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Arbitrage, contract design, and market structure in Bitcoin futures markets

Riccardo De Blasis, Alexander Webb

2022Journal of Futures Markets27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Perpetual futures, first proposed by Shiller (1993), have only seen wide use in cryptocurrency markets. We examine the contract design and market microstructure differences for the behavior of Bitcoin quarterly and perpetual futures prices and assess the implications for market participants and policymakers. We find perpetual futures exhibit multiple “u‐shaped” curves, seasonal effects, and opening effects despite lacking opening and closing hours. There is suggestive evidence of spillover effects between perpetual and quarterly futures contracts. We find quarterly futures offer cash‐and‐carry arbitrage opportunities, but similar to Hattori and Ishida (2021) these opportunities primarily exist during market dislocations.

Topics & Concepts

Futures contractEconomicsArbitrageClosing (real estate)Forward marketFinancial economicsSpillover effectCashMonetary economicsCryptocurrencyFutures marketLimits to arbitrageMicroeconomicsFinanceComputer securityComputer scienceBlockchain Technology Applications and SecurityFinancial Markets and Investment StrategiesComplex Systems and Time Series Analysis
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