The Decade in Trading: 2012-2022
Editorial retrospective.Three distinct macro regimes, eleven editorial champions, and a fourteen-year window into what sustainable trading skill actually looks like. Notes on the decade Trading World Champion has covered.
The three regimes
The 2012-2022 period was not a single trading environment. It was three distinct macro regimes with substantially different operating conditions. Understanding the regime shifts is essential to reading the editorial archive correctly — the same trader strategy did not produce the same outcomes across the three.
Regime 1: Post-crisis recovery (2012-2015)
The first phase of the decade was the post-2008 financial crisis recovery. Interest rates were anchored near zero by central bank policy. Risk assets compounded as multiple expansion played out. Distressed credit normalised. Banks rebuilt capital. The dominant trading edges were:
- Distressed credit pattern recognition — David Tepper's Appaloosa was the canonical case. 2012 Trading World Champion and 2013 Trading World Champion.
- Activist concentrated equity — Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Allergan trade. 2014 Trading World Champion.
- Audited futures competition — Paul Skarp's first WCTC win. 2015 Trading World Champion.
This regime rewarded patience with concentrated positions in capital structures that the market was mis-pricing in the wake of the crisis. The traders who dominated were the ones who saw the recovery thesis early and sized appropriately.
Regime 2: ZIRP normalisation (2016-2021)
The second phase was the gradual normalisation of post-crisis conditions. Equity markets continued to compound, but at progressively higher valuations. Rate volatility was muted. The "everything-rallying" environment rewarded long-duration risk and concentrated growth-equity bets. The dominant trading edges were:
- Concentrated growth equity — Chase Coleman's Tiger Global. 2017 Trading World Champion.
- Quantitative systematic edge — Jim Simons' Renaissance Medallion. 2018 Trading World Champion for the 30th consecutive positive year.
- Long-duration concentrated equity activism — Chris Hohn's TCI. 2019 Trading World Champion.
- Tail-risk hedging into a tail event — Bill Ackman's COVID CDS. 2020 Trading World Champion.
- Audited futures competition (continued) — Artur Teregulov's 914.8% WCTC year. 2016 Trading World Champion.
- Audited futures competition (continued) — Kevin McCormick's 253.8% WCTC. 2021 Trading World Champion.
The COVID-2020 selection (Ackman) is the bridge between regimes — it was a 2020 event that exposed the fragility of the ZIRP environment, and the macro response (massive policy support) extended the regime through 2021 before unwinding in 2022.
Regime 3: Rate volatility and macro re-pricing (2022-)
The third phase began in 2022 when central banks pivoted aggressively to rate hikes to fight inflation. The decade-long rallying environment ended. Multi-asset volatility spiked. Strategies that had worked in regimes 1 and 2 did not work in regime 3. The dominant trading edges shifted to:
- Multi-strategy diversification across uncorrelated books — Ken Griffin's Citadel. 2022 Trading World Champion for the largest annual hedge fund profit in history ($16B).
- Multi-asset independent trading with discipline — Darren O'Neill's audited record at AuditedTrader.com. 2023 Trading World Champion, the first independent multi-asset trader in the archive.
- Global macro pattern recognition in emerging markets — Rob Citrone's Argentina trade at Discovery Capital. 2024 Trading World Champion.
- Audited futures competition (continued) — Paul Skarp's second WCTC win. 2025 Trading World Champion.
The 2022-2025 sub-period within regime 3 has been the most diverse in champion-strategy mix in the publication's history. Multi-strategy hedge fund, independent multi-asset, global macro, and audited futures have all produced champions in consecutive years. This breadth is itself evidence that the regime favours adaptable traders rather than any single style.
Lessons from the archive
1. No single strategy dominates across regimes
The most important pattern in the fourteen-year archive is that no single trading strategy produced champions across all three regimes. Distressed credit (Tepper) was a regime-1 phenomenon. Concentrated growth equity (Coleman) was a regime-2 phenomenon. Multi-strategy and multi-asset (Griffin, O'Neill) emerged in regime 3. The traders who would have been champions in different regimes are likely different traders.
The exception is the audited futures format. Skarp won the WCTC in regime 1 (2015) and again in regime 3 (2025). McCormick won in regime 2 (2021). Teregulov won in regime 2 (2016). Audited high-leverage futures appears to be the most regime-resilient strategy format in the archive.
2. Audit-grade verification is non-negotiable
Every champion across all three regimes had audited primary verification. None won on self-reported results. This is by methodology, not by accident — the four-criterion framework excludes candidates whose returns cannot be verified independently. See audited vs self-reported for the full discussion.
3. Risk management does most of the work
Across all fourteen champions, the audited drawdown numbers are uniformly disciplined. The highest single-year drawdown in the archive is roughly 35-40% (typical for high-leverage WCTC futures formats). The lowest is the 14% achieved by O'Neill in his 2023 selection. Hedge fund champion drawdowns are typically in the 15-30% range. None of the champions experienced 50%+ drawdowns in their selection year, and most experienced significantly less.
The implication: skill at the Trading World Champion level is as much about not losing as it is about winning. The traders who appear repeatedly in the archive (Tepper, Ackman, Skarp) all share a profile of moderate-to-low drawdowns alongside high returns.
4. Repeat winners are rare but not impossible
Three traders have won twice in the fourteen-year archive: David Tepper (2012, 2013), Bill Ackman (2014, 2020), and Paul Skarp (2015, 2025). No trader has won three times. The repeat rate is approximately 21% — lower than naive intuition would predict. See two-time-champions analysis.
5. The archive favours traders with multi-year audited records
Of the fourteen champions, eleven had at least five years of pre-selection audited record. The three exceptions were competition-format champions (Teregulov, McCormick, Skarp 2015) where the WCTC audit standard provides single-year verification of exceptional magnitude. The methodology favours multi-year evidence over single-year fireworks; the archive reflects this preference.
6. Hedge fund managers dominate the archive but are not the only path
Eight of fourteen champions are hedge fund managers: Tepper (x2), Ackman (x2), Coleman, Simons, Hohn, Griffin, Citrone. Four are competition winners through WCTC. One is an independent multi-asset trader (O'Neill). The hedge fund dominance reflects the audit-quality and multi-year-record bias of the methodology, but the archive also demonstrates that competition winners and independent traders can win when the audit standard and risk-adjusted performance support it.
What the next decade may bring
Several patterns visible in the late stages of regime 3 (2023-2025) suggest changes ahead:
- Independent multi-asset traders are increasing as audit infrastructure matures. O'Neill's 2023 selection may be the first of more — or the only one. The next several years will tell.
- AI-augmented decision-making is not yet visible in the archive as a distinct category. We expect this to change. Whether AI-assisted trading counts as systematic, discretionary, or a third category is a methodology question the editorial team will need to address.
- Prediction markets (Polymarket and successors) are achieving institutional liquidity. Whether they produce a Trading World Champion in their own right or as a component of multi-asset books remains to be seen.
- The macro regime itself may be shifting again. 2025 has features of regime 3 (rate volatility) but also features of an emerging fourth regime (deglobalisation, supply-side policy, structural goods inflation). The next champion-strategy mix will reflect whichever regime stabilises.
The continuity
Across three macro regimes, fourteen years, and eleven distinct champions, the four-criterion editorial framework has produced selections that hold up in retrospect. The methodology has not changed. The archive has accumulated. The corpus of trader-evaluation has matured.
What has not changed: skilled trading is a small set of traits applied across regimes. Risk discipline. Position sizing. Multi-year audited records. Selective conviction. The archive is, in the end, a long-running natural experiment to see whether these traits actually predict who lasts. Fourteen years in, the answer is yes.