Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Let's figure out what’s really going on in the market when large capital starts moving prices. Smart money trading isn’t just a catchy name—it’s a methodology that helps you understand the logic of big money. Whales, hedge funds, banks—everyone follows the same rules, and once you learn to recognize them, trading becomes a completely different game.
The whole point is that smart money trading is the analysis of how large capital behaves. Big players act against the crowd; they deliberately create patterns that they want smaller traders to see, and then they break those patterns in an unexpected direction. Have you ever seen a beautiful triangle suddenly break to a “illogical” side? Or a support level that everyone was betting on, breaking through and then following with a sharp pullback? This isn’t random—it’s a hunt for stops and liquidity collection.
First of all, you need to understand the market structure. There are only three variants: an upward move (HH+HL—updating highs with higher lows), a downward move (LH+LL—updating lows with lower highs), and sideways movement, where the market oscillates between levels without a clear direction. It’s in a sideways range that a whale accumulates a position, obtaining the liquidity it needs. Smart money trading is primarily about understanding where this liquidity is and how a large player “hunts” to gather it.
The main difference from classic technical analysis is that most small participants use standard patterns and indicators, which often don’t work. Big players know this and intentionally draw formations for the crowd to see. The result—95% lose their assets. Classic TA becomes a tool for manipulation, not analysis.
Now let’s talk about key concepts. Swing is a turning point—three candles, where the middle candle has either a maximum (Swing High) or a minimum (Swing Low), and the neighboring candles have lower/higher values. Those are exactly the levels where small traders’ stops pile up—liquidity pools that the whale hunts for.
Deviation is when price moves outside the trading range. Often it’s a signal for a reversal and a return back into the channel. You can enter on the first attempts of the return, with a stop placed beyond the wick of the impulse breakout.
Imbalance forms when there’s a mismatch between buying and selling—on the chart it looks like a long candle that “breaks” through the shadows of the neighboring candles. Price will tend to go back and fill that “gap.” Entering at 0.5 Fibonacci gives a good risk-to-reward ratio.
Orderblock is the place where a large player traded a big volume. This is a key liquidity manipulation. In the future, order blocks act as support or resistance, a magnet that price will try to move toward. A bullish order block is the lowest candle of a downward move; a bearish one is the highest candle of an upward move.
Divergence is the divergence between price movement and an indicator. Bullish divergence (price lows are falling, while the indicator is rising) signals seller weakness and an upward reversal. Bearish (price highs are rising, while the indicator is falling)—indicates buyer weakness. On higher timeframes, signals are stronger; on lower timeframes, they’re often broken. Triple divergence is a very strong reversal setup.
Volumes show the real interest of participants. Rising volumes mean the trend is strong; declining volumes mean it’s weakening. In a bullish trend, buy volumes increase; in a bearish trend, sell volumes increase. Price rising while volumes fall is a signal of an upcoming reversal.
Three Drives Pattern is a series of higher highs or lower lows, often formed near support/resistance. Entry is when price enters the support zone or after the third extreme.
Three Tap Setup is similar to TDP, but without the third extreme. This is accumulation of a position by a large player in the support or resistance zone. Entry is on the second move (when collecting stops) or on the third retest.
It’s important to remember trading sessions: Asian (03:00-11:00), European (09:00-17:00), American (16:00-24:00) Moscow time. Within the day there are three cycles: accumulation (usually Asia), manipulation (Europe), distribution (America).
CME trades Bitcoin futures from Monday to Friday. Between the Friday close and the Monday open, a gap (gap) may form. On classic crypto exchanges, trading runs 24/7, so on weekends the price can change. Gaps act as a magnet for price—most of the time, they try to be filled. The smaller the gap, the faster it closes.
Don’t forget about indices. S&P500 has a positive correlation with Bitcoin—when the index rises, BTC usually rises too. DXY (the Dollar Index) has an inverse correlation—its rise is accompanied by crypto falling. Crypto is still young and depends heavily on traditional markets, so these indices help you understand the situation.
In the end, smart money trading is a way to see the market through the eyes of a large player. When you understand where it’s collecting liquidity, how it manipulates the crowd, and how it enters and exits positions—you can trade alongside it instead of against it. Keep this information—it’s worth it. Good luck with your trading.