
On June 4, Ether’s 8-hour network-wide average funding rate was only 0.0028%, according to CoinGlass. This low rate suggests traders were not very sure about the market’s direction. Usually, higher leverage shows that traders have more confidence in how an asset will move.
This average considers all major exchanges, but the figures differ significantly from one platform to another. For instance, Binance had 0.0047%, OKX 0.003%, and Gate 0.0052%. Bybit surprisingly showed -0.0013%, according to ChainCatcher.
These variations matter because they show there are no coordinated directional bets. Instead, it shows more fragmentation when funding rates are negative on one exchange and positive on others.
How Ethereum funding rates reflect market sentiment and leverage demand
Perpetual futures contracts do not have an expiry date. To prevent their price from drifting far from the spot price, exchanges use funding payments that transfer value between long and short holders at regular intervals (usually every eight hours).
If the funding rate is positive, those with long positions pay those with short positions, and when it’s negative, the shorts pay up instead.
According to CoinMarketCap’s glossary, this setup “incentivizes people to open a position on the less popular side, hence driving the price toward the spot price.”
At a funding rate of 0.0028% per eight-hour window, that’s around 0.0084% daily, or about 3% annualized. This means the cost for holding leveraged long exposure on Ethereum isn’t much.
According to CoinGlass, when the funding rate is near zero, it means there’s equal demand for both long and short positions in perpetual markets.
Why ETH funding rates matter beyond crypto derivatives markets
High funding rates in crypto markets impact everyone, not just professional traders. When they’re very positive, it gets expensive to hold leveraged long positions, dampening speculators’ interest in buying ETH. If rates surge, major sell-offs occur, causing wider price fluctuations and dragging down connected assets as well.
At the current level, the risks aren’t huge. Bitget shows that at around 0.0035% rate, there was only a mild bias towards long positions, with no extreme beliefs. The current rate of 0.0028% is even milder and closer to neutral.
The exchange-level disparity adds a layer of complexity for institutional participants and arbitrage desks. A negative rate on Bybit alongside positive rates elsewhere creates what CoinGlass describes as “cross-exchange differences” that can generate “carry or arbitrage opportunities.”
Capital flowing to exploit those gaps affects the liquidity distribution across global trading venues.
What ETH traders should monitor beyond funding rates
A single eight-hour snapshot carries limited predictive weight. As CoinEx Academy says, the funding rate is just a “sentiment and positioning proxy,” not a standalone price predictor.
Also, they note that positive funding can last for weeks during strong uptrends without sparking a reversal.
Trajectory matters more here. When funding goes up, and open interest grows over time, it means new leveraged longs are jumping in. That increases the number of positions at risk if prices fall.
When funding falls toward zero alongside declining open interest, existing positions are closing and the market is resetting.
According to ChainCatcher, ETH open interest dropped 5.06% in the past 24 hours, hinting at unwinding rather than setting up fresh positions. With funding nearly flat, this looks like a derivatives market waiting to see what happens next.