Which prop shops allow non-employees to trade their backtested and paper traded strategies with the shops' money?
None without real money experience. So many ways to screw up a backtest.Which prop shops allow non-employees to trade their backtested and paper traded strategies with the shops' money?
None without real money experience. So many ways to screw up a backtest.
do they let you trade equities or is it just commodities?I'm not sure whether they'll necessarily fit into your definition of a "prop shop", but TopStepTrader will, if you can briefly demonstrate the reliability of your trading by passing one of their "Combines". They have some risk-management rules to be maintained, of course (as anyone putting up funding for someone they don't really know obviously would), but it's one of the fastest ways of achieving funding, if you can satisfy their parameters. They're well-established, reliable, responsive and ethical, and their profit-sharing terms are about as generous as you'll find.
do they let you trade equities or is it just commodities?
That means given the initial amount of $50,000, you are "out" if your first day results in a loss.

My bad...I didn't read the "fine print". Ten days is definitely fair.It really doesn't.
I suspect that it's "after the first ten days traded, post-Combine, with a funded account", if you've started with a $50,000 account, that you can't go below the $50,000? It's certainly not what you've stated above, anyway: that would make no sense at all, for exactly the reason you suggest.
So if you are below $50k after 10 days, then you need to ante-up another $100 ?