The cryptocurrency market has exploded in popularity in recent years, which has created a range of opportunities for traders to speculate on market prices. But before you open a position, it is important to know how to trade cryptocurrencies – so, we’ve compiled a list of everything you need to know to get started.
Cryptocurrency trading steps
The cryptocurrency market can be daunting for beginners and seasoned traders alike due to the vast amount of jargon and processes involved. We’ve broken it down into six simple steps to help you better understand the cryptocurrency market and how to trade it:
Decide how you’d like to trade cryptocurrencies
Learn how the cryptocurrency market works
Open an account
Build a trading plan
Choose your cryptocurrency trading platform
Open, monitor and close your first position
Decide how you’d like to trade cryptocurrencies
There are two routes to trading cryptocurrencies: speculating on their prices using CFDs or buying the digital currencies in the hope they increase in value.
Trading cryptocurrencies using CFDs
A CFD is a contract in which you agree to exchange the difference in the price of a cryptocurrency from when you first open your position to when you close it. You are speculating on the price of the market, rather than taking ownership of the cryptocurrency. If you open a long position and the cryptocurrency does increase in value, you’ll make a profit, but if it falls in price, you’ll make a loss – the opposite is true for a short position.
Find out more about CFD trading
Buying cryptocurrencies via an exchange
Alternatively, you might decide to buy a cryptocurrency, which means that you take ownership of a portion of the digital currency outright, with the intention of holding it in a digital wallet and profiting if it increases in value.
Before you can start, you would need to open a cryptocurrency wallet, and an account with a cryptocurrency exchange. There can be a lot of steps to this process, and you might have to join a waiting list for an account.
Discover the benefits of trading cryptocurrencies
Learn how the cryptocurrency market works
The cryptocurrency market operates in a different way from other financial markets, which makes it vital to learn how it works, and understand the jargon used to describe it, before you start trading.
The cryptocurrency market is a decentralised digital currency network, which means that it operates through a system of peer-to-peer transaction checks, rather than a central server. When cryptocurrencies are bought and sold, the transactions are added to the blockchain – a shared digital ledger which records data – through a process called ‘mining’.
Cryptocurrencies are also famously volatile, which makes it important to know what is likely to move the market – this could be anything from ICOs and blockchain forks, to breaking news and government regulation.
Learn more about cryptocurrencies and how they work
Open an account
When you trade on cryptocurrencies, instead of buying them, you can be ready to open a position much faster. You don’t need a digital wallet or an account with an exchange. In fact, all you need to trade via CFDs is an account with a leveraged trading provider.
With IG, you can open an account in minutes, and there’s no obligation to add funds until you want to place a trade.
Build a trading plan
Having a trading plan is crucial to success for any trader but even more so for cryptocurrency traders because the market can see high amounts of volatility. This is a double-edged sword: volatility makes the market extremely attractive, but difficult to trade. This is why your trading plan should include risk management tools, as well as an outline of your goals, which cryptocurrency you want to trade, and a methodology for entering and exiting trades – known as a trading strategy.
Learn more about cryptocurrency trading strategies
Your plan should also include the way you will analyse the cryptocurrency market: either through technical or fundamental analysis. Technical analysis focuses on the price movement of a cryptocurrency and its historical patterns, while fundamental analysis looks at the external factors and macroeconomic data that impact the digital asset. Whichever method you choose, it is important to remain up to date with any news that could impact the market, as cryptocurrencies are especially sensitive to market sentiment.
Choose your cryptocurrency trading platform
Our trading platforms can provide you with a smarter and faster way to trade cryptocurrencies CFDs – with personalised alerts, interactive charts and built-in risk management tools. You can trade via the IG trading platform using:
Your web browser
One of our mobile apps
Advanced third-party platforms such as MT4
Find out more about our trading platforms
Open, monitor and close your first position
As there is no need to own a digital wallet, once you have opened your account with IG and chosen your platform, you can start trading cryptocurrencies straight away.
Whether you have decided to trade bitcoin, ether, litecoin or another cryptocurrency, all you need to do is open the deal ticket for your chosen market, and you’ll see both a buy and a sell price listed. You’ll be able to decide the size of your position, and then select buy to open a long position or sell to open a short position. Remember, you can add stops or limits to close your trade once it hits a certain level and protect your trade from unnecessary risks.
You can monitor the profit/loss of your position in the ‘open positions’ section of the dealing platform. And when you have decided that it’s time to close your position, you just need to place an equivalent trade in the opposite direction.
Cryptocurrency trading examples
To help you understand how to trade cryptocurrencies, we’ve complied two examples of cryptocurrency trades and their possible outcomes.
CFD trading example: selling ether
You believe that the price of ether – the token of the Ethereum network – is going to fall in value, and decide to go short by selling ether against the US dollar (ether/USD).
The current market price is 200, and you decide to sell 5 contracts (each equivalent to 1 ETH) to open a position at this price.
If your prediction is correct
If you were right, and the value of ether fell against the US dollar, your trade would profit. Let’s say that the new market price is 150, you could close your position and take your profit by buying 5 contacts to close your position at the buy price of 155, which is slightly higher than the market price due to the spread.
Because the market has moved 45 points in your favour, the profit on your trade would be calculated as follows: 5 x 45 = $225.
If your prediction is incorrect
However, if the value of ether rose against the US dollar, your position would be closed at a loss. Let’s say that you decide to exit the trade after the market rose by 15 points to 215 – so buy back 5 contracts at the buy price of 217. This would mean the loss to your position was 5 x 17 = $85.
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