It's all relative, right?
According to
An Introduction to the Study of Metallurgy By Sir William Chandler Roberts-Austen, "Malleable metals are also ductile, but they do not possess the two properties in the same order. Arranged according to their malleability, the most important metals follow this order: 1. Gold, 2. Silver, 3. Copper, 4. Tin, 5. Platinum, 6. Lead, 7. Zinc, 8. Iron, 9. Nickel. The order of ductility, on the other hand, is: 1. Gold, 2. Silver, 3. Platnium, 4. Iron, 5. Nickel, 6. Copper, 7. Zinc, 8. Tin, 9. Lead."
So it would I guess be appropriate to say that copper is far more malleable than iron, but iron is more ductile than copper. These properties depend a lot on temperature and probably also the rate at which force is applied. I believe zinc is pretty brittle at room temperature but heated up slightly, it can be pounded out into thin sheets. Like anything else, it's rarely simple.