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I noticed that many traders talk about Smart Money Concept, but very few really leverage what makes this approach powerful — the Fair Value Gap. Honestly, it’s one of the most underrated concepts in today’s technical trading.
So, what exactly is the FVG? It’s simply an area where the market moved so quickly that it skipped over certain price levels. Imagine a bearish candle, followed by a strong bullish impulse, then a small pullback. Between the top of the first candle and the bottom of the third, there’s a gap — that’s your FVG. It’s where institutions accumulated at high volume, but couldn’t fill all of their orders. And that’s why price always comes back there.
The interesting thing is that institutions don’t find all the liquidity at the same price. So they push prices quickly, then pull the market back to fill the remaining orders. It’s almost mechanical. The FVG becomes a price magnet — a zone the market is magnetically drawn to in order to close the imbalance.
How do you use it concretely? First, you identify the major trend. Look at the market structure — is there a bullish or bearish BOS (Break of Structure)? Next, you look for your three-candle formation with this characteristic gap. Once you’ve marked your FVG, you simply wait for the retracement. When price comes back into this zone, you look for a confirmation candle — that’s your entry signal. Stop loss logically below the FVG or below the last swing, and you target either the previous high or a higher liquidity zone.
But here’s the secret most people miss: FVG trading is never a standalone strategy. The real magic happens when you combine it with other elements. Add market structure to the equation, and your profit ratio improves dramatically. If your FVG forms exactly where an institutional order block exists, that’s a massive confluence. Why? Because the order block is the foundation of Smart Money, and the FVG is the imbalance. Together, they indicate concentrated institutional interest.
Timing is crucial too. On the 4H and 1H charts, you identify strong institutional zones. The 15 min and 5 min timeframes are used to confirm and fine-tune your entry. Some traders even scalp on 1 min, but that requires real mastery and confluence from higher timeframes.
I’m going to give you a concrete example. On BTC/USDT, a bullish BOS formed on the 1H. The impulsive candle created an FVG between 62 000 and 62 600 dollars. The next day, the price returned to that zone around 62 300. On the 15 min chart, you get a bullish engulfing confirmation. Entry at 62 350, stop loss at 62 100, target at 63 200 and up. Result? A solid profit with minimal risk — that’s what proper FVG trading looks like.
Now, add a balayage de liquidité to this scenario. If the price first performs a chasse aux stops of a recent support (chasse aux stops), and then enters the bullish FVG, that’s the most aggressive entry zone possible. It’s when you truly have all the elements aligned — structure, imbalance, and liquidity confirmation.
Risk management: never risk more than 1 to 2% per trade. Your stop loss should always be at a logical place — below the FVG, below an order block, or below a swing. For take profits, follow the structure or use a multi-TP strategy. And record every FVG trade you make. Journaling is how you truly learn.
The key takeaway? FVG trading changes the game, but only if you use it correctly. Never by itself. Always with confluences — market structure, order blocks, balayage de liquidité, and analysis of higher timeframes. It’s this combination that protects you from the traps of retail trading and lets you trade on the institutions’ side. If you really want to level up to a professional level, this is an indispensable strategy to master.