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When I first started learning technical analysis, I thought charts were just a bunch of candles. But then I realized: every price movement hides the logic of big players. And here are two tools that truly changed my approach to trading — order blocks and what is called imbalance.
Let's understand what is really happening in the market. Imbalance is not just an empty space on the chart. It’s a trace left by large participants when they quickly enter their positions. Imagine: the price suddenly jumps up or down, leaving behind an “unfilled” zone. The market remembers this and sooner or later returns there. It’s like accidentally leaving a door open — someone will definitely want to close it.
Now, about order blocks. These are areas on the chart where big players — banks, funds, institutional traders — placed their orders. Usually, these are the last few candles before the price sharply changes direction. If the price was falling and then suddenly reversed upward, the candles right before the reversal are the order block. Buyers were sitting there, absorbing supply, and the price moved up.
There are two types. Bullish order block — a zone where buying accumulated before an uptrend. Bearish order block — the opposite, a zone of selling before a downtrend. In practice, it looks simple: take the last candle of the opposite direction, and there’s your zone.
How does imbalance look visually? It’s the gap between the low of one candle and the high of the next, or the gap between candle bodies where the price simply didn’t visit. The market creates these voids when it moves too quickly. And then, as a rule, it returns to fill them. This is one of the most reliable signals I’ve seen.
Why do these two tools work together? Because they describe the same process from different angles. Large players place orders (order block), creating a demand and supply (imbalance), the price moves quickly, leaving gaps, and then it returns to fill those gaps. And at this moment, when the price returns to the order block, you have the opportunity to enter a trade along with the big players.
How to apply this in practice? First — look for an order block. Check the chart, find the moment when the price sharply reversed. A few candles before the reversal — that’s your zone. Second — determine if there’s an imbalance nearby or inside this block. Is there an unfilled area? Third — wait for the return. When the price comes back into the order block, it often becomes a good entry point.
For risk management: set your stop-loss below the order block, take-profit at the next resistance level. And remember, order blocks often coincide with classic support and resistance levels. This strengthens the signal.
On lower timeframes — 1 minute, 5 minutes — order blocks form constantly, but signals are less reliable. I recommend beginners start with hourly, 4-hour, or daily charts. The signals are clearer, and you have more time to make decisions.
Practical tip: review historical data. Look for examples of order blocks and imbalances in the past. See how they played out. This will give you intuition. Then combine these tools with Fibonacci levels, volume, trend lines. One tool is good, but multiple confirmations are much better.
And of course, practice on a demo account. Work out the technique before risking real money. Trading is a skill, and like any skill, it requires practice.
Order blocks and imbalances are not magic; they are simply ways to understand where big players are sitting and where the price might go. These are tools for reading the market. They help you see not just the price movement, but the logic behind it. And when you start seeing that logic, trading becomes less chaotic and more predictable. The main thing — patience, discipline, and continuous learning.