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No. A Print order is only checked at the end of each 24-hour block. If the price touches your target intraday but isn’t past it at the 24-hour mark, you don’t fill — the order rolls over. This is the biggest difference from a normal limit order, which fills the instant the market touches it.
Always your target price, not the market price at the checkpoint. If BTC is well below your long target at the 24-hour mark, you still open at the target — the extra move sits in your favor as unrealized profit the moment you fill.
Yes to both. Yield is paid each block and is already yours: it funds your position when the order fills, or it comes back with your deposit when you cancel. The only way to lose accrued yield is liquidation.
No. The most you can lose is your deposit plus the yield it has earned — everything in the Print account, and nothing beyond it.
The rate is recalculated every cycle from current market conditions — how far your target sits from the market and how much the market is moving. Every roll-over re-prices at the new market, so your APY moves over time.
There’s no in-place edit. Cancel the order — it resolves at the end of the current 24-hour block — and place a new one with the settings you want.
It becomes an ordinary leveraged position opened at your target price. From then on it follows normal perp rules: you can close it, add margin, or be liquidated like any other position.
Liquidation is only evaluated at a 24-hour checkpoint. If, at that point, the market has run past your liquidation price (which sits beyond your target), the order is liquidated and the margin is lost. Intraday spikes that recover before the checkpoint don’t liquidate you.
A Print order — and a cancellation — always resolves at the end of the current 24-hour block, not instantly. Once it resolves, your funds return to your main trading balance and you can withdraw them.
Yes. Placing a Print order moves the deposit into that order as locked margin, and each order is its own bucket. It returns to your main balance when the order resolves.