About BUUR BUUR is building the next generation of delta-neutral trading infrastructure. Our mission is to make advanced, risk-managed crypt
About BUUR BUUR is building the next generation of delta-neutral trading infrastructure. Our mission is to make advanced, risk-managed crypt


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Delta-neutral refers to a trading position that's designed to remain stable even when the price of the underlying asset moves slightly up or down.
If you've spent any time around crypto traders, chances are you've come across the term “delta-neutral.” Maybe you nodded along like you knew exactly what it meant. Maybe you bookmarked it for later. Or maybe you’re here now, finally getting to the bottom of it.
Either way this isn’t just another buzzword. Delta-neutral trading is a powerful risk-management strategy that can completely change the way you interact with volatile markets.
At BUUR, we're building the Delta Neutral Trade Dashboard to make these strategies not only accessible, but also seamless and smart. But more on that in a bit.
Why Directional Bets Are Risky
Let’s start with a familiar situation: you buy Bitcoin (BTC) or Ethereum (ETH) expecting the price to rise. Then the market dips 15% overnight. Suddenly your portfolio takes a hit.
That’s the nature of directional trading — you’re exposed to the market moving in one direction. And with crypto’s wild volatility, these swings can be both frequent and severe.
We’ve all seen it: a coin pumps 20% in a week, then crashes 30% the next. It outperforms for a few weeks, only to underperform just as quickly. Even macro trends get ignored in sudden market shifts.
Even experienced traders can’t reliably time these movements. The crypto market has humbled many so-called experts. So what if you didn’t have to guess the next big move at all?
A delta-neutral position is structured so that its overall delta — a measure of sensitivity to price changes — is zero (or very close to it). This means your position stays largely unaffected by minor up or down moves in the underlying asset.
How is that possible? Through offsetting trades that cancel out directional risk.
Delta is a number between -1 and 1 that tells you how much your position’s value changes relative to a $1 move in the asset:
Delta of +1: Gain $1 for every $1 the asset gains
Delta of -1: Lose $1 for every $1 the asset gains
Delta of 0: No change in value for small asset price moves
If you combine positions so their net delta is zero, you’ve reached delta neutrality.
Let’s say you:
Buy 1 BTC on the spot market (delta = +1)
Short 1 BTC using perpetual futures (delta = -1)
If BTC rises by $1,000:
Your spot gains $1,000
Your short loses $1,000
If BTC falls by $1,000:
Your spot loses $1,000
Your short gains $1,000
In either case, your overall position remains flat. That’s delta-neutral trading in action.
Of course, real strategies can involve multiple exchanges, tokens, and derivatives — but the principle remains the same.
So, if you're not profiting from price movement, how do delta-neutral strategies make money?
Delta-neutral trades profit from structural inefficiencies in the market — not from guessing where prices will go. One of the most common profit sources? Funding rate arbitrage.

In perpetual futures markets, funding rates are regular payments between long and short traders. These rates are designed to keep the perpetual price close to the spot price:
When the market is bullish, longs pay shorts
When it’s bearish, shorts pay longs
These payments usually occur every 8 hours, and the rates can range from 0.01% to over 0.1% per period — which adds up significantly over time.
Say:
Exchange A has a funding rate of +0.05% (longs pay shorts)
Exchange B has a rate of -0.02% (shorts pay longs)
You:
Short on Exchange A → earn 0.05%
Long on Exchange B → earn 0.02%
Net gain: 0.07% every 8 hours, or roughly 0.21% daily. That’s over 77% annualized returns — without needing the price to move.
Even if both funding rates are positive, you can still earn from the difference:
Long on Exchange C at +0.01%
Short on Exchange D at +0.05%
Net gain: 0.04% every 8 hours → 44% APR — you're still profiting.
This is known as the Long/Short trade — one of three delta-neutral strategies you can run automatically with BUUR.
One of our BUUR devs recently shared:
"Been in a SEND Long/Short across ByBit and OKX for 9 days and at 87% APR. It bloody works you know."
No speculation. No guessing tops or bottoms. Just capturing funding rate differentials with a delta-neutral setup.
Our beta launch is scheduled for Q3 2025, and it’s your chance to be part of a new era of smart, risk-managed crypto trading.
Stay tuned or better yet, join the presale and be ready for the beta launch.
Ready to stop guessing and start earning? → Try BUUR today.
Delta-neutral refers to a trading position that's designed to remain stable even when the price of the underlying asset moves slightly up or down.
If you've spent any time around crypto traders, chances are you've come across the term “delta-neutral.” Maybe you nodded along like you knew exactly what it meant. Maybe you bookmarked it for later. Or maybe you’re here now, finally getting to the bottom of it.
Either way this isn’t just another buzzword. Delta-neutral trading is a powerful risk-management strategy that can completely change the way you interact with volatile markets.
At BUUR, we're building the Delta Neutral Trade Dashboard to make these strategies not only accessible, but also seamless and smart. But more on that in a bit.
Why Directional Bets Are Risky
Let’s start with a familiar situation: you buy Bitcoin (BTC) or Ethereum (ETH) expecting the price to rise. Then the market dips 15% overnight. Suddenly your portfolio takes a hit.
That’s the nature of directional trading — you’re exposed to the market moving in one direction. And with crypto’s wild volatility, these swings can be both frequent and severe.
We’ve all seen it: a coin pumps 20% in a week, then crashes 30% the next. It outperforms for a few weeks, only to underperform just as quickly. Even macro trends get ignored in sudden market shifts.
Even experienced traders can’t reliably time these movements. The crypto market has humbled many so-called experts. So what if you didn’t have to guess the next big move at all?
A delta-neutral position is structured so that its overall delta — a measure of sensitivity to price changes — is zero (or very close to it). This means your position stays largely unaffected by minor up or down moves in the underlying asset.
How is that possible? Through offsetting trades that cancel out directional risk.
Delta is a number between -1 and 1 that tells you how much your position’s value changes relative to a $1 move in the asset:
Delta of +1: Gain $1 for every $1 the asset gains
Delta of -1: Lose $1 for every $1 the asset gains
Delta of 0: No change in value for small asset price moves
If you combine positions so their net delta is zero, you’ve reached delta neutrality.
Let’s say you:
Buy 1 BTC on the spot market (delta = +1)
Short 1 BTC using perpetual futures (delta = -1)
If BTC rises by $1,000:
Your spot gains $1,000
Your short loses $1,000
If BTC falls by $1,000:
Your spot loses $1,000
Your short gains $1,000
In either case, your overall position remains flat. That’s delta-neutral trading in action.
Of course, real strategies can involve multiple exchanges, tokens, and derivatives — but the principle remains the same.
So, if you're not profiting from price movement, how do delta-neutral strategies make money?
Delta-neutral trades profit from structural inefficiencies in the market — not from guessing where prices will go. One of the most common profit sources? Funding rate arbitrage.

In perpetual futures markets, funding rates are regular payments between long and short traders. These rates are designed to keep the perpetual price close to the spot price:
When the market is bullish, longs pay shorts
When it’s bearish, shorts pay longs
These payments usually occur every 8 hours, and the rates can range from 0.01% to over 0.1% per period — which adds up significantly over time.
Say:
Exchange A has a funding rate of +0.05% (longs pay shorts)
Exchange B has a rate of -0.02% (shorts pay longs)
You:
Short on Exchange A → earn 0.05%
Long on Exchange B → earn 0.02%
Net gain: 0.07% every 8 hours, or roughly 0.21% daily. That’s over 77% annualized returns — without needing the price to move.
Even if both funding rates are positive, you can still earn from the difference:
Long on Exchange C at +0.01%
Short on Exchange D at +0.05%
Net gain: 0.04% every 8 hours → 44% APR — you're still profiting.
This is known as the Long/Short trade — one of three delta-neutral strategies you can run automatically with BUUR.
One of our BUUR devs recently shared:
"Been in a SEND Long/Short across ByBit and OKX for 9 days and at 87% APR. It bloody works you know."
No speculation. No guessing tops or bottoms. Just capturing funding rate differentials with a delta-neutral setup.
Our beta launch is scheduled for Q3 2025, and it’s your chance to be part of a new era of smart, risk-managed crypto trading.
Stay tuned or better yet, join the presale and be ready for the beta launch.
Ready to stop guessing and start earning? → Try BUUR today.
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