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I've just signed up for the Leeloo "$50,000" challenge as today it's only $51 down from $170 for the first month - click on the news section of the website to get the discount code. I am in no way affiliated with Leeloo just seems a good deal and I'm ready to have another go at passing. If I'm feeling brave I may even start a journal to track my progress....
I am debating on OneUp or LeeLoo. Aside from the weird videos and all of that, as long as they allow a fair chance to pass, reasonable prices and pay out cash when it’s time to withdraw then they can have unicorns jumping the moon over a rainbow on their website and videos for all I care. As long as all is legit. I’ve been watching some review videos on LeeLoo on YouTube and it seems to be decent in terms of their process.
I was hoping someone who has taken and is currently funded with them to learn more about them once funded and all.
I shared my experience with Oneup in the previous post. I have also experience with e2t , for me is e2t the best choice. Only one step and no ridiculous rule if you got funded.
I think I am going to try E2T. Seems reasonable and a great selection of platforms.
I love using InvestorRT for charts but I never knew you can trade from it as well? I would use this hands down but does anyone have any trading info? Does it have a DOM to trade from? Is it just chart trading?
InvestorRT is a great software (not cheap, but very good and if you never have used it before, I guess the learing curve is a bit longer until you understand all the features and how to handle em). I saw on their homepage that DOM-trading is available.
The thing about not liking the two steps in TopStep is understandable, but I have a different view: If you're a good trader, you will be able to do both fairly easily. It's a matter of whether you can stay consistent or not. If you're not a good trader and are not consistent, you may pass the first but probably not the second, since consistency -- staying power -- is what is required to do it again. If you can't pass the second, you really don't want to be going directly into live trading after the first, because this is harder and you are more likely to fail it.
In the long view, a few more weeks of Combine trading in their step two is nothing, assuming you can pass it. I know that traders tend to assume they are going to just breeze through these tests, but experience argues otherwise.
Again, I do understand wanting to get on with it, and this is not meant to criticize anyone who feels the two steps are a big issue. I just look on it as another way to be certain that you're actually ready, before entering the big time. Your experience may be different.
But just as most traders will fail at trading their own accounts, at first anyway, so most Combiners will fail as well, and for the same reasons. I would advise people not to assume easy success, and not to count their money just yet.
Also, remember that for a few hundred bucks of margin, there's the micro contracts, which involve real-money trading with relatively low risk. A good way to get you feet wet if you need to.
Good luck to those who are trying any of these, whichever they decide on.
Bob.
When one door closes, another opens.
-- Cervantes, Don Quixote