Recently, altcoins have been experiencing frequent fluctuations, and more and more people are starting to analyze the logic of price and volume. To be honest, one of the most core concepts here is open interest, also known as OI.
But there's a common pitfall that many people have fallen into—OI is actually divided into two completely different dimensions:
**First is the position quantity** **Second is the position value**
These two data points are often confused by beginners, but in reality, they are two independent indicators. Although they influence each other, their logic is entirely different.
Let's first clarify what open interest means. Contract open interest most directly reflects market enthusiasm—how many people are trading this asset. But there's a detail here: the composition of open interest isn't simply "long positions + short positions," but rather only unidirectional positions are counted. In other words, the number of long positions equals the number of short positions, and together they constitute the total open interest of the contract.
For example: I open a long position, and you open a short position; then the OI is 1. We are counterparties. Every long position in the market is necessarily backed by a short position. This is also why contracts are often called zero-sum games—if someone makes money, someone else must lose money. This is a mathematical inevitability.
Furthermore, there are patterns in when open interest increases, decreases, or remains steady.
When open interest continues to rise, it indicates strong market enthusiasm—liquidity in the order book is sufficient, and new traders are continuously entering the market to open positions. This is often a sign of bullish market sentiment.
Next, let's look at how price and open interest interact in different combinations, each representing different market states:
**Price rising + open interest rising** = Bullish traders are building positions strongly, market sentiment is bullish and accumulating
Behind these patterns are the true intentions of market participants. Understanding this can be quite helpful for contract trading.
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LazyDevMiner
· 2h ago
OI is indeed easy to get trapped in; beginners often confuse open interest with position value. I've made that mistake before.
When there are many people, an explosion in open interest isn't necessarily a good thing; it depends on how the price moves in conjunction.
Zero-sum games are right—every time someone makes a big profit, you know someone else is taking a loss.
For the price to be reliable, both price and open interest should rise together. If open interest increases but the price stays still, be cautious.
Mastering this logic can help you lose less money, but the key is in execution.
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LiquidityOracle
· 01-09 08:28
OI these two dimensions are indeed easy to confuse, and it's very normal for beginners to stumble. The combination of rising prices and increasing holdings is the most likely to attract false signals, so be careful.
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ContractTearjerker
· 01-07 22:53
OI this logic sounds good, but I think the key is whether you really understand the long-short pairing part, otherwise you'll still get cut.
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AirdropHunter007
· 01-07 22:52
Position size and value are really easy to confuse. I’ve made that mistake before. Now, looking at volume and price patterns, there are definitely some tricks.
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Again, a textbook-style explanation, but in actual trading, there are really few times when this set of theories can be applied.
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Continuous rise in open interest sounds good, but a sudden flash crash can wipe out everyone. Whether liquidity is strong or not is irrelevant at critical moments.
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I agree with the idea of bullish strong accumulation, but the real question is how to tell if it’s genuine accumulation or institutions just trying to lure more traders in.
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The concept of a zero-sum game is correct. Basically, futures contracts are about betting that the other side is wrong.
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Price + open interest combined looks simple, but only a few can rely on this for consistent profits. Most are just destined to get liquidated.
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This is the real truth behind volume and price. However, most people still lose money after learning this because execution is the real bottleneck.
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ImpermanentPhilosopher
· 01-07 22:50
I've stepped into this pit before with OI. Confusing position size with position value once led to a massive loss. Now, reading these kinds of educational articles still makes me smile.
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LayerZeroHero
· 01-07 22:48
It's another OI trap, and quite a few beginners fall for it here.
View OriginalReply0
SchrodingersFOMO
· 01-07 22:42
It's that same OI stuff again, someone always gets caught here every time.
View OriginalReply0
ThesisInvestor
· 01-07 22:31
OI can indeed be confusing. I used to suffer losses due to the confusion between position size and value, but now I finally understand.
Recently, altcoins have been experiencing frequent fluctuations, and more and more people are starting to analyze the logic of price and volume. To be honest, one of the most core concepts here is open interest, also known as OI.
But there's a common pitfall that many people have fallen into—OI is actually divided into two completely different dimensions:
**First is the position quantity**
**Second is the position value**
These two data points are often confused by beginners, but in reality, they are two independent indicators. Although they influence each other, their logic is entirely different.
Let's first clarify what open interest means. Contract open interest most directly reflects market enthusiasm—how many people are trading this asset. But there's a detail here: the composition of open interest isn't simply "long positions + short positions," but rather only unidirectional positions are counted. In other words, the number of long positions equals the number of short positions, and together they constitute the total open interest of the contract.
For example: I open a long position, and you open a short position; then the OI is 1. We are counterparties. Every long position in the market is necessarily backed by a short position. This is also why contracts are often called zero-sum games—if someone makes money, someone else must lose money. This is a mathematical inevitability.
Furthermore, there are patterns in when open interest increases, decreases, or remains steady.
When open interest continues to rise, it indicates strong market enthusiasm—liquidity in the order book is sufficient, and new traders are continuously entering the market to open positions. This is often a sign of bullish market sentiment.
Next, let's look at how price and open interest interact in different combinations, each representing different market states:
**Price rising + open interest rising** = Bullish traders are building positions strongly, market sentiment is bullish and accumulating
Behind these patterns are the true intentions of market participants. Understanding this can be quite helpful for contract trading.