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Honestly, when I first started trading, the hardest part was understanding exactly how big players position themselves. Then I came across the concepts of order blocks and imbalances — and everything started to make sense.
Let's figure out what an order block really is. It’s not just an area on the chart; it’s a trace left behind by large players — banks, funds, major traders. When they place large buy or sell orders en masse, they create a specific zone on the chart. And here’s an interesting point: the price often returns exactly to this zone, as if the market wants to "fill" the gap left behind.
How do you find such a zone? Usually, an order block forms right before a sharp reversal in price. Look at the candles: do you see a candle (or several candles) moving against the main trend? That’s your order block. If the price sharply rose, then before that there was a bearish candle — that’s a bearish order block. If the price fell, then a bullish order block preceded the decline.
Now, about imbalances. This is the second part of the puzzle. An imbalance is essentially an unfinished business on the market. When big players quickly place their orders, they leave “holes” on the chart — areas where the price hasn’t yet visited. The market has a habit of returning to these zones to fill them. On a candlestick chart, this looks like a gap between candles where there’s no retest.
What’s interesting: order blocks and imbalances work together. When you see an order block coinciding with an imbalance — it strengthens the signal. The market will almost certainly return to that zone.
For practical application, I recommend the following approach. First, identify an order block on the chart. Then wait for the price to retrace back into that area. If an imbalance is also present in the same zone — that’s your entry point. Place a limit order right in that block, set your stop-loss slightly below, and take-profit at the next resistance level.
What is an order block from a risk management perspective? It’s also a great reference point for setting stop-losses because order blocks often align with support and resistance levels. You immediately know where your protection should be.
My advice for beginners: don’t rush into a live account. Use a demo account and scroll through historical data. Look for examples of order blocks and imbalances. You’ll quickly get a feel for the logic. On lower timeframes (1M, 5M) these patterns form often, but signals are less reliable. Start with hourly (1H) or four-hour (4H) charts — they are much clearer.
Combine this with other tools. Fibonacci, volume, trend lines — all of these confirm your observations. The main thing is patience and discipline. Order blocks and imbalances are powerful tools for understanding the behavior of big capital. Once you learn to see them, trading becomes much more logical.