In futures contract trading, the handling fees are determined by your actual opening position;

If you have 100u and conduct short-term market trades on an exchange with a handling fee of 0.05%;

When you choose 1x leverage for isolated margin: the trading volume for each opening and closing transaction is 100u, so to complete a full transaction, you need to pay a handling fee of 0.1u;

When you choose 10x leverage: a completed transaction requires a handling fee of 1u;

When you choose 100x leverage: it is a handling fee of 10u, which accounts for 10% of the principal...

So, the handling fees for 100x leverage versus 1x leverage are mainly determined by your specific trading volume.

When choosing full margin mode, although it involves 100x leverage, if you still only open a position worth 100u, then the handling fee remains 0.1u.

This is why I recommend that everyone should not exceed 5x leverage at any time, because increasing the leverage not only increases the risk but also adds to the wear and tear costs;

This is especially true for most short-term trading enthusiasts, as the profit margin is only 0.5%. With 10x leverage, regardless of whether you are taking profit or cutting losses, you have to bear a fixed cost of 1%, which means that if you take profit, you only have a 4% return, and if you cut losses, you have to add 1% loss.

The more frequently you trade, the more you need to be wary of the invisible wear and tear caused by handling fees;

Don't believe it? Just look at your account flow and calculate the proportion of handling fees to see for yourself! #币安Alpha上新