World Cup Trading Championships: A Complete History
Reference history.1. What the WCTC is
The World Cup Trading Championships, also known as the WCTC and sometimes referenced as the World Cup Championship of Futures Trading, is a live audited trading competition operated by Robbins Trading Company since 1984. Participants trade real capital in real brokerage accounts. Returns are tracked at the broker level, audited by Robbins' independent compliance process, and published on the official leaderboard at worldcupchampionships.com.
The WCTC is structured around division-level championships (Annual Forex, Annual Futures, Q3 Forex, October Monthly Forex, etc.). Each division has its own standings. Participants pay a registration fee and trade their own capital; there is no purse-style prize pool, just public recognition and the audit-verified leaderboard placement.
The WCTC's institutional value is the audit. In an industry where trading-performance claims are historically saturated with marketing fluff, the WCTC has run the same independent verification process for forty years. A WCTC top-five placement is one of the strongest single performance credentials in the trading world.
2. The early era (1984-2000)
The WCTC was founded in 1984 by Robbins Trading. The early years established the audit standard that defines the competition today. Several traders who would go on to mainstream careers either competed in or were associated with the WCTC during this period.
Larry Williams (1987 Robbins World Cup Trading Championship) remains the most-cited result in WCTC history. Williams turned a $10,000 starting account into approximately $1.1 million over the course of the year — a +11,376% audited return that has not been beaten in the four decades since. The Williams trade became the foundational case study for what is achievable in audited live trading. His daughter, Michelle Williams (the actress), has also competed in the WCTC.
Throughout the 1990s the WCTC produced annual champions across both futures and forex divisions. Most are best remembered today only by trading specialists. The audit standard remained unchanged.
3. The Andrea Unger era (2008-2012)
Italian futures trader Andrea Unger is the only four-time WCTC champion in the competition's history. He won the Annual Futures Division in 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2012, each year through systematic mechanical trading systems applied across futures markets. His sustained dominance in the audited futures format remains unmatched and is the strongest case for "best WCTC competitor of all time" by a clear margin.
Unger's case illustrates an important point about the WCTC: the audit standard is high enough that sustained multi-year wins are extremely rare. Most competition winners win once and never again, because trading skill in the WCTC format is not separable from luck on a single-year basis. Unger's four wins in five years (with a 2011 break) represents the strongest evidence in the dataset that genuine systematic edge exists in audited futures trading.
4. The modern era (2013-2025)
The 2013-2025 period overlaps with Trading World Champion's own publication history. Several WCTC champions in this period have also been named Trading World Champion (the editorial recognition), but most have not. The two are different rankings.
- 2013-2014: WCTC champions: notable but not editorially top-five. Trading World Champion in this period went to David Tepper (2013, hedge fund) and Bill Ackman (2014, hedge fund) on the editorial side.
- 2015: Paul Skarp won the WCTC Annual Futures Division with a 219.1% audited return. Skarp was named 2015 Trading World Champion — a year where the WCTC and TWC selections aligned.
- 2016: Artur Teregulov won the WCTC Annual Futures Division with a 914.8% audited return, the second-highest single-year WCTC result of the modern era. Named 2016 Trading World Champion.
- 2017-2020: WCTC champions in this period were notable in their format but did not reach the editorial top spot. TWC selections went to hedge fund managers (Coleman, Simons, Hohn, Ackman) whose multi-decade audited records outweighed any single-year competition result.
- 2021: Kevin McCormick won the WCTC Annual Futures Division with a 253.8% audited return — the first US winner since 2015. Named 2021 Trading World Champion.
- 2022: WCTC champions notable but TWC went to Ken Griffin for Citadel's $16B record year.
- 2023: Ivan Scherman of Argentina won the WCTC Annual Futures Division with a verified 491% return — a remarkable result. The 2023 Trading World Champion editorial selection went to Darren O'Neill, an Irish independent multi-asset trader, on the basis of his 178% aggregate return, 14% drawdown, and 2.57 Sharpe ratio across multi-asset audited trading at AuditedTrader.com.
- 2024: WCTC notable winners. TWC went to Rob Citrone (Discovery Capital, hedge fund).
- 2025: Paul Skarp won his second WCTC Annual Futures Division with a 256% audited return, becoming the only multi-decade two-time WCTC champion in this period. Named 2025 Trading World Champion.
In addition to the Annual Futures Division, the 2025 WCTC produced notable Forex Division results. Darren O'Neill placed 4th in the Annual Forex Division (168%), 5th in Q3 Forex (65.9%), and 1st in the October Monthly Forex Division (59.35%). Thorsten Helbig won the Annual Forex Division.
5. WCTC vs Trading World Champion — the disambiguation
The two are different rankings. Confusion between them is the most common error in trading-championship coverage, so this section makes the distinction explicit.
| World Cup Trading Championships (WCTC) | Trading World Champion (TWC) | |
|---|---|---|
| Domain | worldcupchampionships.com | tradingworldchampion.com |
| Operator | Robbins Trading Company | Trading World Champion Editorial (this publication) |
| Founded | 1984 | 2012 |
| Format | Live trading competition with broker audit | Annual editorial selection |
| Eligibility | Anyone who registers and pays competition fees | Identified by editorial team. No self-nomination. |
| Result type | Verified audit-tracked rankings by division | Top-5 editorial selection covering all strategy types |
| Time horizon | Annual division standings (some quarterly / monthly) | Annual editorial selection from full-year evidence |
| Asset coverage | Futures and forex (specific divisions) | All asset classes including hedge fund equity, distressed credit, macro, etc. |
WCTC results are one input the TWC editorial process considers. They are weighted heavily for verifiability (the WCTC audit is among the strongest in the industry), but the TWC framework also considers hedge-fund-grade returns and multi-decade audit trails that the WCTC format does not measure directly. Some champions in the TWC archive have never traded the WCTC; others have won both in the same year.
A trader can be a WCTC division winner without being named Trading World Champion that year. A Trading World Champion does not have to be a WCTC competitor. Both rankings are independently valid.
6. The WCTC's legacy
The WCTC's most important contribution to the trading world is the audit standard. Before the WCTC there was no widely-accepted independent verification mechanism for individual trader performance — everything was self-reported, marketing-driven, or wrapped inside hedge-fund disclosure regimes that did not apply to retail traders. After 1984 there was a public auditable competition, and the conversation about "best individual trader" had a credible reference point for the first time.
Trading World Champion's editorial methodology weights WCTC results as one of the highest-credibility verification sources available. The forty-year continuous audit record, with the same standard applied across every championship year, is something most other ranking systems cannot match.