Crypto trade

Cross margin

Cross Margin: A Beginner's Guide

Welcome to the world of cryptocurrency tradingThis guide will explain a more advanced trading feature called "Cross Margin". It's important to understand this *before* you start using it, as it can amplify both your potential profits *and* your potential losses. This guide assumes you already understand the basics of margin trading and futures contracts. If not, please read those first!

What is Cross Margin?

Imagine you're betting on a football game. Regular margin (also known as isolated margin) is like betting only the money you've specifically set aside for that one game. If you lose, you only lose that amount. Cross Margin, however, is like being able to use all the available funds in your account to cover potential losses across *all* your open positions.

In cryptocurrency trading, Cross Margin allows you to use the total balance of your account as collateral for multiple open positions. This means if one trade starts losing money, it can draw from funds allocated to your other trades to avoid liquidation. This is different from isolated margin, where each trade is isolated and can only be liquidated independently.

Essentially, it pools your resources.

How Does it Work?

Let's say you have 1 Bitcoin (BTC) in your account on an exchange like Register now. You open two trades using Cross Margin:

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⚠️ *Disclaimer: Cryptocurrency trading involves risk. Only invest what you can afford to lose.* ⚠️