If you've ever entered a trade, placed your stop loss at the most logical swing high or low, watched the market tap your stop loss exactly, and then reverse immediately in your intended direction—you've been the victim of a liquidity sweep. In this guide, we'll teach you how to stop being the liquidity, and start trading the sweep.
Institutions need massive amounts of volume (liquidity) to enter their positions. They cannot simply hit "buy" or "sell" at market price. To fill their massive orders, they must engineer liquidity.
They do this by pushing price just beyond obvious levels of retail support and resistance (such as relative equal highs or recent swing lows). Retail traders place their stop losses in these obvious areas. When price breaks these levels, it triggers a cascade of retail stop losses (which are actually market orders), providing the exact liquidity the institutions need to enter their true, opposing positions.
To trade a liquidity sweep, you must wait for the trap to spring. Do not trade the breakout; trade the failure of the breakout. Here is the exact sequence to look for:
Understanding how liquidity concepts differ from standard retail concepts can be confusing. Read our guide on SMC vs ICT: What is the Difference? to clear up the methodology.
HSKY Suite features advanced Liquidity Sweep Detection, automatically alerting you when retail traders are being trapped so you can trade the reversal.
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