Order Block and FVG: The Two Secret Weapons of Professional Traders 🎯

If you’ve ever read posts about financial markets, you’ve probably come across terms like “Order Block,” “FVG,” “BOS,” or “CHOCH.” These concepts are not just buzzwords—they represent the core of how big capital moves markets. Today, we’ll learn how to recognize these patterns and use them to increase your trading accuracy by up to 20%. Unlike other tutorials, we don’t just analyze candlestick charts: we examine what’s really happening behind every move.

Three Types of Order Blocks You Must Recognize Immediately

An Order Block is essentially the footprint left by whales—the large institutional traders. When these entities place massive orders, they leave an imprint on the chart in the form of specific candles. The key thing to understand is that big market movements are not created by small traders but by those with billions at their disposal.

There are three main categories of Order Blocks, and learning to distinguish them is essential:

Bearish Order Block: When Whales Sell

A bearish Order Block acts as resistance. It’s the area where large capital has placed sell orders, and every time the price returns to that level, it gets rejected.

How to identify it:

  • Open your chart and look for a heavy selling area
  • Find the last green (bullish) candle before the drop
  • Mark the range between that candle’s high and low
  • That is your bearish Order Block

In practice, when the market drops 28% from this area, and then revisits it, it tends to reject again with a similar or larger move (37%+). This is not coincidence—it’s proof that large orders remain “hanging” in that zone, ready to be executed when the price returns.

Trading application: If you’re trading spot markets, wait for the price to approach this bearish Order Block and plan an exit from your position. If the price closes above the high of the area with subsequent green candles, the block has been broken, and you can reconsider your stance.

Bullish Order Block: Support Created by Big Capital

A bullish Order Block is the opposite: it acts as support. It’s the level where large capital has concentrated their buy orders.

How to recognize it:

  • Identify a significant bullish move
  • Look at the red (bearish) candle immediately before the series of green candles
  • Mark that red candle’s range
  • That is your bullish Order Block

The pattern is identical to the bearish one, just reversed. When the price hits this support and bounces 28%, know that when it revisits, it will likely do so with a similar or larger move (37+%). Why? Because buy orders are still waiting to be filled.

How to trade it: When the price approaches your bullish Order Block, place a buy order at that level. Your stop loss? Set it just 1% below the area (considering current volatility, which might be around 10%).

Consolidation: Hidden Order Block in Boredom

How many times have you watched a consolidation thinking “when will it start moving?” while whales quietly accumulate? That is a bullish consolidation containing a hidden Order Block.

During these dull periods, the price forms candles with small bodies and long wicks. It’s a sign that big capital is slowly accumulating/distributing.

Identification:

  • Look for zones where 4-8 candles have small bodies but long wicks
  • Just below this consolidation (if bullish), you’ll find an Order Block—mark it
  • When the price finally breaks out, the subsequent move will be proportional to the identified Order Block

FVG: The Value Gap Acting Like a Magnet

The “Fear Value Gap” (FVG) is another tool created by violent moves of big capital. When they place massive orders without equivalent selling resistance, the price moves straight up (or down), creating a gap between the high of the first candle and the low of the third. That space is your FVG.

FVG acts like a magnet: the price will fall and rise back into it later, like gravitational attraction. When the price drops into a bullish FVG gap, it bounces strongly (54%+ in observed cases). This happens because those pending buy orders are ready to be filled.

Like Order Blocks, FVGs come in two types:

  • Bullish FVG: causes a pump when revisited
  • Bearish FVG: causes a dump when revisited

Combining Order Block + FVG: The Winning Formula

Here’s where the magic happens. When you identify a bullish Order Block exactly where a bullish FVG forms, you’ve found a zone of maximum power.

Practical strategy:

  1. Mark all Order Blocks on your chart (bearish and bullish)
  2. Identify all visible FVGs
  3. Look for overlaps
  4. Wait for the price to fall into that area
  5. Place a buy order at the Order Block zone
  6. Stop loss: 1% below the lowest wick of the candle with the lowest wick
  7. Take profit: at the first bearish Order Block you encounter or the first bearish FVG

In real trading, when the price hits the take profit in these scenarios, it often continues moving the same or greater distance. This is not luck—it’s confirmation that the method works.

When Order Block and FVG Don’t Work (And How to Avoid It)

Here’s the truth no one tells you: they won’t always work, but they will in 75% of cases and provide profit ratios of at least 1:3 in 90% of successful trades.

Situations where they might fail:

  • Unexpected news or market shocks
  • Extreme volatility breaking patterns
  • Order Blocks on too small timeframes (use at least 4H)
  • Very illiquid markets

Essential Rules for Trading with Order Block and FVG

  1. Always use stop loss—no exceptions
  2. Trade only spot markets—avoid futures until you master this technique
  3. Backtest before trading—simulate on at least 50-100 real setups
  4. Monitor volatility—if volatility is 10%, expect at least 10% movement
  5. Risk no more than 2% per trade—risk management is more important than precision

Order Block and FVG are the tools that separate mediocre traders from professionals. Recognizing these patterns means reading the minds of big players.

Follow @MU_Traders for more advanced trading content.

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