FundingPips Weekly Figures Show $1.62M Paid to Traders

Prop firms that publish detailed weekly payout data are still relatively rare — which is what makes FundingPips’ latest disclosure worth paying attention to. The Dubai-based funded trading firm released its weekly figures showing that $1,629,105 was distributed to traders across its global community in a single week. The breakdown goes well beyond a headline number, covering individual leaderboard results, instrument preferences, and a full geographic breakdown of where payouts landed.

What the Numbers Actually Tell Us

Leading the week’s individual payout leaderboard was a trader known as “Nico D,” who took home $12,500 for the period. Close behind were “Luca E” at $12,031 and “Jesus G” at $11,124. FundingPips emphasized that all payouts were processed and delivered within minutes of approval — a benchmark that has become increasingly important to traders. Same-day payouts and fast processing have emerged as a genuine competitive differentiator, with traders factoring payout speed heavily into firm selection decisions.

The $1.62 million total was spread across traders operating under FundingPips’ funded account programs. Publishing this level of granularity — named traders, exact figures, processing times — makes the data verifiable and difficult to fabricate, which is precisely why disclosures like this carry weight.

Gold Dominates — Again

The instrument breakdown tells a clear story about trader behavior on the platform right now. Gold (XAUUSD) accounted for 67% of all trades placed during the period — an overwhelming concentration that reflects the precious metal’s continued dominance as a go-to instrument for active funded traders. EURUSD came in at a distant 7%, with the Nasdaq-100 (NDX100) accounting for 6%.

The gold skew isn’t surprising. XAUUSD combines deep liquidity with consistent intraday volatility, and its sensitivity to macro events creates frequent entry opportunities for disciplined traders. For funded trading firms like Atmos Funded and others that have been building new challenge programs around trader-friendly models, managing concentrated exposure to a single instrument remains an ongoing operational consideration.

A Truly Global Trader Base

Perhaps the most striking element of this week’s data is the geographic distribution of payouts. India topped the regional rankings with $315,388 in total payouts — a figure that reflects the country’s rapidly growing presence in the funded trading world. Pakistan came in second at $153,850, with Ukraine placing third at $93,116.

The spread across South Asia and Eastern Europe mirrors what we’ve been seeing from other active firms recently. Hola Prime, for instance, has been running promotions clearly targeted at emerging market traders, and Goat Funded Trader has similarly been expanding its community reach through aggressive offer structures. The data confirms what those marketing decisions already implied: the center of gravity for funded trading participation has shifted decisively toward markets outside North America and Western Europe.

What This Means for the Broader Prop Industry

Weekly payout disclosures like this one matter because the prop trading industry is still rebuilding trust after a bruising two years. With nearly a third of prop firms disappearing since 2024, traders have become far more discerning about where they put their challenge fees. Publicly verifiable payout data — with real figures, real names, and real timelines — is one of the most credible forms of trust-building a firm can engage in.

For traders currently evaluating prop trading challenges and trying to decide which firm deserves their business, this kind of weekly disclosure offers a meaningful signal. It’s not just proof that the firm pays — it’s proof of how much, how fast, and to whom. In a market where retroactive rule changes and sudden closures remain fresh in traders’ memories, that specificity matters.

The firms that will define the next chapter of prop trading are the ones building credibility through consistent action, not just marketing claims. FundingPips’ weekly reporting is a small but concrete example of that principle in practice.