Broker & Execution Mastery
Slippage โข Spread โข Order Types
Most traders lose not because their strategy is weak โ but because their execution is poor. Slippage, spreads, wrong order types, and panic entries can destroy even the best setup. This bonus module will make you execution-smart like professional traders.
Bonus Module Outcomes
Bonus Module B Lesson Map
Execution is the hidden edge. This module teaches you how brokers and order flow impact your trade.
Slippage Simulator
See how your expected entry price differs from actual execution price.
Expected Price
Executed Price
Slippage Loss
Spread Visual Tool (Bid vs Ask)
Spread is the gap between buyers and sellers. Higher spread means higher cost.
Bid Price
Ask Price
Spread Cost
Order Types Simulator
Choose order type and see the impact on execution quality.
Lesson 1: Slippage
Slippage is the invisible cost most traders ignore.
What Causes Slippage?
- Low liquidity (not enough buyers/sellers)
- High volatility (fast movement)
- Using market orders in sudden moves
- Trading illiquid stocks/options
Lesson 2: Spread
Spread is your entry fee. The wider it is, the harder to profit.
Spread Psychology
- Tight spread = institutional liquidity
- Wide spread = risky retail zone
- Options often have wide spread near expiry volatility
- Spread widens during panic moves
Lesson 3: Order Types
Knowing order types is basic professional trading skill.
Common Order Types
- Market Order: fastest but can slip
- Limit Order: controlled entry but may not execute
- Stoploss Order: protection against big loss
- Bracket Order: auto target + stoploss (if supported)
Lesson 4: Market Order vs Limit Order
Speed vs control. Both have their place.
When to Use Market Order?
- Very liquid stock/index
- Strong breakout candle with momentum
- Fast exit during emergency
When to Use Limit Order?
- Entry at support/resistance zone
- When spread is wide
- In options buying to avoid overpaying premium
Lesson 5: Stoploss Order Best Practices
Stoploss is not optional. It is professional survival.
Stoploss Best Practices
- Always place stoploss immediately after entry
- Use logical level stoploss, not random points
- Never widen stoploss after entry
- Stoploss should be based on structure, not emotion
- In volatile markets, use buffer to avoid small noise exit
ArthVed 9X Execution Checklist
Use this checklist before placing any trade.
Bonus Module Quiz (Broker & Execution)
Test your execution understanding before advanced modules.