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I've noticed that many people still confuse how long and short crypto trading work. It's true that it's a key concept for trading futures contracts, but many jump in without really understanding the mechanism. Let me explain how it actually works.
So, here it is: going long is simple — you bet that the price will go up. If you go long on BTC at $30,000 and it rises to $35,000, you make a profit. Conversely, shorting crypto is the opposite — you bet on a decline. If you short BTC at $30,000 and it drops to $25,000, you profit. But of course, if the market moves against your prediction, you lose.
To trade this, you need an account on a platform that offers futures contracts. There are several options available, but the process is similar everywhere. First, you choose your pair, for example BTC/USDT or ETH/USDT. Then you decide whether to go long or short. This is where leverage becomes interesting.
Leverage is a tool that must be used with caution. With $100 and 10x leverage, you can control a $1,000 position. With 50x, that becomes $5,000. It sounds tempting at first, but it’s also the best way to lose your account in minutes if the market turns against you. Liquidation is real.
Once you place your order, you can choose between a market order for immediate execution or a limit order if you’re waiting for a specific price. But the most important thing is to always set a stop loss and a take profit. The stop loss limits your losses, and the take profit allows you to exit with gains before the market reverses.
When should you go long? When the trend is clearly bullish, when the price retests an important support, or when technical indicators like RSI or MACD give positive signals. For shorting crypto, it’s the opposite: bearish trend, resistance touched, or negative technical signals.
But let’s be honest, the risks are huge. Account liquidation is the main threat with high leverage. Cryptocurrencies are volatile, there are regular “stop hunts,” and psychologically it’s hard to stay calm when you see your money fluctuate. FOMO and panic are your worst enemies.
For beginners, my advice: start with low leverage, like 2x to 5x maximum. Don’t put all your capital into a single position. Diversify, manage risk wisely. And seriously, use a demo account before risking real money. Learn technical analysis first, trade futures afterward. It’s the only way to avoid becoming a liquidation statistic.