BitInsight
BitInsight

Hedging Strategies

2026-01-287 min read read

What is Hedging

Hedging is opening a position in the opposite direction to reduce risk on an existing position. Similar to insurance, you pay a cost to protect against risk.

If you're holding BTC long-term but worried about short-term downside, you can reduce that risk using derivatives without selling your spot holdings. This is the core value of hedging.

Hedging is not about maximizing returns - it's about managing risk. When you hedge, you reduce potential gains on the upside, but you also reduce losses on the downside.


Hedging Spot with Futures

Basic Structure

Holding spot BTC while opening an equal-sized BTC futures short makes your position neutral regardless of price movement.

Price MovementSpot P&LFutures Short P&LNet
+10%+$10,000-$10,000$0
-10%-$10,000+$10,000$0

Full Hedge vs Partial Hedge

Full Hedge (100%):

  • Futures short for entire spot quantity
  • Completely eliminates price movement impact
  • Effectively the same as having sold your spot
  • Use case: Eliminating price exposure without a tax event, or temporary protection

Partial Hedge (e.g., 50%):

  • Futures short for half of spot quantity
  • Losses cut in half on downside, but gains also halved on upside
  • Use case: Reducing downside risk while maintaining some upside participation

Costs

  • Funding rate: Short positions receive or pay funding. Positive funding means shorts earn; negative means shorts pay
  • Trading fees: Fees for opening/closing positions
  • Margin opportunity cost: Capital tied up as futures margin

Hedging with Put Options

Protective Put

Holding spot BTC + buying BTC put options. Unlike futures hedging, this protects the downside while maintaining upside gains.

Price MovementSpot P&LPut OptionNet
+20%+$20,000Expires worthless (-premium)+$20,000 - premium
-20%-$20,000+$20,000 - premium-premium only

Cost and Effect

  • Cost: Put option premium (like an insurance premium)
  • Maximum loss: Limited to put option premium
  • Upside participation: Unlimited (reduced by premium amount)

Put option premiums vary by strike price and expiry:

  • At-the-money (ATM) puts: Expensive but complete protection
  • Out-of-the-money (OTM) puts: Cheaper but no protection until a certain decline

Futures Hedge vs Put Hedge

AspectFutures Short HedgePut Option Hedge
CostLow (fees + funding)High (premium)
Upside participationNone (offset)Yes
FlexibilityRequires active managementAutomatic protection until expiry
Liquidation riskYes (futures position)None
Best forShort-term definite protectionUncertain but prepared for decline

Delta Neutral Strategy

Concept

Delta neutral is a strategy that maintains the portfolio's total delta at zero to pursue returns regardless of price direction.

Spot + Futures Short (Basic Form)

The simplest delta neutral: buying spot + shorting equal amount of futures.

  • Price direction irrelevant
  • With positive funding rate: Short position receives funding = profit
  • With negative funding rate: Short position pays funding = cost

Sources of Return

SourceDescriptionCondition
Funding rateShorts receive during positive fundingFunding rate > 0
BasisFutures convergence profit in contangoWhen using dated futures

Funding Rate Arbitrage

Strategy Structure

When funding rate is positive (longs pay shorts):

  1. Buy 1 BTC spot ($100,000)
  2. Short 1 BTC perpetual futures ($100,000, 1x leverage)
  3. Price movements offset, making you price-neutral
  4. Receive funding every 8 hours

Return Calculation Example

Funding rate 0.03% (per 8 hours), position size $100,000:

PeriodCollectionsFunding Revenue
1 day3x$90
1 week21x$630
1 month90x$2,700
1 year1,095x$32,850

This represents approximately 32.8% annualized return. Of course, funding rates fluctuate, so actual returns vary.

Risk Factors

Funding Rate Direction Change: If funding turns negative, shorts must pay instead of receive. In this case, you need to close the position, and entry/exit trading fees become losses.

Liquidation Risk: If margin for the futures short becomes insufficient, liquidation can occur. Even at 1x leverage, liquidation is possible during sharp price surges if not using cross margin. Maintain sufficient margin.

Exchange Risk: Running spot and futures on the same exchange means both are at risk if the exchange fails or goes bankrupt. Spreading across exchanges adds operational complexity.

Slippage and Fees: Entry/exit slippage and trading fees occur. Funding rate revenue must significantly exceed these costs to be worthwhile.

Execution Conditions

Consider funding rate arbitrage when:

  • Funding rate consistently positive (at least 0.01%)
  • Sufficient capital ($10,000+ recommended)
  • Low trading fees (VIP tier or maker discounts)
  • 24-hour monitoring possible (or automation)

Covered Call for Yield Enhancement

Strategy Structure

Holding spot BTC + selling BTC call options.

  • Receive call premium to enhance holding returns
  • If price rises above strike, you miss the upside
  • Most effective in sideways markets

Example

Holding BTC at $100,000, selling $110,000 strike call option, receiving $2,000 premium:

Price at ExpirySpot P&LOption P&LNet
$90,000-$10,000+$2,000-$8,000
$100,000$0+$2,000+$2,000
$105,000+$5,000+$2,000+$7,000
$110,000+$10,000+$2,000+$12,000
$120,000+$20,000-$8,000+$12,000

If price rises above $110,000, profit is capped at $12,000. However, you still earn $2,000 premium income if price moves sideways or slightly down.


Choosing Hedging Strategies by Situation

SituationRecommended StrategyReason
Confident of short-term declineFutures short hedgeLow cost, direct protection
Decline possible but uncertainBuy put optionsMaintains upside, insurance
Expecting sidewaysCovered callPremium income
Long-term market neutralFunding rate arbitrageDirection-agnostic returns
Pre-event protectionPut options or reduce positionEvent volatility preparation

Limitations of Hedging

Cost

All hedging carries costs. Fees, funding rates, option premiums, opportunity costs, etc. Hedging too frequently erodes returns.

Over-Hedging

Hedging all risks eliminates returns too. Full hedging is essentially the same as closing your position. Selectively hedging only key risks is more efficient.

Timing

Starting hedges too late means losses have already occurred. Plan hedging strategies in advance and execute when specific conditions are met.

Correlation Breakdown

When hedging altcoins with BTC futures, correlation is normally high, but can break down in extreme situations. This is the worst-case scenario where hedges don't work as intended.


Summary

Hedging is the most prudent use of derivatives. You can protect directly with futures shorts, protect only the downside while maintaining upside with put options, or pursue direction-agnostic returns with delta neutral strategies. Funding rate arbitrage provides stable returns in persistently positive funding environments but requires understanding the risks. All hedging carries costs, so selectively applying the right strategy for each situation is key.