Perpetual futures: trade perps with only USDC in 2026
May 28, 2026
-
12
min read

If you are sitting on USDC and wondering whether you need to buy BTC or ETH before you can trade leveraged positions, you do not. The entire perpetual futures ecosystem on decentralized exchanges runs on USDC collateral. Your stablecoins are your margin. Your profit and loss settle in USDC. The volatile asset you are trading is the price feed, not the collateral.
This guide covers how perpetual futures work, why USDC-denominated collateral changes the risk equation, how funding rates and leverage operate in a single-collateral environment, and how to place your first trade with $5 in USDC.
Perpetual futures are leveraged contracts that track the price of an asset without an expiry date. Unlike traditional futures, which settle on a fixed date (monthly or quarterly), perps can be held indefinitely. There is no rollover, no settlement date, and no basis risk from contract expiration.
The basic structure: you deposit collateral (USDC), choose an asset to trade (BTC, Gold, NVDA, EUR/USD, or any listed market), set your leverage (how much exposure you want relative to your collateral), and choose your direction (long if you think the price will rise, short if you think it will fall). Your position's PnL moves in real time with the asset price, amplified by your leverage.
A funding rate mechanism keeps the perp price aligned with the underlying asset's spot price. When more traders are long than short, longs pay shorts a periodic fee. When shorts dominate, shorts pay longs. This replaces the expiry-driven settlement of traditional futures. For a detailed comparison of how perps differ from traditional futures, see the dedicated guide.
Perpetual futures account for roughly 75% of all crypto trading volume. In 2025, total perpetual DEX trading volume exceeded $765 billion in a single month. The instrument is the backbone of crypto derivatives trading, and in 2026, it extends beyond crypto into forex, commodities, indices, and equities on platforms like Ostium.
USDC collateral means your margin does not fluctuate independently of your trade. This is the single most important advantage for risk management, and it is often overlooked.
Some platforms historically allowed BTC-margined or ETH-margined perps. If you deposit 1 BTC as collateral and go long BTC with leverage, you have compounding exposure: your collateral value rises when BTC rises (good in a rally, disastrous in a crash). If BTC drops 20%, your collateral value drops 20% at the same time your leveraged position is losing money. This double-hit effect can trigger liquidation at much smaller price moves than you expected.
With USDC collateral, your margin stays at $1. If you deposit $1,000 USDC and go long BTC at 10x, your $10,000 notional position moves with BTC, but your collateral is not simultaneously losing or gaining value. Your risk is linear and predictable. Your liquidation price is calculable. Your PnL settles in USDC. This is why the entire modern perps DEX ecosystem has standardized on stablecoin collateral.
Collateral in USDC. PnL in USDC. Fees in USDC. Funding payments in USDC. When you close a profitable trade, the profit is in USDC, immediately usable across DeFi without conversion. No need to sell BTC to realize gains. No taxable conversion event between assets. The simplicity compounds: position sizing is straightforward, risk per trade is legible, and portfolio accounting is clean.
For the broader context of why USDC-margined onchain trading is replacing traditional broker models, see the RWA DeFi platforms guide. For cost comparisons across platforms, the cheapest DEX for swing trading guide covers fee structures in detail.
Three mechanics define how a perpetual futures position works in practice.
A periodic payment between longs and shorts, settled every 1 or 8 hours depending on the platform. The rate is calculated on your full notional position (collateral x leverage), not on collateral alone. At 10x leverage with $500 USDC collateral, your notional is $5,000. A funding rate of 0.01% per 8-hour period costs $0.50 per period, or $1.50/day.
On crypto pairs (BTC, ETH, SOL), funding is driven by market sentiment and can spike during trending markets. On RWA pairs (forex, commodities, indices) on Ostium, the equivalent is a rollover fee reflecting real-world carry costs (interest rate differentials, convenience yield), which is more stable and predictable.
Funding is not a platform fee. It is a trader-to-trader transfer on most platforms. The protocol takes no cut on Ostium's crypto funding. Full fee and funding breakdown here.
Leverage multiplies your exposure relative to your collateral. At 1x, $100 USDC controls $100 of exposure. At 10x, $100 controls $1,000. At 50x, $100 controls $5,000. Higher leverage amplifies both profit and loss proportionally.
The practical implication: at 10x leverage, a 10% price move against you wipes out your collateral. At 50x, a 2% move against you triggers liquidation. Higher leverage means tighter liquidation thresholds. For beginners, 2-5x leverage provides enough room for the position to move without immediate liquidation risk.
On Ostium, maximum leverage varies by asset class: up to 200x on select forex pairs, up to 100x on indices, up to 50x on equities. The leverage limit reflects the volatility profile of each asset class. Lower-volatility assets (forex) support higher leverage because the same percentage move is less likely.
Your USDC collateral is your margin. As your position moves against you, your unrealized loss is deducted from your margin. When the remaining margin falls below the maintenance threshold, your position is automatically liquidated. Liquidation is instant. There is no margin call, no grace period, and no phone call from a broker. The smart contract closes your position and you lose the assigned collateral.
This is why USDC collateral is safer than volatile collateral: your margin value does not simultaneously decrease while your position is losing money. The liquidation price is deterministic and calculable before you open the trade.
How your collateral is allocated across positions determines your liquidation exposure.
Each position has its own assigned collateral. If that position is liquidated, you lose only the collateral assigned to it. Your other positions and remaining account balance are unaffected. This is the safer model for beginners because it caps your maximum loss per trade at a known amount.
Example: you have $5,000 USDC in your account. You open a BTC long with $500 collateral at 10x. If the trade goes to liquidation, you lose $500. Your remaining $4,500 is untouched. You can have multiple isolated positions open simultaneously, each with independent liquidation thresholds.
Your entire account balance serves as collateral for all open positions. If one position moves against you, margin from your full balance can absorb the loss, reducing the chance of liquidation on that position. The risk: if your losses exceed your total balance across all positions, your entire account is liquidated. Cross leverage is used by experienced traders who want to avoid liquidation on temporary drawdowns, but it exposes more capital to loss.
On Ostium, positions use isolated collateral by default. You assign a specific amount of USDC to each trade. This makes risk per trade explicit and bounded. For the full list of available markets and their leverage limits, see the docs.
If you have USDC in a wallet or on an exchange, you are minutes away from your first trade.
For a broader platform comparison and beginner tips, the beginners perps DEX guide covers Ostium, Hyperliquid, and Variational side by side. For the protocol-level mechanics of how Ostium's execution model works, see the technical documentation.
Ostium is an onchain broker where everything runs on USDC. Your collateral is USDC. Your PnL settles in USDC. Your fees are in USDC. Across 71 markets spanning stocks, ETFs, commodities, indices, forex, and crypto, every position uses the same collateral, the same settlement, and the same interface.
The fee model is simple: 4 bps to open a position, zero to close. No maker/taker confusion. Gas sponsored. Oracle pricing from institutional TradFi data via the Stork Network. Isolated collateral by default, so each trade has a defined maximum loss. Self-custody from deposit to withdrawal.
Whether you are exploring perps for the first time with $5 or deploying serious capital across a multi-asset portfolio, the infrastructure is the same. Your collateral stays in USDC. Your risk stays legible. Your execution stays onchain.
$5 in USDC. 71 markets. Self-custody.
Trade BTC, Gold, NVDA, EUR/USD, and 67 more assets with USDC collateral. No volatile margin. No hidden complexity.
Disclaimer: Trading leveraged derivatives involves substantial risk. You can lose your entire collateral. Perpetual futures are not suitable for long-term passive investing. USDC collateral does not eliminate market risk on your leveraged position. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Perpetual futures are leveraged contracts that track an asset's price without an expiry date. You deposit USDC as collateral, choose an asset, set leverage and direction, and your PnL moves with the price. A funding rate mechanism keeps the perp price aligned with the underlying spot through periodic payments between longs and shorts. Unlike traditional futures, there is no rollover or settlement date.
Standard futures have fixed expiry dates and require rollover when the contract settles. Perpetual futures have no expiry. You hold as long as you want. Instead of expiry-driven settlement, perps use a funding rate to keep prices aligned. This eliminates rollover costs and basis risk but introduces ongoing funding payments as a holding cost.
Yes. On Ostium, Hyperliquid, and Variational, USDC is the collateral currency. You deposit USDC, your margin is in USDC, your PnL settles in USDC. You can go long BTC, Gold, NVDA, or any listed asset without ever holding the underlying. If BTC rises 5% at 10x leverage, you profit 50% on your USDC collateral. Minimum $5 on Ostium.
The funding rate is a periodic payment between longs and shorts, calculated on full notional (collateral x leverage). At 10x with $500 collateral, a 0.01% rate per 8 hours costs $0.50 per period. Funding is not a platform fee; it is a trader-to-trader transfer. On Ostium, RWA pairs use a rollover fee reflecting real-world carry costs, which is more stable and predictable than crypto funding.
Isolated leverage assigns fixed collateral to a single position; liquidation only affects that collateral. Cross leverage shares your full balance across all positions, reducing liquidation risk per trade but exposing your entire account. On Ostium, positions use isolated collateral by default, capping maximum loss per trade at the assigned amount.
Indefinitely, as long as margin stays above the liquidation threshold. There is no expiry date. However, funding rates or rollover fees accrue continuously while the position is open. Over days and weeks, these costs compound and can erode collateral. Monitor holding costs and close when your trade thesis is complete.
The regulatory treatment is complex and evolving. Perpetual futures are not currently listed on CFTC-regulated exchanges in the US. Most perps DEXes are accessible globally via wallet connect without geographic restrictions at the protocol level. However, individual platforms may implement frontend restrictions. US traders should consult legal counsel regarding onchain derivatives in their jurisdiction.
Receive the latest updates directly to your inbox

.avif)