Indigo Trader Funding first suspended its Discord, then stopped engaging on other social media channels. It finally filed an application to strike the company off the UK's official register. This is the latest prop firm to collapse recently, potentially leaving clients without their due funds.
Indigo Trader Funding's Unexpected End
As recently as late last month, Indigo was conducting business as usual, advertising its products and services on popular prop firm channels, including Discord and X (formerly Twitter). However, activity on the latter platform suddenly ceased on July 23, where previously there had been numerous posts.
Progress is not about immediate success but consistent effortš
ā Indigo Trader Funding (@IndigoFundingUK) July 23, 2024
Every successful journey begins with a single trade.
Stay patient, stay disciplined, and keep pushing forward, no matter how incremental the progress may seem.#PropTrading #PersistencePays #IndigoTraderFunding pic.twitter.com/FAGGfUJ6c6
A few days later on Discord, Lucas Thomas, the president of the company founded at the beginning of this year, announced the suspension of all communication through this platform, apologizing for the āslow support responseā in recent weeks. All support issues were redirected to an email address, and the ability to apply for free accounts was suspended.
After several weeks of silence, the official UK companies register showed that Indigo Trader Funding Limited filed an application on August 12 to strike the company off the register. The current entry indicates that the official date for the company's removal is August 20.
šØ @IndigoFundingUK šØ You need to address this ASAP.
ā The 1% š¦šŖ (@RB_Tradingltd) August 14, 2024
š Have you guys closed up shop or sold the rights. pic.twitter.com/bOScgd3LNd
Companies House also shows that this wasn't the first UK project for Thomas, who is under 30. In 2021, he launched Thomas Forex Trading, and in 2022, Woofly and L&N. However, Woofly and L&N disappeared from the market as quickly as Indigo.
It's worth noting that like many other prop firms, Indigo Trader Funding didn't operate independently but was a promoter for challenges organized by CFD broker Eightcap. While many firms in this sector are deciding to enter the proprietary trading market directly, Eightcap is focusing on promotion through smaller entities that, as recent events show, are not always stable or reputable.
Whether users have lost their funds is currently unknown, but financial influencer Bernd Skroupinski claims to have $27,000 in profits on one of his Funded accounts managed by Indigo.
I am up $27,000 on my $500k @IndigoFundingUK prop account, but received an letter that they submitted AN APPLICATION TO STRIKE OFF!
ā Bernd Skorupinski (@BerndSko) August 14, 2024
I would require an official statement! Does the community know more?
Is this another prop firm going down the drain...? pic.twitter.com/aF8rhew3RP
More Prop Firms Collapse
The last time we reported on a prop trading firm's collapse was... just three days ago. On Monday, August 12, news broke that Karma Prop Trader was ending operations, with its owner blaming ācheatersā who exploited a loophole in the system and rules of the offered challenges.
A month earlier, Funded Engineer also decided to close its operations, unable to stay in the market despite attempts at āstrategic restructuring.ā In May, True Forex Funds left the industry, and in March, SI World made a similar move.
FunderPro believes that over 50 different firms may have dropped out of the prop trading game since the beginning of the year, showing the scale of the problem.
āThe issue plaguing the industry is the āsell as much as you canā approach, often coupled with the promise of easy money. The reality is that trading requires hard work and time to master, and not everyone will succeed. Just as not everyone can qualify for the Olympics, not everyone is meant to be funded,ā Zanutto commented.
The latest survey seen by Finance Magnates showed that in the prop industry, an average of 60% of all clients lose funds, with each investing an average of $4,300. To increase their chances of winning, they use offers from two, three, or even five prop firms simultaneously.