MEV technology is evolving beyond single-chain optimization toward complex cross-chain coordination.
With Ethereum rollups scaling up/Layer 2 ecosystems maturing—ordering now spans multiple chains’ info sync/value coordination.
For example—as assets flow between L1/OP Stack/ZK Rollup—asynchronous state updates/price delays create new cross-chain arbitrage/liquidation opportunities; these require deep understanding of various chains’ execution environments/timing/liquidity structure.
Meanwhile—PBS advances are changing ordering models; more public chains plan protocol-level PBS integration—to make sequencing native/reduce relayer centralization/black-box risk.
Trusted hardware/zero knowledge simulation/verifiable ordering all boost transparency/security.
Overall—MEV tech trends point toward cross-chain collaboration/higher transparency/more validation mechanisms—the future sequencing system resembles networked infrastructure across chains—not just an intra-chain competition tool.
As builder/relayer/searcher roles become more distinct—the ordering market itself begins industrializing.
Clear trends include:
Major institutions are entering sequencing markets—with fast nodes/special hardware/custom simulation setups making it hard for small searchers to stay competitive in certain areas.
Some ecosystems (like Solana/some L2s) use bidding/auction mechanisms so sequencing rights become open market commodities.
Chains with transparent sequencing/mature tooling attract more institutional liquidity—strengthening infrastructure as competitive edge.
We may see global sequencing service providers emerge—offering cross-chain coordination for multiple public chains.
With MEV increasingly affecting user experience/pricing/market orderliness—regulators worldwide now see it as potential financial infrastructure concern—not mere technical matter.
Regulators focus most on whether sequencing leads to market manipulation—sandwich attacks/front-running/price distortion/unfair execution.
With greater data transparency these actions become more visible in public databases—pushing regulation toward formal discussion stages.
Future regulation likely starts with increased sequencing transparency—such as requiring disclosure of sequencing logic/whether private transaction channels are used/offering users “protected routing” options.
For builder concentration risks regulators may adopt anti-monopoly approaches like those in traditional finance—to prevent absolute control by few large sequencers.
Aggressive protocol-level MEV (especially sandwich attacks) may be weakened or banned under joint technical/regulatory pressure.
Overall regulation is moving MEV from an “unregulated technical arbitrage zone” into “financial infrastructure requiring transparency/fairness/anti-manipulation.”
In the long run—MEV will push users/protocols into greater maturity.
Impact on Users:
Impact on Protocols:
Most importantly—protocols will begin treating MEV as a design variable—not just a side effect.
Ultimately—MEV will shift from external arbitrage space into an internally managed value flow within protocols themselves.