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Understand CFDs: The Derivative Instrument That Revolutionized Trading
Unveiling the Contract for Difference
CFD stands for Contract for Difference, and it is a derivative instrument that has changed the way people operate in financial markets. Instead of acquiring the asset itself, you only take a position on its performance, paying only the difference between the price at the time of opening and closing your position.
The big advantage? Derivatives like CFDs allow trading with reduced margin and flexible leverage, making it accessible for traders of different sizes. Unlike some instruments, CFDs provide access to an impressive variety of markets: from forex (currency pairs), through commodities like gold and crude oil, to cryptocurrencies and stock indices. This diversity of assets in a single instrument is one of the reasons why CFDs have gained global popularity.
How It Works
To understand how to operate with CFDs, it is essential to understand the transactional model. When you open a Contract for Difference, an agreement is made between buyer and seller where only the price variation is settled between the parties. If you speculate that crude oil will rise, you open a long position; if you believe that corn will fall, you can sell.
A crucial difference: although CFDs allow trading on futures movements, they are not futures contracts. CFDs do not have an expiration date or a predetermined price. They function like any other tradable asset, with floating bid and ask prices, offering flexibility that traditional futures contracts do not.
In practice, the process is simple. You deposit an initial margin (small percentage of the total value), then buy or sell units of the asset according to your forecast of its movements. Profit or loss is calculated directly based on the accuracy of your price analysis. This low-entry-cost structure combined with leverage is exactly what has made forex and other CFD markets so attractive to modern traders.