Difference between futures and spot, understanding leverage, simplified liquidation price calculation, recommended leverage for beginners, and why stop-loss is mandatory—all explained in one article.
Adding margin is a last resort to save a position. This article explains manual margin addition, auto-margin, time windows, critical points for addition, and when to stop loss instead of adding margin.
Settled every 8 hours, it's a payment between long and short positions. We explain positive/negative meanings, the formula, historical ranges, and arbitrage strategies so you can calculate costs before holding.
Having your stop loss hit only for the market to reverse is a common frustration in futures trading. Learn how to choose stop loss positions using key levels, volatility bands, and time factors, along with tips to prevent 'pin' triggers.
3-5x is a healthy starting range for beginners. We'll explain the mathematical traps of high leverage, the relationship between leverage and position size, and recommended configurations for different account sizes to help you avoid instant liquidation.
Maker fee 0.02% and Taker fee 0.04% are the base rates. We explain VIP levels, BNB deduction, rebates, and delivery contract differences to help you minimize costs.
Isolated Margin locks risk to a single trade, while Cross Margin uses your total capital as a buffer. We explain the margin mechanisms, liquidation triggers, and practical scenarios for both, with switching advice.
Open a long to profit from a rise, and a short to profit from a fall. We'll explain the order interface, direction confirmation, reverse operations, and the details of One-way and Hedge modes to help you avoid clicking the wrong buttons.
Liquidation price isn't a mystical formula. Starting from three variables—margin, leverage, and maintenance margin rate—we'll walk through real examples for both long and short positions so you can calculate it yourself.
Insufficient margin doesn't mean instant liquidation; instead, it triggers a process of position reduction followed by liquidation. We'll clarify maintenance margin rates, the window for replenishment, and the actual liquidation process to help you avoid misjudgments.
Perpetual has no expiry, while Delivery has a fixed deadline. Funding rates, holding mechanisms, and liquidation logic are completely different. This guide explains the underlying differences, use cases, and suitable audiences for both.