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Comment construire une liste de surveillance qui aide réellement

La plupart des listes de surveillance sont des usines à bruit. Apprenez à créer une liste courte et à fort signal d'instruments qui s'aligne avec votre stratégie et votre session.

DC

David Chen

VP Product

31 mars 2026
3 min de lecture

title: "How to Build a Watchlist That Actually Helps" description: "Most watchlists are noise factories. Learn how to curate a short, high-signal list of instruments that aligns with your strategy and session." slug: "how-to-build-a-watchlist-that-actually-helps" publishedAt: "2026-03-31" author: name: "David Chen" role: "VP Product" avatarInitials: "DC" tags: ["education", "tools"] heroEmoji: "🔍" ogImageHint: "Trading watchlist curation strategy" featured: false

Introduction

The default TradingView watchlist has fifty symbols, ten timeframes, and three news tickers screaming for attention. It is designed to keep you engaged, not to help you trade. A professional watchlist is the opposite: small, intentional, and ruthlessly filtered.

This article walks through the exact process we teach at BRIZTRADE for building a watchlist that reduces decision fatigue and increases the quality of your setups.

Start With Your Session, Not Your Favorites

The most common mistake traders make is filling a watchlist with instruments they like instead of instruments that move during their trading hours. If you trade the London session, your primary focus should be EUR, GBP, and CHF crosses. If you trade New York, add USD and CAD. If you trade Asia, JPY and AUD dominate.

A session-aligned watchlist has two advantages. First, you are watching markets when liquidity is deepest and spreads are tightest. Second, you avoid the psychological trap of stalking a market that is asleep, which leads to overtrading low-quality setups out of boredom.

Pro tip

Limit your core watchlist to eight symbols. That is enough diversification to find a setup almost every day, and few enough that you can memorize key levels without looking at a chart.

Filter by Volatility and Structure

Not all instruments in your session are tradeable. Some have erratic, news-driven spikes that destroy technical setups. Others have such low volatility that the spread consumes most of the potential move.

We recommend filtering by average true range (ATR) relative to spread. A simple rule: the 14-day ATR should be at least 30 times the typical spread during your session. If EURUSD has a 60-pip ATR and a 0.3-pip spread, the ratio is 200—excellent. If an exotic cross has a 40-pip ATR and a 15-pip spread, the ratio is 2.6—untradeable.

Structure matters too. Instruments that respect support and resistance cleanly are preferable to those that gap and reverse randomly. You can measure structure quality by backtesting a simple support-bounce strategy on the instrument and checking the win rate. If a naive strategy works, the instrument has clean structure.

Categorize by Setup Type

Once you have your shortlist, organize it by the type of trade you expect to take. At BRIZTRADE, we use three categories:

  • Trend continuation: Instruments in a clear directional move on the daily chart, offering pullback entries on the hourly.
  • Range plays: Instruments oscillating between well-defined support and resistance, offering mean-reversion entries.
  • Breakout candidates: Instruments coiling into a tight consolidation near a major level, offering explosive directional moves.

Each category gets its own sub-watchlist. When you open your terminal, you know exactly what you are looking for. If none of the trend-continuation instruments are pulling back, you do not force a trade. You move to the range-play list.

Note

An instrument can change categories. EURUSD might be a range play for three weeks, then break out and become a trend-continuation trade. Update your labels every weekend during your review session.

The Weekly Reset Ritual

A watchlist is a living document, not a monument. Every Sunday, spend twenty minutes doing the following:

  1. Remove any instrument that has violated your volatility filter.
  2. Check economic calendars for high-impact events that could gap your core symbols.
  3. Re-categorize each instrument based on the current weekly chart structure.
  4. Add one experimental instrument—something outside your comfort zone with a paper-trade allocation.

That last step is critical. It prevents your watchlist from becoming so rigid that you miss regime changes. In 2023, traders who refused to add crypto to their forex watchlists missed a six-month divergence trade that outperformed every G7 pair.

Further Reading

  • "Trading in the Zone" by Mark Douglas
  • BRIZTRADE Academy: Chart Analysis course
  • "The Art and Science of Technical Analysis" by Adam Grimes

About the author: David Chen is BRIZTRADE's VP of Product and a former prop trader. He designed the firm's watchlist and alert system and trades a personal account focused on Asian-session forex crosses.

DC

David Chen

VP Product

Publié le 31 mars 2026.