This dashboard details the funding rates of crypto currencies including open interest. This information is provided for individual cryptocurrencies and also for the crypto market as a whole. This makes it possible to identify situations with positive or negative funding rates.
Average Funding Rates
Highest Funding Rates
Lowest Funding Rates
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Cryptocurrency Funding Rates
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Exchanges
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About Funding Rates
How do crypto funding rates impact long and short positions?
Funding rates determine which side-longs or shorts-pays the other. Positive rates mean longs pay shorts; negative rates mean shorts pay longs. This affects the cost of holding positions and can influence traders to adjust leverage or exit trades when funding becomes expensive.
How do crypto funding rates differ between perpetual futures and traditional futures?
Traditional futures have expiry dates that naturally align prices with spot at settlement. Perpetual futures never expire, so funding rates act as the mechanism that keeps them anchored to the spot price. This continuous payment system makes perpetuals more sensitive to market sentiment and leverage.
Do funding rates predict future price movements?
Funding rates don’t directly predict price, but they highlight market imbalance. Persistently high or low funding may signal overcrowded long or short positions, increasing the likelihood of a reversal or volatility spike. Traders often use funding as a sentiment indicator, not a standalone predictor.
Why do different exchanges show different funding rates?
Each exchange uses its own formula, premium index, and underlying data sources. Differences in liquidity, volatility, and trader positioning also influence rate calculations. As a result, the same asset can have varying funding rates across platforms at any given time.
Are funding rates the same as margin interest or trading fees?
No-funding rates are peer-to-peer payments exchanged between traders, not fees collected by the exchange. Margin interest is charged by the platform for borrowed capital, and trading fees apply to executed orders. Funding is unique to perpetual contracts and reflects market sentiment, not platform revenue.