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If you've spent some time trading derivatives, you've definitely come across something called the funding fee. Honestly, it can be a bit confusing at first, but it's actually a pretty simple mechanism.
In short, there’s a cost to keeping your leveraged position open. This cost is called the funding fee. It’s calculated roughly every 8 hours and paid three times a day. Rarely, depending on market conditions, it can be paid four times.
But here’s where it gets interesting. The amount of this fee isn’t fixed. It varies based on the price difference between the spot market and the futures market. If the spot price is higher, it usually indicates that short positions are dominant. In such cases, the funding rate turns negative.
A market dominated by short positions means there’s more selling pressure on that pair. As the price gap widens, investors in short positions have to pay more in funding fees. A portion of these fees is transferred to those holding long positions. The system tries to balance things this way.
There’s one more very important point: the market often moves against the majority. So, taking a position when the funding rate is high can be a risky strategy. Instead, it’s more sensible to use funding data as an indicator. Rather than relying solely on market signals, it’s a metric you should look at to get a sense of the overall market sentiment.