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If you're involved in perpetual futures trading, there's a concept you absolutely must know: the funding rate. Many people surprisingly don't understand it well.
In simple terms, the funding rate is the fee exchanged periodically between long and short position holders. It functions as an incentive to keep the futures price aligned with the spot price when there's a divergence.
Here's how it works: when the funding rate is positive, traders holding long positions pay a fee to those holding short positions. Conversely, if it's negative, the opposite occurs. In other words, if the market is bullish, the side holding longs ends up paying.
The factors that determine the funding rate are mainly two. First is the interest rate, which reflects the cost difference between borrowing the base currency and the quote currency. For BTC/USD, it's the difference in funding costs between dollar funds and Bitcoin funds. Usually, this is small and stable.
The second factor is the premium index. This measures the difference between the perpetual contract price and the spot price. If the premium is positive, the futures are valued higher than the spot, indicating strong buying pressure. If negative, it indicates strong selling pressure.
Note that calculation methods vary across exchanges. For example, some large futures exchanges adopt a fixed interest rate model, with a default rate of 0.03% per day, paid in three installments every 8 hours.
From a risk management perspective, it's crucial to understand how the funding rate is calculated on your chosen exchange. Knowing how much fee you'll incur when holding a position beforehand is wise. Especially if you're holding a long position for a long time and the funding rate is positive and trending upward, it could unexpectedly increase your costs.
Having this knowledge makes your futures return calculations much more accurate.