One-Click Execution: Placing Trades Straight From the Chart
Speed matters at entry. See how a live chart with one-tap BUY/SELL and auto-calculated stop-loss and take-profit gets you into a position across every account without leaving the screen.
The distance between seeing your setup and being in the trade is measured in clicks — and on a fast-moving symbol, every extra dialog is money. One-click execution collapses that distance: BUY and SELL live on the chart itself, and one tap opens the position on every enabled account.
Protected by default
Speed without protection is how accounts die, so every one-click order goes out with stop-loss and take-profit attached — auto-calculated from your configured distances, then adjustable by dragging the lines on the chart. Drag an SL or TP and the change mirrors to the matching position on every account; nothing moves unless you move it.
The chart shows your entry, SL and TP as live lines with floating P&L per line, and when several accounts hold the fanned-out position, the marker tells you how many.
The same chart is the copier
This isn't a chart bolted onto a copier — the chart IS the order ticket for the whole fan-out. Gold, indices, FX pairs and crypto CFDs stream live; futures accounts get their own contracts (MNQ, MGC and friends) with per-second candles. Close is one click too, and closing the leader propagates to every member.
What one click means when you run many accounts
On a single account, one-click trading saves seconds. Across five accounts it changes the character of your execution: the difference between the first and last account's entry stops being 'however long it takes me to switch terminals and retype the size' and becomes the copier's fan-out time. Entries that used to arrive at five slightly different prices arrive as one decision, and the per-account lot math — the thing most likely to go wrong under pressure — is precomputed from each account's balance before you ever click.
The lot multiplier control matters here too: step size up or down (×2, back to ×1) without opening a settings page, and the scaled size applies proportionally on every account in the fan-out.
Speed is not a substitute for discipline
One honest caution: making entries frictionless also makes overtrading frictionless. One-click execution earns its keep when it's paired with the guardrails that don't care how fast you clicked — daily loss limits and session locks that lock an account the moment its rules are breached, and a journal that records every fill automatically so Friday-you can audit what Tuesday-you actually did. Fast in, protected always, recorded without writing anything down.