Market Structure Glossary: BOS, CHoCH, Order Block, FVG, Liquidity Pool
Operational definitions of BOS, CHoCH, Order Block, Fair Value Gap, and Liquidity Pool — the core smart-money vocabulary with validation rules and entry sequence.
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Market Structure Glossary: BOS, CHoCH, Order Block, FVG, Liquidity Pool
Smart-money concepts (SMC) use a specific vocabulary for market structure. These terms identify where institutional orders cluster and where liquidity rests. Below are operational definitions, not theory.
BOS (Break of Structure)
A continuation signal: price breaks the most recent swing high (in an uptrend) or swing low (in a downtrend) in the direction of the prevailing trend. Confirmation requires a close beyond the swing, not just a wick.
BOS validates trend continuation. The new entry is typically on the pullback to the broken level after the BOS.
CHoCH (Change of Character)
The first counter-trend structural break. In an uptrend, price breaks the most recent higher-low — a lower-low forms. CHoCH alone is not a reversal; it is a warning that the prior trend's structure has cracked.
The difference from BOS is direction: BOS continues the trend, CHoCH breaks against it. Many false CHoCHs occur in ranges — wait for confirmation (a new swing in the opposite direction) before treating it as reversal.
Order Block (OB)
The last opposite-color candle before a strong impulse move that breaks structure. The theory: institutional orders rest at that candle's origin. Valid OBs have:
- A strong impulsive move away (3+ momentum candles).
- An FVG left behind (imbalance).
- Price returns to the OB and reacts.
Not every opposite candle is an OB. Without the imbalance and displacement, it is just a candle.
FVG (Fair Value Gap / Imbalance)
A three-candle pattern where the first candle's high and the third candle's low do not overlap, leaving a gap in price delivery. Bullish FVG: candle 1 high < candle 3 low. Bearish FVG: candle 1 low > candle 3 high.
FVGs act as magnets — price tends to return to fill them. Use as entry zones; stop beyond the gap.
Liquidity Pool
A price level where stop orders cluster — typically above equal highs or below equal lows. Visible liquidity: prior session highs/lows, weekly open, round numbers. Hidden liquidity: orders sitting just beyond obvious levels.
Liquidity sweeps (stop runs) occur when price spikes beyond a pool, triggers stops, then reverses. Equal highs above resistance are the most common sweep target.
Operational sequence
Most SMC setups follow the same sequence: identify trend (HH/HL or LH/LL) → wait for BOS or CHoCH → mark the Order Block or FVG left behind → wait for price to return to the OB/FVG → enter with stop beyond the structural swing. Risk is defined by the OB; target is the next liquidity pool.
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