Copy Trading Club (english) Podcast Por Andrés Díaz arte de portada

Copy Trading Club (english)

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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 Economía
Episodios
  • Martingale alert: how to detect it before copying
    Oct 13 2025
    Summary: - Episode goal: teach you how to detect a martingale before copying trades on a copy-trading platform to protect capital and improve risk-adjusted returns. - What a martingale is: a money-management approach that increases trade size after losses to recover and win; theoretically tempting but can exhaust finite capital; in markets it leads to large drawdowns. - How to detect it before copying: - Equity curve: beware slow gains followed by a sudden cliff; a perfectly steady uptrend is suspicious. - Win rate vs. average loss: very high win rates (e.g., >90%) with losses much larger than gains are red flags. - Trade duration: winners closed quickly, losses allowed to run; long losing periods vs. short winning periods indicate trouble. - Grid of orders: many open trades in the same direction or averaging down with increasing size signals a martingale. - Leverage and margin: increasing exposure after losses, negative floating, shrinking usable margin suggest reliance on a market move to recover. - Provider descriptions: promises of no losses, guaranteed daily profit, or no drawdowns are common red flags. - Practical audit steps: - Step 1 (public metrics): max drawdown, win rate, average win vs. loss, time in trade, number of simultaneous trades, exposure per asset. - Step 2 (trade-by-trade): look for loss caps, whether losses are cut or allowed to breathe. - Step 3 (concentration): avoid strategies relying on a single asset with overall losses. - Step 4 (backtest/practice): backtest when possible or test in a practice/demo account before real copy trading. - Counterintuitive guidance: prefer a history of small, frequent losses and modest gains over many tiny gains with one catastrophic loss; focus on risk-adjusted returns, not just monthly gains. - Actionable filtering rules (defensive framework): - Do not copy strategies without a stop loss. - Avoid providers with win rate above 85% and with average loss greater than average gain. - Do not copy grids that increase position size. - Demand controlled maximum drawdown and an equity curve with natural pauses. - Set a total loss limit per provider on the platform. - Educational note: this is not personalized advice; emphasize risk control, diversification, and monitoring to make copy trading safer. - Closing question: choose a solid process with controlled losses over a hollow promise of perfection, which helps you sleep better and avoid disproportionate losses. - Call to action: options to follow the creator’s personal strategies (links in description) and join a Telegram group for suggested strategies. - Final reminder: long streaks exist in probability; risk management is essential to avoid hidden risks revealed by extreme events. Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    7 m
  • Evaluate the long-term consistency of a copied trader.
    Oct 6 2025
    - The episode discusses how to evaluate the long-term consistency of copied traders, focusing on sustainable growth and risk control rather than short-term gains. - True consistency means capital grows over time with manageable losses, visible across different market conditions; avoid traders with large drawdowns or profits tied to a single signal. - Practical evaluation steps: - Review history over 18–24 months, noting number of positive months, drawdown depth, and length of losing streaks. - Analyze risk management: position sizing, stops, and loss limits. - Assess performance in various market environments to gauge adaptability. - Consider win rate alongside risk-adjusted returns (average return per trade and gain-to-loss ratio). - Check liquidity and execution quality (slippage and trading costs). - Important caveat: consistency often means a stable long-term trajectory rather than every month being positive. - Action plan for you: - Define return targets and your risk threshold. - Use a minimum evaluation period (e.g., 18 months) and track results monthly. - Compute indicators: average monthly return, % positive months, maximum drawdown and duration, risk/benefit ratio. - Compare with your risk tolerance; adjust diversification or capital allocation as needed. - Start with a demo or small allocation before scaling. - Practical starter: maintain a spreadsheet with month, monthly return, max drawdown, number of trades, win rate, and return per trade; monitor sustainability, loss control, and risk exposure stability; note changes in risk management or strategy if losses occur mid-period. - The podcast also mentions links in the description to copy the host’s strategies and a Telegram group for sharing strategies, with emphasis on transparency and risk monitoring to build trust. - Key takeaway: long-term consistency is driven by disciplined rules, periodic review, and data-driven adjustments, not luck or constant optimization. - If you want deeper help, the host offers guidance to build your own evaluation system for more predictable results. Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    6 m
  • Consistency signals for copy traders
    Oct 6 2025
    - The episode, hosted by Andrés Díaz, explains what consistency means for copied traders and how to spot someone with a steady, risk-managed track record rather than just occasional spikes in performance. - Core idea: consistency = a balance of solid performance, disciplined risk management, patience, and discipline. Look for repeatable patterns like moderate, sustained returns, fewer losses in downturns, and disciplined capital management. - Seven-step framework to assess and maintain consistency: 1) Define clear criteria before copying (e.g., annual target, monthly drawdown cap, win/loss ratio) and write down 2–3 indicators to track for at least six months. 2) Review history under different market conditions; consider 3, 6, and 12-month performance, not just the best month. 3) Diversify across multiple well-chosen strategies to reduce idiosyncratic risk; allocate capital with predefined limits and review weekly. 4) Test in a controlled environment (demo or small amount) and document lessons to adjust criteria. 5) Set alerts and schedule regular reviews (daily/weekly alerts, biweekly reviews) and decide what signal would trigger stopping. 6) Manage risk with discipline (capital allocation per trader, per-trade and per-period loss limits, stop losses, sensible take-profits; have an exit plan if performance worsens). 7) Validate consistency with real data using risk-adjusted metrics (e.g., Sharpe, Sortino, or net profit-to-drawdown) to ensure gains aren’t offset by large losses. - Mid-episode note: the creator promotes copying his personal strategies via links in the podcast description and his Telegram group. - Catchphrases and ideas emphasize that consistent performance includes controlled losses, daily discipline, and patient, steady work over chasing shortcuts. - Practical takeaway: create a mini consistency plan outlining which trader to copy, capital share, acceptable risk, and review cadence; start conservatively and scale only if criteria remain met. - Fun fact: successful copy platform users tend to diversify and stay vigilant without obsessing over every tick; consistency comes from simple, repeated, prudent decisions. - Final thought: automation and a trained eye can work together; use tracking tools, log decisions, and review periodically to stay focused on sustained profitability. The speaker invites a weekly habit to move toward greater consistency. - Closing: thanks for listening; encouragement to subscribe, comment, or share; contact information provided. Remeber you can contact me at andresdiaz@bestmanagement.org
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    5 m
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