Futures Trading Guide

Gate.io Fee Guide - Discounts, Rebates & Signup Paths futures guides covering leverage, funding rates, position sizing, liquidation risk and beginner risk-control checks.

Editorial Focus

How this topic cluster is structured

Futures pages should not read like a shortcut to leverage. This category is structured to explain risk first: account readiness, margin mode, leverage control, first-order flow and stop-loss logic.

For SEO and usability, the strongest path is usually general futures orientation first, then isolated vs cross margin, then leverage changes and only then the first live order page.

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Hub entry

Invite, fee and app handoff hub

If you want to zoom back out from a single tutorial into the broader invite route, fee logic and mobile handoff pages, use this hub.

All Articles

All articles in this category

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FAQ

Common questions in this category

Which futures page should a beginner read first?

Start with the general futures guide before reading leverage, margin-mode or first-order pages. That gives the risk context needed to interpret the rest.

Why are futures topics split into separate guides?

Margin mode, leverage, order placement and risk control each answer a different high-intent question and should not be collapsed into one page.

What is the main SEO risk for futures content?

Thin pages that only mention leverage or profit potential tend to perform poorly and create trust issues. Risk explanation and execution order improve both quality and search value.

Decision Points

What this category helps you decide

  • Understand margin mode before deciding whether leverage should change.
  • Treat the first futures order as a workflow test, not a conviction trade.
  • Define stop-loss logic before the contract is live.

Common Mistakes

What these pages help you avoid

  • Entering futures because leverage looks attractive before understanding liquidation risk.
  • Changing leverage without recalculating position size and account exposure.
  • Opening a position first and only then thinking about exits.