How Aurevia actually works.
A document written for subscribers to read — without marketing language, with full detail on what the platform actually does with your capital.
Three steps, three stages
Your subscription becomes active in apply → fund → execute. Not a complex process — just a careful one. Each stage is detailed below.
Stage 01 — Apply (~2 minutes)
You submit identity details (name, email, phone) and upload verification documents through a single secure form. All data is encrypted at rest with AES-256. Our KYC team reviews the application — usually within one business day. When verification completes, your assigned coverage advisor contacts you.
Stage 02 — Fund (~5 minutes)
Once your account is approved, you can fund it — from €250. We accept bank transfer, credit/debit card, and cryptocurrencies (BTC, ETH, USDT, USDC). Funds enter segregated custody from day one — in a structurally separate account from Aurevia Tradex's operating capital.
Stage 03 — Execute (instant)
You select a risk profile (Conservative, Balanced, Growth) or configure it manually with your advisor. The execution engine begins working within your defined limits. You can pause, exit or reconfigure at any time.
Execution engine
The engine runs three concurrent reinforcement learning models, each handling a specific stage of the trading lifecycle: signal generation (identifying opportunities), weight attribution (sizing positions given the current risk profile and total portfolio), and outcome feedback (continuously recalibrating against realised results).
Risk control
Risk controls are set by you and enforced by the system without exception:
- Maximum loss limit — e.g. "if my portfolio drops more than 15%, close all positions"
- Sector exclusions — e.g. "do not invest in weapons, tobacco, gambling"
- Asset caps — e.g. "do not hold more than 20% of portfolio in any single asset"
- Automatic pause — automatically pause before major economic announcements
Monthly memo
On the 5th of every month, you receive a detailed attribution report. More like a note than a spreadsheet — closer to what an editor would write than what an accountant would. It includes: each position's monthly contribution at basis-point detail, the rationale for trades made, comparative performance vs major indices, planned adjustments for the next month, and a complete fee breakdown.
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