Crypto opened the doors to retail now Wall Street is feasting on it
Retail investors were sold a story about market access that was impossible to argue with: trading would be cheaper, information would be easier to find, public blockchains would pull back the curtain, and the old hierarchy that once defined finance would lose some of its grip.
What that story left out, and what has become harder to ignore across both stocks and crypto, is that broader access didn’t do much to stop the system from organizing itself around retail behavior. It’s been studying, routing, pricing, and turning it into a source of value for someone else.
That’s a new kind of problem brought about by the democratization of the crypto market. Markets are now open, and retail investors are more informed and knowledgeable than ever before.
But access and visibility were never the same thing as power. The real power lies with institutions, venues, market makers, token issuers, and insiders, all of whom have better tools, better timing, and better ways of converting public information into actual advantage.
Arkham’s recent case for the positive role of retail in crypto captures one side of that story. Public ledgers expose more of the market than tradfi ever did, and that alone changed the balance of information in ways that would’ve been hard to imagine a decade ago.
Anyone can now track wallet movements, model token supplies, follow treasury activity, and users who would have been completely blind up until a decade ago can now see quite a bit of the market that’s in front of them.
But visibility doesn’t erase hierarchy. A public board is still a board, and the people with the fastest models, the best data, the strongest execution, and the closest read on incentives still get to trade first and with more precision.
That problem has already started surfacing across the crypto market, although in different forms. CryptoSlate’s reporting on Bitcoin’s ETF-driven market structure shift showed how demand increasingly travels through institutional channels that most retail investors don’t control.
Another report on how stablecoins function as crypto’s M2 made a similar point from another angle: the market can be open to everyone and still be shaped by capital pools, liquidity rails, and settlement systems that ordinary traders might never see.
Where the house lives now: inside the market’s hidden machinery
The best place to see this in stocks is in the market’s hidden machinery.
Retail order flow is valuable enough that exchanges and market centers compete for it, design incentives around it, and describe it in regulatory filings in terms far more revealing than the average investor would ever encounter on a brokerage screen.
Recent SEC filings from 24X and NYSE Arca describe rebates and tiered incentives meant to attract more retail activity and encourage firms to direct that order flow to their venues.
A market doesn’t build formal reward structures around something unless it can be monetized.
Seen from that angle, democratized trading starts to lose some of its innocence.
Retail is now being treated as a commercially desirable input, a stream of orders with characteristics valuable enough for exchanges and intermediaries to compete over, package, and profit from. The interface may speak in the language of convenience and empowerment, but the structure underneath speaks in the language of routing economics, credits, execution quality, internalization, and rebates.
All of that sounds technical until you realize it determines where retail orders go, who gets first access to them, and who earns from the process.
That same pattern becomes even harder to ignore in crypto, partly because the industry spent years describing itself as the antidote to exactly this kind of extraction. The promise was that if finance were rebuilt in public, if ledgers were transparent and intermediaries thinner, some of the old asymmetries would weaken.
While this might have been true in the early days of crypto, it’s certainly no longer the case. The house just adapted to a different kind of environment. The edge it had no longer depends on private information, but on speed, interpretation, tooling, sequencing, and the ability to act on public information faster and with more confidence than everyone else.
The SEC’s January 2025 DERA working paper on crypto payment for order flow found that crypto payment for order flow lacked transparency and generated fees roughly 4.5x to 45x higher than those found in equities and options. The setting it studied produced an estimated $4.8 million in added daily trading costs.
Even without treating the paper as the final word on every corner of the crypto market, the message is clear: a market can look frictionless from the front end while still charging a hidden premium through the architecture underneath it. And those costs tend to fall on the people least equipped to see where the extraction is happening.
CryptoSlate’s report on how crypto derivatives liquidations drove Bitcoin’s 2025 crash showed how quickly visible participation can be overrun by leverage and forced positioning. A later report argued that on-chain scarcity is transparent, but price discovery isn’t.
Retail can see more of the game and still be the product
That’s why transparency, while valuable, should never be confused with symmetry.
A blockchain can make a treasury wallet visible, make token movements legible, and let anyone monitor issuance, unlock schedules, staking behavior, and governance activity. But none of that means all participants are equally positioned to understand what those things mean in real time.
Public information still has to be gathered, cleaned, interpreted, ranked, and acted on. By the time a retail trader notices that a large holder has started moving funds, or that a token with a swollen fully diluted valuation is heading toward another supply release, the people with better systems have already modeled the pressure, adjusted positioning, and prepared to trade the reaction.
A project can boast about unparalleled transparency, while still creating a structure in which those closest to the project have insider knowledge and those farthest from it absorb the consequences later.
This isn’t a claim that retail can never win, or that ordinary investors are uniquely naive, or that markets were somehow fairer in the past. The point is much more nuanced and more disturbing because it sits inside the design of the thing itself.
Retail participation has become easier, more visible, and more culturally central across financial markets. At the same time, it became highly monetizable for the institutions, venues, issuers, and counterparties operating around it. The user is invited in as an owner, thinks like a participant, but tends to get processed like a product.
That’s why the old promise of democratized markets now feels incomplete.
The system opened, and the data became more visible. A lot of the old walls guarding the market were toppled, but none of that prevented its deep, inherent structure from rewarding those who can exploit retail flow.
The house always wins. That’s why it didn’t disappear, just became more abstract, technical, and much harder to recognize because it learned how to present itself as infrastructure.
So the lingering question isn’t whether retail investors were allowed into the market, because they plainly were, and it isn’t whether modern finance is more open than it was, because it plainly is.
The harder question, and the one that stays with you longer, is whether all that openness altered the balance of power in any fundamental sense, or whether it simply made the language friendlier and the extraction of value more elegant.
The post Retail was promised fair markets. So why does the house keep winning? appeared first on CryptoSlate.

