What is Watchlist?
A watchlist is a pre-selected set of instruments you will monitor for valid setups.
Indian market context (NSE)
Reference levels: Nifty 50 at 24,300, Reliance Industries at ₹1,300, Bank Nifty futures at 55,000 (lot size 30). Examples below show how Watchlist shows up on Indian index, equity, and futures books — update to live quotes in your journal.
Nifty 50 perspective
Watchlist in Indian context at Nifty 24,300: apply SEBI/regulatory framing where relevant and tag index trades separately in weekly review.
Reliance Industries perspective
Watchlist using Reliance at ₹1,300 as a liquid large-cap example — adjust numbers to your live quote and contract note.
Bank Nifty futures perspective
Watchlist with Bank Nifty futures at 55,000 — respect lot size 30 and quarterly vs monthly contract rules on NSE.
How to validate
- Validate Watchlist with a written rule and at least 20 tagged examples.
- Ask whether the reading changed because of process or one outlier trade.
- Compare two independent time windows before adjusting position size.
- Document validation date in weekly review notes.
How to track in TradeLyser
- Mention Watchlist in trade comments when it influenced the decision.
- Mirror the term in weekly review questions for consistency.
- Filter trades mentioning the concept during monthly analytics.
- Cross-link to related glossary terms in mentor notes.
Best practices
- Teach Watchlist the same way to mentors and peers — shared vocabulary.
- Re-read this page after major rule changes to Watchlist usage.
- Prefer one improvement per month over ten simultaneous tweaks.
- Link learn articles when Watchlist needs deeper study.
Common pitfalls
- Using Watchlist buzzwords without measurable journal tags.
- Copying another trader’s Watchlist rule without sample size context.
- Skipping weekly review because the term feels “basic”.
- Letting social media redefine Watchlist mid-quarter.
How to use this in TradeLyser
Rebuild watchlist weekly from liquidity and playbook fit; log why symbol was on list at entry.
Related terms
Day trading opens and closes positions within the same session, avoiding overnight gap risk on cash products.
Liquidity describes depth and ease of entering/exiting at stable prices. Nifty top names differ sharply from illiquid small caps.
A setup is the specific pattern, level, and confirmation rule that must be present before entry.
A trading plan is a written contract with yourself: what you trade, when you trade, how much you risk, and how you review. It turns discretion into measurable rules.
FAQ
Watchlist same as portfolio?
No — watchlist is opportunity set; portfolio is exposure.
Add midcaps to Nifty day list?
Only if spread and size rules still work.
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