How to Go Short in Futures Trading: Weex Guide 2026
Most crypto traders only know one direction: up. They buy. They hope. They watch red candles and panic. That is spot trading. Limited. One-way.
Futures trading changes that. A trader can go short. Profit when prices drop. Hedge existing positions. Trade both bull and bear markets.
This guide shows exactly how to go short on WEEX, why it works, and the risks every trader should understand before opening a short position.
What Does "Go Short" Mean in Futures Trading?
Going short means opening a futures position that profits when the asset price falls.
A simple example:
A trader shorts BTC at 80,000.Pricedropsto80,000.Pricedropsto75,000. The trader profits $5,000 per BTC (minus fees and funding).
Same trader shorts BTC at 80,000.Pricerisesto80,000.Pricerisesto85,000. The trader loses $5,000.
Position | Price Goes Up | Price Goes Down |
Long (buy) | Profit | Loss |
Short (sell) | Loss | Profit |
Futures trading allows profit from both directions. Spot trading only profits from rising prices.
Why does this matter? Because crypto markets do not only go up. Bear markets happen. Corrections happen. Shorting lets a trader act on those views instead of sitting in cash.
Why Go Short?
Directional conviction
A trader believes BTC is overpriced. Maybe a crash is coming. Maybe just a correction.
A short futures position lets that trader act on the view. No need to own the asset first. Open a sell position. If price drops, the position generates profit.
With up to 10x leverage on Weex, a 5% drop produces a 50% return on margin. Same leverage works against the trader if price rises.
Hedging existing holdings
A trader holds crypto and does not want to sell. Reasons include tax implications or long-term belief. But the trader is nervous about a short-term drop.
Opening a short position solves this. If price falls, the short gains offset spot losses. The portfolio stays flat while the market drops.
Professional traders use this constantly.
How to Go Short on Weex: Step by Step
Weex offers futures trading with up to 400x leverage on multiple markets.
1. Navigate to Weex futures trading page
2. Select the trading pair (BTC, ETH, SOL, etc.)
3. Set leverage using the leverage selector
4. Choose order type: Limit or Market
5. Enter position size or margin amount
6. Set take-profit or stop-loss in the order panel
7. Click Open Short to open the position
8. Confirm order details and submit

What Futures Markets Can Be Shorted on Weex?
Weex supports short positions across major crypto futures markets including:
BTC, ETH, SOL, ADA, DOGE, LTC, XRP, and other supported pairs.
Traders should check the platform for the current full list. New markets are added regularly.
Short vs Long: Risk Profiles Comparasion
Factor | Long Position | Short Position |
Maximum loss | Limited to margin | Theoretically unlimited |
Funding impact | Pays if rate negative | Pays if rate negative |
Emotional difficulty | Low (feels natural) | Higher (feels uncomfortable) |
Squeeze risk | No | Yes (short squeeze) |
Most new traders find shorting more difficult psychologically. That is normal. Starting small, using lower leverage, and always setting stop-losses helps build experience.
Pro Tips for Shorting Crypto Futures
Tip 1: Start with 2x to 3x leverage, not 10x
Leverage amplifies both gains and losses. A trader should master the direction first, then add leverage.
Tip 2: Check funding rates before holding overnight
Positive funding pays the short trader. Negative funding costs the short trader. Ignoring funding rates is a common mistake.
Tip 3: Set stop-loss 5% to 10% above entry
A stop-loss set too tight gets triggered by normal market volatility. Giving the trade room to breathe improves success rates.
Tip 4: Short into resistance, not after a crash
The best short entries are near obvious resistance levels. The worst entry is after price has already dropped 20%.
Read More: How to Set a Stop-Loss Order on WEEX: Full Guide 2026
Common Mistakes When Going Short
No stop-loss
The most common and most expensive mistake. A trader who does not set a stop-loss deserves the loss.
Over-leveraging
10x leverage on a short position means a 10% price rise liquidates the position. That move happens often in crypto.
Ignoring funding rates
Holding a short position for days without checking funding rates can lead to unexpected costs.
Conclusion
Futures trading opens opportunities that spot trading cannot offer. Going short lets a trader profit from down moves, hedge an existing portfolio, and trade full market cycles.
But shorting carries real risks. Unlimited loss potential. Funding costs. Fast liquidation during short squeezes.
A trader who uses stop-losses on every trade, checks funding rates before holding overnight, and starts with low leverage has a much better chance of success.
Weex provides a straightforward platform to go short on BTC, ETH, and other major futures markets. The tools are there. Risk management is up to the trader.
Ready to trade? WEEX gives you up to 400x leverage, zero fees, instant execution, and the security you need. Sign up now and start trading!
FAQ
What does go short mean in crypto futures?
Going short means opening a futures position that profits when the price of an asset falls.
How does a trader go short on Weex?
Select the market, set leverage, choose order type, enter position size, set TP/SL, and click Sell/Short.
Can a trader short Bitcoin?
Yes. BTC futures are available on Weex and most major exchanges.
What leverage can be used for shorting on Weex?
Weex offers up to 10x leverage on crypto futures. Lower leverage is recommended for beginners.
Is shorting riskier than going long?
Yes. Losses on a short position are theoretically unlimited. A long position can only go to zero.




