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Order Flow Trading: Introduction

Order flow trading watches the actual bids, offers, and executed trades instead of derived indicators — here is the foundational vocabulary and how it differs from price-based analysis.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#order-flow#tape-reading
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Order Flow Trading: Introduction

Indicators tell you what price did. Order flow tells you what traders are doing right now — the difference between a mirror and a windshield. Most chart analysis is derivative, calculated from past price. Order flow goes to the source: the actual bids, offers, and executed trades that move price in the first place.

Core concept: the vocabulary and the four data sources

Order flow rests on a small vocabulary. The bid is the price buyers will pay; the ask (offer) is the price sellers will accept; the spread is the gap between them — tight means liquid, wide means illiquid or fast. A market order executes immediately at the best available price and consumes liquidity; a limit order sits at a specified price and provides liquidity. Every trade is a market order hitting a resting limit order, and the aggressor is whichever side used the market order.

Delta at a price equals buy volume minus sell volume executed there. A buy market order lifting the ask adds positive delta (aggressive buying); a sell market order hitting the bid adds negative delta. Rising delta = buyers aggressive; falling delta = sellers aggressive.

Order flow traders combine four data sources:

  1. DOM (Depth of Market): the ladder of resting limit orders — shows where size is parked (intent).
  2. Time and Sales (the tape): every executed trade with size and side — shows who is actually transacting (action).
  3. Footprint chart: a candlestick showing volume traded at bid vs. ask at every price level within the candle (distribution).
  4. Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD): a running total of delta through the session — shows which side is winning (bias).

Example. Price is pushing up into a resistance level on the 5M, but the footprint shows the up-candles printing negative delta (sellers absorbing the buys) and the DOM shows large resting offers just above. That is absorption — buyers are aggressive but getting filled by a larger seller. The push up is likely to fail. Indicators show "strong momentum"; order flow shows distribution into resistance. The tape is the truth.

Practical application: reading absorption, imbalance, and the sweep

Step-by-step reading:

  1. Set context first. Define structure on the chart (trend, key levels) — order flow is a confirmation tool, not a standalone system. Never trade flow against structure.
  2. Watch the DOM at key levels. As price approaches a level, look for large resting size on the opposite side — that is potential absorption. If the size disappears just before price arrives, it was a spoof and the level will likely break.
  3. Read the footprint for absorption. A candle that pushes into a level but prints delta opposite to direction (e.g., up-candle with negative delta) signals a larger opposite-side participant absorbing the move.
  4. Read the footprint for imbalance. A candle with stacked positive delta on the way up and little pullback delta shows aggressive, one-sided commitment — a real move.
  5. Confirm with CVD. CVD making new highs while price makes new highs = healthy trend. CVD diverging from price = exhaustion.

Entry checklist (absorption reversal):

  • Price at a key HTF level (validated S/R)
  • Footprint shows delta opposite to candle direction (absorption)
  • DOM shows resting size defending the level
  • CVD diverges from price (e.g., price new low, CVD higher)
  • Enter on the LTF trigger (BOS back inside the level)
  • Stop beyond the absorption extreme; target the next liquidity pool
  • R:R ≥ 2:1; risk ≤ 1%
Signal What it shows Trade implication
Absorption Aggressor filled by larger resting size Fade the push
Imbalance (stacked delta) One-sided aggression Trade with the move
CVD divergence Price vs. delta disagreement Exhaustion / reversal warning
Spoof in DOM Size vanishes before arrival Level likely breaks
Sweep + CVD flip Stops hit, delta reverses High-probability reversal

Complete trade example. ES futures push up into the overnight high at 4550 on the 5M. The footprint shows the last two up-candles printing negative delta (sellers absorbing), and CVD rolls over while price still makes a marginal new high — divergence. Price sweeps 4552 then snaps back below 4550 within 2 candles (a fakeout reclaim). Enter short at 4549, stop 4553 (4 points, beyond the sweep), target the session VWAP at 4535 (14 points). R:R ≈ 3.5:1. Order flow flagged the absorption; the reclaim gave the entry; the sweep extreme gave the stop.

Common mistakes

  1. Trading flow without structure. Reading delta in a vacuum leads to counter-trend fade trades that get run over. Fix: always define the chart trend and key levels first; only use flow to confirm or reject a structural setup.
  2. Treating every spoof as fake. Not all disappearing size is a spoof — some is genuine order cancellation as price approaches. Fix: confirm DOM reads with the footprint and tape; act only when flow aligns across at least two sources.
  3. Overtrading the tape. Reacting to every large print on Time and Sales produces dozens of low-quality entries. Fix: only act on flow signals at pre-marked key levels; ignore flow in the middle of the range.

Advanced tips

  • Combine flow with SMC. Absorption at an order block or FVG is the highest-quality entry — see Smart Money Concepts intro.
  • Session matters. Order-flow signals at the London or NY open carry far more weight than Asian-session signals; trade size and participation are higher.
  • Start with one tool. Master the footprint first; add DOM, tape, and CVD only as each becomes second nature. Reading flow fluently takes months.
  • Validate the levels you read flow at using Key Level Validation, and ground everything in Market Structure.

Summary

Order flow takes you to the source — the bids, offers, and executed trades that move price. Learn the vocabulary (bid/ask/delta), read the four sources (DOM, tape, footprint, CVD), and always combine flow with structure. Absorption and imbalance are the two patterns that pay; everything else is noise. Master one tool before adding the next.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk