Crypto trading for beginners: digital assets, volatility, and risk

Crypto assets are digital assets that can trade around the clock. They can attract traders because of volatility and access, but they also carry significant technology, liquidity, regulatory, and fraud risks.

Guide | Crypto basics | 7 min read

Crypto assets are digital assets that can trade around the clock. They can attract traders because of volatility and access, but they also carry significant technology, liquidity, regulatory, and fraud risks.

What crypto assets are

Crypto assets include cryptocurrencies, tokens, stablecoins, and other blockchain-based assets. Some are intended as payment assets, some as network tokens, and some as speculative instruments.

Unlike traditional listed securities, crypto markets can vary widely in transparency, custody protections, market structure, and regulatory oversight.

Why crypto is volatile

Crypto prices can move sharply because of liquidity, market sentiment, exchange flows, leverage, token-specific news, protocol issues, regulatory headlines, and broader risk appetite.

Some crypto markets trade continuously, which means price movement can happen outside normal business hours and during periods of thin liquidity.

Automation and crypto

Because crypto markets can run 24/7, some traders use automation for monitoring and execution. But 24/7 markets also increase operational demands.

Automated crypto trading must consider exchange reliability, API behaviour, liquidity gaps, funding costs, liquidation risk, and strong security practices.

Main risks

Crypto trading can involve extreme volatility, fraud risk, cyber risk, exchange risk, regulatory uncertainty, and liquidity risk. Beginners should avoid assuming that a popular token, exchange, or automated strategy is safe by default.

TSS Hub context

TSS Hub is focused on MT5 automated trading workflows. This crypto guide is beginner education and not an indication that every crypto product is supported.

Further reading