Understanding Trading Mechanics

Education
Precision and consistency in every trade.

Whether you're a seasoned trader or completely new, understanding how your trades are executed, what fees are involved, and how the rules actually work is important to keeping your account safe and avoiding accidental breaches.

  • Prop Firm vs Broker: how we differ from a traditional broker.
  • Trading Glossary: core terminology every prop trader needs to know.
  • Trading in Practice: the full lifecycle, execution mechanics, common mistakes, and overnight fees.
  • How Daily Loss and Max Loss Are Calculated: balance vs equity with worked examples.
1

Prop Firm vs Broker

FundingPips is not a broker. Understanding the difference matters, especially when it comes to what you risk, what you trade, and how you get paid.

Category Traditional Broker FundingPips (Prop Firm)
Capital Traded Your own money The firm's simulated capital
Cost to Enter Deposit required; all at risk One-time evaluation fee; no deposit
Risk to Trader 100% of losses come from your pocket Limited to your evaluation fee only
Account Type Live brokerage account Simulated environment replicating live conditions
Profit Split You keep 100%; but you risk 100% You keep up to 100% of profits with no capital at risk
Capital Size Limited to your deposit Up to $600k Max Allocation, up to $2M Prime Capital
Rules Margin requirements only Daily loss, max loss, trading conduct, and reward rules apply
FundingPips is NOT a live brokerage
You are not depositing your own money. You are not trading live markets with personal funds. The evaluation environment simulates real market conditions, but the capital is the firm's, not yours. This is why strict trading rules exist: FundingPips carries the risk so you do not have to.

2

Beginner's Trading Glossary

The core terms you need to navigate your FundingPips journey.

Asset / Instrument
The specific market you are trading: a currency pair (EUR/USD), a commodity (Gold), or an index (US30).
Position
An active, open trade in the market.
  • Long = Buy position
  • Short = Sell position
Lot Size
The volume or size of your trade. A larger lot size means higher risk and reward per pip of price movement.
Pip
The smallest standard price movement on a currency pair. For most pairs, 1 pip = 0.0001. For JPY pairs, 1 pip = 0.01.
Balance
Your account size based on closed trades only. Does not include floating profits or losses from open positions.
Equity
Your real-time account size: balance plus or minus the floating profit/loss of all currently open trades.
Margin
The "good-faith deposit" your platform sets aside to let you open and hold a trade.
Free Margin
Funds in your account not tied up in active trades; the money you still have available to open new positions.
Drawdown
The amount of capital lost from a defined baseline. At FundingPips, your Daily Loss Limit is anchored to each day's opening balance or equity (resets at 00:00 platform time), and your Maximum Loss Limit is anchored to the initial account size. Managing both is the most critical rule at FundingPips.
Spread
The gap between the Bid (sell) price and the Ask (buy) price. This is the cost of every trade you open.
Swap / Rollover
A small fee charged or credited to your account when you hold a trade open overnight past the daily market reset.
Liquidity
A measure of how active a market is. High liquidity = many participants. Low liquidity = erratic price gaps and slippage risk.

3

Trading in Practice

From the moment you purchase a challenge to the moment you collect a reward and start trading again; this is the full loop, along with what you need to know about execution, common pitfalls, and overnight fees.

Trade Lifecycle

1
Purchase
Buy your evaluation and receive credentials
2
Evaluation
Pass Phase 1 (and Phase 2 if applicable)
3
Master Account
Trade the firm's simulated capital
4
Open Trade
Enter a position; equity moves in real time
5
Rollover
If held overnight, swap fees applied
6
Close Trade
P/L realised; balance updates
7
Reward
Close all trades, wait 15 min, request split
8
Start Trading
Continue trading on your Master Account
Steps 4–8 repeat every reward cycle
The FundingPips Zero model has no evaluation phase. Traders receive a Master Account directly. Trading rules, including news and weekend restrictions, are stricter throughout. Refer to your model's article for the exact rules that apply to you.

Trade Execution & Order Dynamics

Is a Stop Loss Required?

A Stop Loss is an automatic exit order designed to close your position if it starts losing too much money. It is not required during your evaluation or on your Master Account; the firm's focus is on you staying within daily and maximum loss limits.

Although optional, a stop loss acts as a critical safety net. Trading without one means you assume 100% of the risk for any losses, breaches, or slippage that occur, including sudden moves during news events or the rollover window.
How Do Spreads Affect Trade Execution?

Every asset has two prices: the Bid (sell price) and the Ask (buy price). The gap between them is called the Spread. Because charts display the Bid price by default, spreads frequently cause confusion.

Premature Stop Outs: Sell Positions
Your stop loss is triggered by the Ask price, not the Bid. During volatile news events, spreads widen; the Ask may spike and trigger your stop loss even if the visible chart never touched your line.
Missed Buy Limits: Buy Positions
A Buy Limit requires the Ask price to drop to your level. The Bid on the chart may touch your line, but the Ask, still higher by the spread gap, may leave your order unfilled.
How Does Slippage Occur?

Slippage is the difference between the price you expected and the price where your trade actually executed. It typically occurs during extreme market volatility: major news releases or weekend market reopens, when liquidity drops and instantaneous price gaps form.

Negative Slippage
Order fills at a worse price than expected. More common during low liquidity windows and news releases.
Positive Slippage
Order fills at a better price than expected. Can occur when the market moves in your favour between order submission and execution.

Common Mistakes That Cost Traders Their Accounts

These are not rule violations; they are execution errors that experienced traders know to avoid.

1 Trading through the 5 PM ET rollover with a tight stop loss High Risk

At exactly 5:00 PM ET, the forex market's daily trading session ends. Global banks briefly pause, liquidity drops sharply, and spreads widen, sometimes dramatically. If you have a tight stop loss active during this window, the widened Ask price can trigger your stop even though the visible chart price never moved against you.

This is one of the most common causes of unexpected breaches on evaluation accounts.

Fix: Either close vulnerable positions before 5 PM ET or widen your stop loss enough to absorb a temporary spread spike. Check historical spread data for your asset during rollover to understand the typical range.
2 Placing a stop loss without accounting for spread High Risk

Charts show the Bid price. If you are selling and place a stop loss at a visible price level on the chart, it will be triggered by the Ask price, which is always higher by the spread. This means your stop triggers before the chart price reaches your line.

The more volatile the asset and the tighter the stop, the more frequently this causes unexpected exits.

Fix: Always include the current spread in your stop placement. For a sell position, add the spread to your intended stop distance. For a buy limit, subtract the spread. Most platforms let you display the Ask price on the chart as a separate line.
3 Ignoring swap costs on overnight holds Medium Risk

Swap rates are small per trade, but they compound quickly on large positions held over multiple nights. On Wednesday for currency pairs and Friday for indices, the rate triples to account for the weekend.

Swap costs reduce your balance, which affects your equity and can narrow the distance between you and your Maximum Loss limit.

Fix: Check the exact swap rate for your asset before holding overnight. In MatchTrader, select your asset, click Info, then Details. Include triple-swap days in your hold planning, especially on large lot sizes.
4 Confusing balance with equity when assessing risk High Risk

Your balance only updates when a trade is closed. If you have open positions, your actual account value, your equity, is different from what balance shows. Traders who check their balance while in a trade and think they have room to take more risk are often wrong.

This is especially dangerous near the end of a trading day when Daily Loss limits are close to being hit.

Fix: Always monitor your equity, not your balance, when you have open positions. Most platforms display both. Equity is the real-time figure; treat it as your true account value at all times.
5 Holding large open positions into a news event without a stop High Risk

High-impact news events cause sudden, sharp price movements. Without a stop loss, a single candle can move your equity past your Daily Loss or Maximum Loss limit in seconds, with no chance to intervene.

On the Master Account, there are also profit deduction rules for trades closed within the news window, but breach caused by equity dropping is separate and is final regardless of the cause.

Fix: Before any red-folder event on Forex Factory, either close your position or set a stop loss wide enough to handle the spike but tight enough to protect your limits. Know your breach thresholds before the event, not after.

Market Rollover & Overnight Fees

What is Market Rollover (The Daily Reset)?

Rollover is the process of keeping a trade open from one trading day to the next. The forex market's "trading day" officially ends and resets at the close of the New York session : 5:00 PM ET (subject to US Daylight Saving Time shifts).

During this brief window, global banks momentarily pause trading, causing a sudden drop in liquidity and temporarily widened spreads. Non-forex assets (Cryptocurrencies, Indices) may have different daily breaks and swap schedules.

Trading Warning: 5:00 PM ET Rollover
Spreads can widen massively at exactly 5:00 PM ET. A tight stop loss may be triggered by this temporary gap, which could inadvertently cause you to hit your Daily Loss limit. We strongly advise adjusting your risk, widening stop losses, or closing vulnerable trades ahead of rollover.
What are Swap Rates and Overnight Fees?

If you hold a trade open past the daily rollover, you may be charged or credited a small fee called a Swap Rate. Rates vary by asset.

Triple Swaps: Forex
Wednesday
Currency pair swap rates are tripled on Wednesdays to account for the upcoming weekend.
Triple Swaps: Indices
Friday
For indices, the triple charge applies on Fridays instead.
How to Check Your Rates: In MatchTrader, select your asset, click Info, then select Details to find the exact long (buy) and short (sell) swap rates.

4

How Daily Loss and Max Loss Are Actually Calculated

The most common cause of unexpected account closures is a misunderstanding of how Balance and Equity interact with your Daily Loss and Maximum Loss limits. Both are monitored at all times, including while trades are open.

Scenario A: Open Position Triggers a Breach

You have a $10,000 account with a 5% Daily Loss limit. You opened a trade this morning. Your balance has not changed, but your equity is moving in real time as the trade fluctuates.

Starting Balance
$10,000
No trades closed today; balance is unchanged
Daily Loss Limit (5%)
$500
Your equity cannot fall $500 below today's starting value
Breach Threshold
$9,500
If equity touches or falls below this, the account is closed, even with the trade still open
The important point: Your balance still shows $10,000 because the trade is not closed. But your equity, which includes the floating loss, is what FundingPips monitors in real time. If the open trade moves $500 against you, your equity hits $9,500 and the account closes instantly. You do not need to close the trade for the breach to trigger.
Scenario B: Intraday Wins Don't Move the Daily Floor

You have a $10,000 account. You closed a trade earlier today at a $200 profit. Your balance is now $10,200. You then open a new trade that starts losing.

Balance After Closed Trade
$10,200
Realised profit locked in; balance has updated
Daily Loss Limit (5%)
$500
5% of $10,000, today's opening baseline at 00:00 platform time. The limit does not recalculate after intraday wins.
Breach Threshold
$9,500
The floor stays here for the rest of today, regardless of any intraday wins above it
The important point: Today's breach floor was set at 00:00 platform time based on the higher of opening balance or opening equity ($10,000 each). Intraday wins increase your cushion above the floor (from your current $10,200 equity you have $700 of room before breaching), but they do not move the floor itself. The Daily Loss Limit only resets at the next 00:00 platform time.
Server-side monitoring is always live
FundingPips' risk management systems monitor your equity in real time on the backend. If a breach occurs, the server-side data is final, regardless of any lag or delay you may see locally in your terminal or dashboard.
Support

Still Need Help?

Let’s chat
Live Chat
Online now
Our community
Discord
Ask 50,000+ traders
Open Discord
Send us a message
Email
Available 24/7
Send an email