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Copy Trading Club (english)

Copy Trading Club (english)

By: Andrés Díaz
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Welcome to Copy Trading Club, the ultimate podcast for those looking to master the art of copy trading. From the basics to advanced strategies, this show accompanies you through every stage of your evolution as an investor, providing tools, experiences, and practical advice to maximize your results. We explore topics such as trader selection, risk management, diversification, investor psychology, and market analysis. We also address the most common mistakes you need to avoid. Each episode is designed to help you build a profitable portfolio and make informed decisions. Whether you're starting with a small capital or aiming to optimize your investments across multiple platforms, Copy Trading Club offers inspiration, knowledge, and the motivation to take your copy trading to the next level. Join our community of investors and discover how to become a copy trading expert in a simple, entertaining, and effective way! **My personal strategy if you’d like to copy my trades:** [https://my.roboforex.com/en/copyfx/providers/show/377197/](https://my.roboforex.com/en/copyfx/providers/show/377197/) **Join our Telegram channel:** [https://t.me/fromthemiddle](https://t.me/fromthemiddle) **Our WhatsApp group:** [https://chat.whatsapp.com/Hf9ndQeQVvLIrUKYXU0PcE](https://chat.whatsapp.com/Hf9ndQeQVvLIrUKYXU0PcE) **Contact us via email:** copytrading@bestmanagement.orgCopyright 2025 Andrés Díaz Economics
Episodes
  • Survivorship bias: classifications that mislead you when copying
    Dec 15 2025
    Summary: The text explains survivor bias in copy trading: rankings highlight only those who are still around, not those who failed, making apparent profits look better than they are. Relying on short-term results or “golden” performers can mask risk and lead to copy decisions based on luck rather than skill. To avoid this bias, the speaker offers a practical framework for evaluating operators and building a durable copy portfolio, including longer histories, risk visibility, consistency, stable position sizes, transparency, understanding the edge, and meaningful metrics. The message emphasizes backtesting across market cycles and smart diversification, with concrete rules and exercises to test profiles before copying. The goal is to move from chasing appearances to adopting a methodical, risk-aware investment process. Key points and steps: - Survivor bias definition: rankings show only survivors, skewing perceived skill and profitability. - Problems with common rankings: short evaluation windows, emphasis on gross returns while hiding drawdowns, and profiles that reset or rely on hot streaks. - Episode objective: learn to filter, measure risk, and build a copy portfolio that lasts. - Step-by-step filters: 1) History: at least 12 months and ~20 trades; avoid relying on a few wins. 2) Visible risk: assess the equity curve; require a cumulative-return-to-maximum-drawdown ratio of at least 2. 3) Consistency: more than half of months positive; drawdowns recover within months. 4) Trade size/leverage: prefer stable sizing; avoid chasing losses. 5) Transparency: beware of erased history or frequent strategy changes. 6) Edge quality: understand the edge in two sentences; if not, be wary. 7) Metrics: use risk-adjusted metrics (e.g., Sharpe) and watch the length of negative streaks. - Practical guidance: apply filters on the platform, anticipate that few profiles passing the sieve is a good sign. - Diversification: copy multiple operators with different styles; limit exposure per operator (e.g., max 10%); use a loss exit if an operator exceeds their historical max drawdown. - Backtesting and realism: test strategies across up, down, and sideways markets; prefer median results over means. - Quick exercise: seven days, review one operator per day with the checklist, decide whom to copy and why. - Reflection questions: how many operators disappeared from rankings; what loss threshold triggers an exit; what you learn from setbacks. - Takeaway: survivor bias can turn copy trading into a lottery; the aim is a disciplined, survivable investment approach. End note (contact): Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    8 mins
  • Hidden correlation: does copying traders double your risk?
    Dec 15 2025
    Summary: - The episode explains Hidden Correlation in copy trading: duplicating several traders can unintentionally duplicate the same risk, making a diversified portfolio behave like a single bet, especially during market stress. - Hidden correlation types: - Asset correlation: traders end up trading the same instruments. - Factor correlation: different assets depend on the same macro drivers (e.g., dollar strength, interest rates). - Time correlation: similar trading schedules react to news together. - Style correlation: similar trading styles (trend-following or mean reversion) amplify shared signals. - Core idea: true diversification means mixing different sources of risk, not just more traders. - Five-step method to detect/reduce hidden correlation: 1) Exposure snapshot: map traders’ main markets, directions, horizons, leverage, and base currency. 2) Instrument overlap: check overlap in assets; if half or more overlap, reduce either or both positions. 3) Return correlation: compute correlations of traders’ returns; >0.7 suggests duplicated exposure; consider rank correlation for robustness. 4) Risk-based weights: allocate by risk contribution rather than equal capital; dampen weights for highly correlated traders to push average correlation toward 0.5 or less. 5) DIY stress tests: simulate plausible moves (oil, rates, dollar moves) to assess total portfolio impact; similar outcomes across scenarios indicate monoculture. - Important considerations: - Base currency can inflate correlations; include traders with different currency logic or hedging. - Common mistakes: chasing top performers by rank, mixing only one style, equal-weighting, ignoring the economic calendar. - 15-minute mini-plan to improve today: - 5 minutes: list traders and color-code main assets/factors. - 5 minutes: download recent returns and compute correlations; keep pairs below 0.5; review above 0.7. - 5 minutes: rebalance to risk parity; add loss limits per trader and overall portfolio loss limit. - Key question: will a central bank surprise affect all parts of the portfolio similarly, or will different components react differently? - Practical tips for better diversification: - Time diversification: mix very short-term with longer horizons. - Asset/factor diversification: combine currencies, indices, commodities, crypto with different engines (growth, value, rate sensitivity). - Geographic/time-zone diversification: include traders from Asian/European sessions if US-dominated. - Light humor and closing takeaway: - Diversification without checking correlation is like carrying two identical umbrellas in a storm. - Three actionable takeaways: measure correlation, weight by risk, and test across scenarios. - Call to action: subscribe, share feedback, and contact the author for strategies (links referenced in the episode). Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    7 mins
  • Free margin when copying traders: avoid forced liquidations
    Dec 15 2025
    Summary: - Topic and core idea: The episode explains free margin in copy trading and why avoiding forced closures hinges on keeping free margin sufficient (free margin = equity minus used margin). - Key definitions: balance, equity (balance plus floating P/L), used margin (broker’s hold to keep positions open), free margin, and margin level (equity divided by used margin × 100). If free margin falls low, a margin call or forced close can occur. - Practical question: Know your minimum margin level before liquidations with your broker; some platforms trigger alerts below certain levels and may begin staged liquidation. - Five actionable rules to avoid forced closures when copying with leverage: 1) Define a cushion: keep a margin level above a personal minimum (the author suggests >200% as a safe baseline; keep extra reserves for volatile assets like crypto). 2) Size by maximum drawdown: allocate capital so worst-case drawdown keeps you above your floor (e.g., use 1.5x safety factor, and avoid putting all capital into a strategy with high drawdown). 3) Diversify by non-correlation, not by quantity: mix across different assets and strategies so bad moves aren’t synchronized. 4) Set platform limits: impose rules like avoiding new trades when heavily loaded, daily/monthly loss limits, max size per instrument, and max open positions per trader. 5) Reserve for events: reduce risk before major news/events; consider pausing copying if your strategies aren’t built for high volatility. - Mini-tutorial (practical steps to act today): 1) Note current margin level and liquidation threshold. 2) Review each trader’s history (max drawdown, average simultaneous positions). 3) Estimate potential used margin from typical position sizes, number of positions, and instrument leverage. 4) Allocate capital so even in the worst recent scenario, margin stays above your floor. 5) Add a cushion for martingale/averaging-down strategies. 6) Set alerts for equity and margin; reduce exposure if triggered. - Additional notes: - In some platforms, copying is proportional to equity rather than free margin, which can risk too-small or late openings if you’re already committed elsewhere. - Investor psychology: when markets rise, don’t overextend; take profits or move risk to sub-accounts; in tricky markets, reduce risk early. - Overall takeaway: Align risk management concepts (risk, free margin, diversification, disciplined limits) to make copy trading robust and less prone to liquidations. - Final prompt: Consider what you will change today in your copy limits to raise your margin above your floor; implement and review weekly. Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    7 mins
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