Withdraw fee and deposit fee
4. Withdrawal Fee: 0.1% (Redistributed to Remaining Holders)
This is the only fee that doesn't go to Arbitrix or exchanges—it goes directly back to vault participants who stay in the pool.
Why this fee exists:
Without a withdrawal fee, people could game the system: deposit before a big opportunity, withdraw immediately after, repeat constantly. This creates chaos for position management and hurts long-term holders.
The 0.1% fee discourages this behavior while remaining negligible for genuine withdrawals.
How it works:
You decide to withdraw $10,000 from your vault position.
Withdrawal fee: 0.1% = $10
You receive: $9,990
The $10 fee stays in the vault, automatically increasing the value of all remaining shares
Why this is good for holders:
Every withdrawal concentrates the vault's value among fewer shareholders. If you're not withdrawing, you benefit from others' exit fees. It's a small reward for long-term participation.
When you should withdraw despite the fee:
If you're taking profits after strong performance, 0.1% is meaningless. If you earned 50% returns and want to cash out, paying 0.1% to access your gains is trivial.
Deposit Fee: 0% (Zero Cost to Enter)
Many vaults charge 0.5-1% deposit fees to cover gas costs or discourage rapid entry/exit. We charge nothing. Want to add more capital to your position? Do it for free. Want to enter the vault after the airdrop period? No entry fee.
Why? Because we want to encourage growth. The larger the vault, the more opportunities it can capture, and the better we can negotiate volume-based fee discounts with exchanges.
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