During copy trading, the actual returns of copy traders may differ from those of the trader. These differences are generally caused by market fluctuations, position synchronization, and copy trading settings, and are considered normal.
1. Price Synchronization Delay (Slippage Risk)
Although the system synchronizes trader orders at high speed, there may still be a very short delay between the trader placing an order and the copy trading account executing the order automatically.
During periods of high market volatility, the actual execution prices of the trader and the copy trader may differ.
Example: The trader opens a position at 50,000 USDT, while the copy trader’s actual execution price is 50,005 USDT. Although the price difference is small, leverage may amplify the impact, resulting in noticeable differences in final returns.
2. Position Cost Differences Caused by Failed Position Additions
Traders may add to their positions multiple times during holding periods to adjust the overall average entry cost.
If the copy trading account has insufficient available balance, or if the maximum follow amount has already been reached, the system may be unable to continue copying additional position orders.
In such cases, the trader’s average entry price may decrease due to successful position additions, while the copy trader’s average position cost remains relatively higher because the additional position orders were not copied successfully, ultimately leading to differences in returns.
3. Position Differences Caused by Copy Trading Modes
Even when the account balance is sufficient, the selected copy trading mode itself may result in differences between the copy trader’s position and the trader’s position.
Example: If a trader adds to positions multiple times using different amounts (such as opening the first position with 1,000 USDT and adding another 2,000 USDT later), while the user selects the “Fixed Amount” mode (for example, copying each order with a fixed 100 USDT), the system will continue placing copy trades using the fixed amount instead of adjusting proportionally based on the trader’s additional position size.
In this situation, the copy trader’s average position cost may differ from the trader’s, which may ultimately affect overall return performance.
4. How to Reduce Return Differences
To reduce differences in returns, it is recommended to prioritize the “Balance Ratio” copy trading mode and maintain sufficient available account balance to improve position synchronization consistency.