Build Trading Skills That Actually Work in Real Markets
Our program starts in October 2025 and runs for nine months. You'll work with instructors who've spent years navigating market volatility, making mistakes, and finding what actually works when money's on the line.
Check PrerequisitesMeet Your Instructors
These folks have been through the ups and downs of trading. They've made the mistakes so you don't have to, and they're here to share what they've learned along the way.
Kalin Todorov
Kalin spent twelve years as a market analyst before switching to teaching. He's got this knack for explaining price action without making it sound like rocket science. Started his career during the 2008 crisis and learned more in those two years than most do in a decade.
Desislava Ivanova
Desi worked at a prop trading firm in Sofia for eight years before joining us. She's seen what happens when traders ignore risk management, and she's not shy about sharing those cautionary tales. Her background in mathematics helps break down complex concepts into digestible pieces.
Rosen Petkov
Rosen teaches the part most programs skip over. He's been trading for fifteen years and says the hardest part wasn't learning the strategies but managing his own emotions during losing streaks. His sessions focus on building the mental framework that separates consistent traders from those who burn out.
Milena Georgieva
Milena bridges the gap between theory and actual execution. She trades the European markets daily and brings current examples into every session. Her approach is practical because she's dealing with the same market conditions you'll face when you start trading.
Common Obstacles We'll Tackle Together
Most people hit the same walls when learning to trade. Here's how we address them in the program.
Information Overload
There are thousands of indicators, strategies, and conflicting advice online. New traders often freeze up trying to absorb everything at once.
Emotional Decision Making
Watching your money move up and down triggers reactions that undermine rational planning. Fear and greed are real problems, not character flaws.
Unrealistic Expectations
Social media makes trading look like quick money. Reality involves losses, plateaus, and slow skill development.