Receiving a clear signal is one thing; executing it correctly is another. This guide takes you step by step, from the moment a signal arrives until the trade is closed.
First: The Components of a Signal
Every ForexBro signal contains:
- Pair / instrument: e.g. EUR/USD or Gold XAU/USD.
- Direction: Buy or Sell.
- Entry point: the price at which you open the trade.
- Three targets (TP1, TP2, TP3): levels to take profit gradually.
- Stop loss (SL): the price at which the trade closes to protect your capital.
Second: Before You Open the Trade
Entering close to the suggested price matters. If the market has already moved far from the entry point by the time the signal reaches you, it's better to skip it than to chase — the signal was built around that specific price.
The stop loss is a core part of the signal, not optional. A trade without a stop loss is not executing the signal — it's gambling against it.
Third: Position Sizing (Risk Management)
This is the most important step, and it's your responsibility. The simple professional rule: never risk more than 1%–2% of your capital on a single trade. The distance between the entry and the stop loss (in pips) is what determines the proper lot size — not "how much I want to win."
Fourth: Managing the Targets
The three targets let you take profit in stages. A common approach: close part of the trade at the first target, then move the stop loss to the entry (breakeven) to protect the rest of the trade from turning into a loss. When profit is locked, the tracker sends you an automatic alert.
Fifth: Following the Updates
After opening, you don't need to watch the screen constantly. The ForexBro tracker sends you live updates: a target hit, profit locked, or a close. All you have to do is mirror these updates on your trade at your broker.
The Bottom Line
The signal gives you the "what" and the "where." The "how much you risk" and "how precisely you execute" are your skill. Stick to the entry, never ignore the stop loss, and size every trade on a fixed risk percentage — and you'll find that long-term results follow discipline more than they follow any single signal.



