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Funding is a mechanism for balancing the futures market.
Funding is a system in which traders pay fees to each other rather than to the exchange. It’s not just a fee – it’s a tool that maintains the balance between supply and demand in the derivatives market.
How the funding payment system works
The principle of funding is based on simple logic: if the majority of traders are in a long position, the price of the futures contract can diverge upward from the spot price. To prevent this, those in long positions pay those in short positions. This happens several times a day – payments are automatically deducted from traders’ accounts.
The opposite situation develops when the majority opens short positions. Then funding becomes negative: short sellers pay, as their imbalance pulls the price down relative to the spot.
Direction of payments depending on market imbalance
The key point: funding is not charity, but a market mechanism. When funding is positive, long holders lose part of their profits on fees. When funding is negative, short sellers lose. The amount of the payment depends on the strength of the imbalance: the greater the tilt in one direction, the higher the funding rate.
Why funding is necessary for the market
The main goal of funding is to maintain the connection between the futures price and the spot price. Without this mechanism, the price of futures would quickly deviate from the true value of the asset, creating arbitrage opportunities and destabilizing the market. Funding acts like a stabilizer that gently brings prices back to equilibrium.
What traders need to know about funding
It’s important for newcomers to remember several key points about funding. First, these payments are deducted every few hours – usually every 8 hours on major exchanges. Second, even if the price is not moving, your account may change due to funding. This means that funding is a real cost of holding a position that needs to be considered in your strategy.
High positive funding often signals that the crowd has already entered a position and the market is overheated. Experienced traders use the funding level as an indicator of market sentiment: extremely high values can foreshadow a correction.