The day before yesterday, I was watching the $BREV trend, and in the end, I decided to go long. After my order was filled yesterday, I saw the reaction today. At this position, I set a capital preservation stop-loss, mainly to capture a wave of funding rate. To be honest, I don't have much attachment to the future price trend; whatever it rises to is fine. Currently, the strategy is to stabilize the position and let the funding rate gradually contribute to the profit. Friends with similar ideas, this kind of operation is quite steady—both avoiding directional risk and profiting from the spread in funding rates.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
21 Likes
Reward
21
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ImpermanentTherapist
· 01-12 03:34
Fee Rate Bro, this wave of thinking is indeed refreshing and much more reliable than guessing the ups and downs.
View OriginalReply0
FloorSweeper
· 01-12 01:04
ngl this funding rate play is lowkey genius... while paper hands panic over price action you're just farming yield like a real degenerate lmao
Reply0
VitalikFanAccount
· 01-10 09:43
Rate arbitrage is really awesome, much more reliable than guessing the rise and fall blindly.
View OriginalReply0
TokenEconomist
· 01-09 09:52
actually, the funding rate arbitrage play here is basically applied microeconomics—you're essentially exploiting temporary market inefficiencies where perpetual traders are overpaying for leverage. think of it this way: long funding rates exist precisely because bulls are willing to pay bears to hold positions, ceteris paribus the direction doesn't matter if the carry covers your slippage costs.
Reply0
AirdropHarvester
· 01-09 09:45
Fee rate manipulator, I like this idea
View OriginalReply0
SeasonedInvestor
· 01-09 09:25
The funding rate is indeed stable, much more reliable than guessing the rise and fall blindly.
View OriginalReply0
NeonCollector
· 01-09 09:23
The fee rate arbitrage strategy is indeed more stable and much more comfortable than guessing ups and downs every day.
The day before yesterday, I was watching the $BREV trend, and in the end, I decided to go long. After my order was filled yesterday, I saw the reaction today. At this position, I set a capital preservation stop-loss, mainly to capture a wave of funding rate. To be honest, I don't have much attachment to the future price trend; whatever it rises to is fine. Currently, the strategy is to stabilize the position and let the funding rate gradually contribute to the profit. Friends with similar ideas, this kind of operation is quite steady—both avoiding directional risk and profiting from the spread in funding rates.