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Your perpetual contract profit and loss are being secretly altered by an invisible algorithm.
Many traders stare at the floating profit numbers on their trading interface, thinking that they represent real gains. Little do they know, the complex algorithms behind perpetual contracts have long since quietly changed the meaning of profit and loss. Mark price, funding rate, liquidation mechanism, auto-deleveraging—these unseen forces are conducting a silent game of chess within your account. The safe holding you believe in may already be on the edge of risk; the slight floating loss you see could be a warning before liquidation.
The truth about perpetual contracts is: the numbers you see are never equal to the final settlement figures.
Floating profit does not equal real profit—The trap of the mark price in perpetual contracts
The most common misconception in perpetual contract trading is confusing the “mark price” with the “latest transaction price.” Exchanges use the mark price to determine if you should be liquidated, but your orders are executed at the latest transaction price. This dual-price system is designed to prevent market manipulation but also sets a huge trap for unwary traders.
Scenario 1: Being forced out by liquidity shocks “sniping”
Trader A goes long on BTC at $31,500, setting a stop loss at $30,800. Under normal market conditions, the price fluctuates slightly between $31,400 and $31,600. Suddenly, a large sell order appears, causing the transaction price to plummet to $30,780 for just 2 seconds before rebounding to $31,500.
What just happened?
Result: The trader was just “shaken out” by liquidity impact; the market itself didn’t change, but their reaction caused the loss. Later, the market rises as expected, but they can only regret from the sidelines.
Scenario 2: Stability apparent, sudden liquidation
Conversely, a similar deadly situation occurs. Trader B shorts ETH, watching the price stabilize at $2,000 on a small exchange, judging their position to be safe.
But the system uses an index price that is a weighted average of spot prices from Binance, OKX, Coinbase, etc. When these platforms’ prices drop to $1,900, the mark price also falls below the liquidation threshold—even if the price on their “own” exchange hasn’t moved.
The account is instantly liquidated.
Key understanding: The mark price is the real death line
Perpetual traders must understand a brutal truth: the candlestick charts you watch are only superficial; the “backend thermometer”—the mark price—is the real indicator of your survival or demise. Ignoring this is equivalent to trading blind.
The compound killing of funding fees: Why high leverage is most deadly in volatile markets
If the mark price is a deadly trap, then funding fees are an invisible meat grinder. This effect is amplified when using high leverage.
Funding fees are periodic payments exchanged between longs and shorts to anchor the spot price, seemingly insignificant. But these fees are calculated based on the full nominal value of the contract, not your margin. Coupled with the compound effect of high leverage, the consequences are severe.
Chronic bleeding calculation
Trader C opens a 100,000 USDT BTC long position with 50x leverage, investing only $2,000 margin.
This $300 accounts for 15% of the initial margin.
The most terrifying part: During these 10 days, BTC’s price remains unchanged, and the trader does nothing, yet their margin is silently eroded by 15%.
High leverage + volatility + long holding period = invisible time bomb
In sideways markets, funding fees are like small daily cuts on your account. The more volatile the market, the longer you hold, and the higher the leverage, the deeper the wound. Many traders only realize in hindsight: they didn’t lose because of wrong market judgment, but because of unseen costs.
The triple kill of liquidation, slippage, and ADL in perpetual contracts
When markets experience extreme volatility, the risks of perpetual contracts are no longer single-dimensional but involve a chain of mechanisms.
Chain liquidations and slippage hell
When a large leveraged position is liquidated, the system issues a huge market order to close it. In illiquid markets, this market order rapidly “eats through” the order book, causing extreme slippage, which pushes prices further in the same direction. This price movement triggers more liquidations, creating a self-reinforcing negative feedback loop.
The most famous example is the market crash on May 19, 2021. Bitcoin plummeted from $42,000 to $30,000 in less than an hour, triggering a domino effect:
Trader D set a stop at $38,000, but the actual execution price was $34,500. It wasn’t that he wanted to lose that much; the system, in chaos, simply didn’t give him a choice.
Auto-deleveraging (ADL): The curse of winners
After the insurance fund is exhausted, the system activates the last risk control—auto-deleveraging. It forcibly closes the most profitable opposing positions, using those profits to cover bankrupt traders’ losses.
This creates a bizarre scenario: winners become victims.
Trader E shorts LUNA at $20, with the price crashing to $1, making a paper profit of 95%. But due to the crash causing many longs to bankrupt and deplete the insurance fund, the system triggers ADL.
E’s short position is forcibly closed, but not at the market price of $1; it’s assigned a price of $2.5. His profit instantly shrinks, and he can’t reopen the position, only watch helplessly as the market continues downward.
From paradise to hell, it’s just an algorithmic judgment by the system. Your “loot” is taken away for “aftermath.”
Practical example: the full lifecycle of a BTC trade
To make these concepts more concrete, let’s look at a complete trading example of how a perpetual contract operates.
Position opening
A trader on Binance, when BTC is $60,000, opens a 1 BTC long with 20x leverage.
Profit scenario
Market moves: BTC rises to $65,000
Surface profit is $5,000, but after fees, actual net is about $4,931. Fees eat up nearly 1.4% of the profit.
Loss scenario
When BTC starts to fall:
Many traders hold onto hope near the liquidation price, thinking the market will reverse, but ignore the early warning signals from the mark price mechanism. This is the most common psychological trap in losing trades. Ultimately, the position is liquidated, losing the entire $3,000 margin.
Five key understandings to master perpetual contracts
After understanding these mechanisms, how should you operate practically? Here are five top-priority recommendations.
1. Focus on the mark price, not the candlestick chart
Every platform provides tools for mark price and liquidation warnings—Binance has a dedicated “mark price” module, Bybit has “Estimated Liquidation Price,” OKX shows “Risk Ratio.” Use these tools effectively instead of relying solely on the latest transaction candlestick chart. The mark price is the real indicator of your survival.
2. Limit orders are better than market orders for stops
In volatile markets, setting limit stop-loss orders can effectively prevent secondary damage from slippage. This is very important—a good stop-loss setup can minimize your losses.
3. Avoid excessive leverage; understand the cost of each leverage level
Leverage isn’t forbidden, but you must understand: each additional leverage multiplies both unrealized gains and losses exponentially, reducing your error margin. A 50x position allows less than 1% error—basically gambling.
4. Recognize subtle differences across platforms
Binance, Bybit, Bitget, etc., differ in fee structures, liquidation mechanisms, funding frequency. Understanding these differences is fundamental to precise operation. Don’t apply the same rules across platforms without adjustment.
5. Shorten trading cycles in high-volatility markets
The greater the uncertainty, the shorter your holding time should be. Flexibility beats prediction. During high volatility, funding costs are high, slippage risk increases, and ADL risk rises—all unfavorable for long-term holding.
Conclusion: The brutal reality of perpetual contracts
The appeal of perpetual contracts lies in high leverage, no settlement, and 24/7 trading flexibility. But this flexibility comes at a cost: every detail can be fatal.
The ultimate truth of perpetual trading:
If after reading all this you feel perpetual contracts are too complex and hard to control precisely—that’s a sign not to trade them. It’s not humility; it’s responsible self-awareness.
Perpetual contracts are designed for a small group of traders who truly understand their mechanisms. Most people will only be rewritten by invisible algorithms.