In the contract market, most people focus on the direction of price movements and trade aggressively, resulting in either huge profits or liquidation. But there is another way—arbitrage trading. It doesn't require you to guess the market direction; you just exploit pricing discrepancies in the market, with significantly lower risk than one-way positions.
**Cash and Futures Arbitrage: Wait for the Price Difference to Revert**
The principle is simple: the prices of the same asset in futures and spot markets are not always aligned. Opportunities often arise from the spread between Bitcoin perpetual contracts and spot prices.
Here's how it works—when the perpetual contract price is more than 3% above the spot index, for example, if the spot BTC is at 30,000 USDT and the contract is quoted at 31,000 USDT (a 3.3% premium), you can simultaneously buy 1 BTC in the spot market and open a short position of 1 BTC in the futures contract. When the spread narrows back to around 0.5%, you close both positions. After deducting fees, you can earn approximately 2.8%.
But there's a key point—short-term, the spread might continue to widen, so you need sufficient capital to avoid forced liquidation. Use 2-3x leverage on the short position to leave yourself a buffer.
**Funding Rate Arbitrage: The "Dividend" Mechanism of Perpetual Contracts**
Perpetual contracts have a unique feature called the funding rate, settled every 8 hours, which involves transfer fees between long and short positions. When the market is bullish (more longs), the funding rate is usually positive, meaning longs pay shorts—that's the arbitrage opportunity.
When the rate stays high, for example, over 0.05%, you can buy spot and open an equal-sized short contract simultaneously. Every 8 hours, you pay or receive the funding fee. With a 0.1% rate, three settlements a day, the annualized return can exceed 100%.
When choosing coins, opt for those with high trading volume and stable funding rates to avoid getting caught. Also, pay attention to the historical fluctuations of the funding rate—extremely high rates often signal market extremes and risk.
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fork_in_the_road
· 01-05 05:20
Arbitrage sounds good, but you need to have capital as a cushion. Ordinary retail investors simply can't play this game.
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LiquidityWhisperer
· 01-05 05:10
Arbitrage sounds good, but in practice, the capital pressure is really intense. One misstep and you could still get爆。
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I've tried fee rate arbitrage before. It looks like an annualized return of 100%, but when a black swan event hits, it can wipe you out completely. Mainly because it just crushes your mindset.
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Spot-futures arbitrage, to put it simply, is waiting for the market to correct. The premise is that you can withstand the intermediate volatility, which most people really can't handle.
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Low leverage sounds safe, but once the price difference widens in the opposite direction, how long does your capital get tied up? Have you considered the opportunity cost?
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Honestly, this kind of stable arbitrage method is suitable for big investors with idle funds. For retail investors with tight funds, it's better not to bother.
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Starting at a fee rate of 0.05%? I haven't seen such high fee rates recently. When the market is so flat, there's simply no opportunity.
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The key is that coins with high trading volume inherently have low fees. The small interest you earn isn't even enough for the platform to take, so whether you count it or not, you're at a loss.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 01-05 00:38
Rate arbitrage sounds good, but I'm worried about being caught off guard when the rate suddenly drops.
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RiddleMaster
· 01-02 23:50
Arbitrage sounds simple, but in practice it's full of pitfalls. What do you do when your funds are wiped out during the price gap correction?
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ThreeHornBlasts
· 01-02 23:50
Arbitrage sounds good, but I still think most people can't stick with it at all, always trying to buy the dip and sell at the top.
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ArbitrageBot
· 01-02 23:50
Arbitrage sounds stable, but very few people can truly stick to it without wavering. The biggest challenge is maintaining the right mindset.
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GmGmNoGn
· 01-02 23:46
Arbitrage sounds good, but how many can actually stick with it until they see profits? Most people still get liquidated.
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BrokeBeans
· 01-02 23:24
Sounds good, but what should I do when the fee rate suddenly plummets? I was scammed like that last time.
In the contract market, most people focus on the direction of price movements and trade aggressively, resulting in either huge profits or liquidation. But there is another way—arbitrage trading. It doesn't require you to guess the market direction; you just exploit pricing discrepancies in the market, with significantly lower risk than one-way positions.
**Cash and Futures Arbitrage: Wait for the Price Difference to Revert**
The principle is simple: the prices of the same asset in futures and spot markets are not always aligned. Opportunities often arise from the spread between Bitcoin perpetual contracts and spot prices.
Here's how it works—when the perpetual contract price is more than 3% above the spot index, for example, if the spot BTC is at 30,000 USDT and the contract is quoted at 31,000 USDT (a 3.3% premium), you can simultaneously buy 1 BTC in the spot market and open a short position of 1 BTC in the futures contract. When the spread narrows back to around 0.5%, you close both positions. After deducting fees, you can earn approximately 2.8%.
But there's a key point—short-term, the spread might continue to widen, so you need sufficient capital to avoid forced liquidation. Use 2-3x leverage on the short position to leave yourself a buffer.
**Funding Rate Arbitrage: The "Dividend" Mechanism of Perpetual Contracts**
Perpetual contracts have a unique feature called the funding rate, settled every 8 hours, which involves transfer fees between long and short positions. When the market is bullish (more longs), the funding rate is usually positive, meaning longs pay shorts—that's the arbitrage opportunity.
When the rate stays high, for example, over 0.05%, you can buy spot and open an equal-sized short contract simultaneously. Every 8 hours, you pay or receive the funding fee. With a 0.1% rate, three settlements a day, the annualized return can exceed 100%.
When choosing coins, opt for those with high trading volume and stable funding rates to avoid getting caught. Also, pay attention to the historical fluctuations of the funding rate—extremely high rates often signal market extremes and risk.