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Recently, I noticed that many newcomers in the market confuse two key concepts that actually define technical analysis. We're talking about order blocks and imbalances. If you understand them, the entire market starts to read much differently.
Let me start with the most important. An imbalance is not something complicated — it's simply a zone on the chart where demand sharply exceeds supply or vice versa. When big players quickly place their volumes, they leave empty spaces between candles. The market will inevitably return to fill these gaps. It's like someone walking through a crowd and leaving an empty spot — the crowd will inevitably fill that vacuum.
Now about order blocks. Essentially, these are areas where large players, banks, hedge funds, have placed their big orders. They usually form during trend reversals. See a candle that moves against the trend? That’s often an order block. After such a candle, a significant move usually follows.
When I look at a chart, I focus on these points. A bullish order block is a zone where selling occurred before a rise. A bearish one is a zone of buying before a fall. Do you understand the logic? Large players first accumulate a position in one direction, then start closing it, and the market follows their actions.
A very important point: imbalance is not just a fancy term, it’s a signal of unfilled orders. When I see such a zone, I know the price will return there. It works like a magnet. Why? Because those who didn’t get the desired price will wait for a return. And those who already entered will add to their position.
Here’s how I apply this in practice. First, I identify an order block on the chart. Then I check if there’s an imbalance nearby. If they coincide — it strengthens the signal. I place a limit order to enter, set a stop-loss below the block, and take profit at the next resistance level.
For beginners, the main rule: don’t chase signals on lower timeframes. On the hourly, 4-hour, or daily charts, signals are much more reliable. On minute charts, order blocks form constantly, but noise is everywhere too. Start with higher intervals.
Another tip: combine this with other tools. Fibonacci levels, volume, trend lines — all help confirm the signal. And definitely practice on a demo account before risking real money. Review historical data, find examples of order blocks and imbalances, understand how they worked in the past.
In the end, imbalance is not magic, it’s just a reflection of the behavior of big players in the market. When you see these zones, you see traces of their actions. Order blocks and imbalances are tools that help you enter the market alongside those who truly move the price. If you learn to read them, half the work is already done. All that’s left is discipline and patience.