Getting Started
Pre-Order Checklist: From Novice to Pro Before You Place a Trade
Every experienced stock trader runs a pre-order checklist before placing a trade — the signal is just the starting point, not the green light. Whether you scanned for yesterday's top momentum picks or ran a systematic edge filter, what you do in the 15 minutes before market open determines whether that setup actually deserves your capital.
This guide layers the checklist by experience level. Start at Level 1. Add gates as your trading evolves. The goal is not to follow all 15 checks on day one — it's to understand why each gate exists and when it starts to matter.
Why a Pre-Order Checklist Exists
Markets are not static. A signal generated at 4:00 PM yesterday lives in yesterday's regime. By 9:30 AM today, three things may have changed: macro backdrop, overnight price action, and market sentiment. A signal that scored 75/100 at close can be a 40/100 setup by open.
The checklist below is organized as a progressive system. Each level adds gates without removing the ones before it.
Level 1 — Novice: 3 Checks Before Any Trade
You are new to scanning and executing. You need a short, repeatable checklist that prevents the worst entries. These three checks take under two minutes.
Check 1: VIX Level
The VIX (CBOE Volatility Index) measures expected market volatility over the next 30 days. High VIX = wide swings = wider stops needed = worse risk-reward on tight scalp setups.
Rule for novices: If VIX is above 25, sit out until you understand how volatility affects your stop distances.
Check 2: Gap Check on Your Stock
Did your stock gap up or down 2% or more from yesterday's close? Post-close drift signals assume a normal overnight. A large gap means the thesis may have already played out — or reversed entirely.
Pull up a 1-minute pre-market chart. If the gap is large and pre-market volume is thin (less than 20% of average daily volume), the gap is unreliable.
Check 3: Bid-Ask Spread
Liquidity is invisible until you need to exit. A wide bid-ask spread eats directly into your profit.
How to check: In your broker platform, look at the Level 1 quote before placing an order. For a $50 stock, a $0.50 spread (1%) means you need a 1%+ move just to break even.
Level 2 — Intermediate: Add 2 More Gates
You have been trading consistently for 2–6 months. You understand entries and exits. Now you add macro context and sector confirmation.
Gate 4: Macro Calendar Check
High-impact economic events create volatility spikes that make directional scalp signals unreliable. Check the economic calendar every morning before open.
High-impact events to watch: FOMC decisions, CPI/PPI releases, Non-Farm Payrolls, GDP prints. Any of these within 2 hours of your planned entry = skip or reduce dramatically.
Where to find the economic calendar?
Investing.com/economic-calendar and Forex Factory both show today's events with impact ratings (low/medium/high). Filter to United States, High impact only. Check it before 9:15 AM every trading day.
Gate 5: Sector ETF Strength Confirmation
Your individual stock does not live in isolation — it moves with its sector. If the sector ETF is weak in pre-market while your stock looks strong, the stock is likely to be dragged down at open.
| Stock Confirms Sector | Stock vs Sector Diverging | |
|---|---|---|
| Sector ETF direction | Same as your pick | Opposite to your pick |
| Pre-market volume | Sector ETF also elevated | ETF quiet, stock isolated |
| Signal conviction | High — proceed with full size | Low — isolated strength is fragile |
| Action | Enter at plan | Reduce to half size or skip |
Common sector ETFs: XLF (financials), XLK (tech), XLV (health), XLY (consumer discretionary), XLE (energy), XLI (industrials).
Level 3 — Pro: The Full Pre-Order System
You are running a systematic edge — scanner, signal scoring, overnight drift logic. You need every gate before execution. This level adds sentiment recheck, ATR-based stops, and correlation risk.
Gate 6: Signal Score Recheck
Your scanner ran at 4:00 PM yesterday. It is now 9:15 AM. Overnight news may have changed the picture.
Re-run or mentally recalculate your signal score with current data:
- RSI: still in the 55–70 momentum zone?
- MACD: histogram still expanding or has it flattened?
- Volume: did overnight trading volume confirm or deny yesterday's move?
Score threshold: Only proceed if the signal still clears your minimum threshold (typically 60+). Do not rationalize a borderline score — skip it.
Gate 7: ATR-Based Stop Calculation
Average True Range (ATR) is the most reliable measure of a stock's actual daily movement. Stops set without ATR context get hit by normal noise before the trade has a chance to work.
Calculate this before entering, not after. If the stop distance puts your loss above 2% of account, reduce position size.
What is ATR and how do I calculate it?
ATR (Average True Range) measures average daily price movement over N periods (typically 14). For a $50 stock with 14-day ATR of $1.20, your stop should be placed $1.80 below entry (1.5 × $1.20). Most broker platforms show ATR as a built-in indicator. In TradingView, add indicator → ATR → default 14 periods.
Gate 8: Correlation Risk Check
Running 3 picks from the same sector on the same day is not diversification — it is triple exposure to one theme. If that sector drops 2%, all three positions hit stop simultaneously.
Quick check: List your open positions and their sector ETF. If 2+ positions share the same ETF, either skip the new entry or close an existing one first.
Gate 9: Overnight Asia and Europe Check
US markets do not open in isolation. The S&P 500 future reacts to overnight action in Japan, Hong Kong, Germany, and the UK. Understanding the global overnight context takes 90 seconds.
Rule: If Asia AND Europe both closed down more than 1%, the macro backdrop is against momentum longs. Either skip or cut position size to 50%.
Gate 10: Execution Reality Check
The last gate is operational. A good setup with a broken execution layer loses money.
✓ API connection live (if bot-assisted)
✓ No pending orders on the symbol
✓ Order type confirmed (limit, not market)
✓ Position size calculated and entered
✗ Stale data (quotes not updating)
✗ Open position in same symbol
✗ Placing a market order on thin pre-market
✗ Stop price not pre-entered in platform
The Mindset Behind the System
You have 31 potential edges in any given scanning session. The pre-order gate system will void 30–40% of them. That is not a failure — that is the system working correctly.
Here is what the data shows about skipping bad setups:
The discipline to skip a setup that fails one gate — especially when that setup looks compelling — is the hardest skill in systematic trading. It is also the one that separates consistently profitable traders from traders who blame their signals.
Pre-Order Checklist: Quick Reference
Run these every day before any trade:
- VIX check — above 25? Sit out or go very small
- Gap check — stock gapped 2%+? Let it stabilize first
- Bid-ask spread — above 1% of price? Skip the trade
Estimated time: 90 seconds
Add these once you are comfortable with basics:
- VIX check
- Gap check
- Bid-ask spread check
- Macro calendar — any high-impact event in next 4 hours?
- Sector ETF confirmation — sector moving same direction as pick?
Estimated time: 3–4 minutes
Full system — run every session:
- VIX check
- Gap check
- Bid-ask spread check
- Macro calendar check
- Sector ETF confirmation
- Signal score recheck — still above threshold on fresh data?
- ATR stop calculation — stop placed, position sized from calculator
- Correlation risk — no more than 3 positions, max 2 same sector
- Overnight macro check — Asia and Europe direction
- Execution check — broker live, order type set, stop pre-entered
Estimated time: 8–12 minutes
Example: Running the Checklist on a Real Setup
Say your scanner flagged XYZ Corp (hypothetical) — a financial stock that rallied 3.2% on strong volume yesterday, RSI 61, MACD crossing up. Signal score: 74/100.
Here is how the checklist runs:
The CPI gate is the one that most novices miss. A strong signal on a financial stock right before an inflation print is not a good setup — it is a coinflip on the macro event.
Where to Go Next
Once your pre-order checklist is habit, the next layer is understanding how your signal scoring system interacts with market regimes. Two articles that build directly on this framework:
- Backtesting a Trading Strategy: What the Numbers Actually Tell You — how to validate that your scanner signal has real edge before live trading
- Risk of Ruin in Trading: The Math That Ends Accounts — the position sizing math behind Gate 7 and Gate 8 above