Tradingview has announced a strong briefing on future traders: Improved paper trading capabilities for future fulfillment contracts.

Until now, paper negotiation has only supported key actions such as opening and closing future fulfillment transactions, which limited the ability to design and test long -term strategies. With this update, TradingView users can now simulate the entire life cycle of a future fulfillment from the execution and end of the balances and balances. This makes the test much more accurate, realistic and insightful.

All contracts that are now settled are installed at the final settlement price. This provides a much clearer picture of your earnings and losses, helping you evaluate the true effectiveness of your strategy under conditions near reality.

Expired positions are automatically closed and all active orders linked to expired contracts are canceled. This means less manual cleaning: Your account now reflects only active positions, the prevention of errors and the maintenance of your strategy simulation smooth and accurate.

All executions are fully reflected in your account history and trading journal. This gives you complete transparency in your commercial performance and allows you to analyze every commercial detail so you can detect patterns, improve discipline and improve your strategy.

A new expiry date column has been added to the trading table for both seats and orders. Clear visibility in contract contracts helps you manage the risk better and avoid surprises when a contract reaches maturity.

All future fulfillment contracts are treated as cash, regardless of their actual type, which means they are closed by paying/taking the difference between the entry price and the cash settlement price.

This allows you to test strategies without restrictions, giving you a more flexible and versatile test environment.

All of these features are activated by default for both new and existing paper accounts and apply to all future fulfillment contracts.

This update is not valid for constant or continuous future.