Streamline Your Trading Management with PAMM
PAMM System
The Percentage Allocation Management Module (PAMM) enables professional money managers to trade on behalf of multiple investors from a single master account — efficiently, transparently, and at scale.
How PAMM Works
PAMM simplifies multi-account management by automatically allocating profits and losses proportionally across all connected investor accounts.
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Dynamic Allocation
Profits and losses are distributed automatically and proportionally based on each investor's share, ensuring fair and transparent allocation at all times.
Multi-Account Management
Manage dozens or even hundreds of investor accounts simultaneously from one master account, with automated position sizing and risk controls.
Reliability
Built on enterprise-grade infrastructure with 99.9% uptime, real-time synchronization, and failover systems to ensure uninterrupted operation.
Business Enhancement
Grow your asset management business by leveraging PAMM to attract investors, generate performance fees, and scale your operations efficiently.
For Money Managers
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For Investors
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Frequently Asked Questions
A PAMM (Percentage Allocation Management Module) account allows a professional money manager to trade using pooled funds from multiple investors. Profits and losses are distributed proportionally based on each investor's contribution.
Profits are allocated proportionally based on each investor's percentage share of the total pool. For example, if an investor contributes 10% of the total funds, they receive 10% of the profits (after any applicable management fees).
Withdrawal policies depend on the specific PAMM manager's terms. Most managers allow withdrawals at scheduled intervals (e.g., weekly or monthly). Check your manager's terms for specific details.
Review each manager's historical performance, risk metrics, trading strategy, fee structure, and drawdown history. Diversifying across multiple managers can help manage risk effectively.
Fee structures vary by manager but typically include a performance fee (a percentage of profits) and in some cases a management fee. All fees are clearly disclosed before you allocate funds.