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What do you mean by "hand price, market price, queuing price, latest price and over-price liquidation" in futures?
Counterparty price refers to the entrustment based on the opponent's quotation, that is, buying at the handicap price and selling at the handicap price. According to the principle of price priority, this can ensure immediate transaction.

The market price refers to the buying orders issued at the daily limit price and the selling orders issued at the daily limit price, which can also guarantee the immediate transaction, especially when the quotation fluctuates greatly, but it is not recommended to do so, because the transaction price may be unsatisfactory, or even caught by the fishing list, that is, close to the price fluctuation and stop trading, causing great losses.

Queue price refers to the order bought at the handicap price and the order sold at the handicap price. This price is not a priority, so we have to queue up with everyone. This is called queuing price.

The latest price gives the buying and selling instructions of the latest transaction price, and there is no guarantee of immediate transaction, depending on the specific quotation.

Close the position at an over-price and close the position at a price lower than the latest price. In this case, the position will be closed immediately after entrustment, which means that the market outlook will fluctuate greatly immediately and flee quickly.

The way of futures is very similar to the stock market, but there are obvious differences. ?

Betting on small stocks is a full transaction, that is, you can only buy as many stocks as you have, while futures is a margin system, that is, you can trade 100% only by paying 5% to 10% of the turnover.

The two-way trading of stocks is one-way. Only by buying stocks first can you sell them. Futures can be bought first and then sold, which is a two-way transaction, and bear market can also make money.

Futures trading is generally a commodity, and the fundamentals are relatively transparent. The number of contracts (sales) is theoretically infinite, and the trend is relatively stable, which is not easy to manipulate. The number of stocks is limited, the fundamentals are opaque, and it is easy to be manipulated by bad bookmakers.

The price of futures is relatively small, generally 3%-6%. When the board stops trading three times in a row in one direction, the exchange can arrange for customers who want to stop losses to close their positions. The range of the stock price limit is 10%, and there are times when the daily limit can't come out for several consecutive times.

Due to the restrictions of margin system, additional margin system and forced liquidation at maturity, futures have the characteristics of high returns and high risks.

Futures are T+0 trading, and can be traded several times a day. You can close the position immediately after opening the position. The handling fee is lower than that of stocks (about 1/10000 to 5/10000, and there is generally no handling fee for closing positions on the same day).