
Denise
1.5K posts















I will add some conviction and accountability: $QQQ 98% chance that it'll have a red week. If I am wrong, I will post a video of myself doing 200 pushups and 50 pullups total in 10 minutes.






Here is a guide of when to know that a Prop Firm is in trouble or at least know the signs so you are well prepared to run: 1) Changing trading conditions Tweaking trading environment on a demo LP is the first sign there are troubles ahead. That would be by increasing spreads by 2 - 5 pips, increasing latency upon entry and exit at specific market hours, or adding arbitrary slippage on specific order types or Market (Gold is the main culprit). Usually a sign that a firm is trying to lower the payout ratio. 2) Changing rules and payout timelines Changing rules every now and then is actually a good thing. For example, if a firm is too strict and needs to compete with other firms out there, it's wise to slightly tweak rules in order to accommodate better flow of customers. But if you see weekly/monthly rule changes, or stealth/ambiguous rules being introduced, it means that the firm is trying to lower amount of payouts. 1 and 2 go in tandem, time to diversify and use other firms. 3) Sudden and sharp increase of payout rejections for ambiguous reasonsIf step 1 and 2 fail, then step 3 is implemented. Many of the big firms have done this, and do it sporadically just so it's not obvious to the naked eye. 4) Payout delays (multi day ones specifically) Huge red flag! If a firm has multiple day payout delays, instantly run, do not buy further challenges from that firm. It simply means their cashflow is in deep red and they are about to rug pull or are extremely struggling. Just run, do not listen to excuses no matter how good they are. Over the years I've heard and seen them all. 99% is PR bullshit. 5) Extreme discounts... at all times 40 - 50% discounts in special occasions 1 per year is fine, but remember having discounts cuts into the business main revenue stream which is never good. On its own it may not be a sign, as the firm may be trying to gain more market share and have the capital to back it up, but in my opinion it's a terrible idea as you build innate yearning from customers to keep having 50% off due to being used to pricing. 6) Forced Platform Migrations If a firm suddenly forces you to move from a major platform (like MT4/5) to a web-trader nobody has ever heard of, it is rarely an "upgrade." It usually means they lost their license or their broker dumped them due to toxic flow. Stability is key in this game, and forced migration is chaos. 7) Leadership acting emotional on the timeline If you see the CEO or the main brand account arguing with random anime profile pics, blocking critics, or screaming "FUD" at legitimate questions, the end is near. Professional, solvent business owners don't have time to fight on Twitter. If they are panicking publicly, imagine what is happening behind the scenes. One of these signs is a worry. Two is a pattern. Three is a guarantee of trouble.








I hope this is rage bait because $1M is definitely not enough to retire comfortably. I have $10,547,837.27 in my 401k and still can't retire.







