Real Trading
Agro program after deduction of all costs in USD
Agro – Ride the Trend in Global Grains
Agro offers focused exposure to one of the world’s most essential markets: agricultural commodities in the grain sector. By operating in markets like corn, wheat, and soybeans, Agro captures opportunities driven by shifting supply and demand, extreme weather patterns, and global geopolitical dynamics.
Long or Short – Always in Tune with the Trend
Agro is a trend-following strategy that can go long in rising markets and short in falling ones. The model is designed to follow the dominant trend—regardless of direction.
Position size is adjusted dynamically: increased during strong trends, and reduced or exited when momentum weakens. This allows Agro to stay nimble and responsive in changing market environments.
Discretion Backed by Rules
Decisions to enter or exit positions are guided by a rule-based trend model that helps identify trend strength and direction. The approach combines the flexibility of human insight with the discipline of a systematic framework—helping reduce emotional bias while staying responsive to the market.
A Diversifier in Any Portfolio
Grains tend to move independently of equities and bonds, driven instead by factors like climate, crop reports, and global food supply. Agro adds a unique layer of true diversification and real asset exposure to your portfolio—ideal for investors seeking alternatives beyond traditional asset classes.
Expected Behavior
Because grains (corn, wheat, soybeans) form a small, highly correlated group, it’s normal to see extended flat or drawdown periods when these markets don’t trend. To smooth the equity curve and improve the risk-adjusted return, Agro should be combined with other trend-following programs exposed to different commodity cycles—such as Soft Commodities, Gold Bug, or Energizer.
When strong grain trends do emerge, they are often explosive and can pay off the long waiting time in a relatively short period.
Access & Minimums
Agro is accessible, transparent, and built on a clear principle: follow the trend—whether up or down.
Minimum Investment: $4,000
THE RISK OF LOSS IN TRADING FUTURES, OPTIONS ON FUTURES, FOREIGN EXCHANGE, DIGITAL ASSETS, AND RELATED DERIVATIVES CAN BE SUBSTANTIAL. YOU SHOULD CAREFULLY CONSIDER WHETHER SUCH TRADING IS APPROPRIATE FOR YOU IN LIGHT OF YOUR FINANCIAL CONDITION. IN CONSIDERING WHETHER TO TRADE OR TO AUTHORIZE SOMEONE ELSE TO TRADE FOR YOU, BE AWARE OF THE FOLLOWING:
Total loss and losses beyond deposits. You may sustain a total loss of the funds you deposit to establish or maintain a position, and, because many products are leveraged, you may incur losses beyond your initial deposits.
Margin calls and liquidation risk. You may be required to deposit additional margin on short notice to maintain positions. Failure to meet a margin call may result in the liquidation of your positions at a loss, and you will be liable for any resulting deficit.
Volatility, gapping, and execution risk. Rapid price movements and price gaps can occur, and stop-loss or limit orders may not be filled at your desired price. Market illiquidity can delay or prevent order execution.
Leverage magnifies outcomes. Leverage can amplify both gains and losses. A relatively small market move may have a large impact on your account equity.
Options risk. Purchasing options involves the risk of losing the entire premium and associated costs. Writing (selling) options can involve substantial or theoretically unlimited risk.
Counterparty, custody, and operational risks. Losses may arise from the failure or distress of brokers, custodians, clearinghouses, exchanges, stablecoin issuers, or other counterparties. Trading relies on technology and data feeds that can fail or be interrupted.
Digital-asset–specific risks (if applicable). Protocol changes (forks), governance actions, smart-contract bugs, oracle failures, bridge exploits, network congestion, and de-pegs can impair pricing, liquidity, and access.
Model and strategy limitations. Systematic or discretionary methods may underperform or fail in certain market regimes (e.g., range-bound periods). Hypothetical/backtested results have inherent limitations and do not reflect actual trading or all costs.
Correlation breakdown and diversification limits. Assets that appear uncorrelated may become correlated during stress, reducing diversification benefits.
Fees and expenses reduce returns. Management, performance/incentive, brokerage, financing/funding, and administrative fees lower net performance.
Regulatory and tax uncertainty. Laws and tax treatment can change without notice, affecting trading, leverage, custody, reporting, and product availability.
Not suitable for all investors. Only risk capital—money you can afford to lose—should be used. Carefully review your objectives, experience, and financial resources, and consult independent professional advisers as needed.
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. NO REPRESENTATION IS BEING MADE THAT ANY ACCOUNT WILL OR IS LIKELY TO ACHIEVE PROFITS OR LOSSES SIMILAR TO THOSE SHOWN OR DESCRIBED.