
CME Bitcoin futures open interest has fallen to a 14‑month low as the once‑crowded basis trade collapses, compressing yields and pushing leveraged institutions out.
Summary
- CME Bitcoin futures average daily open interest fell below $8B in March and to about $7.2B in early April, the lowest since February 2024.
- March volume slid to $163B, nearly half January 2025’s peak, as the spot‑ETF plus short‑futures basis trade unwound and leveraged funds exited.
- With annualized basis near 5% versus ~4.5% risk‑free rates, funding costs and counterparty risk have erased arbitrage appeal at CME.
CME Bitcoin futures activity has fallen to its weakest level in more than a year as the once‑crowded basis trade unwinds and leveraged institutions pull back. Average daily open interest dropped below $8 billion in March 2026 and slid to about $7.2 billion in early April, marking a new low since February 2024 and extending a five‑month decline. Monthly trading volume on CME fell to $163 billion in March, almost half the peak seen in January 2025, underscoring how quickly institutional demand has cooled.
At the center of the shift is the cash‑and‑carry structure that dominated Wall Street’s crypto exposure after U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs launched. For much of 2024 and 2025, funds bought spot ETFs while shorting CME futures to capture a relatively low‑risk yield from the spread between futures and spot. “The CME Bitcoin futures basis is primarily driven by price momentum and market sentiment,” CF Benchmarks wrote in a 2025 analysis, noting that aggressive rallies tended to push futures into rich contango and make basis trades highly attractive.
That regime has broken down as Bitcoin has retreated from highs near $120,000 to below $70,000, compressing the annualized basis to around 5% — barely above a roughly 4.5% U.S. risk‑free rate. With funding costs and counterparty risk taken into account, “a near‑flat basis reduces the incentive for basis trades that rely on futures premia to generate low‑risk carry,” derivatives commentary from MEXC noted in February, describing CME’s structure as close to neutral. In some stress episodes, the CME‑to‑spot basis has even turned negative, a sign of “aggressive hedging or the unwind of cash‑and‑carry structures when risk appetite fades,” according to Padalan Capital’s observations cited in the same report.
The result is a sharp drop in the very type of activity CME was built to attract. Total Bitcoin futures open interest across venues remains sizable — over $43 billion as of early March, according to derivatives trackers — but liquidity is increasingly concentrated offshore or in perpetual swaps, while regulated CME contracts lose share. A Binance research note in January captured the turning point bluntly: “The era of arbitrage is over; Wall Street withdraws from Bitcoin basis,” after CME open interest fell below major offshore exchanges for the first time.
For Bitcoin (BTC), the implications are mixed. A lower, flatter CME basis suggests less leveraged carry and more spot‑driven price action, which can make the market structurally healthier but also more sensitive to directional flows. For CME, the open question is whether new use cases — such as more nuanced hedging by spot ETF issuers — can replace the vanished basis trade, or whether regulated futures will remain a shrinking island in a derivatives complex increasingly dominated by 24/7 offshore products.

