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Peblo
Any examples of those firms offering 30:70 or 50:50?
TopStep and other similar ones that offer 80-20 split in your favor--can do so because the funding they provide in your "funded" account is 1-time funding not recurring revolving repeatable funding. Meaning the catch is TS only provides the initial funding with the caveat that there is a trailing max drawdown (not a fixed max drawdown). The firms that offer 50-50 (or less) usually offer a fixed max drawdown
What is the difference?
Huge difference in my opinion
80/20 deal TopStep Trader (TS) scenario with trailing max drawdown: if you withdraw your profits down to zero Topstep will close your account because they only offer a trailing drawdown and not a true fixed drawdown.
Once you have made profits equal to your max drawdown - a trailing drawdown requires you to keep profits equal to the max drawdown in the account (meaning you cant withdraw them if you still want your max drawdown)
example: $4,500 max trailing drawdown in your funded acct - you start out week 1 and generate $4,500 in profits. If you withdraw the entire positive balance of your funded account of $4,500 your account is closed. Their risk is overwith---you must now keep all $4,500 in the account and it now is your cushion to keep the account open.
The real funding is just provided at the start of the funded account - if you lose daily and keep losing then eventually when hit your max allowable loss the account is closed and they have taken the loss bot you. Conversely though if you generate profits you must keep profits equal to max drawdown always in the account to keep that drawdown--hence--trading with your own money at risk from that point on and paying them 20% (at least that is my opinion on how this works out for TS)
50-50 scenario with other companies that offer a "fixed" max drawdown
if you withdraw your profits down to zero your account is NOT closed (like with TS)
If your max "fixed" drawdown was $4500 with the 50-50 company and you generated $9,000 in profits and you want to withdraw all $9,000 and take your account back a $0 starting balance then the $9,000 is withdrawn--they get their $4,500 cut and you get the remaining $4,500 and then your account balance is now $0.00 but unlike TS you still have your account open and you still have your max drawdown available of $4,500 just like you did on day 1
So whats the bottom line...
In my opinion
With firms like TS that offer 80-20 split with the trailing max drawdown caveat "catch"
the trader is actually Penalized for his/her success in trading. These types of firms are not interested in your long term success in my opinion since you are not allowed to keep your funding if you withdraw all profits down to zero as they close your account then and these firms are looking to free ride on your capital by forcing you to keep your profits in the account to keep a drawdown equal to the beginning drawdown
With firms that are 50-50 split they seem more interested in your long terms success and allowing you to pay yourself profits to the fullest extent on a recurring basis and not have you penalized for your withdrawals like TS does. That is why these firms charge 50% as they are more interested in earning a percentage of your continued success rather than ways to trip you up. Also some of these firms offer to substantially increase your funding and your fixed max drawdown after you show consistent profitability
Not exactly truly fair since it's their capital.
Why not just make the 5,000, leave it in the account, then everything after is 80:20. If you're successful, no problem. If you break a rule, then you get that 5,000 back and account closed anyway. Not saying the rules are easy.
Look at it this way. Would you give a bunch of remote traders 80:20 of your own cash with a 4,500 drawdown?
I get what you're saying. It's not really a 50k account, it's more like a 5k account. I mean you could do that... Get the profit and leave.ok in my opinion the difference is as follows:
Lets do exactly what you just said
Make $5,000 in profits and leave it in the account
Ok fair enough but lets look at 2 different scenarios now that you have generated $5,000 in profits in your newly funded TS account
Scenario 1 is your scenario - you have generated $5,000 in profits and instead of withdrawing them you leave it all in the account as tyou stated and from now on only withdraw thos profits that are over and above $5,000 you left in your account. Now lets say you continue to generate $5,000 in new profits each month for the next 12 months.
Month 1 - You trade well and generate $5,000 in profits and all $5,000 are left in the funded TS account to keep full trailing drawdown. No profits withdrawn in month 1.
Month 2 - You continue to trade well and generate $5,000 in additional profits and now your toital account balance is positive $10,000. You withdraw the additional $5,000 in profits generated this month and leave $5,000 in your account. TS takes their cut of your $5,000 withdrawal and that is $1,000 and you net $4,000.
and now for the next 11 additional months you continue to generate $5,000 in new trading profits each month and make your $5,000 withdrawal and leave the original $5,000 in the acct and each month TS takes its 20% cut of your $5,000 profits withdrawal which is $1,000 each month to TS and you net $4,000 each month.
At the end of the 12 additional months of leaving the original $5,000 in the account you have generated an additional $60,000 in profits but only netted $48,000 in your pocket as 20% ($12,000) went to TS.
Scenario 2 - you withdraw all $5,000 in profits from the TS account - they close your account due to no funding left due to the way they configure the trailing drawdown.
You then take the $5,000 and open an account with Tradovate and deposit the $5,000 into it and set the risk parameters on your new Tradovate account to be the exact same as TS's with the same daily loss limit and same max trailing drawdown. And now lets say you continue to generate $5,000 in profits each month for the next 12 months
Under this scenario you can withdraw the full $5,000 in new profits each month and keep all $5,000 as you are not paying 20% to TS anymore (even though your trading account with Tradovate has the same risk parameters as as TS account would have had). The 20% each month on $5,000 in new profits is $1,000 so over a 12 month period you have saved $12,000 that you would have paid to TS had you kept the $5,000 in the TS account and continued to trade through your TS funded account.
At the end of the 12 additional months you have generated an additional $60,000 in profits and you have netted $60,000 in your pocket - saving $12,000 VS scenario 1 with leaving the $5,000 in the account and continuing to trade with TS
Keep in mind 2 additional things
1) There is no defined increase in funding (a carrot) that TS offers (that I know of) should you consistently make trade profits over time. So you must leave the whole $5,000 in original profits generated in the account to keep the same trailing max drawdown
VS
2) the firms like SMB Capital actually define on the website that if you consistently generate profits over the initial 6 month period that your max fixed drawdown is increased to $25,000 which is over 5X what TS's biggest account offers for futures trading which is the "$150k" account that just has the $4,500 "trailing drawdown" - not fixed
I get what you're saying. It's not really a 50k account, it's more like a 5k account. I mean you could do that... Get the profit and leave.
You could potentially trade well for 6 months and try and renegotiate your agreement - you'd know for sure then...