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Bitcoin (BTCUSD) Trading Guide: Specs & Strategy

···4 min read
BTCUSD
crypto (major)
$1
30 pips
1
24/7 — 24/7

Continuous00:0023:59 UTC

A trader opens a Bitcoin position at 2:47 AM on a Tuesday — not because of a news catalyst, but because a liquidity sweep just triggered a technical setup that had been building for six hours. That scenario plays out thousands of times daily across BTCUSD, and it illustrates the defining characteristic of this market: there is no closing bell, no dead zone, and no single authority setting the price. Understanding how this instrument actually works — mechanically and structurally — is the foundation of any credible Bitcoin trading approach.

  • Bitcoin on MetaTrader 5 trades as a CFD against the US dollar, with a contract size of 1 BTC and a pip size of 0.01. The...
  • Bitcoin never closes. That fact alone separates it from every traditional asset class and creates a unique challenge: id...
  • Bitcoin's average true range (ATR) on a daily chart has historically oscillated between $1,500 and $4,000 depending on t...
1

BTCUSD Key Metrics: What the Contract Specifications Actually Mean

Bitcoin on MetaTrader 5 trades as a CFD against the US dollar, with a contract size of 1 BTC and a pip size of 0.01. The pip value is fixed at $1 per pip — meaning each one-cent move in the Bitcoin price equals exactly $1 of profit or loss per contract. That sounds modest until you consider that BTCUSD routinely moves 500 to 2,000 pips in a single hour during volatile sessions.

The typical spread on BTCUSD sits around 30 pips, which translates to a $30 cost to enter and exit a one-contract position. At a Bitcoin price of $65,000, that represents approximately 0.046% of notional value — relatively narrow compared to many altcoins, but meaningful when compounding multiple intraday trades. According to data from major CFD providers, Bitcoin spreads widen significantly during weekends and low-liquidity windows, sometimes reaching 80–120 pips.

The absence of a fixed contract multiplier (unlike forex where 1 lot equals 100,000 units of base currency) means position sizing in Bitcoin requires recalibration. At $65,000 per BTC, a single contract carries $65,000 of notional exposure. A 1% price move — commonplace for Bitcoin — generates a $650 swing. Traders accustomed to forex need to account for this when translating percentage-based risk rules to Bitcoin positions.

2

When Bitcoin Volatility Peaks: Reading a 24/7 Market

Bitcoin never closes. That fact alone separates it from every traditional asset class and creates a unique challenge: identifying which hours actually carry meaningful volume and directional conviction.

Research published by Kaiko in 2023 identified three recurring volatility clusters in Bitcoin's daily cycle. The first runs from 08:00 to 12:00 UTC, overlapping with European market open and early institutional activity. The second, and typically most liquid window, spans 13:00 to 17:00 UTC — the period when US equity markets are open and crypto-adjacent institutional flows intensify. The third cluster emerges around the Asian open, between 00:00 and 03:00 UTC, where derivatives activity on major exchanges like Binance and OKX drives sharp short-term moves.

Sunday evenings (UTC) carry a specific risk profile. Liquidity thins considerably as institutional desks remain offline, and price can gap aggressively on modest order flow. The 2024 Bitcoin halving in April produced a 6% intraday swing during a Sunday low-liquidity window — an event that caught many position traders with inadequate stop placement.

For intraday strategies, the 13:00–17:00 UTC window offers the best combination of spread tightening and volume depth. For swing traders holding multi-day positions, weekend exposure requires wider stop buffers to absorb noise without triggering exits on technical levels that would otherwise hold.

Bitcoin's average true range (ATR) on a daily chart has historically oscillated between $1,500 and $4,000 depending on the market cycle.

3

Risk Management on BTCUSD: Sizing for a Market That Moves in Thousands

Bitcoin's average true range (ATR) on a daily chart has historically oscillated between $1,500 and $4,000 depending on the market cycle. During the 2021 bull run, daily ATR exceeded $5,000 on multiple occasions. These figures are not anomalies — they represent the instrument's baseline behavior.

A standard risk-per-trade approach of 1% of account equity requires precise position sizing. With a $10,000 account and a 1% risk limit ($100), a trader placing a 150-pip stop on BTCUSD can only justify 0.67 contracts — a fractional position that many platforms handle, but that requires deliberate calculation rather than round-lot intuition.

Multi-level stop placement has gained traction among professional Bitcoin traders as a response to the market's tendency to spike through technical levels before reversing. Rather than a single stop at one price, this approach stages exits across two or three levels — for example, closing 50% of a position at a preliminary stop, then the remainder at a wider catastrophic stop. This structure accepts a partial loss on noise-driven spikes while protecting against genuine trend reversals.

According to a 2022 study by the CFA Institute on retail CFD trader outcomes, accounts that used predefined stop-loss levels on every trade outperformed those using discretionary exits by a statistically significant margin over 12-month periods. The volatility of Bitcoin makes this discipline especially consequential.

Trader Sentiment

BTCUSD

62% Long38% Short

Simulated sentiment data based on historical averages. Not real-time.

Advanced trading tools for Bitcoin on MetaTrader 5.