Perpetual Futures
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finance Finance refers to monetary resources and to the study and Academic discipline, discipline of money, currency, assets and Liability (financial accounting), liabilities. As a subject of study, is a field of Business administration, Business Admin ...
, a perpetual futures contract, also known as a perpetual swap, is an agreement to non-optionally buy or sell an
asset In financial accounting, an asset is any resource owned or controlled by a business or an economic entity. It is anything (tangible or intangible) that can be used to produce positive economic value. Assets represent value of ownership that can b ...
at an unspecified point in the future. Perpetual futures are cash-settled, and they differ from regular futures in that they lack a pre-specified delivery date and can thus be held indefinitely without the need to roll over contracts as they approach expiration. Payments are periodically exchanged between holders of the two sides of the contracts, long and short, with the direction and magnitude of the settlement based on the difference between the contract price and that of the
underlying In finance, a derivative is a contract between a buyer and a seller. The derivative can take various forms, depending on the transaction, but every derivative has the following four elements: # an item (the "underlier") that can or must be bou ...
asset, as well as, if applicable, the difference in leverage between the two sides. Perpetual futures were first proposed by economist Robert Shiller in 1992, to enable derivatives markets for illiquid assets. Shiller, Robert J, 1993.
Measuring Asset Values for Cash Settlement in Derivative Markets: Hedonic Repeated Measures Indices and Perpetual Futures
" Journal of Finance, American Finance Association, vol. 48(3), pages 911-931, July.
However, perpetual futures markets have only developed for
cryptocurrencies A cryptocurrency (colloquially crypto) is a digital currency designed to work through a computer network that is not reliant on any central authority, such as a government or bank, to uphold or maintain it. Individual coin ownership records ...
, with specific "inverse perpetual" type being invented by Alexey Bragin in 2011 for ICBIT exchange first, following their wider adoption in 2016 by other derivatives exchanges like BitMEX. Cryptocurrency perpetuals are characterised by the availability of high leverage, sometimes over 100 times the margin, and by the use of auto-deleveraging, which compels high-leverage, profitable traders to forfeit a portion of their profits to cover the losses of the other side during periods of high market volatility, as well as insurance funds, pools of assets intended to prevent the need for auto-deleveraging. Prior to spread of stablecoins in cryptomarkets all perpetual futures traded on unlicensed crypto exchanges were inverse (non-linear) futures contract, with asset being US dollar, and the price being quoted in US dollars for 1 Bitcoin. The contract is called non-linear inverse bitcoin futures because of the added non-linearity in the calculation. This makes the contract useful as a financial instrument and enables to do all accounting in Bitcoin at the same time, unlike quanto futures, while also not requiring exchange to have financial license due to accounting not being done in any fiduciary currency. Perpetuals serve the same function as contracts for difference (CFDs), allowing indefinite, leveraged tracking of an underlying asset or flow, but differ in that a single, uniform contract is traded on an exchange for all time-horizons, quantities of leverage, and positions, as opposed to separate contracts for separate quantities of leverage typically traded directly with a broker.


History

Holding a futures contract indefinitely requires periodically rolling over the contract into a new one before the contract's expiry. However, given that futures prices typically differ from spot prices, repeatedly rolling over contracts creates significant
basis risk Basis risk in finance is the risk associated with imperfect hedging due to the variables or characteristics that affect the difference between the futures contract and the underlying "cash" position. It arises because of the difference between the ...
, leading to inefficiencies when used for hedging or speculation. In an attempt to remedy these ills, the Chinese Gold and Silver Exchange of
Hong Kong Hong Kong)., Legally Hong Kong, China in international treaties and organizations. is a special administrative region of China. With 7.5 million residents in a territory, Hong Kong is the fourth most densely populated region in the wor ...
developed an "undated futures" market, wherein one-day futures would be rolled over automatically, with the difference between future and spot prices settled between the counterparties. In 1992, Robert Shiller proposed perpetual futures, alongside a method for generating asset-price indices using hedonic regression, accounting for unmeasured qualities by adding dummy variables that represent elements of the index, indicating the unique quality of each element, a form of repeated measures design. This was intended to permit the creation of derivatives markets for illiquid, infrequently-priced assets, such as single-family homes, as well as untraded indices and flows of income, such as labour costs or the
consumer price index A consumer price index (CPI) is a statistical estimate of the level of prices of goods and services bought for consumption purposes by households. It is calculated as the weighted average price of a market basket of Goods, consumer goods and ...
. In 2011, Alexey Bragin developed a solution to simplify leverage trading of cryptocurrencies for unlicensed exchanges. The product provided several improvements specific to the crypto-sphere: inverse nature (asset itself used as a margin for trading) and funding mechanism (to keep perpetual futures price close to asset price, funding is paid, on a regular basis, to incentivize price move closer to asset price). These innovations enabled the setting of lots to convenient size in USD, keep price
contango Contango is a situation in which the futures contract, futures price (or forward contract, forward price) of a commodity is higher than the spot price. In a contango situation, arbitrageurs or speculators are "willing to pay more for a commodity ...
or
backwardation Normal backwardation, also sometimes called backwardation, is the market condition where the price of a commodity's forward contract, forward or futures contract is trading below the ''expected'' spot price at contract maturity. The resulting fu ...
under control, and settle all operations in cryptocurrency, which simplified the legal side of crypto trading. The drawback of this solution was non-linear PnL, generating specific convexity (the second derivative of a contract’s value with respect to price), so that long positions will be liquidated faster on price fall than short positions will be on price rise


Mechanism

Perpetual futures for the value of a cash flow, dividend or index, as envisioned by Shiller, require the payment of a daily settlement, intended to mirror the value of the flow, from one side of the contract to the other. At any day ''t'', the dividend s_, paid from shorts to longs, is defined as: s_=(f_-f_t)+(d_-r_tf_t) where f_t is the price of the perpetual at day ''t'', d_t is the dividend paid to owners of the underlying asset on day ''t'', and r_t is the return on an alternative asset (expected to be a short-term, low-risk rate) between time ''t'' and ''t+1''.


See also

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Futures contract In finance, a futures contract (sometimes called futures) is a standardized legal contract to buy or sell something at a predetermined price for delivery at a specified time in the future, between parties not yet known to each other. The item tr ...
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Contract for difference In finance, a contract for difference (CFD) is a financial agreement between two parties, commonly referred to as the "buyer" and the "seller." The contract stipulates that the buyer will pay the seller the difference between the current value o ...


References

{{derivatives market Derivatives (finance) Futures markets Cryptocurrencies