Risk

Understand risk before you participate

Copy trading is not a guaranteed-profit tool. Any strategy can experience drawdowns. What matters is whether the risk is defined, controlled, and acceptable to you.

Mechanics

Know how it works

Understanding synchronization, scaling, spreads, and slippage helps you set realistic expectations.

Suitability

Check if it fits you

Whether you can tolerate equity fluctuations and allocate responsibly often matters more than picking a strategy name.

FAQ List

Click to expand each answer. If you prefer to start with a complete overview of copy trading, we recommend reading Copy Trading 101 first.

Q1: Can copy trading lead to a margin call / stop-out?

Look at the worst-case scenario first—then decide whether to participate.

Any trading can experience meaningful drawdowns, and copy trading is no exception. Whether severe losses can occur depends on the strategy’s risk design, your account leverage, and how you allocate capital. We recommend evaluating your tolerance using a “worst-case” mindset rather than focusing only on best historical performance.

Q2: What is drawdown? Will it always happen?

Drawdowns are normal. The key is whether they are controlled and acceptable.

Drawdown is the decline in equity from a peak to a subsequent trough. Any strategy can experience drawdowns, especially during regime changes or volatility expansion. What you should evaluate is: Can you tolerate that drawdown range? And does the strategy have clear risk boundaries?

Q3: Will my fills be exactly the same?

Not necessarily—spreads and slippage can create differences.

During synchronization, your entry/exit prices may differ slightly due to spread, slippage, server latency, instrument specifications, and broker execution conditions. This is normal in real markets. It’s better to think in “ranges” rather than expecting identical tick-perfect fills.

Q4: Who is not suitable for copy trading?

The sooner you know you’re not a fit, the better.

Copy trading is generally not recommended if you:
1) cannot tolerate equity fluctuations;
2) expect short-term “quick wins” and cannot accept drawdowns;
3) refuse to read risk explanations and only want “guaranteed profits”;
4) use essential living funds to participate in high-volatility markets.
You can review our Risk Framework and then assess whether it matches your risk tolerance.

Q5: Can I stop or adjust anytime?

Generally yes—but understand your current open-position risk first.

In general, you control your own account and can adjust or stop according to your needs. Before stopping, it’s recommended to understand your current positions and floating P/L to avoid making emotional decisions during high-volatility periods.

Q6: Should I look at performance first, or risk control first?

Suggested order: concept → risk → performance → small-scale test.

We recommend understanding copy trading mechanics and risk first, then reading the Risk Framework, and only then reviewing performance displays. Without a risk context, performance can create unrealistic expectations. If you decide to participate, start with a small, tolerable test allocation and adjust gradually.

Start here: two core pages

If you want to understand the fundamentals and risk controls clearly before deciding to participate, we recommend starting with these two pages:

Disclaimer: This page is for education and research only and does not constitute investment advice. Trading involves risk, and past performance does not guarantee future results.