We’ve been talking a lot about copytrading, ROI, win rate, Sharpe Ratio, MDD… …but what do these numbers actually mean? And more importantly: How useful are they REALLY for users and copiers? 👇🏽 (Photo 1) Most exchanges like Binance, Bybit, or other copy trading platforms will initially show traders filtered by: • PnL • 30D performance • ROI • MDD • Sharpe Ratio etc. You can also change the timeframe: 7D / 30D / 90D / 180D / 360D Personally, I recommend filtering by: ✅ ROI ✅ 180D or 360D performance Why? Because consistency matters much more than short-term hype. And also because TIME matters. A Lead Trader who has survived multiple market conditions is usually much easier to evaluate than someone who only performed well for a few weeks. Some traders look amazing… until a real volatility event arrives. When BTC dropped from around 122,500 to 101,500 on October 9th, 2025, many “top” Lead Traders completely disappeared. Even some traders I personally considered good enough to diversify part of my own funds into got wiped out during that move. That’s when you understand: Surviving matters more than flexing short-term ROI. (Photo 2) Once you enter a Lead Trader profile, don’t look only at the big green number. You need to understand what each metric means: • ROI Return on Investment. It shows how much the trader has grown their capital in percentage terms. Example: If someone starts with $100 and grows it to $150, that’s a +50% ROI. High ROI is good, but alone it does NOT tell you how much risk was taken to achieve it. — • MDD (Maximum Drawdown) This shows the biggest drop from a peak to a low point. In simple words: How much pain the strategy had to survive before recovering. Example: If an account goes from $10,000 down to $7,000 before recovering, that’s a 30% drawdown. Usually: • under 10% = very controlled • 10-20% = acceptable/moderate • 30%+ = aggressive/high risk A trader making +100% ROI with 50% drawdown is VERY different from someone making +30% ROI with 5% drawdown. — • Sharpe Ratio Risk-adjusted performance. This measures how efficiently returns are generated relative to the volatility/risk taken. In traditional finance: • Sharpe Ratio above 1 = considered good • above 2 = very strong • above 3 = exceptional That’s why many hedge funds and institutional portfolios care more about Sharpe than raw ROI. Higher Sharpe usually means: more consistency with less chaos. — • Win Rate The percentage of trades closed in profit. Example: 8 winning trades out of 10 = 80% Win Rate. Useful, but dangerous if analyzed alone. A trader can have: • 90% Win Rate …and still lose money if the losing trades are massive. — • Copier PnL This shows how much money copiers are ACTUALLY making. Very important. Because the Lead Trader can be profitable while copiers: • get worse entries • pay more fees • experience slippage • or receive delayed execution — • Number of copiers This shows trust and demand, but it is not enough by itself. More copiers does NOT automatically mean: better trader. Sometimes it simply means: better marketing. — • Trading history duration The longer the history, the better. A trader with: 180D or 365D of consistent results is usually much easier to evaluate than someone showing only: 7D or 30D. A trader doing 300% in 30 days means nothing if the risk was extreme or if copiers are not making money. (Photo 3) This is probably the MOST important section. Check: ✅ how long copiers have stayed with the trader ✅ copier ROI over time ✅ consistency across long periods (+180D preferably) Why does this matter? Because copy trading execution is NOT identical to the Lead Trader execution. This is the small text nobody explains 👇🏽 The Lead Trader may execute: • limit orders • market orders • custom entries BUT copiers usually receive a MARKET execution AFTER the Lead enters. That means: ❌ different entry price ❌ different liquidation price ❌ different fees ❌ slippage ❌ delayed execution So what happens? Some “bot/quant/high leverage” traders can generate huge ROI for themselves… …but their copiers may barely make money, make less than 10%, or sometimes even lose money because execution quality matters. There are traders showing: 300%+ ROI in 180D while their long-term copiers barely generated returns. That’s a HUGE red flag. A sustainable Lead Trader strategy should also work FOR THE COPIERS. This is actually one of the reasons why, since becoming a Lead Trader, I intentionally give more space to: • entries • re-entries • stop losses • exits If I were trading completely alone, I could probably trade much more aggressively or “sniper-like”. But because copiers receive delayed market executions after my orders are filled, I need to leave enough room for them to: • enter properly • survive volatility • re-enter positions • and exit correctly as well. That execution difference changes EVERYTHING in copy trading. And finally… If you don’t want to manually analyze everything: Binance AI Analysis (Photo 4) is actually becoming a pretty useful tool 😉🛸 @Feraf Trades #Copytrading BUILDING FREEDOM
Last night I attended another great Web3 community event in Lima.
The discussion covered some of the topics shaping this market cycle:
• Bitcoin market structure • Stablecoins and real-world adoption • Market liquidity • Regulations • Why this cycle has been different for altcoins
It was also great to see Binance sharing more than just trading features, highlighting practical use cases for digital assets in everyday life.
Thanks to El Club del Bitcoin, the Hub de Innovación de Miraflores, Binance , and all the speakers for creating spaces where the community can learn, connect and exchange ideas.
The crypto industry keeps evolving—and continuous learning is part of the journey.
🇵🇪 What could Julio Velarde’s continuity mean for Peru’s digital finance future?
Most discussions focus on inflation and monetary policy.
I think there’s another opportunity worth watching:
Stablecoins.
Peru is already seeing growing adoption for real-world use cases like cross-border payments, remittances, USD savings, and P2P transactions.
A stable macroeconomic environment can create better conditions for businesses and financial institutions to responsibly explore digital assets and blockchain-based financial infrastructure.
This conversation is no longer just about Bitcoin.
It’s about building a more efficient, accessible, and inclusive financial system.
What do you think? Could Peru become one of LATAM’s leading digital finance hubs?