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Many people are confused about what the funding fee in futures trading actually is. Today, I will explain it clearly with a simple example.
First, the conclusion: the funding fee has nothing to do with the number of traders; it entirely depends on who has invested more money.
The tug-of-war game is the best analogy to explain this mechanism. One side has 1,000 kindergarten children desperately pulling to the left, while the other side has only 1 weightlifting champion pulling to the right. Although there is a huge difference in numbers, the champion can still pull the rope toward the right with all his strength. The exchange's logic is the same—it doesn't care how many people are long or short; it only looks at which side has a larger amount of capital.
The role of the funding fee is like the referee at the midpoint of the rope. When the price is forcibly pulled to one side, it activates a mechanism to bring the price back. How exactly does it work?
If the long side has a particularly large amount of capital, pushing the price up rapidly, the funding fee will increase, which is like punishing the longs and rewarding the shorts. Conversely, if the short side has accumulated too much capital, crashing the price, the funding fee will turn negative, punishing the shorts this time.
An extreme example: suppose you are the only person in the world opening a short position, but you directly invest 10 billion, while the other 10,000 long traders combined only invest 1 billion. The exchange's funding fee mechanism will still determine that you are on the winning side, and the price will follow downward. This is why in the crypto market, large capital movements can often directly influence market trends.