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Crypto traders apply funding rate arbitrage to US equities

A fast-growing trade is bringing crypto-style funding arbitrage into U.S. equities, creating income streams that do not rely on stock prices moving up or down. By buying spot shares and shorting matching perpetual futures, traders are capturing funding payments that, in some cases, translate into annualized yields of several hundred percent.

How funding rate arbitrage works

Perpetual futures use a funding rate to keep contract prices in line with the underlying stock. When demand is higher on one side of the market, that side pays the other at regular intervals. This mechanism means traders can earn, or pay, a continuous funding fee depending on positioning.

Where long demand dominates, funding turns sharply positive. On one venue, Samsung Electronics perpetuals recently showed an annualized long funding rate of about 364%, Nokia around 403%, and BBX roughly 591%. On another platform, Dell was near 281%, GameStop 227%, and Zoom 287%, pointing to heavy appetite for leveraged long exposure.

On the other side, negative rates emerge where short interest outweighs longs. Eli Lilly’s funding rate is negative on both major venues, around −65% and −103% annualized. Apple shows no funding on one platform but about −14% on another, setting up cross-exchange arbitrage for traders who can execute in both markets at the same time.

Traders exploit delta-neutral structures

One trader known as Cbb is among those capitalizing on these dynamics. Cbb buys stocks such as Apple and Samsung while shorting their perpetual futures in equal size, aiming to eliminate price direction risk. The strategy relies on being “delta-neutral”: gains come from collecting funding, not from betting on whether shares rise or fall.

This approach has reportedly generated around 2.4 million U.S. dollars in recent months, with returns tied almost entirely to funding differentials. The structure effectively transfers funding fees from traders seeking leveraged equity exposure to those providing that exposure through hedged positions.

Institutions test equity perpetual strategies

Institutional groups are starting to adopt similar methods. Ethena, a blockchain-based stablecoin issuer, has modeled an expansion of its existing delta-neutral playbook into equity perpetuals. The firm estimates that such a move could produce annual revenues of 40 to 80 million dollars from funding income alone.

In Ethena’s case, the goal is not directional speculation but the generation of relatively stable on-chain yields to support its currency system. The firm’s analysis suggests that the opportunity in equity perpetuals is large compared with that in crypto derivatives, with Young of Ethena arguing that the equity perpetual market could be more than 30 times the size of the digital asset space.

Market structure and regulatory shift

The infrastructure to support this trade is growing rapidly. More than 7,000 equities are now available for both spot and perpetual trading, while open interest on decentralized platforms continues to climb. Hyperliquid, a decentralized exchange focused on perpetuals linked to real-world assets, saw open interest double in two months to a record 2.65 billion dollars by late May 2026, reflecting strong demand for 24/7 equity and commodity exposure.

A key regulatory milestone arrived on May 29, 2026, when the Commodity Futures Trading Commission approved the first perpetual futures contracts on a U.S.-regulated venue. Kraken followed by announcing plans to launch CFTC-regulated perpetual futures for U.S. traders within a month, a move that could shift a significant portion of this activity from offshore venues into the domestic market.

This formalization is drawing in more established financial players. Coinbase Ventures recently purchased ENA tokens and partnered with Ethena to build new on-chain savings products that plug these yield sources into a broader financial ecosystem.

Why high funding rates may not last

Historically, funding-driven returns tend to shrink as more capital enters arbitrage trades. Bitcoin perpetuals once offered annualized funding around 18%, but that level fell to roughly 9% as exchange-traded funds and structured products enabled more efficient arbitrage.

Analysts expect a similar pattern in U.S. equities. As additional capital chases high funding rates in stocks, competitive pressure is likely to compress spreads. For now, the elevated payments look like an early-phase anomaly in the integration of crypto-style derivatives with conventional equity markets.

Risks behind the “market-neutral” label

Although the strategy aims to cancel out price direction, it introduces other forms of risk that require active management. Funding rates themselves are variable. They can swing sharply or flip from positive to negative, turning a seemingly steady income stream into a cost, particularly when leverage is involved.

Operational challenges add another layer. Maintaining a clean hedge demands precise, often simultaneous execution in spot and futures markets. Delays can cause slippage that erodes profits. Each leg of the trade also faces its own margin and liquidation risk, as exchanges typically monitor positions separately rather than as a netted portfolio.

A temporary window for arbitrage

The elevated funding payments now available in equity perpetuals effectively represent a transfer from traders who want leveraged exposure to those who can provide it through fully hedged positions. That transfer creates a market-neutral income stream built on the supply and demand for leverage, not on the performance of the underlying stocks.

With more platforms listing equity perpetuals, regulators approving onshore products, and institutions exploring structured versions of these trades, the window for unusually high funding-based yields may narrow. Until competitive pressures fully take hold, traders able to build and maintain delta-neutral positions remain positioned to capture outsized funding income in a market that is still adjusting to this new structure.


To deepen your understanding of equity funding rate arbitrage, explore how crypto-style mechanisms create yield opportunities across markets.

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