Holding BEEG doesn't have to mean sitting on your hands. This step-by-step guide covers how to provide liquidity in the BEEG/SUI pool on Cetus Protocol, earn trading fee rewards, and understand the real risks before you deploy capital.
Overview
Most BEEG holders buy the token and wait. That's the default — and for a meme coin on a fast-moving chain like Sui, the upside can be real. But in 2026, "only HODL" leaves potential income on the table. The Sui DeFi ecosystem has matured significantly, with total value locked surging from $250 million in early 2024 to over $2.6 billion by late 2025, and BEEG holders now have a practical alternative: providing liquidity on decentralized exchanges to earn trading fee income on top of their existing position.
This guide walks you through exactly how BEEG liquidity pools work, how to add your tokens to the BEEG/SUI pool on Cetus Protocol, and what risks you cannot afford to ignore before deploying capital. Whether you're new to DeFi or simply new to Sui-native liquidity strategies, this tutorial is designed to give you an honest, complete picture.
Key Takeaways
BEEG holders can earn passive income through liquidity pools on Cetus Protocol without selling their tokens
Liquidity providers (LPs) earn a proportional share of trading fees, with theoretical APRs in the BEEG/SUI pool ranging from 50%–200% during active trading periods
Impermanent loss is the primary risk for LPs — it is especially significant for high-volatility meme coins like BEEG
The step-by-step process: set up a Sui wallet → acquire BEEG and SUI in equal value → add liquidity on Cetus → monitor your position
MEXC offers zero-fee trading on BEEG with the deepest CEX liquidity depth, making it the recommended starting point for acquiring your tokens
All DeFi operations carry smart contract risk — only deploy capital you are fully prepared to lose
What Is a Liquidity Pool and Why Does BEEG Need One
A liquidity pool is the foundation of every decentralized exchange. Rather than relying on traditional order books filled by market makers, DEXs match trades automatically using reserves of tokens deposited by users. When you deposit BEEG and SUI into a liquidity pool, you become a liquidity provider — effectively functioning as a decentralized market maker. Every trade routed through your pool generates a fee, and that fee is distributed proportionally to all LPs.
According to a
data-driven analysis by Memeburn, BEEG trades primarily on Cetus Protocol via the BEEG/SUI pair, with additional pools on BlueMove and Turbos Finance. This means providing liquidity to the Cetus BEEG/SUI pool directly underpins the token's on-chain trading infrastructure — your capital keeps the market functioning.
The connection is direct: deeper liquidity reduces slippage, attracts more traders, which generates more fees for LPs, which in turn attracts more liquidity. For a micro-cap token like BEEG, this flywheel is fragile but real.
Where to Provide BEEG Liquidity: Platform Breakdown
Cetus Protocol (Primary)
Cetus Protocol is the largest DEX by volume on the Sui network and the primary venue for BEEG liquidity. It uses a Concentrated Liquidity Market Maker (CLMM) model — similar to Uniswap v3 on Ethereum — which allows LPs to concentrate liquidity within a defined price range, significantly improving capital efficiency compared to traditional AMMs.
The BEEG/SUI pool on Cetus is where the majority of on-chain BEEG volume flows. According to
MEXC Crypto Pulse's liquidity mining guide, theoretical APRs in Sui ecosystem BEEG pools have reached 50%–200% during active trading periods — though this figure fluctuates in real time with trading volume and pool depth.
One piece of context worth knowing: Cetus suffered a $223 million exploit in May 2025. The team executed a structured recovery plan, including a $30 million loan from the Sui Foundation, which
CoinMarketCap's analysis notes restored 85%–99% of pool liquidity. The protocol subsequently open-sourced its code. You should weigh this history when assessing platform risk.
Turbos Finance (Secondary)
Turbos Finance is a concentrated liquidity DEX also native to Sui, with a small BEEG pool available. Pool depth is lower than Cetus, making it better suited for small position diversification rather than a primary LP strategy.
BlueMove (Supplementary)
BlueMove originated as an NFT marketplace on Sui and added token swap functionality. BEEG liquidity on BlueMove is minimal, and it functions better as a price reference point than a serious LP destination.
Step-by-Step: How to Add BEEG/SUI Liquidity on Cetus Protocol
The following steps are drawn from Cetus official documentation and Sui ecosystem DeFi practice. They apply to holders who already have BEEG and want to begin earning LP income.
Step 1: Set Up a Sui-Compatible Wallet
You need a non-custodial wallet that supports the Sui network. The most commonly used options are the Sui Wallet browser extension or Backpack Wallet.
Install the Sui Wallet extension from the Chrome Web Store
Create a new wallet and securely back up your seed phrase (12 or 24 words — treat this as you would a bank vault combination)
Ensure your wallet holds enough SUI to cover gas fees; keep at least 5–10 SUI reserved specifically for transaction costs
Step 2: Acquire BEEG and SUI on MEXC
If you do not yet hold BEEG,
MEXC is the recommended acquisition point — zero trading fees, industry-leading liquidity depth, and 100% Proof of Reserves. MEXC also supports SUI spot trading, so you can build both sides of your LP position on one platform.
Once you have purchased both tokens, withdraw the amount you plan to deploy as liquidity to your Sui wallet address.
Step 3: Calculate Your Token Ratio
BEEG/SUI is a standard 50/50 pool. You must deposit equal-value amounts of both tokens based on the current market price at the time of deposit. For example: if BEEG is priced at $0.00002 and SUI at $2.00, depositing 5 million BEEG (worth ~$100) requires you to simultaneously deposit 50 SUI (also worth ~$100).
Calculate this before initiating the transaction. The Cetus interface will calculate the second token amount automatically once you enter the first.
Step 4: Connect Your Wallet to Cetus Protocol
Open the Cetus Protocol interface and click "Connect Wallet" in the upper right corner. Select your Sui wallet and approve the connection request. Ensure you are on the official Cetus domain to avoid phishing sites.
Step 5: Locate the BEEG/SUI Pool
Navigate to the Pools or Liquidity section on Cetus. Search for "BEEG" or paste the BEEG contract address directly to find the correct pool. Cross-reference the contract address with BEEG's official channels before proceeding — fake pools do exist.
Step 6: Set Your Price Range and Add Liquidity
This is the most consequential decision in the CLMM model. Per
Cetus DLMM documentation, you have two primary approaches:
Full Range: Spreads your liquidity across all price levels, equivalent to traditional AMM behavior. Lower capital efficiency, but your position remains active regardless of where the price moves. Recommended for beginners and for highly volatile assets like BEEG.
Custom Range: Concentrates your liquidity within a specific price band you define. Higher capital efficiency when the price stays in range, but your position stops earning fees if the price moves outside your range.
For BEEG, a meme coin with a documented history of extreme price swings, Full Range is the lower-complexity, lower-management-burden option. Custom ranges require active monitoring and repositioning.
Enter your BEEG or SUI amount. The interface will auto-calculate the corresponding token quantity. Review all parameters carefully, then confirm and approve the wallet transaction.
Step 7: Receive Your LP Position NFT
Once the transaction is confirmed on-chain, Cetus issues an NFT to your wallet that represents your liquidity position. Per
Cetus official documentation, it typically takes a few minutes for the position to appear in the interface. Do not transfer or discard this NFT — it is the only claim to your deposited funds and accumulated fees.
Step 8: Monitor and Manage Your Position
Adding liquidity is not a set-and-forget strategy. Periodic review is required:
Check whether your current APR remains attractive relative to impermanent loss risk
For custom ranges: verify whether your position is still active (in-range)
Review accumulated fees and decide whether to compound or withdraw
Assess whether market conditions have changed materially since your entry
Impermanent Loss: The Risk You Cannot Skip
Before depositing anything, you must understand impermanent loss (IL). This is not a theoretical edge case — for a high-volatility meme coin like BEEG, it is the dominant risk factor in any LP strategy.
As explained in
dCentral's LP risk guide, impermanent loss occurs because the AMM algorithm constantly rebalances the token ratio in your pool. When one asset appreciates significantly, the protocol automatically sells your appreciating asset and buys more of the depreciating one to maintain balance. The result: your LP position's value is worth less than it would have been if you had simply held the tokens outside the pool.
Simplified example:
You deposit $100 of BEEG and $100 of SUI into the pool (total: $200)
BEEG 4x in price; the AMM rebalances automatically
Your LP position is worth approximately $400 — but if you had held the original tokens, they would be worth $500
The $100 difference is impermanent loss
The "impermanent" label refers to the fact that the loss reverses if prices return to their original ratio. But if you withdraw while prices have moved, the loss becomes permanent.
According to
Memeburn's on-chain analysis, BEEG's market cap is approximately $83,000, meaning a single $5,000–$10,000 sell order can move the price 10%–20%. In conditions this extreme, the impermanent loss exposure for LPs far exceeds what's typical for liquid blue-chip pairs. Fee income is only a positive outcome if it consistently exceeds the impermanent loss on your position — and for micro-cap meme coin pools, that is not guaranteed.
Risk Summary
Impermanent Loss: BEEG's extreme volatility creates unusually large IL exposure. Understand this fully before entering.
Liquidity Risk: With real daily volume around $360, the pool is extremely thin. Even modest LP positions represent a significant share of total pool depth, meaning slippage on entry and exit can be substantial.
Smart Contract Risk: All DeFi protocols carry exploit risk. Cetus experienced a major hack in May 2025 and has since improved its security posture, but residual risk remains.
Ecosystem Risk: BEEG is native to the Sui blockchain. Any network disruption, upgrade, or adverse development affecting Sui will directly impact BEEG LP positions.
Total Loss Risk: BEEG has already fallen over 98% from its all-time high. The capital you deploy into LP can go to zero. Only deploy what you can afford to lose entirely.
MEXC Crypto Pulse Research Team's Independent Take
The LP opportunity for BEEG is structurally coherent — providing liquidity to a Sui-native meme coin that has real CEX listings and demonstrable on-chain trading activity is a legitimate way to generate incremental yield on a speculative position. That framing is accurate.
What often gets glossed over, however, are three structural realities that matter significantly for anyone actually considering this strategy.
First, the pool is almost comically thin. With real daily volume of approximately $360, most retail LP positions will represent a non-trivial fraction of total pool depth. This means two things: your individual influence on pool pricing is larger than you think, and the absolute fee revenue generated per dollar of LP capital is proportionally lower than the advertised APR percentages might suggest during low-volume periods.
Second, CLMM concentrated liquidity is a sophisticated tool that demands active management. For BEEG — a token that has moved across several orders of magnitude in its short history — setting a custom price range is as likely to leave your capital idle outside the active range as it is to generate superior returns. Full Range removes this complexity at the cost of capital efficiency.
Third, the LP vs. HODL decision hinges entirely on market regime. In a sideways or moderately trending market where BEEG consolidates, the accumulated fees can meaningfully outperform passive holding. In a directional move — whether a sharp rally or a sharp sell-off — impermanent loss will almost certainly overwhelm fee income. Entering an LP position in BEEG requires a view not just on the token but on the shape of the market ahead.
Our practical guidance: if you are testing this strategy, start with Full Range, size the position at a level where total loss is genuinely acceptable, and build in a calendar reminder to reassess every two weeks. This is an active DeFi strategy wearing passive clothing.
FAQ
Q1: Do I need both BEEG and SUI to participate in the LP?
Yes. The BEEG/SUI pool requires you to deposit both tokens at equal current market value. If you only hold BEEG, you can sell a portion for SUI on
MEXC before withdrawing both to your Sui wallet.
Q2: Are trading fees credited to my position in real time?
Yes. Cetus accrues fees to your position with each swap that passes through the pool. You can claim accumulated fees at any time, independently of removing your liquidity principal.
Q3: Can I withdraw my liquidity at any time?
Yes. Cetus pools have no mandatory lock-up periods. When you withdraw, you receive tokens in the proportion currently held by the pool, which may differ from what you originally deposited if prices have shifted.
Q4: When does LP outperform simply holding BEEG?
LP tends to outperform HODL when BEEG's price consolidates within a range, allowing fee income to accumulate without triggering significant impermanent loss. When BEEG makes a strong directional move in either direction, simply holding is typically the better outcome.
Q5: Can I provide only SUI without BEEG?
Not in standard CLMM full-range mode. Both tokens are required. Some CLMM implementations allow single-sided liquidity under specific conditions (e.g., price at range boundary), but these are complex edge cases not recommended for entry-level LP participants.
Q6: Is Cetus Protocol safe to use?
Cetus was exploited in May 2025 for $223 million and has since executed a recovery plan and open-sourced its code. No DeFi protocol is risk-free. The appropriate response is not to avoid it entirely, but to size your position relative to your actual risk tolerance.
Q7: Where is the best place to buy BEEG before entering the LP?
MEXC offers BEEG trading with zero spot trading fees and the deepest CEX liquidity depth available for this pair.
Disclaimer
This article is produced by the MEXC Crypto Pulse team for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment, financial, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency investments — particularly meme tokens such as BEEG — carry extreme risk, including the total loss of principal. Liquidity mining introduces additional risks including impermanent loss, smart contract vulnerabilities, and pool illiquidity. Always conduct your own independent research before making financial decisions. Past yield rates do not guarantee future performance. MEXC, as a centralized exchange, bears no custodial or operational responsibility for any user's DeFi liquidity provision activities.
About the Author
This article was written by the
MEXC Crypto Pulse Team — the research and content division of
MEXC, one of the world's leading cryptocurrency exchanges. The team specializes in Sui, Solana, and emerging DeFi ecosystem analysis, producing data-driven content for a global crypto audience.
Sources