HFT vs scalping
Scalping can be manual or rule-based short-term trading. HFT usually implies extremely fast automated trading that depends on technology edge, latency or market microstructure.
HFT is one of the most abused phrases in prop trading. Some traders use it to mean fast trading; firms often use it to describe prohibited latency exploitation, quote arbitrage or platform abuse.
These keywords share the same search intent, so they are combined into this single canonical page to avoid duplicate SEO pages.
Scalping can be manual or rule-based short-term trading. HFT usually implies extremely fast automated trading that depends on technology edge, latency or market microstructure.
Prop firms commonly ban latency arbitrage, reverse arbitrage, tick scalping, quote stuffing, system exploitation and strategies that rely on demo-feed differences.
If a firm advertises HFT-friendly accounts, ask exactly what is allowed, what platform supports it, how execution is modeled and whether funded payouts are reviewed differently.
This page is written to match the exact search intent without stuffing keywords. Prop firm rules change often, so always confirm the live rulebook, payout policy and legal entity before paying for an account.
Most ban abusive HFT. Some advertise special accounts, but rules must be read closely.
Not automatically. It depends on speed, method and order behavior.
Yes, if it violates prohibited-strategy rules.
Use this guide with the broader prop firm comparison pages to check drawdown, payout access, platform fit and country restrictions.