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← Trading 101

Lesson 5 of 10 Β· 8 min read

Long, short, and leverage

Long bets on price going up, short bets on it going down, and leverage multiplies both. Understanding what 5x actually does to your equity is the difference between a tool and a trap.

Long, short, and leverage

There are only two directions in trading. A Long position profits when price rises; a Short position profits when price falls. Everything else β€” entry timing, exits, sizing β€” sits on top of that binary choice.

Spot vs perpetual

A Spot trade is the simplest: you buy the asset, you own the asset, you can sell it later. No expiry, no borrowing, no third party between you and the position. A Perpetual contract (perp) is a derivative β€” you do not own the underlying, you hold a contract whose value tracks it. Perps allow shorting and leverage, and they introduce one new mechanism in exchange: Funding, a small periodic payment between longs and shorts that keeps the perp price tethered to spot.

What leverage does

Leverage lets you control a position larger than your account balance, by borrowing the difference from the exchange. With 5x leverage, $1,000 of your equity controls a $5,000 position. A 1% move in your favour returns 5% on your equity. A 1% move against you costs 5% of your equity. The math is symmetric until it isn't β€” see liquidation, below.

Liquidation

Because you borrowed money to open the position, the exchange will close it the moment your remaining Equity can no longer cover the loss β€” this is Liquidation. At 5x leverage, a 20% adverse move (roughly, before fees and the maintenance margin) wipes out the entire collateral. At 10x, 10% does it. At 20x, 5%. Compare that to the daily range of the asset you trade. Most crypto liquidations are not bad luck; they are predictable consequences of leverage chosen without reference to volatility.

Reflection

Compute the price move that would liquidate a 10x long on the asset you trade most. How does that distance compare to a typical daily range?