Overview and Quick Facts

Summary Introduction

Quant Tekel Funded is a rapidly growing simulated funding platform that offers challenge and instant funding paths, competitive profit splits, and multi-platform access targeted at active traders seeking scalable capital.

Company snapshot

  • Name: Quant Tekel Funded
  • Legal entities: Quant Tekel LLC (virtual funding), Quant Tekel (Pty) Ltd (regulated broker services in select jurisdictions)
  • Offices: London, South Africa, Philippines, Hong Kong
  • Team size: 40+ professionals

Key metrics at a glance

  • Traders served: 70,000+
  • Payouts to traders: $10M+ (claimed)
  • Max allocation: $400,000 overall; Instant limits noted ($99k/$49k legacy)
  • Profit split: Up to 80% standard; promotional boosts up to 90% advertised
  • Payout cadence: Bi-weekly or on-demand options (plan dependent)
  • Platforms: MT5; cTrader; TradeLocker; Web, iOS, Android

History and reputation

  • Founded and positioning: Launched under Quant Tekel group to provide simulated proprietary evaluations and instant funding; emphasizes tech-first execution and rapid scaling.
  • Regulatory nuance: Core simulated programs run under Quant Tekel LLC (demo/simulated funds). Brokerage services operated by Quant Tekel (Pty) Ltd with local regulation in South Africa (FSP). Fees for evaluations are subscription-like and non-refundable.

Trustpilot and community score summary

  • Community signals: Active presence across comparison platforms; mixed-to-positive reviews noting fast support and competitive promos, occasional complaints on strict rule enforcement and account breaches.
  • Reviewer takeaway: Reputation shows rapid scale and solid payout history claims, but traders should expect strict risk enforcement and thorough KYC/risk interviews.

Funding programs and account types

Overview of funding models

Quant Tekel Funded offers multiple funding pathways: challenge evaluations (QT POWER / QT PRIME), QT INSTANT (instant funding), and reward/redemption via the QT Digital Card that lets users earn evaluation credits through spending.

Account sizes and instruments

  • Sizes: $5K, $10K, $25K, $50K, $100K, $200K (merged/maximum allocation rules apply; Instant has separate caps such as $99k legacy/updated limits).
  • Instruments: Forex, indices, metals, crypto, oil (oil may be commission-free on some plans).

Pricing and fee structure

  • One‑time challenge fees vary by account size and plan; QT PRIME/QT POWER fees are charged at checkout and are non‑refundable per terms.
  • Commissions: $2 per lot per side ($4 round trip) on raw-spread accounts; some plan variants include commissions into spread pricing.
  • Promotions: Coupon discounts (e.g., QTCARDS launch code) and limited-time 50% offs are offered; stacking is prohibited unless explicitly allowed.

Trial, demo, or free options

  • Simulated evaluation accounts are provided (demo-like with live feeds) for all plans; QT Instant grants immediate funded accounts after KYC and contract signing rather than a pass-through challenge.
  • QT Digital Card allows earning free evaluations by redeeming points accrued through spending.

Evaluation Rules and Performance Targets

Quant Tekel Funded’s evaluation framework is strict and clearly documented, designed to mirror live trading constraints while filtering for consistent, risk‑aware traders.

  • Profit targets and phases

    • 2‑Step (QT PRIME standard): Stage 1 — 8%, Stage 2 — 5% to pass the evaluation.
    • 3‑Step option (QT PRIME alternative): Stage 1 — 6%, Stage 2 — 6%, Stage 3 — 6%.
    • QT POWER: Two stages, 6% each.
    • QT INSTANT: No pre‑evaluation profit target; funded immediately after KYC/contract, with 5% profit required before first withdrawal.
  • Time limits and minimum trading days

    • No hard countdown for most challenge plans (unlimited timeframe), but minimum trading days apply: typically 4 days per phase for QT PRIME/QT POWER, and 5 days before withdrawals for QT INSTANT.
    • Payout cycles are bi‑weekly or on‑demand where plan rules permit; on‑demand requests must meet consistency and minimum‑day thresholds.
  • Drawdown and risk rules

    • Daily drawdown: fixed percent rules — e.g., QT PRIME: 4% fixed (based on initial balance, EOD rules apply); QT POWER: 3% daily (EOD) / 4% variant for newer rulesets; QT INSTANT: 3% fixed daily.
    • Max drawdown: QT PRIME: 10% static, QT POWER: 8%, QT INSTANT: 6% trailing (locks and trails with highest equity).
    • Max exposure / max risk: firm enforces 2% max risk per trade (or 2.5% exposure cap on some plans). Violations often trigger a hard breach.
  • Allowed and disallowed strategies

    • Allowed: manual trading, most EAs/algos after pre‑approval, swing, intraday, and trend strategies that respect SL/TP rules.
    • Disallowed or restricted: latency arbitrage, high‑frequency tick scalping, reverse/group hedging, order‑book spamming, one‑sided excessive positions, and toxic trading behaviours. Specific rules forbid trading 5 minutes before/after red‑folder news in funded accounts (news rule).
    • Stop‑loss rule: funded accounts historically required SL placement within 60 seconds of opening (accounts purchased after specific rule changes may be exempt), failure can be a hard breach.
    • Layering / position limits: some plans prohibit 3+ concurrent positions on the same asset (layering rule) — check plan version for date‑based exceptions.
  • Position sizing and consistency constraints

    • Consistency score: measures concentration of profit by day: (best trading day ÷ total profit) × 100. Thresholds: QT INSTANT — 25%, QT POWER — 35% to be eligible for withdrawals.
    • Consistency rule (practical): no single trading day may represent more than the specified percentage of total profit at withdrawal. Traders must distribute gains across days to qualify.
    • Lot and allocation limits: merged allocation caps and overall maximum allocation rules (e.g., $400k total) restrict simultaneous account exposure; Instant plans have separate caps (historical and updated).
  • Reviewer notes

    • The rules are comprehensive and conservative, prioritising capital preservation. Traders should read the plan version date and KYC/contract requirements carefully, since rule sets have changed over time and date‑based exceptions exist.

Payouts and Trader Economics

Payout structure and profit split

  • Standard split: Funded stage profit split is 80% to the trader on most plans; promotional boosts and on‑demand conditions can raise effective splits (occasionally advertised up to 90% for limited promotions).
  • Payout cadence: Biweekly payouts by default on funded accounts or on‑demand where plan rules allow; payout eligibility depends on meeting minimum trading days, consistency score, and plan‑specific profit thresholds.
  • Minimum withdrawal: QT INSTANT requires 5% total profit before the first withdrawal; other plans specify minimum trading days and consistency scores rather than strict percent floors for routine payouts.

Payment methods, fees and responsibilities

  • Payment rails: Crypto (USDC/ERC‑20), Wire transfers, and QT Card are supported; traders bear any network or bank fees.
  • Wallet rules: Submitted wallet addresses are final at time of payout submission; change requests are treated as urgent exceptions and cannot be guaranteed. Traders are fully responsible for correct address submission.
  • Taxes and compliance: Payouts are the trader’s responsibility for local taxes and reporting; the platform disclaims tax advice.

Processing times and conditions

  • Processing: Payout requests are processed within 24 business hours after approval; the day of request does not count toward the processing window. Risk interviews or additional KYC can delay payment.
  • Account state at payout: All trades and pending orders must be closed before requesting a payout; accounts are reset within 24 hours after payout processing on funded accounts.

Fee refunds, guarantees and disputes

  • Minimum fee: Performance fee minimums apply (plan dependent); QT INSTANT lists a minimum performance fee policy for instant models.
  • Refunds: Registration/evaluation fees are generally non‑refundable; promotional reimbursements are rare and handled case‑by‑case per terms.
  • Dispute escalation: Payout reversals or holds may trigger risk interviews; failure to attend mandatory risk interviews can result in forfeiture of payout.

Scaling and growth economics

  • Scaling plan: Traders become eligible for scaling after meeting three processed payouts plus minimum profit accumulation (e.g., 10% over 8 weeks) and no major drawdown breaches; scaling increments include increased allocation, higher profit shares, and potential salary/office offers at higher tiers.
  • Allocation caps: Aggregate maximum allocation rules (e.g., $400,000 overall) and Instant plan caps (historical/updated limits such as $99,000) control how much capital a trader can run across accounts.

Reviewer notes

  • Economic terms favour long‑term consistent traders: high splits are attractive, but non‑refundable fees, strict payout conditions, and finality of wallet submissions mean traders must plan withdrawals carefully and maintain impeccable KYC and compliance records.

Trading Conditions and Execution

Spreads, commissions and swaps

  • Spreads: Quant Tekel Funded offers both raw spreads (with commissions) and variable spreads (commission‑included) account types; oil is frequently commission‑free on select plans.
  • Commissions: Raw‑spread accounts charge $2 per lot per side ($4 round‑trip) applied across FX, indices, metals and crypto unless stated otherwise.
  • Swap policy: Accounts are swap‑free by default; triple‑swap and rollover rules follow standard market practice and are applied during the rollover period.

Execution model, slippage and re‑quotes

  • Execution: Trading runs on partner broker infrastructure with live feeds and variable interbank spreads to simulate realistic execution; executions may experience slippage and occasional delays during high volatility.
  • Slippage: Both positive and negative slippage are possible; examples and mitigation tips are documented in the knowledge base (avoid major news, split large orders, use limit orders).
  • Re‑quotes: The platform emphasises realistic fills rather than guaranteed no‑requote execution; during extreme events some fills may be voided or adjusted per risk policy.

Available platforms

  • MetaTrader 5 (MT5), cTrader and TradeLocker are supported for account access; desktop, web and mobile clients are available.
  • Platform restrictions: MT5 and cTrader access are restricted by residency for certain countries (check the account’s platform availability before trading) and logging in from restricted IPs can cause account suspension or hard breach.

Liquidity, routing and typical latency

  • Liquidity: Demo/simulated accounts use partner broker liquidity and variable spreads to reflect interbank conditions; liquidity can widen during news and low‑volume sessions.
  • Routing: Orders are routed through partner broker servers which mirror live market liquidity; very large orders may experience deeper market impact and partial fills.
  • Latency: Typical latency is low in normal market conditions but can increase during major economic releases and black swan events; the platform documents expected behaviour and enforces rules around news windows to reduce disputed fills.

Reviewer notes

  • Trading conditions aim to replicate a live institutional environment rather than a frictionless demo; traders should factor commissions, spread type, and news‑related execution risk into their strategy and position sizing.

Rules Enforcement and Account Monitoring

Overview

Quant Tekel Funded applies a layered monitoring system combining automated rule checks, manual risk reviews, and mandatory interviews to enforce compliance and protect simulated capital.

Monitoring tools and dashboards

  • Real‑time dashboard: Traders have access to a dashboard that displays live equity, drawdown, open positions, and consistency score.
  • Automated flags: The system auto‑flags violations such as exceeding max exposure, news‑window trades, excessive one‑sided positions, and stop‑loss breaches.
  • Audit logs: Full trade history, IP/device logs, and order timestamps are retained for post‑trade investigations.

Rule enforcement process and exceptions

  • Immediate actions: Soft breaches trigger warnings or temporary pauses; hard breaches lead to immediate account failure and forfeiture of simulated profits.
  • Manual review: Risk analysts review flagged accounts for contextual evidence (fills, latency, market conditions) and may escalate to a risk interview before final adjudication.
  • Exceptions: In rare cases of demonstrable platform errors or black swan events, the firm may void specific fills or apply discretionary remedies after a review.

Dispute resolution and appeals

  • Initial escalation: Traders should raise disputes through the official Intercom/support channel with supporting logs and timestamps.
  • Risk interview requirement: Failure to attend a scheduled risk interview forfeits payout eligibility for that cycle.
  • Appeal path: After manual review, unresolved disputes are escalated to a compliance panel; final decisions may be subject to the firm’s Terms and Conditions.

Account suspension, termination and bans

  • Temporary pause: Connections from restricted IPs (forbidden countries) or unusual login patterns may cause a temporary pause pending verification.
  • Hard breach consequences: Violations like latency arbitrage, group account sharing, maximum allocation breaches, or repeat policy breaches result in permanent account closure and profit forfeiture.
  • Payment disputes: Disputing payments with card providers can trigger account bans per the payment dispute policy.

Reviewer notes

  • Enforcement is strict and documented; traders must keep detailed logs, respect IP and KYC rules, and respond promptly to risk communications to avoid irreversible penalties.

Risk Management, Protections, and Guarantees

Built‑in risk controls

  • Daily and maximum drawdown: Clear fixed and trailing drawdown rules per plan — 3–4% daily limits and 6–10% max depending on product (QT INSTANT trailing 6%, QT PRIME static 10%, QT POWER 8%).
  • Equity Protector: Optional 1.5% floating‑loss auto‑close available at purchase to limit extreme single‑trade exposure; execution delay on auto‑close may vary during volatility.
  • Max risk/exposure caps: Firm enforces 2% per trade (some plans allow 2.5% exposure caps); exceeding limits triggers hard breaches.

Capital protection, insurance and liability

  • Simulated capital model: All accounts operate with simulated funds; the platform does not act as a live broker for client capital, and liability for trading losses or third‑party interruptions is limited in the Terms.
  • No guaranteed insurance: There is no insurer‑backed guarantee for trader profits; remedies for platform error or exceptional market events are discretionary and handled case‑by‑case.

Corporate solvency signals and disclaimers

  • Legal structure: Trading programs run under the group entities with KYC/KYB and Terms that limit refunds and liability; traders must read contracted T&Cs carefully.
  • Disclaimer emphasis: The company disclaims investment advice and positions all services as simulated evaluation products; users accept risk and legal obligations in the onboarding contract.

Protections traders must follow

  • KYC and device ownership: Traders must complete KYC, use personally owned devices, and avoid VPN/VPS during KYC or trading or risk account closure.
  • Wallet finality: Wallet addresses submitted for payouts are final; traders bear responsibility for accurate details.
  • Risk interview compliance: Mandatory risk interviews may be required before payout; non‑attendance forfeits payout.

Reviewer notes

  • The protection framework prioritises rule‑based capital preservation rather than insurer guarantees. Traders seeking insured or segregated live capital should weigh this simulated funding model against regulated custodial offerings.

Tools, Education, and Trader Support

Overview

Quant Tekel Funded provides a mixed set of trader resources focused on practical skill development, execution analytics, and community access rather than beginner-only tutorials.

Educational resources

  • Content types: Articles, FAQs, rule guides, and targeted “how‑to” pieces covering slippage, drawdown mechanics, and plan‑specific rules.
  • Live events: Periodic webinars and promo webinars tied to launches and anniversary offers.
  • Structured learning: No full university‑style curriculum reported; emphasis is on concise rule explanations and practical checklists for passing evaluations.

Trading tools and analytics

  • Account dashboard: Live equity, drawdown, open positions, trade history, and consistency score displayed in real time.
  • Trade reports & logs: Comprehensive trade history, audit logs, and execution stamps retained for dispute resolution and personal review.
  • Performance analytics: Basic P/L breakdowns, daily profit charts, and scaling eligibility trackers; no advanced built‑in algotrading studio disclosed.
  • Optional third‑party tools: Integrations and access may be available (journals, EAs, trade copier) but are provided “as‑is” and are not monitored by the firm.

Community and mentorship

  • Community channels: Official support channels plus community touchpoints; active marketing partnerships (e.g., promotional sponsorships) and social presence noted.
  • Mentorship: No formal paid mentorship program described in source texts; community mentorship and peer sharing appear to be the primary routes for guidance.

Customer support and SLAs

  • Primary support: Live chat (Intercom), email support, and dashboard ticketing; risk and KYC teams handle compliance inquiries.
  • Response expectations: Fast responses reported for KYC and payout queries, though escalations to risk interviews can take longer; payout processing windows and scheduled interviews are enforced.
  • Risk team access: Traders may be asked to join mandatory risk interviews before payouts; missing scheduled interviews can forfeit payouts.

Reviewer notes

  • The support stack is operational and rule‑focused: good for traders who prefer self‑service documentation and clear escalation paths, less suited for traders wanting deep structured education or in‑house mentoring.

Onboarding and User Experience

Account setup flow and KYC requirements

  • Sign‑up and purchase: Users select a plan (QT PRIME, QT POWER, QT INSTANT) and complete checkout; evaluation fees are non‑refundable and treated as access/subscription payments.
  • KYC & contract: KYC verification via Sumsub (passport, national ID, driver’s license) plus a live selfie is mandatory before funded trading or payouts; the contract must be signed via the e‑signature provider (Mail@digisigner.com). VPNs/VPS use during KYC is strictly prohibited.
  • Device and ownership policy: Traders must use personally owned devices; shared devices or delegated verification can trigger account closure and profit forfeiture.

Dashboard usability and reporting

  • Main dashboard features: Live equity, EOD equity history, drawdown trackers, open positions, trade history, and consistency score are visible in real time.
  • Payout & wallet UX: Payout button appears on the homepage when eligible; wallet address submission is final on request and any change is treated as an urgent exception.
  • Reports & logs: Detailed execution stamps, trade logs, and audit history are accessible for review and dispute submission.

Mobile experience and app availability

  • Access channels: Web dashboard plus mobile access for iOS and Android; platforms supported include MT5, cTrader, and TradeLocker via mobile apps or web connectors.
  • Notifications: Email and in‑dashboard notifications for KYC, contract receipt, payout windows, and scheduled risk interviews; users are advised to whitelist Mail@digisigner.com to receive contract emails.

Reviewer notes

  • Onboarding is straightforward but compliance‑heavy: successful users must complete KYC and sign contracts before trading funded accounts. The dashboard provides essential transparency but wallet finality and strict device/KYC rules require careful attention during setup.

Security, Compliance, and Legal

Regulatory status and licencing

  • Legal entities: Services are provided under group entities; core simulated evaluation programs operate under Quant Tekel LLC while certain broker services are delivered by Quant Tekel (Pty) Ltd with local registrations in select jurisdictions.
  • Regulatory nuance: Programs are explicitly presented as simulated demo accounts; the provider disclaims that services are not investment advice and limits liability in the Terms.

KYC, AML and onboarding compliance

  • KYC provider: Identity verification is handled via Sumsub; accepted IDs include passport, driver’s license, national ID plus a live selfie for facial verification.
  • Prohibitions during verification: Use of VPNs/VPS during KYC is forbidden and may lead to account closure; KYC must be completed personally by the account holder.
  • Risk interviews and monitoring: Mandatory risk interviews may be required before payout approval; failure to attend forfeits payment.

Data protection and privacy

  • Privacy model: Personal data collection, retention, and processing are governed by the firm’s Privacy Notice; users may exercise regional data rights (EEA, UK, South Africa, Australia, Canada, US states) as described in the policy.
  • Security controls: Organizational and technical measures are declared but not guaranteed; users are advised to secure devices and accounts and not share credentials.

Terms of service, liability and dispute rules

  • Non‑refund policy: Registration/evaluation fees are final and non‑refundable; purchases are treated as access/subscription payments.
  • Limitation of liability: The Terms disclaim investment advice and cap liability for losses, platform interruptions, and third‑party services.
  • Dispute path: Informal negotiation required for at least 30 days before arbitration; payment disputes (chargebacks) can lead to account bans per policy.

Intellectual property and communications

  • IP ownership: The company retains IP rights over platform content, software, and marks; user submissions may be assigned per the Terms.
  • Confidentiality: Communications between users and the firm are treated as confidential under the Terms; disclosure without written consent is restricted.

Reviewer notes and practical guidance

  • Read the contract and KYC instructions carefully prior to trading funded accounts. Wallet finality, non‑refundable fees, and strict KYC/anti‑fraud rules mean compliance lapses can be costly. Traders seeking fully regulated custodial capital should compare this simulated funding model against licensed brokers offering segregated client custody.

Reputation, Reliability, and Track Record

Public track record and longevity

  • Overview: Quant Tekel Funded is presented as a rapidly expanding simulated funding service under the Quant Tekel group; public claims include large trader counts and multi‑million dollar payout totals.
  • Tenure: Product rollout and rule updates across 2024–2025 show active iteration and frequent policy changes, indicating growth but also evolving rule sets traders must track.

Payout reviews and real‑world case studies

  • Payout history: The platform advertises regular biweekly payouts and processed trader payments; reviewer notes show many traders report successful payouts while some report disputes tied to KYC or risk interviews.
  • Common issues in reviews: Delays linked to KYC, missed risk‑interviews, wallet submission errors, or rule breaches are the frequent causes of negative payout reports.

Community sentiment and review platforms

  • Mixed signals: Public commentary is mixed‑to‑positive — praise for responsiveness to KYC/payout queries and promotional offers; criticism centers on strict enforcement, non‑refund policy, and account finality rules.
  • Trust indicators: Clear T&Cs, mandatory KYC via Sumsub, and detailed audit logs increase transparency; however, non‑refund fee policy and hard breach enforcement reduce perceived leniency.

Red flags and scam indicators

  • Watch for: Aggressive marketing promises without contract clarity; inconsistent public case histories where traders cite unexplained hard breaches; opaque wallet‑change guarantees once payouts are submitted.
  • Mitigations: Traders should keep granular trade logs, preserve all KYC and contract emails (whitelist Mail@digisigner.com), and document any Intercom/support conversations and timestamps.

Reviewer conclusion

  • Quant Tekel Funded demonstrates a credible operational footprint and real payout mechanisms suitable for disciplined, compliance‑oriented traders. The firm’s strict rule enforcement, non‑refundable fee model, and mandatory risk procedures mean the platform rewards consistent behaviour but can be unforgiving to errors or policy lapses.

Pros, Cons, and Ideal Trader Profiles

Pros

  • Attractive profit split up to 80% standard with occasional promotional boosts.
  • Multiple funding paths (challenge phases plus QT INSTANT) that fit different trader preferences.
  • Robust monitoring and audit logs that increase transparency for disputes and performance tracking.
  • Multi‑platform support (MT5, cTrader, TradeLocker, web/mobile) and broad instrument coverage (FX, indices, metals, crypto, oil).
  • Clear risk framework with published daily and max drawdown limits that reward consistency.

Cons

  • Non‑refundable fees for evaluations and strict chargeback policy that can lead to bans.
  • Stringent KYC and device rules (Sumsub, live selfie, no VPN/VPS) that may delay onboarding for some traders.
  • Hard breach enforcement for exposure/risk violations (2% per trade / 2.5% exposure caps) with immediate account failure.
  • Rules evolving frequently — traders must track plan version dates to know which rules apply.
  • Payout caveats: wallet address finality, mandatory risk interviews, and possible delays from additional compliance checks.

Ideal trader profiles

  • Discipline‑first intraday trader (scalper aware): experienced scalpers who respect SL/TP rules, avoid tick‑scalping/latency arbitrage, and keep trades balanced to satisfy consistency scores.
  • Consistent swing trader: steady day‑to‑day returns, low single‑day concentration, comfortable with minimum trading days and drawdown caps.
  • Algorithmic trader (after approval): systematic EAs and algos that are pre‑approved and designed to respect exposure and layering rules.
  • Risk‑conscious growth traders: traders focused on steady scaling, meeting payout cadence and scaling milestones to access larger allocations.

Not a fit

  • Traders relying on latency arbitrage, unmanaged HFT, undisclosed account sharing, or those unwilling to accept non‑refundable evaluation fees and strict KYC.

Reviewer takeaway

Quant Tekel Funded suits disciplined, compliance‑oriented traders who prioritise scaling real capital through documented, rule‑driven progression rather than traders seeking lax rules or anonymous, high‑frequency advantage.

 

Comparative Metrics and Decision Aids

Side‑by‑side scorecard (short)

AttributeSummary
Evaluation ModelInstant funding (QT INSTANT) + multi‑phase challenges (QT PRIME, QT POWER); clear but evolving rules.
Profit SplitStandard 80% to trader; limited promotions up to 90%.
Trading ConditionsMT5/cTrader/TradeLocker; raw and variable spreads; commission ~$2/lot/side; news trading restricted.
Platform & ExecutionPartner broker routing; realistic fills with possible slippage during news and high volatility.
Support & TransparencySumsub KYC, audit logs, Intercom support; strict non‑refund and hard breach enforcement.

Weighted decision checklist

  1. Risk tolerance (30%) — If you accept strict 2% per‑trade caps and hard breaches, score higher.
  2. Need for speed (15%) — If you rely on HFT/latency arbitrage, this firm is unsuitable.
  3. Consistency ability (20%) — Consistency score thresholds (25–35%) reward distributed gains.
  4. Payout priorities (15%) — If biweekly/on‑demand payouts and crypto/wire suit you, score positive.
  5. Compliance readiness (20%) — Strong KYC/device rules require high compliance readiness.

Final verdict

  • Who should apply: disciplined intraday and swing traders who prioritise scaling, accept non‑refundable evaluation costs, and can operate within strict risk limits.
  • Who should not: HFT/latency arbitrageurs, account‑sharers, or traders unwilling to complete robust KYC.

Risk

Forex trading can involve the risk of loss beyond your initial deposit. It is not suitable for all investors and you should make sure you understand the risks involved, seeking independent advice if necessary.

Forex accounts typically offer various degrees of leverage and their elevated profit potential is counterbalanced by an equally high level of risk. You should never risk more than you are prepared to lose and you should carefully take into consideration your trading experience.

Past performance and simulated results are not necessarily indicative of future performance. All the content on this site represents the sole opinion of the author and does not constitute an express recommendation to purchase any of the products described in its pages.