These two terms reflect whether a trader believes a cryptocurrency is going to rise or fall in value.
Cryptocurrency traders often use industry-specific jargon that is not fully understood by newcomers.
In a nutshell, long and short positions reflect the two possible directions of a price required to generate a profit.
In a long position, the crypto trader hopes that the price will increase from a given point.
In a short position, the crypto trader expects the price to decline from a given point i.e., the trader “goes short,” or sells the cryptocurrency.
While buying and selling is typical for spot exchanges, you can go long or short on a cryptocurrency without actually buying or selling it.
When you trade these derivatives, you get exposure to cryptocurrencies via long and short positions but without “physically” owning or dealing with them.
That being said, you will see more long positions versus shorts in a bullish market, as more traders want to benefit from the price ascension.
When the market is bearish, short positions generally exceed the long ones.
Professional traders and investors usually buy the dips and sell the rips i.e., they open long positions when the price retreats from recent peaks and sell the cryptocurrency when the price tests resistance levels.
Long and short positions, explained
gepubliceerd op Oct 5, 2020
by Cointele | gepubliceerd op Coinage
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