Post
Topic
Board Trading Discussion
Re: Long term investing - Spot, Margin or Derivatives?
by
loll_l
on 26/09/2022, 06:35:06 UTC
Thanks for all of your replies - it's nice to see a forum and community who are actually trying to help and advise rather than condescend a newbie  Smiley

I realise that the most common and less risky way to invest long term is to purchase a coin/token through Spot on an exchange like Binance or KuCoin and then transfer the coin/token to a wallet like TrustWallet or MetaMask (as this is considered safer than keeping the coin/token on an exchange)...

If however, hypothetically speaking, we lived in a world where exchanges were perfectly safe and you didn't need to move your crypto to a wallet... and in this hypothetical world I wanted to purchase crypto with a 2x leverage, I was just wondering what the downside (apart from safety) of keeping a long term trade open in Derivatives would be....

From what I can gather through your replies, it seems as though another downside of going down this route (apart from safety) would be that keeping your trade open in Derivatives will accumulate fees that would not be accumulated in Spot.... How do these fees work?

Using my initial example which I have quoted below….
 
Quote
EXAMPLE

If I purchase $1000 of BTC using the ByBit Derivatives pair BTC/USDT (i.e. using USDT to purchase the BTC) and I buy the BTC when the price is at $14k using a leverage of 2x, please can someone tell me if I've understood the following scenarios correctly:

1 - If, in a years time, the BTC price goes up from $14k to $56k, that would mean the price has multiplied by 4. That being the case, my investment of $1k USDT which I leveraged at 2x (so effectively invested $2k) will go up to $8k, resulting in $7k profit... Have I understood this correctly?

In an example like the above, how much in fees can I expect to pay over a year?