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All about PropFirm


Why 95% of Traders Lose
More than 95% of retail traders lose money over time, according to data published by multiple regulated brokers. This article explains why that number exists, how probability shapes broker business models, why most strategy sellers target the 95%, and why buying a challenge does not change your statistical position. It examines behavioral, structural, and mathematical reasons behind trader failure—and what separates the minority who survive.


Crypto Prop Trading
Crypto Prop Trading refers to proprietary trading models focused on digital asset markets such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, and perpetual futures. This article explains how crypto prop trading works, how it differs from traditional FX or equities prop trading, how funding models operate, and how live capital allocation interacts with crypto market structure.


What Is a Prop Firm Challenge?
A Prop Firm Challenge is an evaluation process used by many firms to determine whether a trader qualifies for funded capital. This article explains what a prop firm challenge is, how it works, common rules and risk limits, how firms generate revenue from challenge models, and how challenge-based funding differs structurally from live capital allocation models.


How to Get Funded Without a Challenge
How to Get Funded Without a Challenge is increasingly searched by traders who want capital access without paying evaluation fees. This article explains how capital allocation works outside of traditional challenge models, how live funding differs from simulation-based evaluations, what performance standards matter, and how structured track records can lead to direct funded consideration without passing a multi-stage test.


Best Prop Firms
Best Prop Firms cannot be determined by marketing claims or payout promises alone. Many firms branded as “prop firms” operate challenge-selling or simulation-based models that differ structurally from traditional proprietary trading firms. This article explains how to evaluate prop firms based on capital source, incentive alignment, live execution, withdrawal risk, and structural transparency—rather than promotional language.


Why Prop Firms Make Money
Why Prop Firms Make Money is often misunderstood. Modern “prop firms” frequently operate by selling evaluation challenges rather than trading proprietary capital. This article explains the structural difference between traditional proprietary trading firms and challenge-based funded account models. It examines revenue incentives, risk alignment, rule design, and why capital allocation models differ fundamentally from participation-fee models.
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