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One of the most common questions I get from people who are new to crypto is, what's the difference between spot trading and futures trading?
They sound similar. They're not.
Let me break it down simply.
Spot trading is the most straightforward way to buy or sell a digital asset. When you buy Bitcoin on spot, you own $BTC . The trade settles immediately, the asset is yours, and your risk is limited to what you put in. If the price drops, you lose on that position. If it goes up, you gain. Simple cause and effect.
Futures trading works differently, and this is where a lot of beginners get tripped up. With futures, you're not buying the asset itself. You're trading a contract based on the asset's future price movement. You can take a position on whether the price will go up or down, without ever actually owning the underlying asset.
That distinction matters more than most people realize.
Futures also typically involve leverage. This means you can control a position much larger than your actual capital. And here's the part people don't fully appreciate until it hits them, leverage amplifies everything. Not just potential gains. Potential losses too. A leveraged position moving against you doesn't just lose money slowly. It can liquidate your entire position quickly.
This is why the risk profile of futures trading is fundamentally different from spot. With spot, the worst case is your asset loses value. With leveraged futures, you can lose more than you expected, faster than you anticipated.
Neither is inherently better than the other. They serve different purposes and suit different levels of experience and risk tolerance. Spot is generally where most people start because what you see is what you get. Futures is a more complex product that requires a solid understanding of how leverage and liquidation actually work before you engage with it.
The important thing is knowing which one you're using and why, not just following what someone else is doing.
Understand the product before you use it. Always DYOR.
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