In a brutal market, survival is always the top priority.



The most heartbreaking story is this: a trader's directional judgment was completely correct, and they held on stubbornly for four days, only to be drained of over 1000 USDT by funding rates little by little, and finally forced to close the position. Ironically, the market surged after the liquidation. The shock brought by this contrast is something experienced traders can all feel.

The root cause is not misjudging the direction, but failing to understand the underlying logic of contract trading. Today, starting from the pitfalls we've stepped into ourselves, let's analyze the five most common tricks that easily trap traders in perpetual contracts.

**Trap 1: Funding Rate — The Invisible Plunder**

Most people focus on candlestick charts to judge price movements, never thinking that the funding rate quietly erodes their principal in the background.

This mechanism is unique to perpetual contracts. It is settled every 8 hours, and when the rate is positive, longs pay shorts; the reverse is also true. The key point is, even if the price remains unchanged, your money is still disappearing.

How to deal with it? Keep an eye on the funding rate level. Once two consecutive periods exceed 0.05%, be cautious when opening long positions. If you plan to hold for the long term, consider a different approach — trading in a direction where the funding rate is negative, so you can continuously earn fees instead of paying them.

**Trap 2: Liquidation Price — The Hidden Noose**

A common mistake among beginners: thinking that a 10x leverage only gets liquidated if the price drops 10%, but in reality, the system liquidates at a 5% drop. Is that strange? Not at all.

When the exchange executes a liquidation, it charges additional fees, which makes the actual liquidation price more stringent than the theoretical calculation. For example, when holding a long position, the calculation of the liquidation price involves the maintenance margin rate pulling the line downward. It may seem to have a safety margin, but in fact, that line of defense is much more fragile than you think.
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AirdropHunterXiaovip
· 2h ago
Another routine post about cutting leeks. The fee rate has long been exploited to the point of baldness. Only after being trapped by fees do you realize how ruthless they are. Long-term holding is basically slow suicide. That's right, forced liquidation is the real killer, always coming before you can calculate it. I've stepped on these pits before. Now I keep a close eye on the fee rate; losing money first means losing the exchange's money. Only by understanding these can you survive; otherwise, no matter how much capital you have, it can't withstand this kind of drain.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 01-07 00:44
I have a say in the fee rate bloodsucking... Last year, because I didn't keep a close eye on the 0.05% line, I was forcibly drained of over 2000U. Data shows that the continuous positive fee rate lasted for three settlement cycles. The key issue was mindset—I always thought I could endure it. Now I've learned to be smarter; once the fee rate turns red, I switch directly to a negative fee rate to earn passively. Not being greedy is not an option.
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NeverVoteOnDAOvip
· 01-06 19:52
Fee rate cuts are the real hidden danger, more terrifying than forced liquidation
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SchroedingerGasvip
· 01-06 19:50
Funding rate is truly the silent killer. If you choose the wrong direction, you still end up losing.
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SeasonedInvestorvip
· 01-06 19:48
Ha, fee rates are truly the silent killers. I only realized after being drained completely.
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RugpullSurvivorvip
· 01-06 19:41
It's the same old story again, the funding rate vampire is truly relentless. Even when you see the right direction, you still get wiped out. Truly speechless. --- The liquidation price system is the most disgusting. Your calculations and the exchange's calculations are never the same, and the leek harvest tax is arranged accordingly. --- I just want to know how many people die because of the rate rather than the direction. I guess it accounts for more than half. --- That's why I now prefer to miss the market opportunities rather than overlook every detail. The painful lessons have built up my experience. --- Futures trading, to put it simply, is a meat grinder for exchanges and big players. Retail traders are just paying tuition here. --- Can negative rates still charge in reverse? I need to try this operation. It's definitely better than passive bleeding. --- That guy's direction was completely correct, but he was drained of 1000U. I really find it heartbreaking—just a little more, and it would have been perfect. --- Leverage is a double-edged sword. A slight mistake can lead to an abyss. We must always respect the market.
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MetaverseMortgagevip
· 01-06 19:34
This funding rate is truly a silent killer; I've seen too many people fall victim to it.
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SolidityNewbievip
· 01-06 19:30
Fees feast on people without spitting out bones, I've seen too many ground to death by them.
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BlockchainBouncervip
· 01-06 19:26
Funding rate is truly amazing, silently harvesting profits. Even if the direction is correct, it's still a loss.
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