In the regulated traditional futures market, the underlying assets must have a large spot market supply and demand to avoid price monopolies and ensure market liquidity. For example, energy commodities (crude oil, natural gas), metals (copper, gold), and financial assets (government bonds, stock indices) have become mainstream futures trading varieties due to their massive spot market scale. If the spot scale is insufficient (such as certain niche industrial products), it can easily be manipulated by capital, affecting market fairness. In this unregulated market, capital takes anything to enter contracts for short-term gains. May I ask, which of these counterfeit contracts is not controlled at will by the manipulators? Moreover, with so many contracts continuously draining liquidity from the spot market, manipulators find it easier to control the spot market, which in turn reflects in the contracts becoming increasingly unscrupulous, gradually exhausting market funds, depleting existing forces, and witnessing the disappearance of new forces. The contracts that have emerged are ultimately delisted one after another due to extremely poor liquidity. Consequently, both the reputation of the exchanges and users are lost. Therefore, it is advised not to touch counterfeits and especially not to engage in counterfeit contracts. Wait until almost all counterfeits and counterfeit contracts have been delisted before entering the market for the counterfeit season you are eagerly anticipating.