Scalping, day trading, swing, news trading, ICT, ORB, mean reversion. Which prop firms allow each strategy.
Every term in this category, alphabetized.
In ICT/SMC trading, an order block that failed to hold and was broken through — often becoming resistance/support on the OPPOSITE side when retested. A flipped order block.
A momentum-based strategy that enters when price breaks decisively above resistance or below support — capturing the explosive moves that often follow extended consolidations.
A strategy that doubles position size after each loss to recover prior losses with a single win — universally banned or heavily restricted at prop firms due to catastrophic risk.
A trading approach that bets on price returning to its average — fading extended moves at statistical extremes rather than trading with momentum. Popular in algo trading and futures range scalping.
A strategy that enters in the direction of strong recent price action — buying strength and selling weakness, riding the persistence of established moves rather than fading them.
A day trading strategy that defines the high and low of the first 5-30 minutes of a session, then trades the breakout above or below that range with structured stop and target placement.
In ICT/SMC trading, the last candle of opposite color before a strong directional move — interpreted as the institutional accumulation/distribution zone where smart money built positions before the breakout.
A short-timeframe strategy that profits from small price moves over seconds to minutes — ideally suited to intraday trailing drawdown accounts but high-friction with consistency-rule firms.
A trading style holding positions overnight to multiple days — capturing larger moves than day trading but requiring prop firm accounts that explicitly allow overnight holds (most don't).
Drawdown limits, consistency rules, account breaches, payout policies. The rule mechanics that determine whether you keep your funded account.
Tick values, contract specs, margin, settlement, expiration, rollover. The plumbing of futures markets that prop traders need to understand.
Foundational prop firm terminology: funded account, evaluation, challenge, instant funding, simulated funded.
Rithmic, Tradovate, NinjaTrader, CQG, Quantower, R|Trader Pro, ProjectX. Platform comparisons, pricing, and prop firm compatibility.
ES, NQ, MES, MNQ, RTY, YM, CL, GC, NG and every major futures contract: tick value, margin, hours, point value.
Activation fees, reset fees, commission structures, platform licensing, data feed costs. The full cost-to-trade picture.
FOMC, NFP, CPI, Powell speeches, OPEC decisions. Scheduled macro events that move ES, NQ, ZN, and CL — and the prop firm news-restriction rules that flag them on funded accounts.