Pros
You do receive an internship certificate upon completion.
Basic exposure to trading concepts (only theoretical, due to platform issues).
Cons
The internship begins with students paying 10,000, supposedly to be added as part of their "trading portfolio," which can later be withdrawn along with a promised E25,000 stipend. In reality, this amount never goes into any legitimate trading environment.
The trading platform provided during the internship does not reflect real market prices. Once you open a position, it consistently moves against you, making profit practically impossible. The platform is not transparent, not verifiable, and does not match live market data. The required number of trades to qualify for the stipend is extremely high-so high that the portfolio gets fully wiped out well before completion, regardless of skill or accuracy in predicting market movements. There is no realistic path to earning the stipend or recovering the initial F10,000.
The entire model appears designed so that students inevitably lose their deposit, while the company benefits.