Futures Trading
Trade standardized exchange‑listed contracts across indexes, commodities, rates, and currencies.
Futures provide efficient exposure to global markets with centralized clearing, high transparency, and deep liquidity.
Whether you are seeking directional opportunities or hedging portfolio risk, futures can be an essential part of a disciplined trading plan.
Futures are standardized contracts to buy or sell an asset at a predefined price on a future date.
specifications, tick sizes, margin requirements, and trading hours are defined by the exchange.
Common assets include equity indexes, energy, metals, agricultural products, fixed income, and foreign exchange.
Our approach emphasizes robust risk management, instrument selection, and platform tooling to help traders operate consistently and professionally.
Your Path to Funding
- Phase 1 – Reach the profit target while following the consistency requirement and adhering to the Max Loss Limit.
- First Payout – Upon completing Phase 1, you're instantly eligible for your first payout.
- Phases 2–4 – Hit each target, maintain consistency, and avoid the Max Loss to receive additional payouts.
- Live Funded – After Phase 4, you’ll transition to a Live Funded account.
- There is no Max Time restriction at this phase (inactivity still applies). Once you achieve this phase you are responsible for all platform and data fees (deducted monthly from the account balance). As long as traders adhere to the rules as defined above and remain profitable, they can continue trading.
Markets, Contracts & Platforms
Traders can access a broad range of contracts to express macro views, hedge exposures, or capture intraday moves.
Contract selection should consider volatility, liquidity, tick value, margin, and rollover schedules.
Our platform for Trading Futures is Rithmic, which offers multi‑window layouts, and extensive tooling for analysis and order execution.
Risk Management
Effective futures trading centers on position sizing, defined risk per trade, daily loss limits, and adherence to a documented plan. Traders should account for contract leverage, intraday volatility, and news events.