Part 1 Advanced The Market Maker’s Exchange Checklist (Liquidity, Latency, and Risk Controls) Market makers and HFT desks: evaluate exchanges on execution quality, liquidity, latency, fees, margin, and security — with a WhiteBIT walkthrough. Open guide You hold your own keys. The hard part is what comes next.
In 2026, moving between assets means routing across dozens of venues and networks, often by hand, on every swap. Self-custody used to mean one thing: keeping assets in a wallet you control. It now means something broader.
Users also need reliable routing, clear pricing, network support, recovery paths, and swap infrastructure that lets them move assets without rebuilding the custodial risks they were trying to avoid.
You can hold your own keys and still face a difficult question every time you move funds: what is the safest, clearest, and most efficient route from one asset to another?
That is the new self-custody problem. The first version of self-custody was about ownership: keeping assets outside an exchange account, a lender's balance sheet, or a custodial platform. The next version is about execution. A user who controls their wallet still has to choose networks, compare liquidity, understand fees, pick a rate type, avoid address mistakes, and recover when a transaction stalls.
The argument about who holds your money is won. The one about how you move it is still open. SimpleSwap has spent eight years on the second argument while keeping the first intact.
This guide explains why self-custody has expanded beyond private-key control, how the routing problem has grown as liquidity fragmented across venues and chains, and what to evaluate before relying on wallet-to-wallet swap infrastructure.
What this guide covers
- Why self-custody has expanded beyond private-key control.
- How centralized platforms made crypto easier while adding custody risk.
- Why liquidity fragmentation makes routing harder in 2026.
- What self-custodial swap aggregation does.
- What risks remain even when funds are not parked on an exchange.
- How to evaluate a self-custodial swap workflow.
- Where SimpleSwap fits as one example of the category.
Who this guide is for
- Users who hold assets in self-custodial wallets.
- Traders rotating between assets without wanting long exchange balances.
- Long-term holders moving larger balances.
- Wallet-first users comparing CEX, DEX, bridge, OTC, and aggregator workflows.



