
@MOJOCODE Targets $40K Apex Payout After Passing 11 of 15 Evals
Trader @MOJOCODE opened the week by buying three five packs of $50K Apex Evals, passing 11 and failing 4, moving to 20 performance accounts and publicly targeting a $40,000 payout within ten days using an AI engine called the MOJO CODE.
The $40,000 payout figure referenced in this article is a stated goal published by the trader on X, not a confirmed Apex Trader Funding payout. Outcomes depend on continued compliance with program rules.
On Monday, @MOJOCODE shared an update on X describing the start of a focused evaluation push at Apex Trader Funding. According to the post, the trader purchased three five packs of $50K Apex Evals, totaling fifteen attempts. Of those fifteen evaluations, eleven were passed and four were failed, a hit rate the trader framed as a strong opening to the week.
The result of that Monday session moved the account count to twenty performance accounts active under the trader's belt. From there, @MOJOCODE laid out a public goal: a $40,000 payout within ten days. The post invites followers to track the run in real time, turning the next phase of the journey into a transparent milestone rather than a private trading log.

“Monday bought 3 five packs $50K Apex Evals and passed 11 of them, failed 4. Puts me at 20 PA now. Journey with me to the $40K payout in 10 days.”— @MOJOCODE on X
The trader attributes the workflow to an automated tool referenced in the post as the MOJO CODE, described as an AI trading engine. No instrument, contract size, or specific strategy parameters were disclosed in the source post, only the evaluation outcomes and the stated payout target. Apex Trader Funding operates as an evaluation based program where traders demonstrate consistency on a simulated account before becoming eligible for payouts, and the company has paid out more than $1 billion to funded traders since launch.
The journey @MOJOCODE described, scaling from a batch of fresh evaluations on Monday to a stated $40,000 payout window inside ten days, depends on continuing to meet the program's consistency and risk rules across the twenty performance accounts. The original post and accompanying media remain available on X for readers who want to follow the updates as the ten day countdown progresses.