Definition
Basis in crypto refers to the difference between the spot price and the futures price of the same asset.
- Positive basis (contango): Futures price > Spot price
- Negative basis (backwardation): Futures price < Spot price
Why It Matters
- Market Sentiment Indicator: Positive basis often signals bullish sentiment; negative basis suggests bearish expectations.
- Arbitrage Opportunities: Enables cash-and-carry strategies by exploiting price gaps.
- Funding Rate Influence: In perpetual futures, basis relates closely to funding rates.
- Risk Management: Helps assess hedging costs or futures premium/discount.
How It Works
- Identify spot price.
- Identify futures price (same asset, specific expiry).
- Calculate basis: Futures − Spot.
- Interpret (contango or backwardation).
- Annualize for longer-term analysis.
Example
ETH Spot: $3,000
3-Month Futures: $3,060
Basis = $60
Traders could borrow ETH at low interest, sell spot, buy futures, and capture convergence profit if costs are below $60.
Common Mistakes
- Ignoring funding rates
- Overlooking liquidity
- Miscalculating fees/borrowing costs
- Assuming automatic convergence
Quick Checklist
- Spot vs Futures price difference
- Contango or backwardation?
- Funding rate impact
- Liquidity depth
- Total costs
- Exit strategy
Related Terms
Spot Price
Futures Contract
Contango
Backwardation
Funding Rate
Cash-and-Carry Arbitrage
FAQs
- What is futures basis?
- The price difference between spot and futures.
- What does positive basis mean?
- Futures trade at a premium (contango).
- What does negative basis mean?
- Futures trade at a discount (backwardation).
- How is it calculated?
- Futures Price − Spot Price.
- Why is it important?
- Helps identify arbitrage, sentiment, and hedging costs.
Sources
CME Group, Coin Metrics, Investopedia, Binance Academy
Disclaimer
For informational purposes only. Crypto investments are volatile and high-risk.