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Why Is the Mark Price Often Different from the Last Traded Price?

The mark price is calculated using a more stable, averaged price from a basket of spot exchanges (the index price) and an average of the perpetual contract's basis. The last traded price is simply the most recent price at which a trade occurred on the specific exchange's order book.

Temporary market volatility or manipulation can cause the last traded price to deviate significantly from the stable mark price.

What Is the Difference between the Mark Price and the Index Price in a Perpetual Swap?
What Is the Difference between the Last Traded Price and the Mark Price?
Why Do Exchanges Use a Mark Price Instead of the Last Traded Price for Liquidations?
What Is the Difference between Mark Price and Index Price in Derivatives Trading?