The desired effect of the compensation capacitor is to feed back some of the output signal back into an earlier stage. However signals can flow both ways. As the gain of the second stage drops at high frequencies, the signal at the left side of the capacitor can be larger than that on the right side. As a result, signal flow reverses and now the output is driven more by the compensation capacitor than the output stage. This has two effects. First, the gain levels off, which creates a zero as can be seen by examining the magnitude in a Bode plot. Second, by bypassing the output stage, which is inverting, the sign of the signal reverses. This creates an additional 90 degrees of phase shift. In effect, has the look of a zero if you examine the magnitude of the gain versus frequency, but it has the look of a pole if you examine the phase. In reality this is a right-hand plane zero (or RHPZ or positive zero).
To increase the frequency of the RHPZ so that it does not interfere with the stability of the loop, the designer has connected the compensation capacitor to a low-impedance node. The signal level will be relatively small there, reducing the effect of the feed-forward path through the capacitor. This will substantially raise the frequency of the RHPZ to the point where it is well beyond the unity gain frequency. With this modification, the RHPZ no longer degrades the stability of a loop built with the OTA.
For more, see
https://www.allaboutcircuits.com/technical-articles/the-right-half-plane-zero-an...-Ken