One Prop Trader a Day – Episode 26

About Bilyaminu
Bilyaminu Muhammad, also known as Sir Bilyuzz, is a trader from Nigeria who has spent seven years in the financial markets since 2019. With a background in business and economics, he trades forex, commodities and crypto with a strong focus on market structure, macroeconomic narratives, and liquidity behavior. Alongside trading, he has spent years building and mentoring trading communities, helping younger traders from emerging markets approach the markets with a structured, long-term mindset.
FromNigeria
TradesFX, Commodities & Crypto
Trading Since2019
StyleMacro & liquidity
AlsoCommunity mentor
Prop FirmAlpha Capital
Q Who are you, and what do you trade?
A My name is Bilyaminu Muhammad, also known as Sir Bilyuzz. I’m from Nigeria, and I have been involved in the financial markets for seven years now, since 2019. My background in business, economics, and trading shaped the way I look at the markets today. Over time, trading became more than just charts for me; it became a way of understanding human behavior, macroeconomics, risk, and discipline. I mainly trade forex, commodities and crypto, with a strong focus on market structure, macroeconomic narratives, and liquidity behavior. Alongside trading, I have also spent years building and mentoring trading communities, especially helping younger traders from emerging markets approach trading with a more structured and long-term mindset.
Q When did you become a funded trader, and what changed for you?
A I became funded after years of learning, failing, adjusting, and understanding that trading is more fundamental and psychological than purely technical. At first, like many traders, I thought getting funded would instantly change everything. But when it finally happened, what really changed was my mindset. It gave me a deeper sense of responsibility and discipline. I stopped looking at trading as a quick way to make money and started treating it the same way I treat my health: something that requires consistency, patience, protection, and long-term care. I also began seeing it as a long-term business rather than just a hustle. Getting funded also validated the years of struggle behind the scenes; the losses, the self-doubt, the chart time, and the emotional battles most people never see.
Q How did you feel when you became funded for the first time?
A Honestly, it felt surreal at first. Not because of the money, but because it finally felt like all the years of learning, failing, studying charts, and doubting myself were starting to mean something. There was excitement, but there was also relief. In trading, especially when you come from an environment where financial pressure is real, you spend a lot of time questioning yourself silently. Becoming funded gave me confidence, but more importantly, it gave me proof that discipline and consistency can eventually pay off. At that moment, I realized trading was less about trying to ‘win big’ and more about becoming mentally structured enough to survive and grow long term.
“Trading was slowly changing me beyond money.”Bilyaminu Muhammad
Q How many times did you fail before getting funded, and what kept you going?
A More times than I can honestly count. Like many traders, especially in the beginning, I underestimated how much psychology and discipline matter in this industry. I failed challenges through overtrading, impatience, poor risk management, and sometimes simply reacting emotionally to the market. There were periods where it felt like I was making progress, only to lose it again because of one bad decision or lack of emotional control. What kept me going was the realization that trading was slowly changing me beyond money. It was teaching me patience, self-awareness, emotional control, and accountability. Coming from Nigeria also played a role in my persistence. Over time, I realized survival alone cannot sustain you in trading; structure and discipline are what truly keep you in the game long term. Eventually, I stopped chasing quick results and focused more on becoming consistent mentally. That shift changed everything.
Q What was your lowest point, and did you ever consider quitting?
A My lowest point in trading wasn’t just losing money; it was losing confidence in myself. There was a period where I worked a physically demanding labor job for almost a month just to save around $100 to deposit into a trading account. At that stage, I was willing to do anything just to stay connected to the markets. I remember coming home exhausted every day, sometimes sleeping with my Timberland boots still on because my body was completely drained. After funding the account, I eventually lost the entire $100. What hurt the most wasn’t only the money; it was the emotional weight behind it. Yes, I considered quitting more than once. But over time, I realized trading was exposing parts of myself that needed growth: impatience, emotional reactions, lack of structure, and the pressure of trying to succeed too quickly. Eventually, I stopped trying to ‘beat the market’ and started working more on controlling myself. That mindset shift became one of the biggest turning points in my journey.
Q Did trading ever affect you mentally or emotionally?
A Absolutely. One of the biggest misconceptions about trading is that people only see the profits and charts, but they don’t see the psychological pressure behind it. There were periods where trading affected me mentally through stress, overthinking, overtrading, self-doubt, and constantly questioning whether I was truly improving or just repeating the same mistakes in different ways. Sometimes after losses, especially earlier in my journey, I would carry the emotional weight for days. Trading has a way of making you confront yourself honestly; it exposes your impatience, greed, fear, ego, and emotional reactions very quickly. Over time, I learned that protecting your mental state is just as important as protecting your capital. Today, I take trading much more calmly. I respect risk more, I focus more on discipline than excitement, and I understand that consistency is built more through emotional control than chasing big wins.
Q What does your trading style look like today?
A My trading style today is much calmer and more structured compared to when I first started. I mainly trade forex, commodities, and sometimes crypto, with a strong focus on macroeconomic narratives, liquidity behavior, and market structure. I pay close attention to central bank policies, geopolitical events, inflation data, and overall market sentiment because I believe price movement is heavily connected to larger economic behavior. From a technical perspective, I focus more on high-probability setups rather than constantly being in the market; I prefer quality over quantity. Most of my executions are based around liquidity zones, structure shifts, momentum confirmation, and risk management rather than emotional impulse entries. Timeframe-wise, I mostly analyze higher timeframes for direction and then refine entries on lower timeframes for precision. Over time, I’ve learned that trading is less about predicting every move and more about managing risk, protecting capital, and staying emotionally disciplined over the long term.
Q What’s a typical trading day for you?
A My trading day usually starts quietly. Before looking at charts, I like to check the overall macro environment first: economic news, market sentiment, geopolitical developments, and anything that could influence volatility for the day. After that, I move into higher timeframe analysis to understand overall direction and key liquidity areas. I try not to rush into trades early because one thing trading taught me is that patience is often more profitable than constant activity. Most of my day is actually spent waiting rather than trading. When setups align with my plan, I execute with defined risk and then try not to overmanage positions emotionally. Outside trading, I also spend time mentoring traders, researching market behavior, journaling, and sometimes simply stepping away from the screen to protect mental clarity.
Q Do people around you understand what you do?
A Honestly, not everyone fully understands trading, especially where I come from. A lot of people around me initially saw trading as something risky, unrealistic, or just ‘pressing buttons on a computer.’ Some thought it was luck, while others believed it was impossible to make a real career from it. In the beginning, it was difficult explaining the amount of time, discipline, and emotional energy trading actually requires behind the scenes. But over time, as people started seeing my consistency, lifestyle changes, market understanding, and the communities I built around trading education, their perception gradually changed. Now, many people around me have become more curious and open-minded about the financial markets. At the same time, I’ve also learned to keep parts of the journey private, because trading is one of those careers people only fully understand when they experience it personally.
“Don’t measure success only by profits. The real growth is in who you become.”Bilyaminu Muhammad
Q How has trading impacted your lifestyle?
A Trading changed my lifestyle more mentally than materially at first. It changed the way I think, manage risk, handle pressure, and approach life decisions in general. Over time, I became more patient, more observant, and more emotionally aware because the markets force you to confront yourself honestly every day. Coming from Nigeria, trading also opened my mind to a more global perspective, connecting me to macroeconomics, global events, currencies, and financial systems beyond my immediate environment. One thing I’m deeply grateful for is that trading took me into rooms I never imagined I would enter; I have had opportunities to meet successful CEOs, billionaires, investors, and people from different parts of the world, and it gave me the opportunity to travel and see life from a much broader perspective. But beyond the lifestyle side, my biggest flex today is knowing I can help people when the need arises, support others as much as I can, and give charity. Today, trading is no longer just about making money for me; it became part of my personal growth, lifestyle, and long-term vision.
Bilyaminu’s Funded Certificate

Q What keeps you motivated to continue trading?
A What keeps me motivated is the level of possibility the markets represent. Trading is one of the few professions where, within minutes, you can make what might take someone months or even a full year to earn in a traditional environment. Coming from where I started, that reality still motivates me deeply. At the same time, I enjoy the freedom, growth, and opportunities that come with the journey. I like knowing there’s always another level to reach, another lesson to learn, and another version of myself to grow into through the process. And honestly, I still love the feeling of being connected to the markets every day.
Q What would you tell your younger self?
A I would tell my younger self to channel the hunger more wisely. From the beginning, I was extremely driven and obsessed with improving, but sometimes that intensity pushed me into forcing trades, overworking mentally, and putting too much pressure on myself to succeed quickly. I would tell myself that hard work alone is not enough in trading; the market rewards patience, emotional control, and consistency more than pure aggression. I’d also remind myself to protect capital like my life depends on it, because opportunities in the market never truly finish, but damaged discipline and emotional instability can take years to recover from. And most importantly: don’t measure success only by profits. The real growth is in who you become mentally throughout the journey.
Q If you were given a $1,000,000 funded account today, what would you do in the first 7 days?
A Honestly, a $1,000,000 funded account is not something that should trigger emotional excitement for me. At that level, survival, consistency, and decision quality matter more than trying to chase unnecessary attention with oversized returns. In the first 7 days, my focus would be identifying clean liquidity conditions, protecting downside risk aggressively, and executing only high-conviction setups with controlled exposure. I believe large capital should be managed with a long-term mindset, not gambler energy. One reckless week can destroy what takes years to build.