
Gaurang_trades Books $2,074.50 on Gold Across Five Apex PA Accounts
On 8 July 2026, X user @Gaurang_trades posted a Gold take profit result of $2,074.50, split evenly as $414.90 across five Apex Trader Funding Performance Accounts, describing the session as day three of a consistency focused push toward a first payout.
Posting on X on 8 July 2026, @Gaurang_trades shared a screenshot from an Apex Trader Funding session in which a take profit level on Gold triggered across a stack of five personal accounts. The trader reported a net gain of $2,074.50, calculated as $414.90 repeated five times, and framed the result as day three of a disciplined stretch on five Performance Accounts.
The tone of the post leans heavily on process rather than prediction. Rather than claiming to have called the top or bottom of the move, the trader wrote that everyone wants to catch the entire move while their own goal is simply to execute the setup. That framing, paired with the phrase no FOMO, no regrets, positions the trade as a rules based outcome rather than an opportunistic grab, with consistency described as the path toward a first payout.

“Everyone wants to catch the entire move. I just want to execute my setup.”— @Gaurang_trades on X
The trade was placed on GC, the futures ticker for Gold, according to the instrument tag captured alongside the post. Apex Trader Funding is built around evaluation and Performance Accounts on the CME Group futures markets, and the platform routes its payout requests through the Rithmic and Tradovate ecosystems that Apex customers use for execution. The five account structure visible in the screenshot is consistent with the multi account approach many Apex traders adopt to scale a single idea across parallel funded books.
The $2,074.50 figure noted in the post reflects the combined profit across those five accounts on the day of the Gold trade rather than an approved withdrawal on its own. Apex publishes payout eligibility rules separately, and traders progress from evaluation through Performance Account milestones before requesting funds. The post is dated July 2026, and the trader positions the day as a step toward a first payout rather than the payout itself.
For readers tracking Apex proof posts, the value in @Gaurang_trades' update sits in the repeatability. The same setup was executed five times, produced the same $414.90 result per account, and the trader stopped there instead of pressing for more. That is the behavior Apex documentation encourages during the Performance Account phase, and it is the behavior the trader is publicly committing to as they work toward their first withdrawal.