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I spent quite a bit of time studying how professional traders exploit market inefficiencies, and I have to say that one of the most underrated concepts is the Fair Value Gap. Few talk about it, but once you understand it, it really changes the way you read charts.
Basically, the fair value gap is the space that remains when the market moves too quickly in one direction. Imagine: a large candle jumps up suddenly, leaving behind an area where no trading has occurred. That’s the gap. And here’s the interesting part: the market tends to return to fill that void, almost like a magnet. It’s pure market inefficiency.
How do you identify it? Look for three candles in a row: the first moves with the trend, the second creates the imbalance, and the third continues without covering the area between them. Boom, you’ve found your fair value gap. It’s not rocket science, but it takes practice to spot it immediately.
Why should you care? Because these gaps act as incredibly reliable price magnets. They can turn into dynamic support or resistance, and if you combine them with other tools—like Fibonacci retracements or moving averages—the probability of success increases significantly.
Here’s the trick to trading with the fair value gap without losing money: don’t enter immediately. Wait for the price to return to the gap area and show real reaction signals. A reversal candle, a break of a key level, something concrete. Then, and only then, place your trade in the direction of the main trend. In an uptrend, the gap acts as support; in a downtrend, as resistance.
Risk management: essential. Place your stop loss just outside the gap, and take profit at a logical zone beyond. Never risk more than 1-2% of your capital per trade. I’ve seen too many traders blow their accounts because they didn’t respect this rule.
A common mistake? Overtrading every single gap. Not all are profitable. Be selective, wait for high-probability setups. And avoid trading gaps in sideways or chaotic markets—the fair value gap works best when the trend is clear.
After testing this approach across different timeframes and assets, I can say that the fair value gap is a serious weapon if used with discipline. Combine it with solid risk management and a consistent strategy, and you’ll see the difference in your results. Happy trading.