Order Flow Getting Started Tutorial
Large-amount entrusted orders (main orders)
Liquidation Heatmap
Liquidation Map
Basic introduction to order flow
What is order flow?
Order Flow Getting Started Tutorial
Order flow
What is the long-short position accounts ratio?
Manual of contract data for newer
Risk management in contract trading
Commonly used indicators for contract data
Costs in cryptocurrency trading
What positive or negative funding rates means?
Arbitrage opportunities in the cryptocurrency market
What are terms mark price、last price and estimated liquidation price?
What determined funding rate?
Basis and premium
Liquidation and delivery
What are USDT contract and USD contract?
What difference between open interest and trading volume?
Differences between cryptocurrency perpetual contract trading and leverage trading
How to keep balance for price in perpetual contracts and spot?
What categories of cryptocurrency derivatives?
What are Golden Cross and Death Cross, and how are they used in trading?
What is liquidity
What is VWAP indicator and how to use it in cryptocurrency trading?
What is the RSI indicator, how to see overbought and oversold?
How to Read Order Book Data?
The Analysis and Trading Applications of Long-Short Position Ratio and Open Interest
The Significance and Application of Cryptocurrency Liquidation Data
How is funding rate calculated for cryptocurrency perpetual contracts?
How to interpret the open interest data of cryptocurrency contracts?
What is the purpose of the cryptocurrency funding rate?
What is Top trader account long/short ratio
What is exchange top trader positions long/short ratio
What is Bitcoin open interest?
What is perpetual contract funding rate?
What is BTC liquidation or what is cryptocurrency liquidation?

Commonly used indicators for contract data

Commonly used reference indicators for contract data include: open interest, trading volume, long-short ratio, large-scale long-short position ratio, funding rate, liquidation data, etc.


The general rules are as follows: 1. The amount of open interest increases, and the ratio of the number of longs and shorts increases, that is, the number of longs entering the market increases, the number of longs increases, and the number of longs has the upper hand.


2. The amount of open interest increases, and the ratio of long-short people decreases, that is, the number of short-sellers enters the market is large, the number of short positions increases, and the air force has the upper hand


3. The amount of open interest decreases, and the ratio of longs and shorts decreases, that is, the number of longs exiting the market increases, and the number of longs closing positions increases, and the price will usher in a wave of decline


4. The amount of open interest decreases, and the ratio of longs and shorts increases, that is, the number of shorts exiting the market increases, and the price will usher in a wave of upward movement


So how to control the level of the long-short ratio and the level of open interest? This needs to be compared with the historical long-short number ratio and historical open interest to get the relative high and low positions.


The above indicators can be used in combination as much as possible to have a better reference value. If the ratio of long-short people is relatively low and the open interest is relatively high, then the possibility of a decline is greater; if the ratio of long-short people is relatively high and the open interest is relatively low, then Subsequent pull-ups are more likely. At the same time, the size of the liquidation data and the positive or negative of the capital rate are used to determine the increase in the winning rate.

Disclaimer:
Information content does not constitute investment advice, investors should make independent decisions and bear their own risks