#合约爆仓 If you are trading high-frequency contracts, you may not be aware of the existence of transaction fees, or you might overlook these fees, not realizing that the fees from frequent trading could even exceed your principal, which can be a significant expense.
Many people might not know about the existence of transaction fees or might wonder why they are still losing money even when they seem to be making a profit.
This is especially true for short-term traders, where the market price for opening and closing positions can sometimes mean that fees take up a large portion of the profits. Today, let’s go into detail about how contract fees are calculated.
For example: opening 1 contract at the current price of 84,000 U:
- Limit order fee is 0.02%
84000 × 0.02% = 16.8 U
- Opening and closing a limit order is 33.6 U
- Market order fee is 0.05%
84000 × 0.05% = 42 U
- Closing and opening a market order is 84 U
Even if you enter with a limit order and exit with a market order, it’s still 33.6 + 42 = 75.6 U.
For one order, the fee is calculated as 33.6 U at the minimum, and 84 U at the maximum.
Even if you place two orders in a day, calculated at 33.6 U, that’s 33.6 × 2 = 67.2 U.
In a month, taking weekends off and trading for 22 days, that would be 22 × 67.2 = 1478.4 U.
With rebates, you can save a few hundred U in a month.
Does this U have to go entirely to the platform? Therefore, I suggest that everyone definitely open for rebates. If one day you accidentally get liquidated, having rebates gives you another chance to make a comeback.
So definitely open for rebates, and make sure to reclaim your transaction fees; otherwise, they all go to the market.
However, the premise is that you can establish a channel with the platform where we can contact each other at any time, and any issues that arise can be addressed and checked. I know that you, being smart, will find me.
Within the platform, the rebate ratios also differ, so how should you look for quality rebates?
1. Inquire about the rebate ratio. If the explanation of the rebate ratio is unclear, pass on that option.
2. Rebate timing. There are currently various rebate methods, and most are weekly. As for semi-monthly and monthly rebates, for daily rebates, it’s best to pass, as the platform needs to pull and calculate data daily, and there’s a high probability that they won’t rebate you later, meaning the nodes are unstable, and it’s just a gimmick to attract users.
3. Whether the rebate data is clear, can it be viewed, and can it withstand verification and checks at any time?
4. Most importantly, rebate stability. I've encountered many users who only received rebates for a period and then saw no more rebates, essentially losing all their fee rebates to higher-ups.
#返佣