Tick Data vs Volume Data: Choosing the Right Feed
Tick and volume data feed different order flow tools; choosing between tick charts, volume charts, delta, and CVD depends on instrument and your objective.
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Tick Data vs Volume Data: Choosing the Right Feed
A tick is one trade at one price, regardless of size. Volume is the number of contracts/shares in that trade. One 1,000-lot trade is one tick but 1,000 volume. The distinction drives which chart and indicator you should use.
Tick charts
A tick chart prints a new candle every N trades (e.g., every 2,000 ticks). Activity-based, not time-based.
- Strength: during fast moves, ticks print more candles, revealing detail time charts hide. During lulls, fewer candles — less noise.
- Best for: intraday scalping, identifying momentum bursts, reading climax (a 2,000-tick candle with huge volume = heavy participation per trade).
- Weakness: a single large institutional order inflates tick count without signaling sustained participation.
Volume charts
A volume chart prints a new candle every N contracts/shares (e.g., every 5,000 volume).
- Strength: every candle represents equal participation. Breakouts show as multiple same-sized candles in one direction.
- Best for: identifying genuine participation, removing size distortion, and reading delta/CVD cleanly.
- Weakness: a 1-lot retail trade and a 500-lot institutional trade look identical on a tick chart but very different on a volume chart — this is a feature, not a bug.
When to use which
| Goal | Use |
|---|---|
| Scalp entries, momentum bursts | Tick chart (1,000–2,000 ticks) |
| Participation / absorption | Volume chart (5,000+ contracts) |
| Footprint / delta analysis | Volume-based (each cell = real size) |
| Climax detection | Tick chart with volume overlay |
Delta and CVD
Delta = market buy volume − market sell volume for one candle. Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) sums delta across the session.
- Use delta/CVD only with real volume data — not tick counts. On a volume chart, delta reflects actual aggressive size.
- CVD divergence (price new high, CVD lower) signals absorption or exhaustion.
Instrument warnings
- Futures (ES, NQ, CL): real exchange volume. Both tick and volume data are reliable. Use volume charts for delta.
- Stocks: consolidated volume is real but fragmented across venues. Tick data is noisy.
- Forex: no centralized volume. Broker "volume" is tick count — a proxy. Never run delta/CVD on forex tick volume; it does not represent size. Use futures on FX (6E) for real order flow.
- Crypto: exchange volume is real but varies by venue. Use a single exchange's feed consistently.
Match the feed to the question. Tick for tempo, volume for participation, delta/CVD only on real size. On forex, abandon volume tools — they measure nothing real.
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