A Contract Trader's Liquidation Nightmare: How Leveraged Lending Leads to Despair

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If you have fantasies about cryptocurrency trading, the answer to “What does a liquidation mean?” might come as a cold shower. Liquidation is not just a financial term; it represents the moment when a trader’s assets instantly drop to zero and their dreams shatter. This is not alarmist; it’s a real story that happens every day on exchanges.

The Truth About Leverage Trading — You Owe the Money You Borrow

It all starts here: you have 10,000 yuan in capital and walk into a trading platform eager to make a big move. The exchange tells you they can lend you money, so you apply for 10x leverage, instantly holding 100,000 yuan. Of this, 90,000 yuan is borrowed from the exchange.

You use this money to buy Bitcoin (commonly called “big cake” in the industry). Everything seems perfect at first. But the exchange doesn’t take this risk for free. It sets an invisible safety line — the liquidation price. Once this line is triggered, your entire position will be forcibly closed.

What happens next is simple: Bitcoin drops by 10%. Your 10,000 yuan capital instantly halves. The exchange can’t absorb this loss itself, so it automatically sells your collateral, converting it into USDT (a stablecoin), and recovers the borrowed Bitcoin. Your 10,000 yuan disappears. That’s liquidation.

What Is Liquidation? Why Does the Margin Instantaneously Drop to Zero?

You think your first attempt was just bad luck, so you decide to try again. This time, you borrow 10,000 yuan from a peer-to-peer platform to add as margin. You again apply for 10x leverage, and the exchange lends you Bitcoin worth 90,000 yuan.

This time, you’re bearish on the market and decide to take a reverse position — you sell all the borrowed Bitcoin. Now you hold 100,000 USDT. But the market doesn’t fall as you expected; instead, it rises by 10%.

Suddenly, a problem arises. You need to buy back Bitcoin worth over 100,000 yuan to repay the exchange, but you only have 100,000 yuan in cash. The exchange won’t give you that chance — it immediately uses your only 10,000 yuan margin to buy Bitcoin, then reclaims its portion. Your margin drops to zero again. Liquidation happens once more.

From 10,000 to Electric Cars to Nothing: The Causal Chain

In despair, you borrow money from a friend. Another 10,000 yuan flows into the exchange. This time, you decide to leverage 5x (thinking you’re being more cautious). But after three days, you’re liquidated again. The borrowed money is gone.

Now, you have nothing left—only an electric scooter. You start delivering food, earning 5 yuan per order. To buy a helmet, you even borrow 200 yuan from Huabei. Thus, you step into the life of a courier.

A whole year of struggle finally earns you 100,000 yuan. To go all-in, you sell the scooter and sell the helmet to a colleague for just 10 yuan. This 100,000 yuan is supposed to be your turnaround tool. You cautiously open a 10x leverage position.

Three months pass. You’re liquidated again.

This time, your heart is completely shattered. The electric scooter is gone; you’ll never get back what was taken in liquidation. You become a delivery person in the rain and wind, working from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Watching others buy houses and get married, you realize you could have lived a simple, peaceful life — but the contract has condemned you to eternal hardship.

You are 28 years old. No girlfriend, no stable job. The nights after liquidation keep you awake; every cigarette you light fuels regret for the past. Sitting in your rented room, you ask yourself: Do I still have a chance?

The Truth About Leverage Risks Revealed

You make up your mind again. You start saving from food delivery, read all the trading books you can find. You think you’ve grasped the true essence of trading. In a final desperate move, you bet everything.

But late at night, the exchange suddenly disconnects. Network delays, system failures, extreme market conditions — all the things you thought would never happen do happen. When the connection is restored, you’re already liquidated.

At this moment, all you have left is a phone and a few hundred yuan in cash. You can’t even pay next month’s rent.

The cruelty of this story isn’t in its extremity but in revealing the overlooked truth of leverage trading: every penny you borrow must be repaid, and every profit you make is danced on the edge of a cliff. Liquidation isn’t a matter of probability; it’s a mathematical law — as long as you keep betting, you will eventually hit that liquidation line.

The purpose of the margin system set by exchanges is to protect themselves, not you. When your assets deviate from the exchange’s risk model, the system ruthlessly executes a liquidation. That’s what liquidation means: your hopes are instantly destroyed by data, your decisions are instantly rejected by the market, and your assets are instantly reclaimed by the exchange.

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