Why Perpetual Futures Became Crypto’s Most-Traded Instrument

Guides 2026-05-18 17:36

Why Perpetual Futures Became Crypto’s Most-Traded Instrument

Perpetual futures are the most heavily traded instrument in crypto.

On any given day, they move more dollar volume than spot Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH) put together.

Yet most people who run into them on Hyperliquid or a centralized exchange treat them like a juiced-up spot trade. They miss the hidden fee ticking away in the background every eight hours.

That fee is called the funding rate, and it's what really sets perpetuals apart from anything else you've likely traded.

This piece walks through what perpetual futures actually are, how the funding rate works, what pushes it around, and when reaching for a perpetual makes sense — versus when it quietly bleeds your position dry.

TL;DR

  • Perpetual futures are derivative contracts that track an asset's price with no expiry date, kept in line with spot price by a recurring funding payment between longs and shorts.
  • The funding rate is charged every eight hours (on most venues) and flows from the side of the market that is overweight to the side that is underweight, creating an automatic rebalancing mechanism.
  • Understanding funding is not optional, it is the single biggest hidden cost for leveraged crypto traders who hold positions longer than a few hours.

What A Perpetual Future Actually Is

A perpetual future, sometimes called a perpetual swap, is a contract that lets you speculate on an asset's price without ever owning the asset itself.

You agree to buy or sell at the current market price, but the contract has no settlement date. It just rolls forward indefinitely, until you close it or get liquidated.

That "no expiry" design is the real break from traditional futures.

A standard futures contract on Bitcoin expires on a fixed date. At that point, buyer and seller either settle in cash or swap the underlying asset. So a traditional futures price naturally drifts toward spot as expiry approaches.

With a perpetual, there's no expiry to do that work — so the convergence has to be engineered artificially.

A perpetual future is a derivative with no settlement date. The funding rate is the mechanism that stops its price from drifting permanently away from the underlying spot market.

The mechanism that does that work is the funding rate. Every eight hours (the standard interval used by most venues, including Hyperliquid and the major centralized exchanges), traders on the heavier side of the market pay traders on the lighter side. If more capital is long than short, longs pay shorts. If more capital is short than long, shorts pay longs. This cost pressure nudges the perpetual's price back toward spot continuously, replacing the convergence that an expiry date would otherwise provide.

Also Read: Mysterious Whale Slams $50M Short On ETH, Pairs It With $25M BTC Long

Why Perpetual Futures Became Crypto’s Most-Traded Instrument

How The Funding Rate Is Actually Calculated

The funding rate isn't arbitrary. Most exchanges derive it from two pieces: an interest rate component and a premium component.

The interest rate component is a small fixed baseline — typically 0.01% per eight-hour period on most venues — representing the cost of capital in the underlying markets. It's usually small enough to ignore.

The premium component is where the action is.

It measures how far the perpetual's market price has drifted from the spot index price over the funding interval. If the perpetual has been trading at a consistent premium — say $78,500 while spot Bitcoin sits at $78,000 — the premium component is positive, and longs pay shorts.

If the perpetual has been trading at a discount, shorts pay longs.

The formula most venues publish looks roughly like this:

Funding Rate = Interest Rate Component + Clamp(Premium Index, -0.05%, 0.05%)

The clamp limits the single-period rate from moving too far in either direction. In practice, during heavy bull runs or extreme fear events, funding can hit the maximum clamp value repeatedly across multiple periods, making holding a perpetual extremely expensive on the crowded side.

During the strongest bull moves in 2024 and early 2025, annualized funding rates on Bitcoin perpetuals reached above 100% on some venues, meaning longs were effectively paying more than their entire position value over the course of a year just to maintain the trade.

The rate is expressed per eight-hour period and is usually small, around 0.01% to 0.05% when markets are calm. That sounds trivial. But compounded across dozens of periods per week, particularly on a leveraged position, it becomes a significant drag that directional traders rarely account for in their profit and loss calculations.

Also Read: Bitcoin's $78K Drop Looks Suspicious, Open Interest Tells The Story

Open Interest, Long-Short Ratio, And What They Signal

Open interest is the total dollar value of all perpetual contracts currently open on a given market. It is one of the most useful data points for understanding the positioning of the market at any moment.

When open interest rises alongside price, it generally signals that new money is entering on the long side. When open interest falls as price rises, it can suggest shorts are being squeezed out rather than fresh longs entering, which is a structurally weaker rally. When open interest rises as price falls, short sellers are piling in. When it falls with price, longs are closing or being liquidated.

The long-short ratio is a related metric. On most venues, it shows the proportion of accounts, or sometimes the proportion of contract volume, that is currently positioned long versus short. A heavily skewed long-short ratio in either direction can indicate a crowded trade that is vulnerable to a sharp reversal, because the liquidation of those positions happens mechanically and can amplify price moves in the opposite direction.

Both metrics are publicly available on major platforms and are worth checking before entering a perpetual position with any significant size. A high funding rate combined with an extremely skewed long ratio is a common setup before a sharp flush to the downside, as the cost of holding eventually forces marginal longs to close.

Also Read: Quantum Computers Could Break Crypto Before 2033, Hoskinson Sees 50% Odds

Liquidation, Margin, And How Leverage Multiplies Risk

When you open a perpetual futures position, you post margin. Margin is the collateral that backs your trade. Most venues offer both cross margin, where your entire account balance backs each position, and isolated margin, where only a defined portion of capital is at risk for that specific trade.

Leverage is the multiplier that determines how large a position you can control relative to your margin. At 10x leverage, posting $1,000 in margin gives you $10,000 of market exposure. This cuts both ways. A 1% adverse move in the underlying becomes a 10% loss on your margin. A 10% adverse move wipes the position entirely, which triggers liquidation.

Liquidation happens automatically. When your unrealized losses reduce your remaining margin below the maintenance margin threshold (a minimum collateral level set by the exchange, typically a fraction of the initial margin requirement), the exchange or protocol force-closes your position to prevent your balance going negative. On decentralized venues like Hyperliquid, liquidation is handled by an on-chain liquidation engine rather than a centralized risk team.

The practical implication is that leverage does not change the direction of the market. It only changes how much of a move you can tolerate before losing your stake. At 20x leverage, a 5% adverse move against you is enough to trigger liquidation from a standard margin level. Most experienced traders use far lower leverage than exchanges technically permit, precisely because funding payments, slippage, and small adverse moves compound quickly at high multiples.

Liquidation is not a loss that can be recovered from within the same position. Once the engine closes your trade, the margin is gone. Risk management before entry, not after, is the only meaningful protection.

Also Read: XRP ETFs Hit Record $1.39B But Token Loses 4th Spot To BNB

Perpetuals On Centralized Venues Versus Decentralized Platforms

For most of crypto's history, perpetual futures were only available on centralized exchanges. Platforms handled custody, matched orders in a centralized order book, and managed risk through their own engines. The user traded against other users with the exchange acting as counterparty guarantor.

The rise of on-chain perpetual platforms has changed that. Protocols like Hyperliquid now run order-book-based perpetual markets entirely on-chain, settling trades without a centralized custodian. Hyperliquid specifically built a custom Layer 1 chain optimized for low-latency order matching, targeting performance levels previously thought impossible for decentralized systems.

There are meaningful tradeoffs on each side:

  • Centralized venues offer deeper liquidity on major pairs, faster onboarding, and customer support. But they require trusting the exchange with custody of your funds. Exchange insolvency or withdrawal freezes, as seen with several major platforms in 2022 and 2023, are real risks.
  • Decentralized perpetual platforms give you self-custodied control of your margin and on-chain transparency of positions and liquidations. But they can have thinner liquidity on smaller pairs, and smart contract risk replaces counterparty risk. Gas costs and chain-specific nuances add friction for new users.

The choice between them comes down to position size, risk tolerance, and how much you trust a given custodian. For large institutional positions, centralized venues still dominate. For users who prioritize self-custody and transparency, on-chain perpetuals have become a serious alternative.

Also Read: Hyperliquid Rejects Wall Street's Manipulation Claims As HYPE Drops 14%

Why Perpetual Futures Became Crypto’s Most-Traded Instrument

Basis Trading, Funding Arbitrage, And How Professionals Use Perpetuals

Not everyone using perpetuals is taking directional risk. A significant portion of open interest at any time is held by traders running what is called basis trading or funding rate arbitrage.

The strategy works like this. A trader buys the spot asset (going long at the real price) and simultaneously opens a short perpetual position of equivalent size. The two legs cancel out the directional price exposure. No matter where Bitcoin moves, the gain on one leg approximately offsets the loss on the other. What remains is the funding rate flowing into the short leg.

When funding is strongly positive, meaning longs are paying shorts, this strategy collects that payment every eight hours with near-zero directional risk. It is sometimes called a "cash and carry" trade, though in crypto the settlement mechanics differ from traditional commodity carry trades.

The strategy's risk is not price risk. It is funding risk (funding can flip negative, meaning you start paying instead of collecting), liquidity risk (exiting both legs simultaneously at favorable prices can be difficult in fast-moving markets), and counterparty or smart contract risk depending on the venue.

Funding arbitrage is one reason very high funding rates tend to be self-correcting over time. As the rate climbs, more capital flows in to short the perpetual and buy spot, which presses the perpetual price back toward spot and reduces the premium that was driving funding in the first place. This dynamic gives sophisticated observers a way to read the market: persistently high funding that is not being arbitraged away suggests either a supply-constrained spot market or elevated risk perception among potential arbitrageurs.

Also Read: AKT Sheds 12% In 24 Hours, Long Traders Lose $56K In Flush

Who Actually Needs To Understand Perpetual Futures

If you only buy and hold spot crypto through a wallet or a simple exchange account, perpetual futures are not something you need to use. But they are something you should understand, because the funding rate and open interest data from perpetual markets are among the most useful real-time sentiment signals available for any crypto asset.

When Bitcoin perpetual funding spikes above 0.1% per eight-hour period while price is also rising sharply, history suggests the move is often nearing a local top.

When funding turns deeply negative during a price decline, crowded short positions can set up a rapid short squeeze rally. These signals do not guarantee anything, but they add meaningful context to price action that spot-only traders never see.

For active traders who already use leverage or plan to, perpetuals are effectively the standard instrument. They offer continuous exposure without managing roll dates, tight spreads on major pairs, and the ability to profit from downside moves as easily as upside moves.

The cost is the funding rate and the liquidation risk. Both are manageable with position sizing and honest accounting of what you are paying over time.

For DeFi-native users exploring platforms like Hyperliquid, perpetuals are increasingly the primary product. Understanding funding, open interest, and liquidation mechanics is not optional knowledge for that context. It is the baseline required to use the platform safely.

Also Read: Thorchain Opens $10M Compensation Portal After Multichain Exploit Drains Four Networks

Conclusion

Perpetual futures exist because crypto markets never close, and traders wanted an instrument without the friction of rolling quarterly contracts.

The funding rate was the elegant fix: a periodic payment that keeps the derivative anchored to the asset it tracks, with no settlement date forced on anyone.

That elegance comes with a real, ongoing cost — one most new users don't see until they've paid it several times over.

The core takeaway is simple. If you're long a perpetual during a stretch of elevated positive funding, you're paying a continuous fee to hold that position. If markets are calm and funding sits near zero, the cost is negligible. If you're on the right side of a high-funding environment, funding becomes income.

The instrument isn't inherently expensive or cheap. It's calibrated by the market's own positioning, which means reading funding data is the same as reading the market's appetite for risk.

Before placing a perpetual trade, check the current funding rate on your venue, the trend of that rate over recent periods, and the open interest behind it.

Those three data points, paired with a clear plan for the worst adverse move your margin can absorb, put you well ahead of most retail traders — the ones who open leveraged positions without ever asking what they're paying to hold them.

Read Next: Sui Holds The Line At $1.07 With Bears Doing Most Of The Talking

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This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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