Most beginners look at charts without understanding what exactly is depicted on them. Meanwhile, big players leave traces behind — and these traces can be read.
Order block: where the “whales” sit
Order block is an area where banks and large funds have opened positions. When you see the price suddenly reverse, it often means that something was entering here. And correctly so — it was them.
How it looks:
A few candles are going in one direction
Then suddenly a turn
The place where the turn began is the order-block.
Two main types:
Bullish — buying zone before the rise
Bearish — a selling zone before a decline
Imbalance: “gaps” on the chart
Imbalance is where demand or supply has outweighed to such an extent that a gap has emerged. The market does not like gaps — it always returns to fill them.
It's like if pages fell out of a book: the reader will want to read them. The same goes for prices — they will return to these gaps.
How to use this for beginners
1. We enter together with the “whales”
Find the order block
Wait for the price to return to it.
Enter there
2. Attention to Disbalance
If the imbalance matches the order block — the signal is strengthened.
This means that big players are going there too.
3. Stop-loss and profit
Stop below the order block
Profit at the next resistance level
To not mess up
Study historical charts — they are full of examples.
Combine with volume, Fibonacci, trend lines
On small timeframes (1M, 5M) blocks form frequently, but the signals are weak — beginners are better off with 1H, 4H, 1D.
First, practice on the demo
The essence is simple: order blocks and imbalances are the footprints of large players on the chart. Learn to read them, and you will enter not blindly, but alongside those who truly have money.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Order-block and imbalance: what is really happening behind the scenes of the chart
Most beginners look at charts without understanding what exactly is depicted on them. Meanwhile, big players leave traces behind — and these traces can be read.
Order block: where the “whales” sit
Order block is an area where banks and large funds have opened positions. When you see the price suddenly reverse, it often means that something was entering here. And correctly so — it was them.
How it looks:
Two main types:
Imbalance: “gaps” on the chart
Imbalance is where demand or supply has outweighed to such an extent that a gap has emerged. The market does not like gaps — it always returns to fill them.
It's like if pages fell out of a book: the reader will want to read them. The same goes for prices — they will return to these gaps.
How to use this for beginners
1. We enter together with the “whales”
2. Attention to Disbalance
3. Stop-loss and profit
To not mess up
The essence is simple: order blocks and imbalances are the footprints of large players on the chart. Learn to read them, and you will enter not blindly, but alongside those who truly have money.