
One Prop Trader a Day โ Episode 58

Baptiste Molko
Baptiste Molko is a 20-year-old French day trader who built his edge on the Dow Jones around patience and higher-timeframe liquidity. Here is his story, in his own words.
My name is Baptiste. Iโm 20 years old and Iโm from France, and Iโm a trader focused mainly on indices, with the Dow Jones as my favourite market. I became a funded trader after developing a consistent approach and proving to myself that I could manage risk properly under real conditions. The biggest change was psychological: trading shifted from trying to โmake money quicklyโ to focusing on consistency, discipline, and execution like a professional.
Becoming funded felt like a real milestone, and I still remember the first thing I bought with the money. It was practical rather than symbolic โ I upgraded my working setup with a Mac and funded a new trading challenge. It felt like a step toward treating trading as a serious profession rather than an experiment. I failed around three to four funded challenges before becoming consistent. Before I even started challenge accounts I was already trading a live account, which gave me real experience with execution and risk management and meant I wasnโt starting from zero. Each failure helped me refine my process, and what kept me going was the belief that my approach had edge potential if I stayed patient.
Of course, getting there was anything but smooth. The most expensive lesson I paid for was learning that overtrading and breaking my own rules destroys consistency. In total it cost me a few thousand euros across multiple challenges before I fully understood the importance of patience and strict risk management. My lowest point came after a series of failed challenges when I felt stuck repeating the same mistakes. I never seriously considered quitting, but I had moments of frustration where I had to step back and reset. Trading affected me mentally, especially in the beginning โ like most traders I went through phases of overtrading and self-doubt. Over time I learned to manage my emotions by focusing on execution rather than PnL, and by sticking strictly to my rules.
Those setbacks shaped the trader I am today. I mainly trade indices now, with the Dow Jones as my preferred market. Iโm a day trader and my approach is very selective โ I only take setups rarely, sometimes once a day at most, and only when everything is aligned. My strategy is based on higher-timeframe liquidity and key HTF zones: I identify where liquidity is likely to be taken on higher timeframes, then shift to lower timeframes to look for reversal confirmations before entering. I only take trades when I can target a minimum risk-to-reward of 1:3 or 1:4 โ otherwise I simply donโt enter.
That same patience carries into my routine. My trading day is structured. I start by analysing higher-timeframe levels and liquidity zones on indices, then I wait for price to reach those areas instead of forcing trades. During the London and New York sessions I focus on execution on lower timeframes if my conditions are met. Iโm not constantly in front of the charts โ one of the reasons I chose trading was freedom, not to be tied to the screen all day. After my analysis I set alerts around my key zones so I can step away and only focus when price reaches my areas of interest. My most recent losing trade was a setup where I had the right higher-timeframe level but entered too early on the lower timeframe without a clear enough confirmation. The market still respected the HTF idea, but my timing wasnโt optimal; Iโd now wait more patiently for a cleaner lower-timeframe confirmation.
I donโt follow the idea that you need to be constantly in the market to be successful. I prefer waiting for very specific conditions at HTF liquidity zones. The people around me have had to adjust to it too. Not everyone around me fully understands trading, especially the way I approach it โ at first most people see it as unclear or unstable, sometimes imagining a โbank traderโ type of job that doesnโt reflect what I actually do. Over time some started to respect it when they saw the consistency and discipline behind it. Trading has changed my lifestyle mainly through freedom and structure. Iโm also a student, and I can trade with full flexibility even while attending classes, which fits the lifestyle I was looking for. At the same time it has taught me discipline, patience, and emotional control.
Looking back, what separates me from someone who washed out at their third evaluation is discipline and consistency. Many traders fail because they try to force results too quickly or overtrade after losses; what made the difference for me was accepting that trading is a long-term process and focusing on execution quality rather than speed. If I could give myself advice one year ago, it would be to be more patient and trust the process โ most of my mistakes came from rushing results instead of letting the edge play out. If prop firms disappeared tomorrow, Iโd still be trading; theyโre just a tool, not the core of my activity. And if someone handed me a $1,000,000 funded account today, I wouldnโt change a thing: the first week would look the same as with any account โ analysis, waiting for high-quality setups, and executing only when my conditions are met. Scaling size doesnโt change my strategy; consistency and risk management remain the priority.
About the writer โ Baptiste Molko
Baptiste Molko is currently a student in the Grande รcole Programme at EM Normandie, building his expertise in management alongside a computer-science background from Paris YNOV Campus. He is the founder and head of GTI Invest and trades for FTMO, holding both the FTMO Challenge and FTMO Verification certifications. Drawing on his experience in trading and teaching, he focuses on applying money-management techniques and financial analysis, with the goal of developing high-performing, accessible solutions across trading and investment โ bringing an innovative, analytical approach to every project he takes on.

