During-Trade Risk Checklist

The discipline of managing an open position, where the main risk is no longer the market but the temptation to abandon the plan you made before entering.

During-Trade Checklist: While a trade is open, the job is to execute the plan you already made, not to renegotiate it. Honour the stop where it is, never widen it to avoid a loss, add or trim only by written rules, and stay aware of margin, liquidity and event or expiry gap risk. The most dangerous moment is when an open loss tempts you to move the stop or double down; the checklist exists to stop that. This is educational discipline, not a signal.

Once a trade is live, your analysis is done and the real test is behavioural. Almost every large avoidable loss comes from changing the plan mid-trade: widening the stop, holding past the exit, or adding to a loser to lower the average. This checklist keeps management mechanical so that a normal adverse move does not become a decision made in fear. The rules below assume you set a stop and a plan before entry, as in the Pre-Trade Checklist.

Protect the stop

  • Confirm the stop is still where you placed it, and resist any urge to widen it to avoid being stopped out.
  • If the trade moves against you, honour the stop when it is hit; a hit stop is a cost of business, a moved stop is how a small loss becomes a large one.
  • Never average down on a losing position outside a pre-planned, pre-sized scaling rule; adding to a loser increases risk exactly when the thesis is weakening.
  • Only trail or tighten the stop in the direction that reduces risk, never loosen it.
  • Confirm the stop order is actually live at the broker, not just a mental note, especially for overnight positions.
  • Remember a stop caps loss only when the market trades through it; for gap-prone positions, keep size small enough that a gap past the stop is still survivable.

Manage the position on plan

  • Scale in or out only according to written rules decided before entry, at pre-defined levels and sizes.
  • If you take partial profit, move the stop on the remainder to protect capital, not to give the trade unlimited new room.
  • Confirm total portfolio heat is still within its cap; a new correlated trade elsewhere may have quietly raised your aggregate risk.
  • Do not add a fresh position that is highly correlated with this one just because it is working; that concentrates rather than diversifies.
  • Check free margin (SPAN plus exposure) has not eroded toward a margin call as the position or volatility moved against you.
  • Resist moving the profit target further away out of greed once price approaches it, unless a written trailing rule says so.
  • Keep a note of why you are still in the trade; if the original reason has gone, the trade should too.

Watch the market context

  • On or near expiry, watch for accelerating theta decay and pin risk, and for far OTM options becoming illiquid and hard to exit.
  • Before a scheduled event, results, RBI policy, budget or major data, decide in advance whether to hold, hedge or reduce, since gaps can jump the stop.
  • Watch for a sharp India VIX move, which repriced options and can widen spreads and raise margin.
  • Check liquidity in real time: if the bid-ask has widened, plan for slippage on exit rather than being surprised by it.
  • Be aware of circuit limits and the risk of being locked into a position that cannot be exited at the stop price.
  • Confirm you are not staring at the screen and micro-managing a trade whose plan is already set; over-monitoring often triggers premature, emotional exits.

Managed well, an open trade needs few decisions, because most were made before entry. When it closes, move to the Post-Trade Review Checklist.

Frequently asked questions

Should I ever move my stop while a trade is open?
Only in the direction that reduces risk, such as trailing it up on a winning long. Never widen a stop to avoid taking a loss, because that converts a defined, small loss into an open-ended one and destroys the entire purpose of having a stop. The most damaging habit in trading is moving stops away from price under stress.
Is it ever right to average down on a losing trade?
Only if adding at a lower price was part of a written, pre-sized scaling plan set before entry, with the combined risk still inside your limit. Averaging down impulsively to lower your entry price increases exposure precisely as the market tells you the thesis is failing, and it is a classic route to a fatal loss.
How closely should I monitor an open position?
Enough to honour your stop and follow your scaling rules, but not so closely that you micro-manage and exit on emotion. If your stop and target are set at the broker, constant screen-watching mostly adds temptation to override the plan. For gap-prone or event-exposed trades, monitoring matters more; for a defined-risk trade with orders in place, less is often better.
What should I do before a results or policy event while in a trade?
Decide in advance whether to hold, hedge or reduce, because a scheduled event can gap the price straight past your stop overnight. If the position is large relative to the possible gap, reducing size or hedging is the disciplined choice. Never assume the stop will fill at your price through an event; it caps loss only when the market trades continuously through it.
Why is expiry day especially risky for an open option position?
Because theta decay accelerates, pin risk near the strike rises, and far out-of-the-money options can turn illiquid so exiting means large slippage or no fill at all. Short options can also see sharp margin and mark-to-market swings. Plan your expiry-day exits in advance rather than hoping to trade out at the last moment.
How do I stop myself from exiting a good trade too early?
Rely on the written exit plan you made before entry rather than reacting to every tick. If you set a target and a trailing rule in advance, follow them, and separate the discomfort of an open profit from an actual reason to exit. Emotional early exits usually come from watching too closely, not from a change in the trade's logic.

Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.

Educational content only — not investment advice. See our Risk Disclosure and Methodology.