BTCW LN
WisdomTree Physical Bitcoin

Published 19 August 2025
Director, Digital Assets Research
In a market addicted to hype and volatility, institutional players are quietly milking a structural inefficiency: basis trading. It is not sexy, but it is repeatable and that is exactly why it is winning.
What is the basis trade?
The basis refers to the difference between the price of a crypto asset in the spot market and its futures market. A positive basis (futures trading above spot) implies a contango structure, common in bullish or highly speculative environments. This creates an opportunity to:
Physically backed exchange-traded products (ETPs) enable institutions to go long spot exposure in a secure and familiar wrapper. Unlike exchange wallets vulnerable to hacks and counterparty risk, physically backed crypto ETPs provide cold wallet custody and daily net asset value transparency – everything a chief investment officer wants, and retail ignores.
With respect to shorting futures, front-month contracts matter most. This is primarily due to:
Perpetual futures are crypto’s endlessly rolling bet – contracts that never expire, but mimic expiry through a clever funding mechanism:
This incentivises convergence to spot and opens the door for continuous basis trades. By shorting perpetuals against spot or ETP holdings, investors can earn a rolling yield – harvesting the funding premium day after day.
| Binance | OKX | Bybit |
|---|---|---|---|
Bitcoin | 0.0100% | 0.0100% | 0.0099% |
Ether | -0.0038% | 0.0007% | -0.0052% |
Solana | 0.0100% | -0.0008% | 0.0100% |
XRP | 0.0100% | 0.0100% | -0.0069% |
Source: Coinglass. 13:22 (London time) on 30 July 2025. Historical performance is not an indication of future performance and any investment may go down in value.
Funding rates are notoriously volatile, swinging sharply with market events and sentiment shifts. This makes active monitoring essential. Moreover, these rates can vary wildly across exchanges due to differences in how premium indices are calculated, interest rate assumptions, and trader positioning.
Offshore venues love perpetuals for their flexibility and leverage, but they come with strings attached: heightened counterparty risk, shallow liquidity in times of stress, and none of the regulatory safeguards offered by Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) futures.
Basis trades across major assets
Basis trading opportunities vary meaningfully across cryptocurrencies, offering a spectrum of yield and risk characteristics that cater to different investor profiles.
Figure 2: Annualised premium to spot

Source: Artemis Terminal, CME, WisdomTree. At 14:20 (London time) on 30 July 2025. Historical performance is not an indication of future performance and any investment may go down in value.
While basis trading captures structural yield from futures mispricing, staking adds an additional layer of return. The table below highlights current protocol-native yields that can be layered into basis strategies to enhance total return potential.
Figure 3: Solana and Ether staking rewards
| Annualised percentage yield (APY) |
|---|---|
Ether | 2.9% |
Solana | 7.5% |
Source: Staking Rewards. 30 July 2025. Historical performance is not an indication of future performance and any investment may go down in value.
For investors seeking to retain liquidity while earning staking rewards, liquid staking tokens such as stETH (Lido) and JitoSOL (Jito) offer a capital-efficient way to participate. They enable the basis trade to be executed without sacrificing yield or flexibility. Of course, protocol-level risk and smart contract exposures remain with liquid staking tokens. This is worth pricing in when calculating basis-adjusted returns.
CME vs perpetual futures: risk breakdown
When choosing instruments for basis trading, the risk differential between CME futures and perpetual futures is non-trivial. CME futures are regulated, centrally cleared, and subject to robust margining frameworks, making them far more suitable for institutional mandates. Their expiry structure adds predictability and mitigates the tail risk of unpredictable funding costs.
In contrast, perpetual futures – popular on offshore exchanges – rely on dynamic funding rates to track spot. These rates can flip rapidly in volatile markets, leading to unstable and sometimes negative carry. Moreover, perpetuals are exposed to platform-specific risks such as auto-deleveraging, forced liquidations, and operational outages. Counterparty risk is also significantly higher due to lack of central clearing.
For institutional players managing risk-adjusted returns, CME futures are the clear choice for structured basis strategies. They offer not only regulatory certainty and central clearing but also more predictable and transparent liquidity profiles, particularly in bitcoin and Ether contracts. While liquidity in CME futures is narrower for altcoins, it is growing steadily as institutional adoption widens.
In contrast, perpetual futures boast deeper liquidity and tighter spreads across a wider range of assets, but mostly on offshore platforms. This liquidity is often propped up by retail leverage and can disappear rapidly in periods of stress. Combined with unpredictable funding costs and elevated counterparty risk, perpetuals are better suited to tactical or high-frequency arbitrage trades than to long-horizon, risk-controlled basis strategies.
Perpetuals still have their place – for short-term basis arbitrage, latency-sensitive desks, or when CME liquidity is lacking. But for strategic, size-able, capital-efficient exposure, CME remains king.
Final thought
In crypto, nearly everyone chases the next 10x token. Few focus on boring, repeatable yield. But basis trading – especially using listed, institutional-grade products – is becoming the go-to strategy for hedge funds, family offices, and treasury desks seeking low-risk, non-directional crypto exposure.

Director, Digital Assets Research
Dovile Silenskyte is a director of digital assets research at WisdomTree. Before joining WisdomTree in May 2024, Dovile worked as an index equity product strategist at BlackRock. Currently, she is responsible for conducting analyses for in-house digital assets publications and assisting the sales team with client queries about products and markets. Dovile holds an MSc in Finance from Texas A&M University – Commerce, and she is also a chartered financial analyst (CFA).