Why are so many people getting liquidated in the futures market, while new retail traders keep rushing in? Honestly, it's just being fooled by surface numbers.



You see the platform showing "5x" or "10x" leverage, and think that's your actual risk factor. Wrong. That's just the platform's risk control reference value. Your real risk depends on two things: position size and stop-loss settings.

For example, with a principal of 10,000 USDT and 10x leverage, it sounds reasonable, right? But if your stop-loss is only 100 USDT, you're effectively playing with 100x leverage—just a 1% price fluctuation can wipe you out. Many people die this way, thinking it's "small leverage."

Ninety percent of liquidation cases in this market fall into three traps. First is anti-positioning—freezing when seeing losses and holding on until liquidation; second is all-in—putting all chips at once without buffer; third is emotional adding—getting angry after consecutive losses and repeatedly adding to try to recover, which accelerates death.

If you get liquidated, don't blame the market's cruelty. The market is just doing what it should—harvesting opportunities that are actively handed to it.

The essence of futures trading is a "corpse scavenging" competition. Every penny you make comes from the account of someone who got liquidated. Whether the market is bullish or bearish, the traders who profit are always the same because they survive. In a bull market, retail traders FOMO chasing highs, while professional traders short at high levels; in a bear market, retail panic-sell, while professionals bottom-fish.

Those who spend all day thinking, "This coin can rise 100x, I dream of financial freedom," end up as someone else's ATM. And what are the real profitable traders doing? They are calculating probabilities: "This position has a 3:1 risk-reward ratio, very worthwhile. I'll try a 5% position with a clear stop-loss here." Then they wait, waiting for most people to make mistakes.

Professional traders have a common trait: 80% of the time they are out of the market watching the show, 20% of the time they are actively picking up profits. This is not laziness; it's discipline. You're not here to trade frequently; you're here to wait for opportunities. Those who enter and exit ten times a day and watch charts for ten hours often die the fastest.

A final word for those still considering trading futures: if you can't control your risk at all, then don't move. Because in the market's eyes, you are just a moving ATM. If you really want to make money, the first step isn't thinking about how to double your money, but learning how to survive. The market will always be there, but if your principal is gone, everything is zero.
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wrekt_but_learningvip
· 9h ago
Honestly, setting a stop-loss at 100U in this example is heartbreaking. How many people have been lost over such a small detail?
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NeonCollectorvip
· 9h ago
Damn, those people going in and out a dozen times a day, I've seen it too many times. Accounts dropping straight down like that.
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RooftopVIPvip
· 9h ago
Set a stop-loss at 100U and play with 10x leverage, this is a 100x move, pretty intense.
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BearMarketBrovip
· 10h ago
Damn, this is the real talk. The brothers around me who watch the market every day are indeed dying pretty fast.
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DefiPlaybookvip
· 10h ago
Damn, this is why my friends keep losing money. They completely don't understand the relationship between stop-loss and position sizing. Really, setting too wide a stop-loss is like gambling. Instead of using 10x leverage, it's better to just go all-in. Honestly, people who watch the market for ten hours a day tend to die faster. I've seen too many of these cases. Those FOMO traders chasing highs, to put it bluntly, are just paying tuition for professional traders. Emotional position adding is a trap. Many have fallen into it, and I only made that mistake once and never did it again. The key is discipline. I've never heard of 80% cash position, but it sounds very reasonable. So basically, it's a risk management issue. No matter what the market conditions are, surviving is the real victory. Not cutting losses is like waiting for death. Now I set clear stop-losses for every trade before entering. This article is spot on. The ones I see losing money are typically those who go all-in and hold through losses. Waiting for opportunities yields more than frequent trading. I understand that now.
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