Crypto trade

Roll Over Strategies

Roll Over Strategies in Cryptocurrency Trading: A Beginner's Guide

Welcome to the world of cryptocurrency tradingThis guide explains “roll over” strategies, a technique used to manage positions that are nearing their expiration date, particularly in perpetual contracts. Don’t worry if some of these terms are new – we’ll break everything down.

What are Perpetual Contracts?

Before we dive into roll overs, let's understand Perpetual Contracts. Unlike traditional Futures Contracts, perpetual contracts don't have an expiration date. However, to simulate a futures contract and prevent the price from diverging too much from the Spot Market, they use a mechanism called a “funding rate.”

Think of it like this: if more traders are *long* (betting the price will go up) than *short* (betting the price will go down), long positions pay a fee to short positions. Conversely, if more traders are short, shorts pay longs. This funding rate is paid periodically (usually every 8 hours). You can learn more about Funding Rates to understand this better.

Why Roll Over?

Even though perpetual contracts don’t *expire* in the same way as futures, exchanges often restructure them periodically. This is called a “roll over”. Essentially, the exchange replaces the existing contract with a new one. This happens to maintain liquidity and ensure the contract continues to track the underlying Cryptocurrency.

When a roll over happens, you have a few options:

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