{"id":671924,"date":"2025-11-28T12:23:36","date_gmt":"2025-11-28T11:23:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/?p=671924"},"modified":"2025-11-28T15:20:50","modified_gmt":"2025-11-28T14:20:50","slug":"how-to-read-the-market-through-liquidity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ftmo.com\/en\/how-to-read-the-market-through-liquidity\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Read the Market Through Liquidity"},"content":{"rendered":"
Liquidity is one of the most important yet misunderstood concepts in trading<\/strong>. Many traders hear the term daily, but only a small percentage truly understand what liquidity represents, where it comes from, and how to use it to improve entries, confirmations and targets.<\/em><\/p>\n To make things clearer, this article breaks liquidity down in a straightforward, beginner-friendly way while still offering insights that more advanced traders can apply immediately.<\/em><\/p>\n Liquidity<\/strong> refers to how easily an instrument can be bought or sold at a stable price<\/strong>. Based on this, markets generally fall into two broad categories:<\/p>\n \u2022 Highly liquid markets<\/strong> \u2022 Low liquidity markets<\/strong> Liquidity, however, is more than just execution speed. For traders, it also indicates where buy and sell orders are resting in the market<\/strong>. These orders sit passively until they are triggered. When price reaches an area filled with resting orders<\/strong>, the market reacts. It may reject the level, pause, or push through it entirely.<\/p>\n Understanding where these orders sit helps traders read price behaviour more accurately<\/strong> and gives them a clearer sense of market direction.<\/p>\n A common belief, especially among newer traders, is that liquidity exists only above swing highs<\/strong> and below swing lows<\/strong>. Many assume these two areas hold the majority of stop-loss and take-profit orders.<\/p>\n There is some truth here because obvious technical levels tend to attract orders. Even so, this is only part of the picture. Liquidity does not sit only at highs and lows<\/strong>. Resting orders can exist anywhere traders or institutions choose to participate. Since every participant places limit orders differently, liquidity often forms in a much wider range of areas than most expect.<\/p>\n Liquidity builds wherever significant orders accumulate. The most common areas include:<\/p>\n \u2022 Market structure turning points<\/strong> \u2022 Consolidation boundaries<\/strong> \u2022 Imbalance zones (inefficiencies)<\/strong> \u2022 High-volume nodes<\/strong> \u2022 Round numbers and psychological levels<\/strong> Recognising these locations gives traders a clearer map of where liquidity is likely to appear and helps them anticipate market behaviour with greater precision.<\/p>\nWhat liquidity really means<\/h2>\n
Major foreign exchange pairs, global indices and large capitalisation stocks fall into this group. These instruments allow traders to place orders with minimal slippage.<\/p>\n
Some smaller or emerging cryptocurrencies fit here. These instruments often move faster, create wider spreads and produce sharper spikes.<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/h3>\nThe myth: liquidity always sits above swing highs and below swing lows<\/h2>\n
Where liquidity actually forms in the market<\/h2>\n
\n<\/b>Zones where previous buying or selling occurred attract new interest.<\/span><\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Range highs and lows often contain large clusters of orders.<\/span><\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Gaps or fast moves usually leave untested areas where orders remain.<\/span><\/p>\n
\n<\/b>Price levels that historically traded heavy volume tend to accumulate new liquidity.<\/span><\/p>\n
\n<\/b>A natural magnet for limit orders from both retail and institutional flows.<\/span><\/p>\n