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Cross-Exchange Arbitrage: Capturing Price Discrepancies

Published April 7, 2026 · 9 min read · By BreakOrb

The same asset can trade at different prices on different exchanges at the same time. Cross-exchange arbitrage captures that difference by buying on the cheaper exchange and selling on the more expensive one simultaneously. It is one of the oldest strategies in financial markets and remains one of the most reliable when executed correctly.

What Is Arbitrage?

Arbitrage is the practice of exploiting price differences for the same asset across two or more markets. In crypto, this means buying a token on one exchange where it is priced lower and selling it on another exchange where it is priced higher, pocketing the spread minus fees.

Unlike directional trading, arbitrage is theoretically risk-free because both legs of the trade happen simultaneously. In practice, execution risk, latency, and fees introduce real costs that must be managed carefully.

How Cross-Exchange Arbitrage Works

Price discrepancies exist because each exchange has its own order book, its own liquidity pool, and its own set of market makers. When a large buy order hits Binance, the price there might spike briefly while Hyperliquid remains unchanged. That momentary gap is the arbitrage opportunity.

The process follows a simple loop: monitor prices on both exchanges continuously, detect when the spread exceeds your minimum profit threshold, execute a buy on the cheaper exchange and a sell on the more expensive one at the same instant, then repeat.

Speed matters: Most cross-exchange arbitrage opportunities last less than 500 milliseconds. By the time a human notices the spread, it has already closed.

BreakOrb Arbitrage Parameters

BreakOrb provides several configuration options for cross-exchange arbitrage strategies:

The Math Behind Profitable Arbitrage

Consider a concrete example. ETH is trading at $2,000 on Hyperliquid and $2,010 on Binance. That is a $10 spread, or 0.5% of the price.

You buy 1 ETH on Hyperliquid at $2,000 and simultaneously sell 1 ETH on Binance at $2,010. Your gross profit is $10.

Now subtract fees. Hyperliquid charges roughly 0.035% taker fee ($0.70). Binance charges roughly 0.04% taker fee ($0.80). Total fees: $1.50. Net profit: $8.50 on a single trade.

Example: ETH at $2,000 (Hyperliquid) vs $2,010 (Binance) = 0.5% spread. After fees (0.035% + 0.04% = ~$1.50), net profit = $8.50 per ETH. At 10 opportunities per hour, that is $85/hour.

The critical insight is that your minimum profit threshold must exceed total fees on both sides. If combined fees are 0.075%, you need at least a 0.1% spread to be profitable, and realistically 0.15% or more to account for slippage.

Latency Matters

Cross-exchange arbitrage is a speed game. The faster your bot can detect a spread and execute both legs, the more opportunities it captures and the less slippage it experiences.

Key latency factors include API response time from both exchanges, network distance between your server and exchange servers, order placement and confirmation speed, and WebSocket feed latency for real-time price monitoring.

Professional arbitrage firms co-locate their servers next to exchange data centers for single-digit millisecond latency. Retail traders operating from home typically see 50-200ms round-trip times, which still captures many opportunities but misses the fastest ones.

Risks of Cross-Exchange Arbitrage

Getting Started with BreakOrb Arbitrage

Cross-exchange arbitrage is available on the Elite tier. It requires funded accounts on at least two supported exchanges. We recommend starting with Hyperliquid and Binance as Exchange A and Exchange B, as they offer the deepest liquidity and lowest fees for most pairs.

Set your min_profit_pct to at least 0.15% initially to ensure profitability after fees. Use a conservative arb_amount until you understand the slippage profile of your chosen pairs. Monitor the dashboard closely during the first few hours to verify both legs are filling correctly.

The most important rule of arbitrage: never risk more on a single trade than you can afford to lose if one leg fails. The strategy is low-risk, not no-risk.

Capture Every Spread

BreakOrb monitors price discrepancies across exchanges in real time and executes both legs simultaneously. Available on the Elite plan.

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