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Bitget vs MEXC funding rates
Live Bitget and MEXC funding comparison with shared markets, best long/short direction, liquidity signals, and quick handoff into ZEEK tools.
Bitget vs MEXC funding markets
All shared live markets with current funding, best long/short direction, OI, and price gap.
How to read Bitget vs MEXC funding rates
This page compares every shared perpetual market ZEEK currently sees on Bitget and MEXC. The table keeps flat and negative carry markets because the job is not only to find a green number; it is to understand the full exchange-pair surface before opening Funding, Opportunities, or Backtester.
Start with the current spread in bps, then check whether the long/short direction makes sense, whether OI is strong enough, and whether the price gap would make entry expensive. A positive spread is only a prompt for deeper work; Backtester should decide whether the exact market is worth your time.
Bitget vs MEXC funding FAQ
What does the Bitget vs MEXC funding page compare?
It compares live perpetual funding markets that are available on both Bitget and MEXC. Each row shows the current funding spread, the best long and short direction between the two exchanges, open interest context, price gap, and a handoff into Backtester.
What are shared markets on Bitget vs MEXC?
Shared markets are coins that ZEEK currently sees on both Bitget and MEXC. They are included even when the current funding spread is flat or negative, because the page is meant to be a complete exchange-pair view, not only a list of profitable-looking spreads.
What does a positive spread mean?
A positive spread means the best current long/short direction has positive funding carry before fees, slippage, borrow or transfer costs, and exchange risk. It is a starting point for checking, not a trade recommendation.
Can I backtest a market even when the spread is not positive?
Yes. Backtester can be opened for any shared market with both exchange legs. That is useful for checking history, fees, timing, and whether a market that looks flat now has behaved differently across previous funding windows.
Why do bps and APY both appear on the page?
Bps shows the current funding spread in basis points for the live funding window. APY annualizes that current snapshot so markets can be compared quickly, but it can change as soon as funding rates move.