Tradeify Launches Slay Markets Brokerage With Exclusive NinjaTrader Clearing Deal
Tradeify just stopped being only a prop firm. On May 19, 2026, the Boca Raton-based outfit announced Slay Markets, a retail futures brokerage operating under its new introducing broker entity, Tradeify Brokerage LLC. The whole regulated plumbing belongs to NinjaTrader Clearing, which Kraken acquired earlier in the cycle. Translation: same charts you already use, but now your payouts can roll straight into a live brokerage account instead of getting laundered through three apps and a wire fee.
Who Does What in This Deal
Here is the part that matters for anyone who actually cares where their money sleeps at night. Tradeify Brokerage LLC is the customer-facing introducing broker, registered with the CFTC and an NFA member (ID 0575972). NinjaTrader Clearing LLC sits behind it as the exclusive CFTC-registered futures commission merchant — it holds client funds, clears and executes every trade, and carries the regulatory weight. Customers sign with Tradeify Brokerage, but the money lives at NinjaTrader. That structure is bog-standard for U.S. retail futures, which is exactly why it's reassuring rather than novel. For traders coming from prop firm accounts, this is the first time Tradeify has touched live client capital directly. TradeInformer
The exclusivity clause is the spicy part. NinjaTrader isn't just a partner — it is the only clearing and technology partner behind Slay Markets. The agreement covers both the regulated clearing side and NinjaTrader Connect, the end-to-end infrastructure layer that handles onboarding, funding, risk controls, and CME Group market access through a single API. That arrangement lets Tradeify ship a brokerage without building its own FCM stack from scratch, which would have taken years and a fortune in lawyers. Insider Monkey
The Kraken Connection Nobody's Talking About Loudly
Here's the subplot worth tracking: NinjaTrader was acquired by Kraken — yes, the crypto exchange — earlier in this cycle, and Kraken has been aggressively pushing into futures and prediction markets. Slay Markets is effectively the first major prop-firm-branded front-end built on top of the post-Kraken NinjaTrader infrastructure. NinjaTrader recently launched a B2B prediction markets platform aimed at brokers and fintechs, and Slay's own landing page already flags "prediction markets coming soon" as part of its product roadmap. For readers tracking crypto and TradFi convergence, this is a quiet but meaningful data point: a regulated U.S. futures pipeline, a crypto-exchange-owned FCM, a prop firm front-end, and an event-contracts product all stitched together through one API. Nobody is putting it that bluntly in the press release, but that's the picture. Finance Magnates
The Timeline: When Does Slay Markets Actually Go Live?
Tradeify is doing a phased rollout, not a confetti-cannon launch. Here is what's locked in:
| Date | Milestone | Who Gets In |
|---|---|---|
| May 19, 2026 | Announcement & waitlist opens at slaymarkets.com | Anyone who signs up |
| Within ~4 weeks (≈ mid-June 2026) | Public launch window per the Slay Markets site | Phased early access begins |
| Early access phase | First live accounts open | Existing Tradeify funded traders first |
| Weeks after early access | Broader retail availability | General waitlist + new sign-ups |
The "launching within the next 4 weeks" language is straight from the Slay Markets landing page itself, dated to the May 19 announcement. Existing Tradeify funded traders are first in line, which makes sense — they're a pre-qualified, self-selected book of business that already knows the DOM, the dashboard, and the support team. Slay Markets
What You Actually Get on Slay Markets
The product positioning is pretty clear from the landing page itself, and it's aimed straight at the friction point every funded trader complains about: getting paid, then having to wire that capital somewhere else to actually trade it as your own money. Slay Markets collapses that into one rail.
- Full CME Group futures access — CME, CBOT, NYMEX, and COMEX, covering equity index, energies, metals, interest rates, ags, and micros. Everything futures traders already know.
- Same Tradeify login, charts, DOM, and dashboard — no relearning a new platform, no new support team to onboard.
- Direct payout routing — funded traders can route Tradeify payouts straight into the Slay brokerage account. No external transfer, no third broker.
- No profit split, no prop rules, no daily drawdown — once you're trading your own money on Slay, you're trading your own money. The prop-firm rulebook stops applying.
- Published per-side commissions — Pro tier comes in at $0.29 per side on micros and $0.99 per side on E-minis, with exchange, clearing, and NFA fees additional. Free tier is for under 30 contracts/month, Pro is for 30+. Margin rates are listed as "published at launch."
- Prediction markets "coming soon" — flagged on the Slay site as a future product, almost certainly powered by NinjaTrader's new B2B prediction-markets platform.
The pitch is essentially: keep your habits, lose the friction. On raw per-side commissions, $0.29 micros and $0.99 E-minis is genuinely competitive with the established retail field — it's in the same neighborhood as Tradovate's published rates and undercuts a lot of full-service brokers. The "all-in" picture depends on what margin schedule actually shows up at launch and whether the funding-rail experience matches the marketing. Slay Markets
How Slay Markets Stacks Up Against the Retail Field
Here's a rough comparison of where Slay's published numbers land against the established retail futures crowd. Note that all of these are per-side base commissions and exclude exchange, clearing, and NFA fees — which are roughly $1.02 per side on standard contracts and $0.40 on micros regardless of broker.
| Broker | Micro (per side) | E-mini (per side) | FCM | Platform |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Slay Markets (Pro) | $0.29 | $0.99 | NinjaTrader Clearing | NinjaTrader stack (exclusive) |
| NinjaTrader (Lifetime) | $0.09 | $0.59 | NinjaTrader Clearing | NinjaTrader / proprietary |
| Tradovate (Active) | $0.25 | $0.79 | Tradovate / NT Clearing | Tradovate |
| AMP Futures | ~$0.37 | ~$0.37 | AMP Clearing / Wedbush | Multi-platform |
| Optimus Futures | ~$0.25 | ~$0.50 | Multiple FCMs | Multi-platform |
The takeaway is honest: Slay isn't the cheapest in the room. NinjaTrader's own Lifetime tier and Tradovate's Active plan both come in lower on raw commissions. What Slay is selling isn't price leadership — it's the integration with the Tradeify funded-trader pipeline. If you're already in the Tradeify ecosystem, the convenience of a one-click payout-to-brokerage rail probably outweighs a few cents per side. If you're starting from zero with no prop-firm relationship, the math gets less obvious. Published rates are also subject to change at launch, so treat these as a snapshot, not a contract. Prop Trading Vibes
- Zero operational track record. Slay Markets has never executed a live customer trade. Tradeify's reputation in the prop world is solid, but a brokerage is a different operational beast — execution quality, slippage on illiquid contracts, support response during a flash crash, and outage handling are all unknowns.
- Platform lock-in. The exclusivity arrangement means you're using NinjaTrader's stack. Period. No Rithmic, no Tradovate alternative, no R|Trader, no choosing a different connectivity provider if you don't like NT's order routing. That's a real constraint for traders who prefer specific execution venues.
- Margin schedule still unpublished. Intraday day-trading margins are where retail futures brokers actually differentiate. "Published at launch" is fine for a press release; it's a deal-breaker if Slay shows up with $1,500 intraday on /ES while competitors offer $500.
- Regulatory novelty of the payout-routing model. The "prop payout → live brokerage account" pipeline is structurally new. No regulator has explicitly weighed in on whether routing simulated-funded-account payouts into a related-party brokerage triggers any additional scrutiny. It probably doesn't, but "probably" is the operative word.
- Concentration risk. Tradeify, Tradeify Brokerage, and NinjaTrader Clearing are all knitted together. Customer funds are segregated at the FCM level per CFTC rules, so the structural protections are in place — but operationally, an issue at one node touches the whole pipeline.
Why This Matters for the Broader Prop-to-Broker Pipeline
The retail futures industry has been quietly consolidating the "prop firm graduate" into a real customer category. For years, the funded-trader pipeline ended at the payout — get your check, congratulations, go figure out where to deposit it. Tradeify is the first major U.S. prop firm to build an in-house off-ramp directly into a regulated brokerage, and it did it by renting the regulated layer from NinjaTrader rather than buying or building one. That's a faster, cheaper play than going full FCM, and it suggests other large prop firms will look at the same blueprint. NinjaTrader, for its part, gets to expand its retail footprint via a brand with an active, self-selected customer base of futures traders — a tidy B2B2C move. Finance Magnates
For day traders who've been graduating from prop evaluations and immediately leaking margin to external brokers, this is a structurally cleaner setup. For traders who never planned to use Tradeify but are shopping for a futures broker anyway, Slay Markets becomes one more name on the comparison sheet — with the unusual wrinkle that the front-end brand has no live-trading track record yet but the clearing partner has been doing this since 2003.
What to Watch Between Now and Launch
Three things to keep eyes on as the rollout unfolds:
- Published commission and margin schedule. The "Free vs Pro" tier framing is interesting, but the actual per-side numbers and intraday margin requirements decide whether Slay is competitive or just convenient.
- Funding rails. ACH, wire, and the speed of the Tradeify payout-to-Slay routing are the operational details that will make or break the user experience. The pitch is "no external transfer" — let's see what that looks like in practice.
- Platform parity. The site promises the same charts, DOM, and dashboard as Tradeify. If the live brokerage experience diverges meaningfully from the evaluation experience, that's friction the marketing didn't promise.















