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Cryptocurrency is digital money that exists only on the internet. Unlike the euros or dollars in your bank account, no government or bank controls it. Instead, it runs on a network of computers worldwide — and math makes it secure.
The word "crypto" comes from cryptography — the science of encoding information so that only the right people can read it. Every crypto transaction is protected by this technology, making it nearly impossible to forge or hack.
A blockchain is the technology that powers cryptocurrency. Think of it as a public ledger that records every transaction ever made — and thousands of computers hold a copy of it simultaneously.
Every time someone sends crypto, that transaction gets grouped with others into a "block." That block is then added to a chain of all previous blocks — creating an unbreakable history. No one can alter past records because doing so would require changing every copy at once, which is computationally impossible.
A crypto wallet doesn't store coins — it stores your keys. Think of the blockchain as a vault with millions of locked boxes. Your wallet holds the key to your box.
Trading is buying and selling assets to make a profit. A trader buys something they believe will increase in value, then sells it later at a higher price. Or they can profit from falling prices too — more on that below.
In crypto and stock markets, trades happen on an exchange — a platform that matches buyers with sellers. When someone wants to sell BTC and someone else wants to buy it, the exchange makes that connection automatically.
Going long means buying an asset expecting its price to rise. This is the most common approach — buy low, sell high.
Going short means betting that a price will fall. You borrow an asset, sell it at the current price, then buy it back cheaper later — pocketing the difference. Shorting is more complex and carries higher risk, especially with leverage.
Leverage lets you trade with more money than you actually have. At 10x leverage, you control $10,000 worth of assets with only $1,000 of your own. Profits are amplified — but so are losses.
Every trade costs a fee. Exchanges typically charge between 0.05% and 0.5% per trade. This seems small but compounds quickly when trading frequently. Always factor fees into profit calculations.
There's also the spread — the gap between buy price (ask) and sell price (bid). When you buy at the ask and sell at the bid, you're already slightly negative the moment you enter.
Candlestick charts are the universal language of traders. Each "candle" represents price movement over a specific time period — 1 minute, 1 hour, 1 day, and so on.
Volume shows how much of an asset was traded in a given period. It's one of the most important indicators — often more telling than price alone.
High volume on a price move = strong conviction. Low volume = weak move, likely to reverse. Always confirm breakouts and trend moves with volume.
Market cap = Price × Circulating Supply. It's the total value of all coins in circulation. A coin priced at $0.001 with 1 trillion tokens in supply might have a larger market cap than a coin at $500 with 1 million supply.
Market cap lets you compare assets properly — price per coin alone means nothing without knowing how many coins exist.
RSI is a momentum indicator on a scale of 0–100. It measures how fast and how far price has moved recently, relative to its own history.
Support is a price level where buying tends to outweigh selling — the price "bounces" upward from this floor. Resistance is a price level where selling tends to overpower buying — the price struggles to break above this ceiling.
Real-time prices from CoinGecko. Each column is explained below so you understand what you're actually looking at.
50+ essential trading and crypto terms, explained in plain English. Search anything below.
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