Bearish Order Block
A bearish order block is generally defined as the last up-close candle (or series of candles) before a significant move down. The idea is that this represents an area where institutional sellers were active, and the price might react when it revisits this zone.
Why it's believed to work:
Institutional Activity: Order blocks are based on the idea that large institutions (banks, hedge funds, etc.) can't execute their entire order at once without moving the price against themselves. They accumulate positions over time, and order blocks are thought to represent areas where they were accumulating short positions before a large move down.
Supply and Demand: The area is seen as a zone of potential supply. When price revisits the order block, the sellers who initiated the move down may be looking to add to their positions, or new sellers may see it as a good opportunity to enter the market.
A bearish order block is generally defined as the last up-close candle (or series of candles) before a significant move down. The idea is that this represents an area where institutional sellers were active, and the price might react when it revisits this zone.
Why it's believed to work:
Institutional Activity: Order blocks are based on the idea that large institutions (banks, hedge funds, etc.) can't execute their entire order at once without moving the price against themselves. They accumulate positions over time, and order blocks are thought to represent areas where they were accumulating short positions before a large move down.
Supply and Demand: The area is seen as a zone of potential supply. When price revisits the order block, the sellers who initiated the move down may be looking to add to their positions, or new sellers may see it as a good opportunity to enter the market.
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免责声明
这些信息和出版物并不意味着也不构成TradingView提供或认可的金融、投资、交易或其它类型的建议或背书。请在使用条款阅读更多信息。
