How Liquidation Works in Futures Trading?

In Futures trading, you can trade with leverage and are only required to fund the initial margin to open positions in a futures contract. It is a critical feature that makes the Futures market attractive, as it allows you to profit from relatively small changes in price movement. Leverage can potentially magnify your profits or losses by the same magnitude.

How liquidation works

Futures exchanges have established various risk management mechanisms to protect highly leveraged traders from incurring significant losses. One of which is liquidation, a risk control feature that prevents traders from falling into negative equity.

In volatile markets, leveraged positions are prone to price gaps and may cause a trader’s equity to plunge into negative territory instantaneously. In these situations, losses can exceed the maintenance margin.

Here's an example of how it plays out in real life:

Consider two traders, Alice and Bob, both initiated opposing positions in BTC/USDT perpetual futures worth 1 BTC with 20x leverage. Both Alice and Bob have a wallet balance of 5,000 USDT each. Table 1 describes the details of their respective positions.

Table 1 - Position details of Alice and Bob

Position

Entry Price

Notional Value

Initial Margin

Maintenance Margin

Liquidation Price

Alice

Long

$55,000

$55,000

5%

0.5%

$50,200

Bob

Short

$55,000

$55,000

5%

0.5%

$59,750

Let’s assume a 10% fall in BTC/USDT perpetual prices to $49,500. In this scenario, Alice incurs a loss of $5,500 in her long trade, while Bob profits $5,500 on his short trade. The consequent events are as follows:

Alice depletes her margin and is subjected to liquidation.

The price at which margin drops to zero is called the liquidation price. For Alice, $50,200 is the liquidation price.

Instantaneously, the exchange liquidates Alice’s position at $50,200 to ensure that Alice does not fall into negative equity.

In a volatile market, it is extremely difficult to ensure that the losing positions are liquidated precisely at their liquidation price. Furthermore, liquidating beyond the bankruptcy price would mean that Bob receives fewer profits and Alice would incur more losses.

To prevent these occurrences, exchanges tend to liquidate the losing positions at a price better than the liquidation price.

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