Zero-Sum Thinking and Trading
8 min read
Grasp why futures and short-term trading are zero-sum arenas and what that implies about the competition you face on every trade.
8 min read
Grasp why futures and short-term trading are zero-sum arenas and what that implies about the competition you face on every trade.
Zero-sum thinking means recognizing that every dollar a trader earns in a futures, perpetual, or options market comes directly from another participant's loss. Total gains and losses across all participants net to zero — and after fees, funding, and slippage, they net to negative. This frame changes how you size, time, and justify every trade.
In the market, if someone wins, someone else loses. Understanding this is the first step to thinking like a strategist—not a signal follower.
Retail traders are often told:
“Follow your edge and the market will reward you.”
But the market is not a benevolent force. It doesn’t “reward” anything.
In reality:
This is the essence of zero-sum thinking:
Trading is a competitive transfer of capital between participants.
A zero-sum game means:
The total gains and losses in the system always net out to zero.
In trading:
Even when price rises, not everyone profits. Only those who positioned correctly before others.
Zero-sum has one operational consequence: if you cannot name the loser, you are the loser. Edge in a zero-sum venue is always extracted from a specific counterparty class — over-leveraged retail longs, late breakout buyers, market-makers caught with inventory, vol sellers in a regime shift. "I have an edge" without a named victim is wishful thinking.
Thinking zero-sum forces a mindset shift:
| Average Trader Thinks... | Strategic Trader Thinks... |
|---|---|
| “This looks like a breakout” | “Who’s trapped here? Who profits if I’m wrong?” |
| “I just need to follow signals” | “Whose money am I taking? Who’s taking mine?” |
| “Markets reward discipline” | “Markets punish predictability and emotion” |
| “Risk management protects me” | “Risk protects me from being the losing counterparty” |
You’re not trading the chart — you’re trading the people behind the orders.
If you buy BTC at $60,000 and it runs to $62,000, the losers are visible on the tape:
If you can't see the losing side in the data, you don't have a zero-sum thesis — you have a hope.
Instead of “buying support,” ask:
“Are weak longs stuck here?” “Is this support level obvious enough to bait them?”
Example:
That's the zero-sum opportunity.
(a) the obvious level was clearly tested, (b) the sweep produced a visible spike in stop-driven volume, (c) tape reclaims the level with passive bid absorption. Without all three, you are the trap, not the layer.
Spot equities are positive-sum on long horizons because the underlying business produces real cash flows (dividends, retained earnings, growth). Spot crypto has no cash flow but BTC supply is fixed, so holders collectively benefit from net new capital inflow. Short-term speculation in any of these is still a zero-sum transfer between participants on top of that drift.
| Market | Sum at participant level | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Spot equities (multi-year) | Positive-sum | Dividends + business growth |
| Spot crypto (multi-year) | Positive-sum (for holders) | Net inflow + fixed supply |
| Futures / perps | Zero-sum gross, negative-sum net | Fees + funding redistribution |
| Options | Zero-sum gross, negative-sum net | Fees + bid-ask + theta vs gamma |
| Short-term speculation in any venue | Zero-sum vs other speculators | Cash-flow drift is too slow to matter |
From a trader's perspective, especially in:
…it is zero-sum among participants and negative-sum after costs. Funding payments on perps redistribute between longs and shorts; fees flow to the exchange. The retail trader is fighting both other participants and a constant cost drag.
And the structural reality is uncomfortable: in zero-sum venues, retail starts with worse fees, slower data, less capital, and no inventory edge. The default outcome of a random retail trader is to be the losing counterparty class. Zero-sum thinking is not optimism — it is the discipline of refusing to trade unless you have identified someone who is structurally worse off than you in this specific setup.
If you don't understand it, the math says you are the losing counterparty class. Published broker disclosures consistently show 70–85% of retail futures and CFD accounts lose money. In a zero-sum venue, that loss is not bad luck — it is someone else's edge. Until you can name the structural reason another participant is worse off than you in a specific setup, assume you are the food.
Source: published broker disclosures. In a zero-sum venue, that loss is not bad luck — it is someone else's edge.
The Prisoner's Dilemma shows how zero-sum logic breaks down when participants can coordinate. Information Asymmetry and Smart Money explains which counterparty class systematically loses. Adversarial Thinking operationalizes the "who is on the other side" frame at the setup level.
No, not all of it. Spot equities and spot crypto held long-term are positive-sum because of dividends, business growth, or net capital inflow. Futures, perpetuals, and options trading is zero-sum among participants and negative-sum after fees, funding, and slippage.
For every $1 a futures trader makes, the counterparty pool loses $1 — there are no new dollars created from a setup, only redistribution. Once you add exchange fees, funding payments, and slippage on top of that redistribution, the trader pool becomes negative-sum: the exchange and market makers are the structural beneficiaries.
Long-term holding of spot crypto is positive-sum for holders because supply is fixed and net new capital inflow lifts everyone holding. Short-term speculation in spot crypto is still a zero-sum transfer between speculators on top of that slow drift.
In zero-sum venues, your gain requires someone else's loss. If you cannot identify which counterparty class is systematically worse off in your specific setup, assume you are that class — broker disclosures consistently show 70–85% of retail futures and CFD accounts lose money.
Every winning trade you take is someone else’s losing one.
When you accept this, your mindset evolves:
Strategic traders do not ask "will price go up?" — they ask "who is structurally forced to be wrong if it does?" If you cannot answer, do not take the trade. Zero-sum discipline is not a mindset — it is a filter.
Next: zero-sum is the simplest payoff structure. The next lesson, The Prisoner's Dilemma, shows what happens when participants can coordinate but choose not to — and why most of crypto's worst sell-offs are exactly that.