[Daily Discussion] Sunday, April 28, 2019 Bitcoin Markets |
- [Daily Discussion] Sunday, April 28, 2019
- [Altcoin Discussion] Sunday, April 28, 2019
- What's the best way to buy bitcoin without waiting for a transfer or paying a fee?
- Question: How do exchanges' liquidation and risk management systems work?
[Daily Discussion] Sunday, April 28, 2019 Posted: 27 Apr 2019 09:05 PM PDT Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
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[Altcoin Discussion] Sunday, April 28, 2019 Posted: 27 Apr 2019 09:06 PM PDT Thread topics include, but are not limited to:
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What's the best way to buy bitcoin without waiting for a transfer or paying a fee? Posted: 28 Apr 2019 06:29 AM PDT I used to have a coinbase account that had high enough limits that I could do instant transfer for most transactions that I wanted to do, but I've been locked out of that account and am waiting for support to respond. In the meantime I'm needing to buy some bitcoin, I signed up for a new coinbase account and found out their instant transfer (card) purchase limit is $50, which isn't enough. I looked into bitcoin ATMs but it looks like they have pretty substantial purchase fees. Is there anywhere that I can buy a couple hundred dollars worth of bitcoin without paying a fee or waiting a long time for the transfer? [link] [comments] |
Question: How do exchanges' liquidation and risk management systems work? Posted: 28 Apr 2019 08:06 AM PDT Just wondering if anyone here has in depth knowledge of the exchanges risk management system and how they handle particular margin calls. I understand that in most cases if the price falls and a margin call is initiated then margin positions are forced liquidated to pay back the lender basically. But what if there is a crash and there are huge margin positions to be liquidated but the order books are super thin, what do the exchanges do in this situation? I understand they cant just force liquidated every position because then that would cause a catastrophic collapse of the whole market right? Do they just hold those margin positions until the market stabilizes and hope that the price recovers and goes back up? How long could they hold it for? What if the price keeps tanking? Would they then be forced to sell it all take the losses? If so then who would paying for this or who is assuming all the risks? The exchange or the lenders or both? What if the price goes back way up and the positions get liquidated with profit, does it get credited back to the client using the leverage or do the exchange just keep it to make up for losses in other positions as part of their risk management system? [link] [comments] |
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