Two-Time Trading World Champions
Editorial analysis.Why repeat champions are rare
Fourteen years of Trading World Champion selections have produced eleven distinct champions across fourteen titles. That means roughly 21% of years went to repeat winners. The base rate of repeat-winning is much lower than the trading-press headline-rate would suggest, and the reasons are structural.
The four-criterion selection framework (returns, risk management, consistency, verifiability) requires not just exceptional performance but exceptional performance against fresh peer competition each year. A trader who was the world's best in one year faces an entirely new field of contenders in the next year. Most of the time, someone else has the year that beats every previous selection on at least one of the four criteria. Repeat winning requires either consecutive once-in-a-decade conditions favourable to the same approach (Tepper 2012-2013) or a long-enough career arc to produce two genuinely different exceptional years (Ackman 2014/2020, Skarp 2015/2025).
1. David Tepper — 2012 (inaugural) and 2013
Tepper is the only consecutive double-winner in the archive. He won the inaugural 2012 Trading World Champion selection for Appaloosa Management's ~30% return on roughly $15 billion in AUM, with the post-crisis distressed credit and bank-stock thesis. He won again in 2013 as the same thesis continued to play out and Appaloosa returned approximately 42% with $3.5 billion in personal earnings.
The consecutive nature of Tepper's wins is unusual and reflects an unusual market environment. The 2012-2013 period was a continuation of the post-crisis recovery: banks healing, credit normalising, US equities working through capital structure changes. Tepper's distressed-credit pattern recognition was perfectly suited to that environment. Once the recovery completed and macro conditions normalised, his absolute-return advantage relative to the field decreased — Appaloosa continued producing strong returns in 2014 and beyond, but the field caught up.
Tepper's two wins demonstrate something important: an exceptional macro thesis can dominate for two consecutive years if the underlying conditions persist. They cannot dominate forever.
2. Bill Ackman — 2014 and 2020
Ackman's two wins are the most stylistically different in the archive. His 2014 Trading World Champion selection was for Pershing Square's 40.4% return driven primarily by the Allergan activist campaign — a multi-year concentrated-equity activist trade where Pershing built a major stake in a pharmaceutical company and pushed for strategic action. His 2020 Trading World Champion selection was for the COVID CDS hedge: $27 million in credit default swap premiums turned into $2.6 billion when credit spreads blew out during the March 2020 panic, alongside a rotation into equities for the post-crash recovery.
The two trades have almost nothing in common. The first is a long-duration concentrated-equity activist play. The second is a short-duration tail-risk hedge. The same trader generated both, six years apart, on completely different sides of the volatility surface. What links them is selective conviction: Ackman is not constantly aggressive in either direction. Most of Pershing Square's annual performance comes from a small number of high-conviction trades sized aggressively while the rest of the book runs conservatively.
Ackman's two wins demonstrate that "great trader" does not require a single repeating playbook. It can mean recognising different asymmetric opportunities a decade apart and sizing each correctly when the asymmetry appears.
3. Paul Skarp — 2015 and 2025
Skarp is the most unusual repeat winner because his two championships came a full decade apart and both came through the same audited venue: the World Cup Trading Championships Futures Division. He won 2015 Trading World Champion with a 219.1% audited return in the WCTC Futures Division. He won again in 2025 with a 256% audited return in the same division, against a completely different field of competitors and across an entirely different market regime.
The combination of audit-grade verification and ten-year separation makes Skarp's case the strongest evidence in the modern Trading World Champion archive that genuine systematic edge exists in audited futures trading. Most competition winners win once and never repeat. Skarp's two wins, ten years apart, against the same audit standard, demonstrate a level of sustained skill that is genuinely rare.
Skarp is also the only trader in the archive whose two wins both came through the same competition format. Tepper's wins were both at Appaloosa but the trades were different (post-crisis bank credit vs distressed equity recovery). Ackman's wins were stylistically distinct. Skarp's two wins are essentially the same trade type, applied across two market regimes a decade apart, with audited verification both times.
4. Why nobody has won three times
Three-time champions would require either a 30-year career with three exceptional editorially-recognised years (Skarp could plausibly join this list by 2035 if he wins again) or three exceptional results within a shorter span (which has not happened).
The closest case is Andrea Unger in WCTC competition (four-time WCTC champion 2008, 2009, 2010, 2012), but Unger's wins predate Trading World Champion's editorial publication, so they are not in the archive. If TWC had existed in 2008-2012, Unger would likely have been a multi-time editorial champion as well.
5. What two-time champions have in common
Despite their stylistic differences, the three two-time champions share traits:
- Selective aggression. All three are known for sizing high-conviction trades aggressively while keeping baseline exposure conservative. None are constant-aggression traders.
- Long career arcs. Tepper has been at Appaloosa since 1993. Ackman founded Pershing Square in 2003. Skarp has been competing in audited futures since the 2000s.
- Audit-grade verification. All three have decade-plus audited records.
- Multi-regime survival. All three have produced strong returns across at least three distinct macro regimes.
- Risk discipline. All three have managed drawdowns aggressively on the wrong-way side. None have blown up.
These are the same traits identified in what makes a great trader, applied to the most-tested cases in the archive.
6. The candidates for future repeat-winning
Several past champions have plausible cases for future repeat-winning if their career arcs continue:
- Ken Griffin (Citadel) — 2022 champion. Citadel's multi-strategy platform is uniquely positioned to produce another exceptional year if a similar regime occurs.
- Chris Hohn (TCI) — 2019 champion. TCI's concentrated-equity activist style produces episodic outsized years when major positions resolve.
- Rob Citrone (Discovery) — 2024 champion. Macro pattern recognition has another decade of runway.
- Darren O'Neill — 2023 champion. The first independent multi-asset trader to win. If his audited record continues at the 2023-2025 level, the case for a second selection grows over time.