How do you calculate the Max Drawdown (TRAILING)?
The Maximum Trailing Drawdown is initially set at a specific % and trails (using CLOSED BALANCE - NOT equity) your account until you have achieved a pre-defined % return in your account. Once you have achieved the % return, the Maximum Trailing Drawdown no longer trails and is permanently locked in at your starting balance. Example: If your starting balance is $100,000, you can drawdown to $94,000 before you would violate the Maximum Trailing Drawdown rule. Then for example let's say you take your account to $102,000 in CLOSED BALANCE. This is your new high-water mark, which would mean your new Maximum Trailing Drawdown would be $96,000. Next, let's say you take your account to $106,000 in CLOSED BALANCE, which would be your new high-water mark. At this point your Maximum Trailing Drawdown would be locked in at your starting balance of $100,000. So, regardless of how high your account goes, you would only breach this rule if your account drew back down to $100,000 (note, you can still violate the daily drawdown). For example, if you take your account to $170,000, as long as you do not drawdown more than 5% in any given day, you would only breach if your account equity reaches $100,000
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How do you calculate the Max Drawdown (STATIC)?
Maximum drawdown is the maximum your account can drawdown before you would hard breach your account. When you open the account, your Maximum Drawdown is set at a defined % of your starting balance. This % is static and does not trail.
How do you calculate the Daily Loss Limit?
The Daily Loss Limit is the maximum amount an account may lose in a single trading day. This limit resets each day at 5:00 PM EST. The Daily Loss Limit is calculated using the greater of the prior day’s end of day balance, which includes closed P&L ...
Am I subject to any position limits?
The maximum position that you may open is generally determined by your available margin. We reserve the right to increase the margin requirement, limit the max order size or limit the number of open positions you may enter or maintain in the Funded ...
What is the difference between a Hard Breach and Soft Breach rule?
● Soft breach means that we will close all trades that have violated the rule. However, you can continue trading in your Assessment or Funded Account. ● Hard breach means that you violated either the Daily Loss Limit or Max Drawdown rule or the ...