Flipping Rule in Bulenox
Bulenox's Flipping rule prevents trading with minimal activity or very small days. Learn what a flip day is and how to avoid violating the rule.
What is the Flipping Rule?
The Flipping Rule, also called Flip Days, is a Bulenox regulation designed to prevent a type of trading considered inconsistent, based on performing minimal activity or very small days repeatedly.
What is a Flip Day?
Simply put, a flip day is a trading day that Bulenox considers as insignificant activity. It is usually related to trading very lightly or with very small results, especially when repeated frequently.
The purpose of the rule is not to limit profits, but to avoid trading patterns that seek to meet minimum requirements without real and consistent trading activity.
What is the Limit?
Bulenox establishes the following limit:
Maximum 2 flip days within a rolling window of 10 trading days.
This means that if in your last 10 trading days Bulenox marks more than 2 days as flip days, you would be in violation of the rule.
What Does "Rolling Window of 10 Trading Days" Mean?
It doesn't count fixed weeks or months. Bulenox always reviews your last 10 actual trading days, and that window moves day by day.
For example, if there are 3 flip days in those 10 days, the rule is considered violated.
What Happens if You Violate the Rule?
If the allowed flip days limit is exceeded, Bulenox may apply compliance measures. This may involve:
- Warnings
- Review or denial of payouts
- In serious cases, account closure
Key Takeaway
The flipping rule aims to ensure that traders maintain real and consistent trading activity. If your trading is normal and not based on repeated micro-operations, this rule is usually not a problem.