I've noticed that many beginners in trading overlook one important thing — they just look at the charts without understanding what’s behind them. Turns out, all the market logic is hidden there. Today, I want to share what helped me understand the structure: order blocks and imbalances.



Let's start with order blocks. This is simply an area on the chart where big players (banks, funds) have placed a bunch of orders. When they do this, the price usually starts to move significantly. It looks like this: you see the last candle or several candles that go against the trend, and then the price suddenly reverses. That area is the order block.

There are two types. A bullish order block is a zone where buying occurred, and then the price went up. A bearish order block is the opposite — a selling zone before a decline. In practice, it looks like this: a bearish candle, a decline to the left of it, then a bounce up from support, and this candle becomes our reference point.

Now about imbalances. This is when demand sharply exceeds supply (or vice versa), and the price moves rapidly, leaving “empty” spaces. An imbalance is like an unfinished order that the market wants to fill. You see on the chart a zone between the low of one candle and the high of the next, where the price didn’t return? That’s it. The market will definitely come back to fill that gap.

How are they connected? Large players place orders (order blocks), which creates an imbalance, the price jumps, and then it returns to fill that void. And this is where we can enter a trade along with them. Pretty neat, right?

How to use this? Find an order block, wait for the price to return to it, check if there’s an imbalance — if yes, it strengthens the signal. Enter with a limit order, place your stop below the block, and take profit at the next resistance level.

I also noticed: order blocks often coincide with support and resistance. This is very useful for risk management. Imbalances often form at the start of trends, so if you learn to spot them, you can catch the move from the very beginning.

My advice: start with higher timeframes (1H, 4H, 1D). On smaller (1M, 5M), order blocks appear constantly, but signals are less reliable. It’s better to practice on historical data, look at examples, then try on a demo. And definitely combine them with other tools — Fibonacci, volume, trend analysis.

Basically, order blocks and imbalances are your way to peek behind the scenes of price formation and understand how the capital of big players moves. When you learn to see this, trading becomes much clearer. The main thing is patience, discipline, and constant practice.
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