
A basis point (bp or bps) is a unit of measure used to describe very small changes in interest rates or fees. One basis point equals 0.01%. Therefore, 10 basis points represent a 0.10% absolute change, making it easy to communicate minor but significant differences.
In the bond market, if a yield rises from 3.00% to 3.10%, it’s described as “an increase of 10 basis points.” In trading, basis points are commonly used to express fees, bid-ask spreads, and funding rates for perpetual contracts, reducing the risk of verbal or written errors.
10 basis points equal 0.10%. The conversion is straightforward: since 1 basis point = 0.01%, then 10 basis points = 10 × 0.01% = 0.10%.
Step 1: Remember the anchor—1 basis point = 0.01%.
Step 2: Multiply the number of basis points by 0.01%; so, 10 × 0.01% = 0.10%.
Step 3: To express this as a decimal, convert 0.10% to 0.001 (since 1% = 0.01 as a decimal).
Example: If a fee is labeled “10 basis points,” it means 0.10%. If an interest rate increases by “10 basis points,” it rises by exactly 0.10 percentage points.
Basis points and percentages are directly convertible:
Common terms include “percentage point” and “percent.” When you hear “increase by 0.10 percentage points,” it means the absolute value goes from x% to x+0.10%, which is equivalent to “an increase of 10 basis points.”
In crypto trading, basis points help you quickly understand fees and small fluctuations:
Funding Rate: The funding rate in perpetual contracts represents periodic payments between long and short positions to anchor the contract price to the spot price. For example, on Gate’s perpetual contract funding rate page, if it shows 0.01%, that’s 1 basis point; if it rises from 0.01% to 0.02%, that’s a change of 1 basis point.
Trading Fees: Platforms often display rates as percentages, which correspond to “percentage × 100” in basis points. For example, if Gate’s fee schedule lists a tier at 0.10%, that equals 10 basis points; 0.20% equals 20 basis points, making it easy to compare different fee tiers.
Spread and Slippage: The spread is the difference between the best bid and ask prices, often measured in basis points; slippage is the deviation between your order’s execution price and the expected price, which can also be measured in basis points to estimate cost. For example, if a trading pair moves from $100.00 to $100.05, that’s a price change of 0.05%, or 5 basis points.
Changes in basis points have a direct impact on absolute costs and returns.
Cost Perspective: If the trading fee is set at 10 basis points (0.10%), buying $10,000 worth of assets incurs a $10 fee; if the rate rises to 12 basis points (0.12%), the fee becomes $12—a $2 difference corresponding to a change of 2 basis points.
Earnings Perspective: If the annual interest rate for staking or lending rises by 10 basis points from 5.00% to 5.10%, then for a $10,000 principal (using simple interest), your annual earnings increase from $500 to $510—a $10 gain.
Leverage and Frequency: In high-frequency or leveraged trading scenarios, even a few basis points can be amplified significantly by trade volume or leverage. Therefore, in contract or grid strategies, it’s important to compare per-trade basis point costs against potential returns on the same scale.
Calculation approach: First convert all rates to either percentages or basis points, then multiply by notional principal or transaction amount to determine the absolute dollar difference.
APR: Annual Percentage Rate, which doesn’t account for compounding. An APR increase of 10 basis points means APR moves from x% to x% + 0.10%.
APY: Annual Percentage Yield includes compounding effects. When converting small rate changes into APY, you must consider compounding frequency; a nominal change of 10 basis points may result in an APY shift slightly greater than 0.10 percentage points with frequent compounding.
Spread: The difference between buy and sell quotes, often represented in basis points for easy comparison across different price levels. For instance, a spread of 2 basis points is easily comparable whether the price is $100 or $1,000.
In summary: Basis points measure small changes (“units”), APR/APY define interest calculation rules and frequencies (“methods”), while spreads reflect trading quote differences (“phenomena”).
Confusing 0.10% with 10%: Remember that 0.10% equals 10 basis points—not 10%. Pay close attention to decimal placement.
Mixing up “percentage point” with “relative percent”: An increase of 0.10 percentage points is an absolute change, not a relative growth rate. For relative changes, use “(new value – old value) ÷ old value.”
Forgetting ×100 or ÷100: When converting between percentages and basis points, multiplying or dividing by 100 is key (percentage ×100 = basis points; basis points ×0.01% = percentage).
Ignoring interest calculation conventions: When evaluating APY/APR changes, simply stating “an increase of 10 basis points” isn’t enough—verify compounding frequency and settlement period.
Risk Warning: Any errors in rate or leverage calculation can lead to financial losses. Always double-check platform rates, units, and settlement cycles before trading or subscribing; when in doubt, start with a small test transaction.
A basis point is a standard unit for measuring small rate changes; 1 basis point = 0.01%. Ten basis points equal 0.10%, or a decimal of 0.001. Building a mental shortcut—basis point ↔ percentage as ×100/÷100—helps you quickly interpret bond yields, fees, spreads, and funding rates. In real trading scenarios, always standardize units first before estimating costs and returns—this makes risk management more reliable.
PVBP stands for “Price Value of a Basis Point.” It quantifies how much the price of a bond or fixed-income product will change when there’s a one-basis-point movement in yield. PVBP is widely used in risk management for bonds and helps traders quickly assess profit and loss due to interest rate shifts—making it a practical application of the basis point concept.
Bps and bp both stand for “basis point.” The only difference is the abbreviation style—“bps” is more commonly used in English literature and financial software—but they are completely equivalent: 1 bps = 1 basis point = 0.01%, and 100 bps = 1%. If you see either term in financial articles or on Gate trading platforms, treat them as representing the same concept.
50 basis points equal 0.5%, while 25 basis points equal 0.25%, making for a difference of 0.25 percentage points. For example, on a $1,000 trade, a fee of 50 basis points amounts to $5; at 25 basis points it’s $2.50. In crypto spot trading, this difference may seem small per trade but can significantly affect total costs in high-frequency or large-volume trading scenarios.
Loan rates often use basis points to describe changes. For instance, if a central bank cuts rates by 50 basis points, it means rates drop by 0.5%; so if the original rate was 5%, the new rate becomes 4.5%. On crypto lending platforms (such as Gate’s borrowing feature), interest rate adjustments are also measured in basis points to help users precisely calculate borrowing costs.
Remember this simple formula: Number of basis points ÷100 = percentage (e.g., 300 bps ÷100 = 3%, or 1 bp ÷100 = 0.01%). Conversely, multiply percentage ×100 to get the number of basis points (e.g., 2.5% ×100 = 250 bps). This method is especially useful when setting fees or calculating trading costs on Gate platforms.


