
To prevent liquidation, keep a close eye on the margin ratio for your futures contracts. When your margin ratio hits 100%, the platform will liquidate some or all of your positions.
The margin ratio is determined by dividing the maintenance margin by your margin balance. If your margin balance falls below the maintenance margin, the exchange will automatically liquidate your positions.
During price declines, make sure your futures account has enough margin balance. The higher your margin balance, the lower the expected liquidation price for your positions. Most major futures trading platforms offer liquidation price calculators to help you see how increasing your wallet balance can reduce your liquidation price.
A stop-loss order is a conditional order that activates when the market reaches a predetermined stop price. Once triggered, the system executes a buy or sell at either the market price or a specified limit price, depending on your order parameters.
Stop-loss orders are primarily intended to limit an investor’s loss on a position moving against their interests. For example, you might set a stop-loss at 20% below your original entry price.
Let’s say your entry order filled at $40,000. The stop-loss order will execute if the price drops 20% from $40,000, which is $32,000. Setting your stop-loss this way lets you exit a losing trade early and avoid a complete account liquidation.
Consider this scenario: Your wallet balance is 500 USDT, and you open a BTCUSDT long worth 1,000 USDT at 20x leverage with an entry price of $50,000. In this case, your liquidation price is $25,100.40.
Suppose the BTCUSDT price drops 10% to $45,000. You then decide to add to your losing position, opening another BTCUSDT long for 1,000 USDT at 20x leverage at $45,000. After recalculating the liquidation price for the combined positions, your liquidation price rises to $35,857.67.
This example shows that adding more contracts to a losing position raises your overall liquidation price, bringing you closer to being liquidated. Therefore, avoid averaging down on losing positions in futures trading, especially when using high leverage.
Liquidation is when the exchange forcibly closes your position after significant losses. This occurs to prevent your account from going negative when your collateral drops below the required threshold.
Use low leverage, such as 1:10. Lower leverage dampens the effects of market swings on your capital and helps protect you from sudden liquidations during volatile moves.
Set a stop-loss below your entry price so the system automatically sells if the price drops, limiting your loss. For short positions, use a stop-buy if the price rises. Choose levels based on your market analysis.
A margin ratio of 150% or higher is relatively safe, but maintaining 160% or above offers stronger protection. The higher your margin ratio, the lower your risk of liquidation.
Reduce liquidation risk by tightly controlling position sizes and leverage, dynamically adjusting your positions, and diversifying across assets. Keeping a low-risk portfolio greatly reduces the chance of liquidation.
Maintain adequate margin, monitor the market continuously, reduce position sizes, use stop-loss orders, and add extra funds as needed to increase collateral.
It’s recommended to risk 0.5% to 2% of your capital per position, depending on your experience. Beginners should not exceed 1%, while advanced traders may gradually increase up to 2%.
Falling margin, rising debt-to-equity ratio, increased price swings, lower trading volumes, liquidation price nearing current price, and delayed interest payments.











