The Execution Map organizes the levels that matter most for the current session. Instead of keeping mental notes across multiple sources, you get one structured ladder of levels inside the live panel.
What you see
The map is built from three level families:
| Level family | What it means | How traders use it |
|---|---|---|
| Intraday | Key algorithmic levels for the current session. | Primary reaction and execution levels for the day. |
| HTF | Higher-time-frame levels that may act as support or resistance. | Context for larger reactions, breakouts, and exhaustion. |
| Prior | Important prior-session reference points. | Useful for carryover context, acceptance, rejection, and gap behavior. |
How to use it as a trader
1. Plan before price gets there
The map is most valuable before the touch. Mark the levels that matter, then decide in advance whether you care about reaction, breakout, or no-trade.
2. Separate level quality from market context
A strong level in a weak market environment is different from a strong level with Market State, Internals, and Options Flow aligned behind it. The map tells you location; the framework tells you quality of context.
3. Track confluence
When an Intraday level sits near an HTF or Prior level, that zone may matter more. Confluence can strengthen both reaction areas and breakout areas.
4. Use it with live trades
Live trades make more sense when you know exactly where they are happening. The Execution Map gives the location context around those entries and exits.
Important notes
- The Execution Map is a level framework, not an auto-trigger system.
- A level becomes more useful when you combine it with Trade Desk Insights and the broader market framework.
- Not every level needs a trade. The map helps you stay selective.