19 min lesson

Trade Execution Checklist & Module Summary

Trade Execution Checklist & Module Summary - Prop Firm Passing Service Academy lesson
Module 6 — Lesson 8

Trade Execution Checklist & Module Summary

Bring market context, confirmation, stop loss placement, profit targets, session timing, strategy rules, and testing together into one disciplined execution process.

Trade Execution & Strategy Development Pre-Trade Decision Process Risk-Controlled Execution Module 6 Completion
Lesson Introduction

Execution Is Where Trading Knowledge Becomes a Result

You can understand market structure, identify support and resistance, recognize candlestick patterns, calculate position size, and build a tested strategy. None of that matters if you abandon the process when it is time to place the trade.

Trade execution is the moment when analysis, risk management, timing, and discipline must operate together. A trader who skips one critical step may turn a high-quality setup into an avoidable loss. A trader who follows the complete process can execute calmly because every major decision has already been made.

The purpose of a trade execution checklist is not to make trading complicated. It is to prevent important decisions from being forgotten under pressure. Pilots, surgeons, engineers, and professional teams use checklists because even experienced people make mistakes when speed, stress, and uncertainty increase.

This final lesson combines everything from Building a Trade Setup, Entry Confirmation, Stop Loss Placement, Take Profit & Trade Management, Trading Sessions & Timing, Building Your First Trading Strategy, and Backtesting & Forward Testing.

Professional principle: A trade should never depend on a last-second guess. Every entry should be the final step of a prepared decision process.

Learning Objectives

  • Understand why checklists improve trading discipline.
  • Complete a structured pre-market preparation process.
  • Confirm market context before looking for an entry.
  • Verify setup location and entry confirmation.
  • Calculate risk and position size before execution.
  • Confirm stop loss and profit target placement.
  • Check session timing, spreads, news, and volatility.
  • Manage an open trade without emotional improvisation.
  • Complete a professional post-trade review.
  • Summarize and apply every lesson from Module 6.

The Complete Professional Trade Execution Framework

1. Why Professional Traders Use Checklists

1

They Reduce Emotional Decisions

A checklist forces the trader to answer objective questions before fear, greed, or excitement controls the entry.

2

They Protect Against Forgetfulness

Important details such as news, spread, drawdown, and position size can be missed when a chart begins moving quickly.

3

They Create Repeatable Data

When every trade follows the same process, results become easier to measure, compare, and improve.

A checklist does not remove discretion. It places boundaries around discretion so that your decisions remain consistent.

2. The Six Stages of Professional Trade Execution

1
PrepareReview market conditions and risk.
2
LocateWait for price to reach the setup area.
3
ConfirmRequire objective entry evidence.
4
CalculateDefine stop, target, and position size.
5
ExecutePlace the order without improvising.
6
ReviewRecord results and rule compliance.

3. Stage One: Pre-Market Preparation

Before Looking for Entries

Prepare the Environment Before Price Starts Moving

Professional execution begins before the setup appears. You should know the market environment, trading schedule, economic risks, and account limits before considering an order.

Pre-Market Preparation Checklist

  • I reviewed the higher-timeframe trend and structure.
  • I marked major support and resistance.
  • I identified previous session highs and lows.
  • I marked important liquidity areas.
  • I checked the economic calendar.
  • I know when high-impact news is scheduled.
  • I confirmed the active trading session.
  • I know the exact time my trading window ends.
  • I reviewed my current daily profit or loss.
  • I calculated the remaining daily risk allowance.
  • I reviewed open positions and correlated exposure.
  • I am mentally focused and able to follow the plan.
Do not begin chart analysis without knowing whether major news is approaching or whether your account is already close to its daily risk limit.

Review Market Context, Multi-Timeframe Analysis, and Trading Sessions & Timing.

4. Stage Two: Confirm Market Context

Bullish Context Questions

  • Is the higher timeframe forming higher highs and higher lows?
  • Is price above a major support area?
  • Is the trade aligned with the dominant trend?
  • Is there room before the next major resistance?
  • Has price already completed an extended move?

Bearish Context Questions

  • Is the higher timeframe forming lower highs and lower lows?
  • Is price below a major resistance area?
  • Is bearish momentum supported by structure?
  • Is there room before the next major support?
  • Is the market already oversold or extended?
Context determines which setups are allowed. A bullish candlestick signal inside strong bearish structure is not automatically a long trade.

Review Understanding Market Structure and Technical Analysis Summary.

Market Context Trade Filter

5. Stage Three: Confirm the Setup Location

A valid trade begins at a meaningful location. Before searching for confirmation, verify that price has reached the area defined by your strategy.

Possible Setup Locations

  • Higher-timeframe support or resistance.
  • Previous breakout level.
  • Protected swing high or swing low.
  • Trendline or channel boundary.
  • Asian session high or low.
  • Previous day high or low.
  • Liquidity sweep area.
  • Chart-pattern breakout or retest.

Location Checklist

  • Price is at a level identified before the setup formed.
  • The level is visible on the strategy’s required timeframe.
  • The level has not been tested too many times.
  • The setup is not forming in the middle of random price action.
  • The next opposing level leaves enough profit potential.
  • The trade is not being chased after price moved away from the area.

Review Support and Resistance Trading Strategy, Trendlines & Channels, and Chart Patterns.

6. Stage Four: Require Entry Confirmation

Once price reaches the setup area, wait for the market to demonstrate that the expected move may be beginning. Confirmation protects you from entering only because price touched a level.

Possible Entry Confirmations

  • Strong rejection candle.
  • Bullish or bearish engulfing candle.
  • Lower-timeframe structure break.
  • Breakout and successful retest.
  • Momentum expansion after consolidation.
  • Multiple timeframe alignment.
  • Liquidity sweep followed by rejection.

Confirmation Checklist

  • The confirmation candle has closed.
  • The signal occurred at the planned setup location.
  • The confirmation supports the higher-timeframe direction.
  • Structure has shifted or held as required.
  • The entry is not based on one wick alone.
  • The market has not already moved too far from the stop location.
  • The entry still provides acceptable risk-to-reward.
Do not lower your confirmation standard because you are afraid of missing the move.

Review Entry Confirmation and Candlestick Patterns.

Planned Setup Location and Entry Confirmation Checklist

7. Stage Five: Define the Stop Loss Before Entry

The stop loss should be placed at the price level that proves the trade idea is wrong. This decision must happen before position size is calculated.

Stop Loss Checklist

  • The stop is beyond the structural invalidation point.
  • The stop is not based only on a random pip distance.
  • The stop includes a reasonable spread or volatility buffer.
  • The stop is not directly on an obvious high or low without protection.
  • The stop distance is appropriate for the instrument and timeframe.
  • I will not widen the stop after entering.
  • I will skip the trade if the logical stop creates excessive risk.
A stop loss determines trade invalidation. Position size determines financial risk. Never reverse that order.

Review Stop Loss Placement.

8. Stage Six: Define the Profit Target

The profit target must be based on a realistic market destination. It should be selected before entering so that the reward can be compared with the risk.

Profit Target Checklist

  • The target is based on market structure.
  • The target is placed near a previous high, low, support, or resistance.
  • The target is not based on the money I want to earn.
  • The target offers acceptable risk-to-reward.
  • The target is not placed beyond several major obstacles without evidence.
  • I know whether I will close the full position or take partial profits.
  • I know the exact rule for trailing the stop.
  • I will not extend the target because of greed.

Review Take Profit & Trade Management and Risk-to-Reward Trading.

9. Calculate Position Size

Once the entry and stop loss are defined, calculate the position size that keeps the maximum loss within your account risk limit.

Position Size Checklist

  • I know the exact percentage or cash amount being risked.
  • I measured the entry-to-stop distance accurately.
  • I used the correct pip or point value.
  • I accounted for spread and commission.
  • I checked whether other positions create correlated exposure.
  • The total account risk remains below my daily limit.
  • I did not increase size because the setup looks unusually strong.
The best setup on the chart still receives the same controlled risk as every other valid setup.

Review Position Sizing Made Simple.

Entry, Stop Loss, Target and Position Size

10. Session, News and Execution Quality

A technically valid setup may still be disqualified by poor timing or unstable execution conditions.

Timing and Execution Checklist

  • The setup formed during my approved trading session.
  • The instrument is normally active during this period.
  • No major economic release is approaching.
  • I am not entering immediately before the 8:30 AM Eastern news window.
  • The spread is within normal limits.
  • The market is not in rollover.
  • The setup did not form during a major holiday or extremely quiet period.
  • The expected reward remains realistic after spread and slippage.
  • I am not entering late because I missed the original signal.
Good analysis cannot repair bad execution conditions. When spreads, slippage, and volatility become unstable, staying out may be the professional decision.

11. The Final Go or No-Go Decision

GO — Execute the Trade

  • Context supports the direction.
  • Price reached the planned location.
  • Confirmation is complete.
  • Stop loss is logical.
  • Target is realistic.
  • Risk is calculated correctly.
  • Timing and spread are acceptable.
  • No strategy rule is being broken.
OR

NO-GO — Skip the Trade

  • Market structure is unclear.
  • Price is between important levels.
  • Confirmation is incomplete.
  • The stop is too wide or too close.
  • The reward is too small.
  • Major news is approaching.
  • The entry would require chasing.
  • You are trying to justify a broken rule.
Skipping a trade that fails the checklist is successful execution. No position is still a position.

Trade or No Trade Decision Framework

12. Placing the Order Correctly

Order Placement Checklist

  • The correct instrument is selected.
  • The trade direction is correct.
  • The order type matches the strategy.
  • The lot size is correct.
  • The entry price is correct.
  • The stop loss is entered immediately.
  • The take profit is entered immediately.
  • The order has not been duplicated accidentally.
  • The total exposure remains within the risk plan.
  • I reviewed the full order before confirming.
A correct analysis placed on the wrong instrument, direction, or lot size is still an execution failure.

13. The Professional Trade Ticket

Complete This Before Every Trade

Instrument
Which market are you trading?
Direction
Long or short?
Higher-Timeframe Context
Trend, range, support, resistance, or liquidity condition.
Setup Location
What exact level created the opportunity?
Entry Confirmation
What objective signal triggered the trade?
Entry Price
What price will activate the order?
Stop Loss
Where is the trade invalidated?
Profit Target
Where is the realistic destination?
Risk-to-Reward
Does the reward justify the risk?
Risk Percentage
What percentage of the account may be lost?
Position Size
What lot size matches the risk?
Session
London, New York, overlap, or another approved window.
News Check
Is major economic news approaching?
Management Plan
Fixed target, partial profit, break-even, or structural trailing.
No-Trade Check
Is any strategy rule being violated?

14. Managing the Open Trade

After the order is placed, your job is to follow the management plan. The analysis phase is over. Constantly inventing new decisions usually makes the result worse.

Open Trade Checklist

  • I will not widen the stop loss.
  • I will not add risk because the trade moved against me.
  • I will not move to break-even before the strategy allows it.
  • I will not close because of one temporary pullback.
  • I will not extend the target because of greed.
  • I will follow the predetermined partial-profit rule.
  • I will trail only behind confirmed structure.
  • I will monitor total account exposure.
  • I will not open unnecessary correlated trades.
  • I will accept the planned loss if the stop is reached.
The purpose of management is not to avoid every loss. It is to execute the tested exit method consistently.

15. When an Early Exit Is Justified

Situation Possible Response Reason
Clear opposite structure breakReduce or close exposureThe original setup may no longer be valid.
Unexpected major newsFollow emergency risk rulesNormal market conditions may disappear.
Order placed by mistakeClose immediatelyAn accidental trade has no strategic justification.
Daily risk limit threatenedReduce or close according to planAccount survival takes priority.
Strong rejection at final targetSecure planned profitOpposing pressure has entered at the intended objective.
One opposite candleUsually no actionOne candle does not automatically invalidate structure.

16. Post-Trade Review

Every trade should produce information, whether it wins or loses. A post-trade review separates market outcomes from execution quality.

Post-Trade Checklist

  • I recorded the final result in money, percentage, and R.
  • I saved a screenshot before entry.
  • I saved a screenshot after the trade closed.
  • I recorded whether every strategy rule was followed.
  • I identified any emotional decision.
  • I separated a valid strategy loss from an execution mistake.
  • I recorded spread, slippage, and news conditions.
  • I noted whether the target and stop behaved as expected.
  • I identified one lesson without rewriting the strategy immediately.
  • I updated the strategy journal.
Review the process first and the financial result second. A disciplined loss may be better execution than a lucky, rule-breaking win.

Pre-Trade During Trade and Post Trade Checklist

17. Process Score vs Trade Result

A+All rules followed, regardless of outcome
BMinor execution issue without added risk
CSeveral rules were ignored
FEmotional or reckless execution

High-Quality Losing Trade

  • Every rule was followed.
  • Risk was controlled.
  • The setup was valid.
  • The market invalidated the idea.
  • The trade receives a strong process score.

Low-Quality Winning Trade

  • The entry was chased.
  • Risk was too high.
  • Confirmation was missing.
  • The market happened to move favorably.
  • The trade receives a poor process score.
Reward disciplined execution, not random profit. What gets rewarded gets repeated.

18. Common Execution Mistakes

Mistake What Usually Causes It Professional Correction
Entering before confirmationFear of missing outWait for the required candle or structure close.
Chasing priceMissing the planned entryWait for a retest or skip the trade.
Oversized positionOverconfidence or recovery pressureCalculate size from fixed risk.
Moving the stop widerRefusal to accept the lossRespect the original invalidation.
Closing too earlyFear of losing open profitFollow the tested management rule.
Extending the targetGreedTake profit at the planned objective.
Trading before newsIgnoring the calendarComplete the timing checklist first.
Overtrading after a lossRevenge and urgencyStop when the daily limit is reached.
Changing strategy mid-tradeEmotional discomfortMake strategy changes only during review.

19. Prop Firm Execution Checklist

Prop firm accounts require an additional rule check before every trade. A technically valid trade may still violate the firm’s trading conditions.

  • I know the current daily drawdown allowance.
  • I know the current maximum drawdown allowance.
  • I confirmed whether drawdown is based on balance or equity.
  • I checked whether the drawdown is static or trailing.
  • I reviewed news-trading restrictions.
  • I reviewed weekend-holding restrictions.
  • I checked consistency requirements.
  • I checked maximum position-size restrictions.
  • I calculated total exposure across all positions.
  • I am not risking the account to complete the challenge quickly.
  • I will stop before reaching the firm’s official limit.

Review Understanding Daily Drawdown, Maximum Drawdown Explained, and Common Rules That Get Traders Disqualified.

Never use the prop firm’s maximum permitted loss as your personal risk target. Your internal limit should remain comfortably below the official limit.

20. The Complete Trade Execution Checklist

Market Context

  • The higher-timeframe trend or range is clear.
  • Major support and resistance are marked.
  • The trade direction aligns with the strategy.
  • There is enough room before the next opposing level.

Setup Location

  • Price reached a level defined before the setup formed.
  • The setup is not in the middle of random price action.
  • The entry has not moved too far from the level.

Entry Confirmation

  • The required confirmation has closed.
  • Structure supports the intended direction.
  • Confirmation occurred at the correct location.

Stop Loss and Target

  • The stop is beyond invalidation.
  • The target is based on realistic structure.
  • The setup offers acceptable risk-to-reward.

Risk and Position Size

  • Risk per trade is within the plan.
  • Position size was calculated correctly.
  • Total account exposure is acceptable.
  • Daily loss limits remain protected.

Timing and Market Conditions

  • The trade is inside the approved session.
  • No major news is approaching.
  • Spread and liquidity are acceptable.
  • The trade is not being chased.

Execution and Management

  • The correct instrument and direction are selected.
  • The stop and target are attached to the order.
  • The management plan is defined.
  • No strategy rule is being ignored.

Final Question

Can I explain this trade clearly in one sentence without making excuses? If not, the trade is probably not ready.

Professional Trade Execution Master Checklist

21. Module 6 Review: Building a Trade Setup

Lesson 1 explained that a complete setup requires more than a directional opinion. You learned to combine market context, location, confirmation, stop loss, target, timing, and risk into one structured plan.

  • Start with market context.
  • Identify a meaningful setup location.
  • Wait for confirmation.
  • Define invalidation.
  • Confirm realistic reward.
  • Control risk before execution.

Review Lesson 1: Building a Trade Setup

22. Module 6 Review: Entry Confirmation

Lesson 2 explained how confirmation improves entry timing. You learned that candlestick rejection, engulfing candles, structure breaks, momentum, retests, and multi-timeframe alignment must occur at a meaningful location.

  • Location comes before confirmation.
  • Wait for candles to close.
  • Use structure to confirm direction.
  • Avoid entering from one wick alone.
  • Do not chase late confirmation.

Review Lesson 2: Entry Confirmation

23. Module 6 Review: Stop Loss Placement

Lesson 3 explained that the stop loss belongs beyond the level that invalidates the setup. The stop should follow structure, volatility, spread, and strategy logic—not a random cash amount.

  • Place stops beyond invalidation.
  • Account for spread and volatility.
  • Do not widen stops after entry.
  • Calculate position size after defining the stop.
  • Skip trades with unacceptable stop distance.

Review Lesson 3: Stop Loss Placement

24. Module 6 Review: Take Profit & Trade Management

Lesson 4 explained how to place realistic profit targets and manage winning trades without emotional interference.

  • Choose targets from market structure.
  • Define management before entry.
  • Use partial profits consistently.
  • Move to break-even only when rules allow it.
  • Trail stops behind confirmed structure.
  • Do not extend targets from greed.

Review Lesson 4: Take Profit & Trade Management

25. Module 6 Review: Trading Sessions & Timing

Lesson 5 explained that the quality of a setup changes with liquidity, volatility, spreads, news, and session participation.

  • Focus on London and New York conditions.
  • Mark Asian session highs and lows.
  • Understand the London–New York overlap.
  • Avoid entering immediately before major news.
  • Be cautious around 8:30 AM Eastern releases.
  • Stop trading when the planned window closes.

Review Lesson 5: Trading Sessions & Timing

26. Module 6 Review: Building Your First Strategy

Lesson 6 turned individual trading concepts into a complete rule-based strategy.

  • Choose a small market list.
  • Give every timeframe a purpose.
  • Define the market context.
  • Define setup and confirmation rules.
  • Define stop, target, and risk rules.
  • Create no-trade conditions.
  • Keep the strategy simple and objective.

Review Lesson 6: Building Your First Trading Strategy

27. Module 6 Review: Backtesting & Forward Testing

Lesson 7 explained how to test a strategy with historical and new market data before depending on it with meaningful capital.

  • Keep strategy rules fixed during each test.
  • Hide future candles.
  • Record every valid setup.
  • Measure results in R.
  • Calculate win rate and expectancy.
  • Track drawdown and losing streaks.
  • Avoid hindsight bias and overfitting.
  • Forward test under realistic conditions.

Review Lesson 7: Backtesting & Forward Testing

28. The Complete Module 6 Execution Model

1

Read Context

Identify trend, structure, levels, liquidity, and timing.

2

Wait for Location

Allow price to reach the strategy’s setup area.

3

Require Confirmation

Wait for objective evidence before entering.

4

Define Invalidation

Place the stop where the idea becomes wrong.

5

Confirm Reward

Target realistic structure with acceptable reward.

6

Control Risk

Calculate position size and protect drawdown.

7

Execute the Plan

Place the trade without improvising.

8

Record and Improve

Journal the trade and evaluate the process.

Complete Trade Execution Model

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to complete the checklist before every trade?

Yes. With experience, some steps become faster, but the important checks should never disappear. The checklist is most valuable when the market is moving quickly and emotions are strongest.

What happens if one checklist item fails?

If the failed item is a required strategy rule, the trade should be skipped. Do not compensate for a missing condition by inventing extra confirmation elsewhere.

Can I enter before the confirmation candle closes?

Only if your tested strategy specifically permits an intrabar entry. Otherwise, wait for the candle close to avoid reacting to a signal that disappears before completion.

Should every trade have the same risk-to-reward ratio?

Not necessarily. The target should follow realistic structure. However, your strategy should define the minimum reward required before a setup becomes eligible.

Can a checklist make me miss trades?

Yes, and that is often beneficial. The purpose is to filter out trades that do not meet the full process, not to maximize the number of entries.

What is more important: the result or the process?

The process is more important over the long term. One trade can win or lose randomly, but disciplined execution determines whether a tested edge can appear across many trades.

When should I modify the checklist?

Modify it only after backtesting, forward testing, and journal data show that a specific change improves the strategy. Do not change it because of one emotional experience.

Knowledge Check Quiz

1. What is the main purpose of a trade execution checklist?

  1. To guarantee every trade wins
  2. To prevent important decisions from being skipped
  3. To increase the number of trades
  4. To remove the need for analysis

2. What should happen before position size is calculated?

  1. The profit target should be removed
  2. The stop loss and entry must be defined
  3. The trader should increase risk
  4. The trade should already be open

3. When should a trade be skipped?

  1. When any required strategy rule is missing
  2. When the setup looks exciting
  3. When a previous trade lost
  4. When the trader wants a larger target

4. What is a high-quality losing trade?

  1. A trade with no stop loss
  2. A trade where all rules were followed but the setup failed
  3. A trade with oversized risk
  4. A trade closed from fear

5. What should a trader do after entering?

  1. Invent a new management plan
  2. Widen the stop if price moves against the trade
  3. Follow the predetermined management rules
  4. Open several correlated positions

6. Which statement best summarizes Module 6?

  1. Find as many entries as possible
  2. Predict every market movement
  3. Build, test, and execute a complete rule-based trade process
  4. Use more indicators on every chart

Quiz Answer Key

Question 1 Answer

B. The checklist prevents important analysis, risk, timing, and execution steps from being forgotten.

Question 2 Answer

B. The entry and stop loss distance must be defined before the correct position size can be calculated.

Question 3 Answer

A. A trade should be skipped when any required strategy condition is missing.

Question 4 Answer

B. A high-quality losing trade followed every rule, controlled risk properly, and was simply invalidated by the market.

Question 5 Answer

C. Once the trade is active, management should follow the rules defined before entry.

Question 6 Answer

C. Module 6 teaches how to build, confirm, protect, test, and execute a complete trading strategy.

Key Takeaways

What You Must Remember

  • Professional execution begins before the setup appears.
  • Market context determines which trades are permitted.
  • Setup location comes before entry confirmation.
  • Confirmation must be objective and complete.
  • The stop loss belongs beyond invalidation.
  • The target must follow realistic market structure.
  • Position size is calculated from risk and stop distance.
  • Session timing, news, spreads, and liquidity can disqualify a trade.
  • A missing strategy rule means no trade.
  • Open trades should follow predetermined management rules.
  • A disciplined loss is better than a lucky rule-breaking win.
  • Every trade should be recorded and reviewed.
  • A tested edge only works when it is executed consistently.
Module 6 Complete

Trade Execution & Strategy Development Completed

You have completed all eight lessons in Module 6. You now understand how to build a complete setup, confirm entries, place stops, select targets, trade during the correct sessions, create a strategy, test its performance, and execute it through a professional checklist.

The next stage is to apply this knowledge consistently. Do not rush to add more complexity. Begin with one market, one setup, one trading window, and one clear risk model. Build evidence through repetition.

WePassChallenges - Module 6 Forex Trading Completion Award

Final Module Summary

Module 6 transformed technical knowledge into an executable trading process. You learned that professional trading is not one entry signal. It is a sequence of decisions that begins with context and ends with review.

A complete trade requires the correct market environment, a meaningful location, objective confirmation, logical invalidation, realistic reward, controlled position size, appropriate timing, and disciplined management.

You also learned that a strategy must be written, backtested, forward tested, and reviewed before it can be trusted. Testing reveals whether the rules have positive expectancy and whether the trader can execute them consistently.

Your goal is not to eliminate uncertainty. That is impossible. Your goal is to control every decision that is within your control and allow the tested edge to work over a meaningful series of trades.

Ready to Get Funded?

WePassChallenges offers professional challenge passing services and funded account management.

Get Started →