Friends who are new to the crypto world are probably confused by terms like “bulls,” “bears,” “go long,” and “shorting,” especially since these terms frequently appear when reading market analysis articles. Actually, understanding the meanings of go long and short is not difficult at all. Today, let’s go through it carefully so you can get it straight.



First, let’s talk about “go long” and “doing long.” “Go long” is easy to understand—it means you expect the market outlook for a certain coin to rise, and you believe it will go up. “Doing long,” on the other hand, is when you actually buy it. In the spot market, all buying actions are essentially doing long. For example, suppose a certain coin costs ten dollars each right now. You think it will rise, so you buy one, spending ten dollars. When it goes up to fifteen dollars, you sell it and make five dollars in profit from the price difference. This whole process is called doing long—it’s basically the logic of buying low and selling high. The concept of bulls is a bit broader: it doesn’t refer to any specific person or institution; it generally refers to a group of investors who are bullish and share the same expectations. They all think the coin price will rise, so that’s why they enter the market and buy.

Then what about “going short” and “doing short”? It’s the exact opposite logic. Going short means you believe the market will fall; doing short is the actual trading action based on that judgment. However, you can’t short in the spot market because you need to have the coin before you can sell it. At that point, you need to borrow the coin—using futures or leverage trading to do short.

The process of doing short is a bit more complicated, so I’ll explain it with an example. Suppose the coin price is ten dollars, and you don’t have any coins, but you believe it will drop. In that case, you can use margin to borrow a coin from the exchange—for instance, if you only have two dollars, you put those two dollars in as collateral and borrow one coin. After you borrow it, you immediately sell it on the market, so now you have ten dollars in cash. But that ten dollars isn’t really yours, because you still owe the exchange one coin.

If the coin price truly drops to five dollars as you expected, you use five dollars to buy back one coin and return it to the exchange—the remaining five dollars is your profit. That’s the process of making money by doing short. But on the flip side, what if the coin price doesn’t fall and instead rises? Your margin will start to lose value; if the loss exceeds the margin amount, you will get liquidated, and your principal is gone. That’s also why the risk of doing short is higher.

Bears, just like bulls, are a general term for a group of investors with the same bearish expectations. They believe the coin price will decline, so they choose to do short or hold the coin and wait.

Once you understand what go long and go short mean, you’ll be able to read most market analysis reports in the market. The key is to remember that bulls and bears are not individuals—they’re general terms for market participants. Go long and go short are judgments, while doing long and doing short are the actual actions. I hope this explanation helps you sort out your thinking. If you have any questions, you can check the market on Gate more and apply what you learn—understanding will become deeper through practice.
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