Use Price Chart History to Filter Real Price Arbitrage Setups

Use Price Chart History to Filter Real Price Arbitrage Setups

Neil has worked in the crypto industry since 2019 and actively trades arbitrage opportunities across spot and futures markets.


Use Price Chart History to Filter Real Price Arbitrage Setups

The live crypto spread on my screen is a snapshot. It does not tell me if the move is new or if I am staring at a structural plateau that has ignored arbitrageurs for a week.

That is why I open Price Chart before I care about the headline %. History is the cheap part of spread tracking; size is the expensive part.

Spike vs Plateau (The Only Question That Matters Early)

Price arbitrage opportunities I still consider usually look like this on chart history:

  • quiet baseline between two venues,
  • then a sudden surge in separation,
  • while books still show room after spread (see gross vs net).

Setups I skip:

  • same cryptocurrency price difference for many days,
  • flat line on Price Chart,
  • no story for why the cheap venue is cheap.

That is the same "walk away" list in when to enter or exit price arb—the chart is how I prove it to myself in thirty seconds.

Where to Open Price Chart in ArbiSight

Price Chart is in-app wherever you compare two exchanges with chart support enabled:

  • Live Crypto Arbitrage — on the pair row when both venues support it.
  • Orderbook viewPrice Chart button next to the spread summary when both exchanges qualify.

If chart is unavailable for a venue pair, I do not pretend history does not matter—I use Spread Analysis and Orderbook Snapshot harder.

Spread Analysis: Manual Sanity Check

Spread Analysis is a simple calculator: long exchange price, short exchange price → spread %. I use it when:

  • I am quoting a friend a number,
  • I want to verify the table without mental math,
  • or I am modeling "what if the gap closes by X%."

Positive spread when the long venue is cheaper than the short venue is the classic crypto arbitrage between exchanges story. The calculator does not replace the chart—it complements it.

Pair Charts With Alerts (So Pings Are Not Gospel)

When Price Opportunity Telegram alerts fire, my order is:

  1. Read the ping.
  2. Open Price Chart — surge or plateau?
  3. If surge, continue the workflow.
  4. If plateau, Stop the symbol or ignore.

A free arbitrage screener or arbitrage scanner row plus chart beats either alone.

When History Says No but the % Screams Yes

Persistent gaps often mean transfer friction, index mismatch, or exit liquidity that will not improve because you waited. There is no guarantee of mean reversion—chart flatlines are often the market telling you that.

Delisting and policy shocks break charts differently; read coin delisting risk before you hero-size alts.

Parting Thought

Crypto arbitrage tools that only show live ticks train reflexes. Price Chart trains judgment.

Trade the spike, not the plateau. Let Watchlist hold names worth another look tomorrow—not every row that flickered green for a second.


Disclaimer: This article is educational content only and not financial advice. Trading carries risk, including loss of capital. Chart availability varies by exchange configuration.


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