:
- Active traders who already understand perps and the meaning of liquidation risk.
- TON holders needing a hedge against a TON drawdown without bridging to a CEX.
- LPs willing to actively manage an SLP position (not set-and-forget) and to accept drawdown risk in trending markets.
- Arbitrageurs running cash-and-carry between STON.fi/DeDust spot and Storm perp.
- People who want access to global markets (equities, forex, gold) through Telegram without KYC.
Bad fit:
- Beginners who have never opened a perp position. Paper-trade first, on any exchange.
- Long-term holders who do not need derivatives — staking and lending are more appropriate (see EVAA Protocol).
- Anyone who only deploys to fully-audited blue-chip protocols — Storm is still young.
- Anyone planning to trade 50–100x without a stop-loss. That is a one-way ticket.
Bottom line
Storm Trade is a meaningful brick in TON DeFi infrastructure. Before it shipped, the ecosystem could not credibly claim “mature” status — no major chain is considered grown-up without an on-chain perp. The architecture (dvAMM + omni-vault) is workable and battle-tested in a GMX analogue. The Telegram-native interface is a moat no other network can replicate.
But it is a tool for people who know what they are doing. A leveraged perp is not “buy and forget”. If you are willing to spend time reading funding and using stop-losses with discipline — Storm gives you a quality product. If not, stay on spot DEXs and do not turn trading into a lottery.
The full card with pros/cons, audits and technical parameters lives in our DEX catalogue. For comparison with other DEXs, see our reviews of DeDust, STON.fi and swap.coffee.












