What funding rate charts show
Funding rate charts display the periodic payment rate over time. They help you understand market sentiment and positioning trends.
- Y-axis: Funding rate (usually expressed as a percentage, e.g., 0.01% = 1 basis point).
- X-axis: Time (each point represents a funding interval, typically 8 hours).
- Positive values (above zero): Longs pay shorts.
- Negative values (below zero): Shorts pay longs.
Reading the patterns
Funding rates reflect supply/demand for leverage. Here's what common patterns suggest:
- Sustained high positive funding: Crowded long positioning. Longs are paying to hold. Can signal euphoria or potential squeeze risk.
- Sustained negative funding: Crowded short positioning. Shorts are paying. Can signal fear or potential short squeeze.
- Funding near zero: Balanced positioning. Neither side paying significantly.
- Funding spikes: Sharp moves often follow large price moves or liquidation cascades.
Using funding as a trading signal
Some traders use extreme funding as a contrarian signal. But be careful—extremes can persist.
- Very high positive funding may precede a pullback (longs get exhausted), but it's not guaranteed.
- Very negative funding may precede a bounce (shorts get squeezed), but bear markets can grind.
- Funding is one input, not a standalone signal. Combine with price action, volume, and other metrics.
Never trade funding alone. It's a positioning indicator, not a price predictor.
Comparing funding across exchanges
Funding rates differ by venue due to index composition, clamp rules, and trader positioning. Comparing across exchanges can reveal dislocations.
- If one exchange has much higher funding, traders may be more crowded there.
- Arbitrageurs may exploit cross-exchange funding differences.
- PerpHQ lets you compare funding across venues side by side.
Related pages
- Funding mechanics: Perpetual Funding Rate Explained
- Live funding: /funding
- Exchange comparison: /exchanges