Which automation to use
A quick decision guide — match Super9MM's automations to your goal.
Super9MM's automations combine. Pick by what you're trying to achieve.
By goal
| Your goal | Turn on |
|---|---|
| Maximize fee yield on a position | Auto-rebalance (both ways, tighter width) + auto-compound |
| Draw income from a position | Auto-rebalance + auto-accumulate (bank fees to withdraw) |
| Protect a position from a big drop | Add a stop-loss |
| Lock in gains at a target | Add a take-profit |
| Accumulate the base asset as price falls | Auto-rebalance down-only |
| Ride a trend up without buying dips | Auto-rebalance up-only |
| Enter only on a dip | DCA — buy the dip |
| Hold exactly as-is for now | Pause |
Sensible combinations
- Set-and-forget yield: both-ways rebalance + auto-compound, on a high Fee/TVL pool, moderate width.
- Income position: both-ways rebalance + accumulate, withdraw fees periodically.
- Protected runner: rebalance + a take-profit ceiling + a stop-loss floor on a volatile pair.
- Disciplined accumulation: DCA in on a dip, then both-ways rebalance + accumulate once open.
How they interact
The keeper prioritizes exit (TP/SL) → rebalance → compound/accumulate. So a stop-loss always wins over a rebalance, and rebalancing happens before fees are compounded. DCA only applies before a position is open.
When to do less
- On a very stable pair, a wide range with auto-compound may be all you need — frequent rebalancing adds cost without much benefit.
- On a tiny position, automation costs (gas) can outweigh gains — see Fees & costs.
ℹ️
Start simple (rebalance + compound), watch how it behaves, then layer on TP/SL or accumulate as your goal sharpens.