Solana sandwich attacks ‘way down’: Anza’s Max Resnick
This is a segment from the Lightspeed newsletter. To read full editions, subscribe.
When Anza’s lead economist Max Resnick came on Lightspeed recently, I asked him a question that frequently gets brought up in conversations about Solana’s economics: What should be done about the sandwich attack problem?
His answer surprised me. “The sandwiching rate [is] way down,” Resnick said.
Solana’s speed makes it an ideal venue for timing games at the expense of unsophisticated users. A sandwich attack happens when a toxic market participant both frontruns and backruns a trade to profit at the expense of the trader.
Sandwiching has historically been a big concern for Solana and its developers. In early 2024, Solana infrastructure shop Jito shut down its mempool over sandwiching concerns. A couple months later, the Solana Foundation cut suspected sandwichers from its stake delegation program. Jito’s DAO also voted to blacklist malicious validators from its stake pool.
None of these fixes turned out to be panaceas, however, and the sandwich attacks continued.
But the story Resnick tells is that sandwich attacking was blunted not by blacklisting bad actors — who may be able to re-emerge with a different online identity — but by improving Solana’s code.
Basically, sandwich attacks are numbers games for the attackers.
In 2024, when landing transactions on Solana was much more difficult, transactions were sprayed widely to validators in hopes of getting user transactions to the blockchain. This meant toxic validators saw a lot of transactions and had more chances to frontrun them. As Solana’s transaction “targeting” has improved, fewer validators see each transaction on average, so sandwichers have fewer opportunities to mess with transactions, Resnick said.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
The Fed’s hawkish rate cuts unveil the illusion of liquidity: the real risks for global assets in 2025–2026
The article analyzes the current uncertainty in global economic policies, the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut decisions and market reactions, as well as the structural risks in the financial system driven by liquidity. It also explores key issues such as the AI investment boom, changes in capital expenditures, and the loss of institutional trust. Summary generated by Mars AI This summary was generated by the Mars AI model, and the accuracy and completeness of its content is still undergoing iterative updates.

Cobo Stablecoin Weekly Report NO.30: Ripple's Comeback with a $40 Billion Valuation and the Stablecoin Transformation of a Cross-Border Remittance Giant
Transformation under the wave of stablecoins.

Bitrace's Perspectives and Outlook at Hong Kong FinTech Week
During the 9th Hong Kong FinTech Week, Bitrace CEO Isabel Shi participated in the Blockchain and Digital Assets Forum...

