Why do so many people lose money when copying trades? Simply put, it's because they choose the wrong person. If you want to truly earn passively through copy trading, here are my summarized key points:
**High Win Rate Should Make You Cautious** Seeing a trader boast a win rate of over 70% should actually raise a red flag. Such figures often hide tricks—either they are artificially inflated by stacking large losing trades to boost the win rate, or they win often but make very little each time, so one big loss can wipe everything out. These "seemingly winning but actually losing" situations are more common than you think.
**Must Review Historical Orders** No matter how lazy you are, you must thoroughly review the trader’s past orders. If you find that the number or total loss of losing trades significantly exceeds the profitable ones, just pass. Following such a person will only lead to more losses over time.
**Avoid Traders Without Stop-Loss or Those Who Have Blown Accounts** Even if they are making good money in the short term, if they have a habit of holding onto losing positions without strict stop-loss discipline, or have previously blown an account, stay away. Looks profitable now, but often ends in nothing.
**Stick to Long-Term Following, Don’t Change Frequently** Many people have the bad habit of jumping from one trader to another, which prevents consistent profits. Once you choose a reliable trader, hold for the long term and avoid constantly switching. Copy trading is fundamentally about patience—money doesn’t come from rushing, and the same applies in the crypto world.
I always stick to real trading, not virtual. To steadily profit in this market and avoid common pitfalls, the key is to carefully select the right traders.
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ValidatorViking
· 13h ago
ngl, the 70% winrate cope is peak delusion—seen way too many validators pump those metrics then blow up spectacularly. real resilience isn't about frequency, it's about not getting slashed when volatility hits. dyor on their actual drawdown history, not just surface level stats.
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BlockchainBouncer
· 19h ago
That's right, choosing the right person is really key. I've fallen for it before, following someone with a very high win rate, only to get wiped out by a single pullback. Later, after reviewing historical trades, I realized it was all small profits and big losses. Now I always analyze three months of trades first.
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WhaleWatcher
· 20h ago
I would directly block those with a 70% win rate; I've seen too many scammers like that.
View OriginalReply0
MevTears
· 20h ago
The core is actually not to be fooled by surface data; analyzing the order book is the real key.
View OriginalReply0
RektButStillHere
· 20h ago
Exactly right, the higher the win rate, the more it looks like a show. One big loss and it's all over.
Why do so many people lose money when copying trades? Simply put, it's because they choose the wrong person. If you want to truly earn passively through copy trading, here are my summarized key points:
**High Win Rate Should Make You Cautious**
Seeing a trader boast a win rate of over 70% should actually raise a red flag. Such figures often hide tricks—either they are artificially inflated by stacking large losing trades to boost the win rate, or they win often but make very little each time, so one big loss can wipe everything out. These "seemingly winning but actually losing" situations are more common than you think.
**Must Review Historical Orders**
No matter how lazy you are, you must thoroughly review the trader’s past orders. If you find that the number or total loss of losing trades significantly exceeds the profitable ones, just pass. Following such a person will only lead to more losses over time.
**Avoid Traders Without Stop-Loss or Those Who Have Blown Accounts**
Even if they are making good money in the short term, if they have a habit of holding onto losing positions without strict stop-loss discipline, or have previously blown an account, stay away. Looks profitable now, but often ends in nothing.
**Stick to Long-Term Following, Don’t Change Frequently**
Many people have the bad habit of jumping from one trader to another, which prevents consistent profits. Once you choose a reliable trader, hold for the long term and avoid constantly switching. Copy trading is fundamentally about patience—money doesn’t come from rushing, and the same applies in the crypto world.
I always stick to real trading, not virtual. To steadily profit in this market and avoid common pitfalls, the key is to carefully select the right traders.