Screener cryptocurrency
Futures, Funding, Open Interest, Liquidations, and Volume - All Coins Binance, OKX And BybitOne table instead of ten tabs.
The cryptocurrency screener collects derivatives market data from three exchanges into a single table, updated via WebSocketSort by funding, identify coins with abnormally high open interest or a surge in liquidations, and find a trading idea while everyone else is still switching between tabs. Below are ready-made filter presets and analysis of specific scenarios.
| Coin | Price | Change 24h | Funding | OI 24h | Volume 24h | Liquidations | RSI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading data | |||||||
What does the screener show and who needs it?
Most exchanges show funding in one section, open interest in another, and liquidations on a third page. Manually scanning 50 coins across six parameters takes half an hour. And by the time you get there, the market situation has already changed.
The futures screener solves this problem. All critical derivatives market metrics are in a single table with sorting, filters, and real-time updates. You can spot anomalies in 10-15 seconds, click on a coin, and proceed to a detailed analysis. This is the essential tool for perpetual contract traders who need speed in their decision-making.
How traders use a screener
Three concrete scenarios with real-life examples. No abstract theory—just mechanics and numbers.
How to find a short squeeze using a screener
Sort the table by funding from lowest to highest. Coins with persistent negative funding—below -0.03% over an 8-hour period—are overly shorted. Short positions pay longs every settlement period, and holding a position becomes more expensive with each hour.
Key filter: the "24h Open Interest" column. If open interest rises with negative funding, new short sellers are entering the market. The more short sellers accumulate, the more powerful the cascade of forced closings will be when the price reverses.
Real-world example: in October 2023, before the rally from $27,000 to $35,000, funding hovered around -0.04% for two days straight. OI while growing by 18%. Traders who tracked this combination in the screener went long before the main impulse began and took a 30% move. Negative funding in itself is not a signal. But the combination of "funding + growing OI + low RSI" statistically gives an advantage.
How to detect abnormal growth before a pulse
Use the "Abnormal Open Interest Growth" preset or sort the table by the "OI 24h" column in descending order. Look for coins where open interest has increased by 15-30% in a day, while the price has barely moved.
What's behind this? Large players are accumulating positions through limit orders and algorithmic execution—they're intentionally not moving the price. But a rally without price movement is like a compressed spring. Funding tells you where it'll go: a positive signal means a dumping of overheated longs is likely, while a negative signal means a squeeze on shorts.
Additional filter: RSI Below 35 with rising and negative funding. This is one of the most statistically reliable combinations for entering a long position on the futures market. It's not a guarantee of profit, but the odds are on your side. This is exactly what the situation has been like before most of the rallies of the last two years.
How to search for density breakouts in the order book
Densities are zones in the order book where an abnormally large volume of limit orders has accumulated. Market makers and funds that place defensive positions or liquidity traps are behind them. The screener helps identify candidates for such analysis.
Filter out coins with abnormal 24h volume and simultaneously growing volume OI — this is a sign of increased activity from major participants. From 200+ futures pairs, you'll get 5-7 hot candidates per minute.
The next step is to open a trade for the selected coin and enable the order book density indicator. You'll see specific price levels where large walls are located. When the price approaches such a zone with increasing volume, a breakout becomes highly likely—market makers often remove limit orders before a cascade, and the price accelerates.
Screener filtering options
Funding Rate
The funding rate for perpetual futures. Paid every 8 hours between longs and shorts. Negative funding means shorts dominate and pay longs. Above 0.1% means longs are overheated and historically precede a correction.
Open Interest (OI)
Total outstanding futures contracts in dollars Increase OI + price increase = new money flows into the trend. Growth OI + price drop = accumulation of short positions. Sharp drop OI - cascading liquidation.
Liquidation 24 hours
The total volume of forcibly closed positions per day. A surge in liquidations signals areas where leverage has failed—and often coincides with local price reversals.
Volume 24h
Total trading volume of futures contracts per day. Abnormal growth during a sideways movement indicates accumulation or distribution of positions by a major player. A decline in volume during a trend is a sign of fading momentum.
RSI (14)
Relative Strength Index on the daily timeframe. RSI Below 30 is oversold, above 70 is overbought. Works more effectively in conjunction with funding: RSI below 30 with negative funding - highly probable rebound.
Price change 24 hours
Percentage change per day. When combined, it allows one to distinguish real demand from manipulative movements. Price increase without growth OI - often a false breakout followed by a pullback.