If the $5K is paid for training fees, then of course the starting balance is zero. It's not being masked for deposit, it's payment for training under the prop terms and the training is carried out. You get a prop account to trade with, and that account absorbs all the losses. You don't pay any more to make up the losses. The prop account comes with very low commissions and 50/50 or 80/20 payouts if you make money with it.Quote from WinItAll:I GUARANTEE YOU THAT YOUR STARTING BALANCE IN YOUR DAILY REPORT WILL BE ZERO, even after you just handed a 5K check over. That means you have waived your right to your own money and only paid for training. Firms can now limit you as they see fit b/c in theory you only paid for training.
hope you stay true to this statement. so far, any facts stated are attacked as "shill", and the number of posts checked and past posting scrutinized for signs of promoting any of these firms ....Quote from WinItAll:I would like to hear from some guys who work at one of these shops. And other posters PLEASE DO NOT ATTACK THESE PEOPLE AS THEY'VE DONE NOTHING WRONG..... THIS IS A DISCUSSION, NOT A PLACE TO RIP APART GUYS WHO ARE TRYING TO LEARN IN THIS BUSINESS. SO LET'S KEEP THIS AN IMFORMATIVE DISCUSSION AND NOT A FIGHT.
Yes, T3 is set up this way for their "hedge fund". You can give whatever leverage you want because it is all margined against your primary account as that is the only account that is actually making trades (on the b/d side that is). But if you are not registered firm, the SEC still looks down on you if you charge overrides. That's a no-no.Quote from cashmoney69:
If a firm does NOT require any risk capital of its traders, and only trades the firms money. is that firm still considered a broker/ dealer?
say a trader with 15mil starts his own operation, he brings on 5 people and trains them, and gives them 3mil a piece + leverage through say lightspeed.
Is something like this common/ easy to set up?
The training fee is just that. The amount you can lose theoretically on a prop account is not tied to the amount paid for training, all losses are absorbed according to the terms. I think this is what confuses you in your arguments.Quote from WinItAll:The fact that you can't figure out by yourself that your training fee is the same amount of money you can lose before getting trained again is somewhat concerning. If you decide to join a prop shop then atleast do the research and understand what you are joining instead of trying to correct others who know infinitely more than you.
Quote from WinItAll:I would like to hear from some guys who work at one of these shops. And other posters PLEASE DO NOT ATTACK THESE PEOPLE AS THEY'VE DONE NOTHING WRONG..... THIS IS A DISCUSSION, NOT A PLACE TO RIP APART GUYS WHO ARE TRYING TO LEARN IN THIS BUSINESS. SO LET'S KEEP THIS AN IMFORMATIVE DISCUSSION AND NOT A FIGHT.