Drawdown is the drop from a peak to a trough in your account value. If your account reaches $100K, then falls to $92K, you've experienced an 8% drawdown. If it recovers to $104K, your max drawdown was 8% — it doesn't reset until you hit a new peak.
Drawdown is expressed as a percentage of the account's high-water mark, not its starting value. This matters: a 5% drawdown on a $100K account is $5K. That's the capital at risk.
In funded trading, drawdown rules define how much loss the program tolerates before something happens to your account — usually a reset, a suspension, or a complete account termination depending on the program structure.
This measures your account balance against a fixed reference point — usually the account's starting balance. If the account starts at $100K and your balance falls to $94K, you have a 6% absolute drawdown.
Prop firm programs typically use end-of-day drawdown — they snapshot your balance at market close each day and measure it against the high-water mark. If you're in violation at close, you're in violation.
DFY programs typically use end-of-month measurement — they're less granular because you're not actively managing the account, so daily fluctuations matter less than monthly realized performance.
This measures drawdown against your current peak, which moves as your account rises. If your account hits $105K, the trailing high-water mark becomes $105K. A drop to $101K is a 3.8% drawdown from peak, even though you're still above your starting $100K.
Prop firm evaluations often use trailing drawdown — the limit tightens as you profit. This creates a counterintuitive trap: making money makes the rules tighter.
Prop firm evaluations define drawdown rules explicitly because the evaluation is scored against them. Typical setup:
The evaluation evaluates you on the weaker of your trailing drawdown or end-of-day drawdown. If you open at $105K (profitable), then draw down to $93K intraday before recovering, you've violated the trailing drawdown — even if you ended the day at $103K.
This is the trap most prop firm challengers fall into: they target a profit level, get there, then experience a volatile day that temporarily pushes the account below the trailing maximum. Evaluation failed. Re-subscription required.
In a DFY funded account, drawdown rules work differently — and more favorably for the member:
The program absorbs drawdown. POW's algorithms trade a $100K account with defined risk parameters per strategy. If the account experiences a drawdown period — say, crude oil gaps down on an OPEC surprise — the algorithms reduce exposure automatically. The account may draw down 3-5% in a bad month.
The member doesn't owe money. The $5K lost in the drawdown comes from POW's capital, not from anything you've paid. Your financial exposure remains capped at the access fee you've already paid ($15K) plus monthly management fees. You will not receive a margin call. You will not be asked to add funds.
The account continues trading. Drawdown doesn't terminate your membership. The algorithms manage through the drawdown period with reduced position sizing. When conditions improve, the account recovers. Your share of profits resumes.
| Scenario | Prop Firm Evaluation | DFY Funded Account |
|---|---|---|
| Account draws down 5% | You fail the evaluation | No impact on you beyond POW's capital |
| Account draws down 10% | Evaluation failed; subscription lost | POW absorbs the loss; account continues |
| Account goes negative (margin call) | You owe money to the prop firm | Not possible — drawdown limits prevent it |
| Recovery from drawdown | Requires passing evaluation again | Automatic — algorithms continue trading |
The critical distinction: in a prop firm evaluation, the drawdown limit is a rule you're being scored on. In a DFY account, the drawdown limit is a risk management parameter that protects the firm's capital. The member isn't being tested against it — they're protected by it.
Before joining any funded trading program, ask these specific questions about drawdown:
"If the account draws down, who absorbs the loss?"
The answer tells you everything. If the program says "you don't owe anything, we absorb drawdown," that's a real funded account with aligned incentives. If they say "your account will be suspended and you'll need to re-subscribe," that's a prop firm evaluation.
"How is drawdown measured — trailing or fixed? Intraday or end-of-day?"
Fixed drawdown against a starting balance is more forgiving than trailing drawdown. End-of-day measurement is more forgiving than intraday. If the program can't or won't answer these questions clearly, that's a red flag.
"Can drawdown rules change after I join?"
Prop firms have documented history of tightening drawdown limits after collecting subscription fees. A clear contractual definition of drawdown rules — one that can't be unilaterally changed — is an indicator of a legitimate program.
"What's the maximum drawdown tolerance before account termination?"
Some programs terminate the account if drawdown reaches a certain level. Others just suspend further profit sharing until the account recovers. Know what happens at the worst-case scenario.
POW publishes aggregate transparency data at /transparency, including portfolio-level drawdown statistics. The numbers from recent months:
These are aggregate figures across 220+ accounts — individual accounts may vary based on strategy allocation and position sizing. The key point: even the worst observed drawdown period was absorbed by POW's capital, not by member funds.
Drawdown rules are the clearest signal of how a funded trading program is structured:
If you're evaluating programs, compare POW against prop firm alternatives specifically on drawdown structure. Or run your ROI scenario accounting for a conservative 3% monthly return — the scenario where even a bad drawdown month leaves you net positive after the 80% split.
The question isn't just "what are the drawdown rules" — it's "who actually absorbs the loss when the account draws down?" The answer tells you everything about what you're actually buying.
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Apply Now → Run the Math FirstCamrin is the CEO of Team POW and FundedEdge. He's been running quantitative trading strategies since 2022 and currently manages $73M+ AUM across 241+ member funded accounts. He answers questions personally — apply here or read member reviews.
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