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Why is margin money in trading considered dead money?
There's a very familiar moment when you trade.
You open a position.
You set the margin.
And then… you wait.
The price hasn't changed yet.
The order has not been matched.
The market is still hesitant.
What about your money?
It lies still.
Not profitable.
Not working.
That's correct.
Just… doing nothing.
In CeFi, this is perfectly normal.
The deposit money is held on the exchange.
Wait for the situation to change.
Wait for the right direction.
No one questioned it.
Because "that's how trading is".
The strange thing is that when DeFi emerged,
We're bringing everything onto on-chain.
but they kept using the Capital in the same old way.
Margin is still asleep.
Capital is still dead.
Crypto is an industry where yield is a major topic of discussion.
APY.
Staking.
Farming.
Compounding.
But there is a huge amount of Capital .
It's being used every day in trading…
and it doesn't create any value.
for most of its existence.
No additional risk.
No further fluctuations.
Just… stand there.
And then I came across a different way of thinking.
It's not about the bet.
It's not about leverage.
But it's about the very original question:
"Why should the deposit be rendered useless?"
If the Capital is already sitting there waiting,
Why can't it work by itself?
While waiting?
@StandX_Official doesn't start by talking about the product.
They started with this very question.
I can't promise to help you become a better trader.
Simply raising an issue that everyone has accepted for too long.
That:
Deposit = dead money.
This is not the answer yet.
This isn't the story about StandX yet.
It's just a small crack.
in the way we are used to using Capital.
And sometimes,
Alpha doesn't come from something new.
It comes from looking back at something old.
and asked:
"Does it really have to be that way?"
(Tomorrow: If deposit money doesn't have to die, how can it live?)
twitter.com/SaintLee04/status/...

Knowledge is okay.
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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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