I've noticed that many beginners in trading overlook simple but powerful analysis tools. We're talking about order blocks and imbalances — concepts that help understand how big players (banks, funds) manipulate the market.



Let's start with what an order block is. Essentially, it's a zone on the chart where large buy or sell orders were placed. An interesting detail: these areas often coincide with market reversal points. It looks like the last candle (or group of candles) before a sharp move in the opposite direction. Do you see a bearish candle? Usually, a rise follows it. That’s your entry zone.

There are two types: bullish order block (buy zone before an uptrend) and bearish (sell zone before a downtrend). In practice, you look for a candle that sharply changed direction and draw the zone to the right of it.

Now, about the most interesting part — imbalances in trading. This occurs when demand far exceeds supply (or vice versa), and the price jumps sharply, leaving "empty" zones on the chart. Large players quickly place their orders, and the market leaves gaps between candles. These gaps are the imbalances.

Why is this important? The market tends to return to these "empty" spots to fill them. This becomes a great signal to enter a trade. Imbalances often indicate unfilled orders from big players.

How do they work together? When large players place orders (order blocks), it creates imbalances. Then, the price returns to this zone, and you can enter along with the big players. This simple combination of two tools gives you a significant advantage.

Practically, it looks like this. First, find an order block on the chart — an area where a reversal occurred. Then look for imbalances: are there gaps between candles where the price hasn't returned yet? If the imbalance coincides with the order block — it strengthens the signal. Place a limit buy order inside the block, set a stop-loss below, and take profit at the next resistance level.

A few tips. First, study historical charts. Just scroll through past data and look for examples. This develops your skill. Second, combine with other tools — Fibonacci levels, volume, trend lines. Third, always practice on a demo before trading with real money.

One important detail: on lower timeframes (1M, 5M) order blocks form often, but signals are less reliable. Beginners should start with 1H, 4H, or daily charts. The signals are clearer, and it’s psychologically easier.

The bottom line: order blocks and imbalances are not just theory. They are tools that reveal the real behavior of big players. They help identify entry and exit points. The key is proper analysis, patience, and discipline. Start with a demo account, practice the technique, and results will follow.
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