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." Don't worry if it sounds complicated – we'll break it down step-by-step. This guide assumes you already understand the basics of cryptocurrency, cryptocurrency exchanges, and margin trading. If not, please read those guides first!

What is Margin Trading? A Quick Recap

Before diving into Cross Margin, let's quickly revisit margin trading. Normally, when you buy cryptocurrency, you use your own funds. With margin trading, you *borrow* funds from the exchange to increase your trading size. This can amplify your profits, but also your losses. Think of it like using a loan to buy a house – you can afford a bigger house, but you also have a bigger debt.

Margin trading uses a concept called "margin," which is the amount of your own capital you need to put up as collateral for the borrowed funds.

Introducing Cross Margin

Cross Margin is a type of margin trading where your margin balance is shared across *all* your open positions on the same exchange. This is different from Isolated Margin (which we'll compare later).

Here's how it works:

1. You deposit funds into your margin account. 2. You open multiple trades (positions). 3. The exchange uses your total margin balance as collateral for *all* of these positions. 4. If one trade starts losing money, the exchange can use the funds allocated to other profitable trades to cover the losses.

Essentially, your winning trades help to support your losing trades. This can be helpful, but it also means a losing trade can impact your entire margin account.

An Example of Cross Margin in Action

Let's say you have $1000 in your margin account on Register now. You open two trades:

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