Have you ever wondered why two people can both be trading Bitcoin but having completely different experiences?


One owns it. The other never will.
That difference comes down to one thing. Spot trading vs futures trading. And most people don't actually know which one they are looking at when they start.
Let's clear it up.
Spot trading is the straightforward one. You buy an asset at the current price and you own it. If you buy Bitcoin on spot, that Bitcoin is yours. It sits in your account. If the price drops, you still hold it. If it rises, your asset rises with it. Simple. Direct. No expiry.
Futures trading works differently.
You are not buying the asset. You are entering a contract based on where the price might go. You can go long expecting the price to rise, or short expecting it to fall. You never actually own Bitcoin or whatever asset you are trading. You are trading price movement.
Now here is where it gets important to understand.
Futures contracts make up roughly 77% of total crypto trading volume in 2026. The market runs on derivatives, not direct ownership. In 2025, perpetual futures volume alone hit $62 trillion compared to $18.6 trillion in spot. That's more than 3 times the size.
This matters because most of the volatility people see in headlines is driven by future activity. Leveraged positions being opened, funding rates shifting, liquidations cascading. Spot markets are quieter by comparison.
And that word leverage is the critical one.
Futures trading can involve leverage. That means you can control a position much larger than your actual capital. Some platforms offer up to 125x leverage. Which sounds powerful until you understand what it means when prices move against you.
In January 2026 alone, over 182,000 traders had positions liquidated in a single day. Over $1 billion wiped out in 24 hours. February saw $3 to $4 billion in liquidations within a single week.
These are not rare events. This is what leveraged futures trading looks like when markets move fast.
Spot trading carries no liquidation risk of this kind. You can hold through volatility without being forced out of your position automatically.
Both products exist for different purposes and suit different levels of experience. Neither is good or bad in isolation. What matters is whether you understand which one you are using and what the risks actually look like before you engage.
Knowing the difference is the first step.
Stay curious. Always DYOR.
#Binance #BinanceAcademy #LearnWithBinance
post-image
此頁面可能包含第三方內容,僅供參考(非陳述或保證),不應被視為 Gate 認可其觀點表述,也不得被視為財務或專業建議。詳見聲明
  • 打賞
  • 回覆
  • 轉發
  • 分享
回覆
請輸入回覆內容
請輸入回覆內容
暫無回覆
  • 已置頂