In a recent interview, Aster CEO Leonard outlined the project’s trajectory from a perpetual contract DEX to a multi-chain trading platform. Aster started on BNB Chain, launching with perpetual contract products, and later expanded to support multiple chains such as Arbitrum, OP, Linea, and Solana. The project is now evolving toward a “comprehensive multi-chain trading platform,” with the goal of seamlessly integrating trading, lending, yield generation, staking, and other functionalities.
Leonard noted that while Aster is often viewed as part of the Binance ecosystem, the team has moved beyond those boundaries, aiming to become an “on-chain version of Binance”—in other words, to deliver the core CEX product experience on the blockchain.
Leonard stated: “Within a year, we plan to replicate 80% of the CEX product experience, but entirely on-chain.” This “replication” is not simple imitation; it means re-creating core CEX functionalities—mainstream trading, asset management, leverage, lending, staking, rewards systems, and market-making mechanisms—via blockchain-native modules.
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Recently, Aster announced that users who pay perpetual contract trading fees with ASTER receive a 5% discount, further expanding the token’s utility. The team is also preparing a token buyback mechanism to reinforce market confidence and manage circulating supply.
Migrating CEX products to the blockchain faces a fundamental challenge: balancing “decentralization” with “efficiency and user experience.”
These challenges test not only technical expertise but also the team’s ability to manage product design, tokenomics, and risk comprehensively.
During the interview, Leonard addressed concerns about the distribution and concentration of Aster tokens. He explained that about 96% of ASTER appears concentrated in a few addresses, but roughly 80% remains locked, with airdrop addresses accounting for about 40% of the total supply. Some “whale addresses” may simply be users’ spot deposit accounts on the platform. Leonard emphasized that private investors do not intend to sell their tokens, which constitute only a small portion of the team’s allocation.
Recently, Aster’s price has seen a decline of over 20%, with some analysts attributing this to product doubts, investor exits, and competitive pressure from Hyperliquid. In this environment, token buybacks, trading fee discounts, and robust user growth are vital for restoring confidence. Leonard noted that a token buyback plan will be announced within the next few weeks.
Leonard has repeatedly stated that he sees CEXs as Aster’s primary competitors, with the ultimate aim to “surpass Binance.” He believes that DEXs can eventually take on the role of CEXs: as blockchain infrastructure becomes more mature, performant, and user-friendly, DEXs could exceed CEXs in areas like transparency, self-custody, and security.
Nonetheless, truly “surpassing Binance” is a significant challenge. CEXs maintain formidable advantages in market share, capital, liquidity, user base, and regulatory compliance. Aster must continue advancing its technology, community, and ecosystem. Ultimately, Aster’s vision is compelling: if it can replicate CEX core features within a year and build a stable ecosystem and user trust in the years ahead, the “on-chain Binance” could become reality instead of just a slogan.
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