When to use this
- Testing a strategy before committing real money
- Tracking a research idea to see how it ages
- Practicing order workflows
- Comparing how different strategies perform
Step 1: Describe the trade
Tell the Agent what you want in plain language:Step 2: Review the impact before it executes
A good habit is asking for the consequences before the trade goes through. The Agent can show how the trade changes your portfolio:Step 3: Use limit orders when you want a price
You are not limited to market orders. Set a price:Step 4: Manage open orders
Limit orders are fully managed by the Agent. It can see order IDs and cancel a pending order directly by ticker, so you do not need to go into the UI to clean up:Adjusting positions
Trimming and adding work the same way:Common mistakes
- Trading without checking impact. Always look at how a trade changes concentration and risk before executing.
- Forgetting it is a test. Paper trading is for learning. Use it to validate a process, then decide about real capital separately.
- Ignoring coverage limits. Paper trading coverage can be narrower than research coverage. Confirm the market is supported before building a workflow around it.
Current limitation
Paper trading coverage may differ from research coverage. Check supported markets before relying on a trading workflow in a given market.Related
- Portfolio and Paper Trading concept — how it works
- Build a portfolio — construct a portfolio from scratch
- Portfolio health check — review what you’ve built
- Paper trading prompts — more templates