Definition and Differences Between End-of-Day Trailing Max Drawdown, Intraday Trailing Maximum Drawdown, and Static Drawdown.

Modified on Thu, 20 Mar at 10:22 AM

An End of Day Trailing Maximum Drawdown Limit (EOD TMD) calculates the maximum drawdown from the realized profits on the end-of-day balance (at the 16.00 CT futures market close). If a trader has made money during the morning session but loses it in the afternoon, the TMD limit will not move at the end of the day because there was no increase in the account balance at the end of day.

An Intraday Trailing Maximum Drawdown (Intraday TMD) calculates the drawdown from unrealized profits in real-time during a trading session. If a trader has an open position in profit during the trading session, the TMD limit will be calculated off the highest balance in the account during the day, even if that position ends up losing money. 

The key difference between the two is that for an EOD TMD account, the TMD limit is calculated on end-of-day realized profits, whereas for an Intraday TMD account, the TMD limit is calculated on unrealized profits within the trading day, in real-time


A static drawdown limit (SDL) is a fixed maximum drawdown limit that does not move or track your account balance growth. It is a set minimum balance that the account cannot fall below.


The key difference between a TMD limit and a Static limit is the TMD limit follows your account growth before it freezes at the starting account balance, whereas the Stat limit does not move.

Was this article helpful?

That’s Great!

Thank you for your feedback

Sorry! We couldn't be helpful

Thank you for your feedback

Let us know how can we improve this article!

Select at least one of the reasons
CAPTCHA verification is required.

Feedback sent

We appreciate your effort and will try to fix the article