How to pass the test to operate funded accounts?

Passing the funding tests to operate funded accounts requires preparation, consistency, discipline and solid risk management. By following a few guidelines and maintaining a methodical approach, you can increase your chances of success and obtain the financing you need to boost your trading career. So today we bring you the ten commandments to pass the tests to operate funded/funding accounts and how you can prepare for it.

How can I prepare for it?

In order to prepare yourself to take the test with guarantees and be a profitable trader, Matvard is what you are looking for. The objective of the MATVARD methodology is that you train as a professional trader to execute winning operations in the financial futures market, combining technical and psychological strategies, operating with external capital. Additionally, and no less important, that you acquire the necessary knowledge to pass the evaluation required for the managing a funded account at some of the best proprietary firms in the United States, in order to operate without putting your own assets at risk. That is, managing external capital. The Matvard method allows obtaining an average of between a 2% and 3% monthly profitability operating with a funded/financed account. In a normal case, a funded account of $100.000 means a profit of $2.000 to $3.000 per month.

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What is Matvard based on?

Matvard is based on different guidelines that will allow you to both pass the funding account test and at the same time be a profitable trader managing risk like the professionals. These guidelines are: 

  • Practices and examples in the open market on the MATVARD methodology with live operations in Trading Rooms, which will be every day from 8:30 to 11:00 and from 14:30 to 16:30 p.m., coinciding with the openings of the Spanish market and American respectively. And if you can't attend one, you can see the recording of all of them on our campus.
  • Laws of Market Dynamics and Time/Price Opportunity: Auction theory, laws of market dynamics, market profile (TPO Time-Price Opportunity) and narrative development.
  • Acceptance, pace and value in development: Identification of acceptance and timing by path and/or temporal range over dynamic value areas.
  • Order flow: Analysis of Time & Sales with delta (cumulative), analysis of excess or absence of supply/demand.
  • Risk management: Profit/risk ratio, position volume and loss limits.
  • Working documentation: Pre-operative, during operation and post-operation.

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