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layer-2-wars-arbitrum-optimism-base-and-beyond
Blog

The Future of MEV in Interconnected Rollups

Shared sequencers like Espresso aim to solve fragmentation but create a new centralization vector. This analysis breaks down the economic incentives, cartel risks, and the precarious future of MEV in the Superchain ecosystem.

introduction
THE NEW BATTLEFIELD

Introduction

Maximal Extractable Value (MEV) is evolving from a single-chain problem into a systemic risk across interconnected rollups.

Cross-chain MEV is inevitable. Atomic composability between Ethereum L1 and rollups like Arbitrum and Optimism creates new, more complex MEV opportunities that span multiple execution layers.

The MEV supply chain fragments. Searchers must now coordinate across sequencers, bridges like Across and Stargate, and different data availability layers, creating inefficiency and new points of centralization.

Intent-based architectures like UniswapX and CowSwap will dominate cross-rollup user flows, abstracting complexity but centralizing bargaining power with a few solvers who control cross-domain liquidity.

Evidence: Over 30% of Ethereum's value is now on L2s, but no standardized, secure cross-rollup MEV auction exists, forcing ad-hoc, trust-minimized solutions.

thesis-statement
THE SHIFT

Thesis Statement

MEV will evolve from a per-chain extraction game into a cross-chain coordination layer, fundamentally reshaping rollup interoperability and economic security.

MEV becomes a coordination layer. The future is not isolated block builders but cross-domain sequencers like Astria or Espresso that coordinate execution across rollups, turning MEV from a tax into a service that funds shared security.

Inter-rollup MEV dominates. The largest value extraction shifts from sandwiching on Ethereum to cross-chain arbitrage and liquidity rebalancing between L2s, creating a new market for intent-based solvers like UniswapX and CowSwap.

Shared sequencers commoditize execution. Rollups like Eclipse and Saga that outsource sequencing create a competitive marketplace for block space, where MEV revenue subsidizes transaction costs and secures the network.

Evidence: The 90%+ of rollups using centralized sequencers today creates a single point of failure and value capture; shared sequencing protocols are the inevitable, decentralized counter-force.

market-context
THE INCENTIVE SHIFT

Market Context: The Rush to Shared Sequencing

The race to build shared sequencers is driven by the need to capture cross-rollup MEV and secure long-term revenue streams.

Sequencer revenue is unsustainable. Current rollup sequencers profit from transaction ordering and base fee capture, but this model collapses as blockspace commoditizes. The long-term value accrual shifts to controlling the cross-domain transaction flow where the real MEV exists.

Shared sequencing is a land grab. Projects like Espresso Systems and Astria are not just selling infrastructure; they are positioning as the central clearinghouse for cross-rollup state. The winner captures the network effects of bundled liquidity and atomic composability across dozens of chains.

This redefines the L2 stack. The base layer is no longer just execution or data availability; it is coordination. A shared sequencer like one built on EigenLayer becomes a new trust layer, mediating between rollups like Arbitrum and Optimism that currently operate as isolated islands.

Evidence: The valuation. Espresso Systems raised $32M and Astria raised $5.5M pre-launch, signaling VC conviction that the entity controlling cross-rollup ordering captures a fundamental piece of the modular blockchain stack.

MEV & CROSS-CHAIN ARBITRAGE

Sequencer Landscape: Contenders & Their Leverage

Comparison of sequencer models based on their technical design, economic incentives, and vulnerability to cross-rollup MEV extraction.

Feature / MetricCentralized Sequencer (e.g., OP Stack, Arbitrum)Decentralized Sequencer Set (e.g., Espresso, Astria)Shared Sequencer Network (e.g., Espresso, Radius, Madara)

Transaction Ordering Finality

1-2 seconds

~12 seconds (consensus latency)

~2-5 seconds (optimistic finality)

MEV Capture Mechanism

First-price auction to proposer

Proposer-Builder Separation (PBS) via auction

Encrypted mempool with commit-reveal

Cross-Rollup Atomic Arbitrage

Forced Inclusion / Censorship Resistance

Sequencer Bond / Slashing

None (reputational risk)

32 ETH (EigenLayer AVS)

Dynamic bond (e.g., 10-100 ETH)

Primary Revenue Source

Priority gas fees + MEV

Consensus rewards + MEV auction fees

Network usage fees + MEV auction fees

Integration Overhead for Rollup

Low (managed service)

High (must run validator client)

Medium (SDK integration)

Key Dependency / Risk

Single operator failure

Validator set collusion

Shared sequencer liveness failure

deep-dive
THE INTERCONNECTED FUTURE

Deep Dive: From MEV Sandwich to Cross-Chain Arb Cartel

The atomic composability of a shared sequencer network transforms simple on-chain arbitrage into a cross-domain cartel.

Shared sequencers create atomic domains. A network like Espresso or Astria bundles transactions across multiple rollups before finality. This atomicity enables cross-rollup arbitrage that is impossible with asynchronous bridges like Across or Stargate.

MEV becomes a coordination game. Searchers must now optimize for multi-chain state transitions, not single-chain latency. This favors sophisticated bots with capital deployed across Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base over solo sandwich attackers.

Cartel formation is inevitable. The capital and data advantage for a dominant searcher creates a winner-take-most market. This mirrors the centralization seen in Ethereum's PBS with builders like Flashbots and bloXroute.

Evidence: The mempool for a shared sequencer is a unified liquidity pool. A 2023 Flashbots report showed 90% of Ethereum MEV was captured by 5 entities; cross-rollup MEV will follow this power law.

risk-analysis
THE FUTURE OF MEV IN INTERCONNECTED ROLLUPS

Risk Analysis: The Slippery Slope to Capture

As rollups proliferate and bridge liquidity fragments, MEV extraction evolves from a public good problem into a systemic threat to chain sovereignty and user value.

01

The Cross-Chain Searcher Cartel

Searchers like Flashbots and Jito Labs will vertically integrate across rollup sequencers. Their capital and infrastructure advantage creates a cartel that dictates transaction ordering across chains, extracting >90% of high-value cross-domain arbitrage.\n- Risk: Centralized control over $100B+ in bridged liquidity.\n- Outcome: Rollup revenue leaks to external actors, undermining their economic security.

>90%
Arb Capture
$100B+
TVL at Risk
02

Intent-Based Bridges as MEV Siphons

Protocols like UniswapX, CowSwap, and Across abstract execution to specialized solvers. This creates a new MEV supply chain where solvers compete on rollup inclusion, but the winning solver captures the bulk of the value.\n- Risk: Bridges become the ultimate MEV auction houses, not neutral infrastructure.\n- Outcome: User savings from better routing are offset by hidden extractive premiums.

~500ms
Auction Latency
30-70%
Value Capture
03

Sequencer-Level Frontrunning is Inevitable

With fast finality and centralized sequencing (e.g., Arbitrum, Optimism), the sequencer node becomes the ultimate frontrunner. Even with permissionless proposer-builder separation, the entity controlling the sequencing software has a millisecond-level advantage.\n- Risk: The "Fair Sequencing" promise is technically unenforceable.\n- Outcome: Native rollup MEV is captured before it ever reaches a public mempool.

~10ms
Advantage Window
100%
Pre-Mempool Capture
04

Shared Sequencing as a Central Point of Failure

Projects like Astria, Espresso, and Radius aim to decentralize sequencing across rollups. However, consolidating ordering power into one network creates a single point of economic and technical capture. A dominant shared sequencer becomes a super-Searcher.\n- Risk: Re-creates L1 validator centralization risks at the sequencing layer.\n- Outcome: Protocol-level MEV cartelization with formalized revenue sharing.

1
Central Point
>50%
Market Share Target
05

The Privacy-For-Rent Economy

Encrypted mempools like Shutter Network or Fairblock are proposed as a solution. But they introduce a new set of trusted actors—the key holders or encryptors. This creates a privacy cartel that can auction decryption rights or selectively censor transactions.\n- Risk: MEV isn't eliminated; it's shifted to the governance of the privacy layer.\n- Outcome: Users trade miner extractable value for validator extractable value.

~10
Key Holder Entities
New Cartel
Risk Created
06

The Only Viable Defense: Sovereign Execution

The endgame is rollups taking full responsibility for their execution environment. This means in-house, verifiable sequencer committees using technologies like SGX or MPC for fair ordering, and native intent-based AMMs that keep liquidity on-chain.\n- Solution: Internalize the MEV supply chain; make it a protocol revenue source.\n- Outcome: Capture value for the rollup's security budget, not external searchers.

Protocol Revenue
MEV Destination
0
External Leakage
counter-argument
THE FLAWED LOGIC

Counter-Argument: The Pro-Cartel Defense (And Why It's Wrong)

The argument that MEV cartels are a natural and stable equilibrium for cross-rollup systems ignores their inherent fragility and cost to users.

Cartels are not stable. The economic incentive for a single member to defect and capture outsized profit by front-running the cartel is immense. This prisoner's dilemma dynamic ensures any cross-rollup MEV cartel is a temporary, high-stakes truce.

They externalize costs onto users. A cartel's profit is extracted from latency and slippage across bridges like Across and Stargate. This creates a direct, negative-sum relationship between searcher profit and user experience, stifling adoption.

They centralize infrastructure control. A dominant cartel controlling cross-domain flow becomes a single point of failure and censorship. This contradicts the decentralized security model of L2s like Arbitrum and Optimism.

Evidence: The Ethereum PBS model shows that even with a dominant builder like Jito Labs, competition persists because the economic design (proposer-builder separation) structurally limits cartel formation. A pure profit-sharing cartel lacks this structural guardrail.

future-outlook
THE INTER-ROLLUP MEV FRONTIER

Future Outlook: The Fragmented Endgame

The proliferation of rollups will shift the MEV battleground from block-building to cross-chain coordination, creating new extractable value and systemic risks.

Cross-domain MEV extraction becomes the dominant game. As activity fragments across Arbitrum, Optimism, and Base, the value of atomic cross-chain arbitrage and liquidation will dwarf single-chain opportunities, creating a new market for inter-rollup searchers.

Shared sequencing is not a panacea. While Espresso and Astria propose neutral sequencing layers, they create a single point of failure and censorship. The endgame is a competitive market of sequencers with specialized cross-chain intent solvers like UniswapX and Across.

The MEV supply chain will vertically integrate. Searchers will merge with builders and bridges, as seen with Flashbots and Succinct, to capture the full value of cross-rollup bundles, reducing inefficiencies but increasing centralization risks.

Evidence: Over 30% of Ethereum's value is now on L2s. A single cross-rollup arbitrage between a large NFT sale on Arbitrum and a DEX on Optimism can already yield six-figure MEV, a figure that scales with fragmentation.

takeaways
ACTIONABLE INSIGHTS

Takeaways

The MEV landscape is shifting from a monolithic L1 problem to a fragmented, multi-chain reality. Here's what builders need to know.

01

The Problem: Cross-Rollup MEV is a Coordination Nightmare

Seeking arbitrage across rollups like Arbitrum, Optimism, and zkSync creates a multi-party prisoner's dilemma. Latency and settlement finality differences turn profitable opportunities into losses.

  • Key Risk: Front-running and sandwich attacks become exponentially harder to detect and prevent.
  • Key Insight: MEV revenue will concentrate on bridges and sequencers that control cross-domain transaction ordering.
~2-12s
Finality Delta
$100M+
At-Risk TVL
02

The Solution: Intent-Based Architectures & Shared Sequencing

Protocols like UniswapX and CowSwap abstract execution, allowing users to express desired outcomes. This shifts the MEV competition from searchers to solvers. Shared sequencers (e.g., Espresso, Astria) provide a neutral ordering layer across rollups.

  • Key Benefit: User gets optimal price without managing complexity.
  • Key Benefit: Reduces toxic MEV by batching and encrypting orders.
-90%
Failed Trades
10x
Solver Competition
03

The New Frontier: MEV-Aware Interoperability Protocols

Bridges and messaging layers like LayerZero, Axelar, and Across are no longer just data pipes. They are becoming MEV-aware routing layers that internalize cross-chain arbitrage, offering users a better net price.

  • Key Insight: The most valuable bridge will be the one that captures and redistributes MEV most efficiently.
  • Key Risk: Centralization pressure on these routing hubs creates new trust assumptions.
$5B+
Bridge Volume
30-80%
Arb Capture
04

The Inevitable Shift: MEV as a Protocol Revenue Stream

Rollups will stop treating MEV as a leak and start auctioning it. Flashbots' SUAVE envisions a decentralized block builder network for cross-domain blocks. This turns MEV from an extractive tax into a sustainable, verifiable protocol subsidy.

  • Key Benefit: Creates a native, crypto-economic security budget for L2s.
  • Key Challenge: Requires robust cryptographic primitives for fair ordering across heterogeneous chains.
$1B+
Annual Revenue
>50%
Fee Reduction
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