$PIPPINThis wave of market activity, some traders want to do some small operations—using bots to run funds fee arbitrage to break even, but when the market drops, they get liquidated directly by risk control, and this experience is indeed frustrating. Someone complained that the risk control department seems to be specifically targeting this type of strategy, but the real issue lies in the funds fee itself—when it rises so ridiculously, the risk control system will naturally act early to protect the account. If you really want to stabilize arbitrage funds fee, instead of blaming risk control, it's better to first look at whether the market rhythm and leverage ratio are problematic. Many exchanges have designed their funds fee mechanisms quite aggressively, which indeed leaves a lot of room for short-term arbitrage, but at the same time, the risks are also hidden deep.
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ChainDoctor
· 12-16 16:45
Ha, are you being harvested by risk control again? When the funding fee skyrockets, you still dare to run arbitrage. Aren't you asking for death?
Robots have no brains, and if you don't calculate the leverage ratio properly, you're even more brainless.
To put it simply, it's correct for exchanges to design aggressively. If you can't handle the risk yourself, don't blame the platform.
The funding fee market is too complicated; I really don't recommend engaging in short-term trading.
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LiquidityWitch
· 12-16 16:44
The liquidation of funding fee arbitrage... To put it simply, it's caused by greed. Risk control isn't intentionally causing trouble, and the leverage ratio wasn't calculated properly, so it's deserved.
Those who run bots for fee trading just want to make a guaranteed profit. When the market moves slightly, they start crying and shouting. It's really speechless.
I'm also baffled by the aggressive exchange mechanisms. Leaving some arbitrage space and asking users to bear the risk—this kind of trading... is a bit unprofitable.
Stop and check if your leverage has become exaggerated again. That's the real solution. Don't always blame risk control.
With funding fees rising so sharply, you still want to arbitrage safely? That's unrealistic, brother. If the market rhythm is off, you should stop.
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SandwichDetector
· 12-16 16:44
Funding fee arbitrage liquidated? Ha, isn't that just the price of greed? You should have kept some margin.
Risk control can't be blamed; the real issue is probably over-leveraging.
This round of market tells us one thing: arbitrage seems stable, but in reality, it's all traps.
Exchanges operate this way; you need to learn to dance with them rather than fight against them.
Robots running funding fee arbitrage sounds easy, but the market never gives free rides.
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RiddleMaster
· 12-16 16:29
Funding fees are really a trap; after a while, you'll get cut off by risk control.
Running bots to place orders like this will eventually lead to a crash; if you haven't thought through the leverage ratio, don't blame the system.
When funding fees spike, you should know that the risk is coming, instead of naively thinking you can arbitrage safely.
The exchange's design is indeed aggressive, but conversely, risk control is also protecting you.
Instead of blaming the risk control department, it's better to calculate the profit-to-risk ratio yourself first.
This arbitrage opportunity looks tempting on the surface, but in reality, it's a honey trap.
$PIPPINThis wave of market activity, some traders want to do some small operations—using bots to run funds fee arbitrage to break even, but when the market drops, they get liquidated directly by risk control, and this experience is indeed frustrating. Someone complained that the risk control department seems to be specifically targeting this type of strategy, but the real issue lies in the funds fee itself—when it rises so ridiculously, the risk control system will naturally act early to protect the account. If you really want to stabilize arbitrage funds fee, instead of blaming risk control, it's better to first look at whether the market rhythm and leverage ratio are problematic. Many exchanges have designed their funds fee mechanisms quite aggressively, which indeed leaves a lot of room for short-term arbitrage, but at the same time, the risks are also hidden deep.