
05/06/2025
*TRADING CRYPTO CURRENCY*
What is crypto trading and how do you trade cryptocurrencies?
How to trade cryptocurrencies
What’s cryptocurrency trading?
Learn why people trade cryptocurrencies
Pick a cryptocurrency to trade
Find your crypto trading opportunity
Take steps to manage your risk and place your trade
Monitor and close your position
What's cryptocurrency trading?
Cryptocurrency trading is the buying and selling of cryptocurrencies on an exchange. With us, you can trade cryptos by speculating on their price movements.
CFDs are leveraged derivatives – meaning that you can trade cryptocurrency price movements without taking ownership of any underlying coins. When trading derivatives, you can go long (‘buy’) if you think a cryptocurrency will rise in value, or go short (‘sell’) if you think it will fall.
By contrast, when you buy cryptocurrencies on an exchange, you buy the coins themselves. You’ll need to create an exchange account, put up the full value of the asset to open a position, and store the cryptocurrency tokens in your own wallet until you’re ready to sell.
How do cryptocurrency markets work?
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 that records data – through a process called ‘mining’.
What moves cryptocurrency markets?
Cryptocurrency markets move according to supply and demand. However, as they’re decentralised, they tend to remain free from many of the economic and political concerns that affect traditional currencies. While there is still a lot of uncertainty surrounding cryptocurrencies, the following factors can have a significant impact on their prices:
Supply: the total number of coins and the rate at which they’re released, destroyed or lost
Market capitalisation: the value of all the coins in existence and how users perceive this to be developing
Press: the way the cryptocurrency is portrayed in the media and how much coverage it is getting.
Integration: the extent to which the cryptocurrency easily integrates into existing infrastructure such as e-commerce payment systems
Key events: major events such as regulatory updates, security breaches and economic se
Cryptocurrencies are notoriously volatile. For traders using leveraged derivatives that allow for both long and short positions, large and sudden price movements present opportunities for profit. However, at the same time, these also increase your exposure to risk. In short, the more volatile the market, the more risk you carry when trading it.
Access real-time pricing. We derive our prices from several exchanges, and they’re calculated on a continuous basis.
Get prices reflective of the underlying market. Because our prices are based on real markets, in real time, they always reflect actual market sentiment
Pick a cryptocurrency to trade
With us, you can use CFDs to trade 11 major cryptocurrencies, two crypto crosses and a crypto index - an index tracking the price of the top ten cryptocurrencies, weighted by market capitalisation.
Our selection includes:
Bitcoin
Ether
Bitcoin Cash
Litecoin
EOS
Freedogs
Pi
X
Zoo
Stellar
Cardano
Bitcoin Cash/Bitcoin
Ether/Bitcoin
Crypto 10 index
Cardano
Chainlink
Polkadot
Dogecoin
Uniswap
Leading cryptocurrencies
Trade a selection of the world’s leading cryptocurrencies or a pair of one of the stable coin.
Trade wherever, whenever
Deal on an award-winning trading platform and mobile app..
Technical indicators
Discover price trends using our in-platform tools.
Expert analysis
Get technical and fundamental analysis from our in-house team
Decide whether to go long or short
'Going long' means you expect the cryptocurrency's value to rise. In this case, you'd elect to 'buy' the market.
'Going short', conversely, means you expect your selected cryptocurrency's price to fall, and here you'd elect to 'sell' the market.
*TO BUY (RISE) OR GO LONG AND TO SELL (FALL) OR GO SHORT*
CFD trading deal ticket - going short
Take steps to manage your risk and place your trade
Because you’re opening your position on margin, you can incur losses rapidly if the market moves against you. To help manage this risk, you can set a stop-loss level in the deal ticket. If triggered, the stop-loss will automatically close your position and cap your risk.3
To lock in any profits if the market moves in your favour, you can also enter a limit level. Here, your trade will be automatically closed to secure positive returns as soon as the market reaches the price you’ve set.
Remember that, when trading CFDs, each contract will specify an amount per point of market movement. If the CFD is for $10 per point, and the underlying cryptocurrency price moves 10 points, your profit or loss – excluding costs – will be $100 per contract.
Once you’ve set the number of CFDs you want to trade, your stop-loss and limit levels, you’d open your position by clicking on ‘place trade’.
Ether deal ticket
Monitor and close your position
When you decide to close a position, click on the ‘Positions’ tab on the left menu. Select ‘Close position’ and set the number of contracts you’d like to close. Alternatively, open the market’s deal ticket and take the opposite position to one you have open – for example, if you bought CFDs to open, you’d now sell, and vice versa.
Trading CFDs on cryptocurrencies: ether example
After completing a thorough analysis on ether price movements, you believe the market will trend upwards from its current level of 3200. Consequently, you decide to take a long position using CFDs. Because you’re going long, you open your position by electing to ‘buy’.
In this example, after a spread of 8 points is applied – and excluding other costs – the buy (or offer) price is set at 3204, while the sell (or bid) price is 3196. The CFD you use specifies an amount of $1 per point of market movement, and you opt to trade 10 contracts. This brings your total exposure for the position to $32,040 ($3204 x $1 per point x 10 contracts).
But, as positions on ether CFDs can be opened with a margin deposit of 50%, you’ll only need to deposit $15,020. At this point it’s important to note that because your exposure is larger than your required margin, you stand to lose more than the deposit if the market moves against you. So, to manage your risk, you can set a stop-loss to close your trade automatically.2 In this case, suppose you add a guaranteed stop loss at 3000.
The market moves as you predicted, up to a level of 3500, at which point you decide to close your position and take a profit. The sell (or bid) price after the spread is applied is 3496. The difference in price between 3496 and 3204 is 292 points. This, excluding other costs, brings your profit on the trade to $2920 – a return of 19.4% on your margin deposit.
Suppose, however, that the market instead decreased and reached your guaranteed stop-loss level, closing your position at 3000. Here, the difference is 204 points, meaning that you’d cut a loss of $2040 (13.6% on your margin deposit), plus a fee for the guaranteed stop-loss being triggered.
FAQs
How do I start trading cryptocurrency?
How much money do I need to start trading cryptocurrency?
What is the best way to trade cryptocurrency?
What moves the cryptocurrency markets?
Can crypto trading be profitable?
Can I Trade cryptos?
All this are answered in our RRCW NGO FOUNDATION crypto currency trading platform