Copy Trading: What It Is and How It Works Explained
By Ken Chigbo, Founder, KenMacro. Published 2026-05-13.
Quick answer
Copy trading is a broker-mediated service that automatically mirrors the trades of a selected signal provider onto a follower’s account in real time. Position sizes scale proportionally to the follower’s allocated capital, and entries, exits, and stops execute without manual input. The provider typically earns a performance fee or spread share.
What is copy trading?
Copy trading is a structured account-linking service offered by retail brokers and third-party platforms whereby a follower allocates capital to mirror the trades of a chosen signal provider. When the provider opens, modifies, or closes a position, the same action replicates on the follower’s account, scaled proportionally to allocated capital. Execution is automated through the broker’s bridge or a platform such as MetaTrader Signals, ZuluTrade, or eToro’s social feed. The follower retains ownership of the account and can stop copying at any time. Providers are compensated through performance fees, monthly subscriptions, or a share of the spread generated.
How traders use copy trading
Retail traders use copy trading to access strategies they lack the time or skill to run themselves, typically allocating a defined portion of capital to one or more providers and reviewing performance monthly. Institutional desks rarely use retail copy trading directly, but allocators do screen providers on the same metrics they apply to systematic managers: maximum drawdown, Sharpe ratio, time in market, average trade duration, and consistency of returns across regime shifts. The desk treats copy trading as a delegation decision, not a passive product. Sensible practice involves diversifying across providers with uncorrelated styles, sizing allocations so that a single provider’s drawdown cannot impair the wider account, and verifying that track records cover at least one full cycle of volatility expansion rather than a single trending period.
ASIC regulated. The desk’s preferred broker for retail macro traders who want the MACRO MASTERY desk overlay alongside the platform.
Common misconceptions about copy trading
The first misconception is that high historical returns indicate future performance. Most public leaderboards rank providers on raw return, which favours those running high leverage with no drawdown control, and these accounts tend to blow up. The second is that copy trading is passive. Followers still bear full market risk, financing costs, and execution slippage, and remain responsible for margin calls. The third is that the broker vets providers. In most cases the broker only enforces basic disclosure, and the burden of due diligence sits entirely with the follower.
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Frequently asked
Is copy trading profitable for beginners?
Copy trading can be profitable, but the base rate of success for unselected providers is poor. Public leaderboards are dominated by accounts running aggressive leverage that eventually suffer terminal drawdowns. Beginners who treat it as a shortcut tend to lose capital. Those who approach it as an allocation decision, screening providers on drawdown discipline and consistency rather than raw return, and diversifying across uncorrelated styles, have a meaningfully better outcome.
How much does copy trading cost?
Costs come in three layers. The follower pays the standard spread and commission on every replicated trade, which can be substantial on high-frequency strategies. The signal provider typically charges a performance fee, often twenty to thirty per cent of net new profits, or a fixed monthly subscription. Some platforms also embed a markup in the spread. The desk recommends modelling total cost as a percentage of allocated capital before committing.
Can I lose more than I invested in copy trading?
On most regulated retail brokers offering negative balance protection, losses are capped at the account balance. Without that protection, a sharp gap or leveraged blow-up on the provider’s strategy can theoretically push the follower into negative territory. Followers should confirm the broker’s jurisdiction and protection terms before allocating, and avoid providers who consistently run leverage above the level the account can absorb in a stress event.
How do I choose a copy trading signal provider?
Screen on drawdown first, return second. Look for at least twelve months of track record covering both trending and ranging conditions, a maximum drawdown below twenty per cent, average trade duration consistent with the stated strategy, and no use of grid or martingale position scaling. Verify the provider has skin in the game by trading meaningful personal capital, and avoid accounts whose equity curve shows long flat periods followed by sudden spikes.
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Educational analysis only. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Manage risk against your own portfolio.
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