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Leverage in Futures Trading

Leverage in Futures Trading: A Beginner's Guide

Welcome to the world of cryptocurrency futures tradingThis guide will focus on a powerful, yet risky, tool called *leverage*. Understanding leverage is crucial before you start trading futures contracts. It can amplify your profits, but it can also dramatically increase your losses. This guide aims to explain leverage in a clear and simple way for complete beginners.

What is Leverage?

Imagine you want to buy a house worth $100,000. You could pay the entire amount yourself, or you could take out a mortgage (a loan) for $80,000 and only pay $20,000 as a down payment. The mortgage *leverages* your investment. You control an asset worth $100,000 with only $20,000 of your own money.

In cryptocurrency futures trading, leverage works similarly. Instead of using all your own capital to open a trade, you borrow funds from the exchange. This allows you to control a larger position with a smaller amount of capital.

For example, with 10x leverage, $100 of your money can control a $1,000 position. With 100x leverage, $100 can control a $10,000 positionThis sounds fantastic, but remember the increased risk.

How Does Leverage Work in Futures Trading?

Futures contracts are agreements to buy or sell an asset at a predetermined price and date. When you trade futures with leverage, you're essentially making a margin call. You're putting down a small percentage of the total trade value as *margin*. The exchange lends you the rest.

Let's say Bitcoin is trading at $30,000. You believe the price will go up, and you want to buy a Bitcoin futures contract with 10x leverage.

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⚠️ *Disclaimer: Cryptocurrency trading involves risk. Only invest what you can afford to lose.* ⚠️