At WeMasterTrade, we are committed to maintaining a fair, transparent, and consistent trading environment for all customers. To uphold these standards, we enforce the Trading Interval Restriction, a rule designed to prevent the misuse of multiple accounts to bypass risk management requirements.
We have identified cases where customers operate several accounts simultaneously to apply strategies such as price transfer manipulation or cycling risk between accounts. These practices are intended to artificially preserve profit levels or risk consistency and directly undermine the core principles of responsible risk management.
What Is the Trading Interval Restriction?
The Trading Interval Restriction limits a customer’s ability to open trades on the same symbol across multiple accounts under specific conditions involving losing positions.
How the Rule Applies
1. Active Losing Position
If a customer has an open position on a specific symbol that is currently at a loss, they are not allowed to open a new position on the same symbol in any of their other accounts, regardless of timing.
2. After Closing a Losing Position
If the losing position has been closed, the customer must wait a minimum of one (1) hour from the time the losing trade is closed before opening a new trade on the same symbol in any other account they own.
Purpose of the Rule
- This rule is designed to:
- Prevent attempts to circumvent trading regulations
- Eliminate risk transfer or hedging behavior across multiple accounts
- Ensure consistent application of risk management rules
- Maintain fairness and integrity for all traders within the WeMasterTrade ecosystem
Conclusion
At WeMasterTrade, protecting firm capital is a top priority, and we aim to build long-term partnerships with disciplined and responsible traders. We support traders who successfully pass our evaluations and demonstrate a strong understanding of risk management and proper trade execution.
The Trading Interval Restriction plays a critical role in promoting sustainable trading practices and ensuring a fair, mutually beneficial relationship between traders and the firm.