Bhupesh Ai Playbook ( Nifty :Bank nifty : Gold)
BhupeshAI · Education Series
19 Core Price Action Concepts Every Trader Should Study
A deep reference guide to the frameworks that professional intraday traders use — compiled for educational study only. Not trading advice.
Liquidity-First Thinking
Most retail traders focus on patterns and indicators. Professional price action study starts with one question: where are the stop orders? Every swing high has buy stops above it. Every swing low has sell stops below it. These clusters of orders are called liquidity pools.
The core idea is that larger participants need significant volume to fill their positions. They engineer moves into liquidity pools — sweeping stops on one side — before reversing and moving in the true direction. This is why so many breakouts fail: they were engineered to collect liquidity, not to trend.
The study rule: never enter before liquidity is taken. Wait for the sweep, then look for a reversal confirmation. The direction of the trade is opposite to where stops were just hunted.
Key study points
Equal highs / equal lows = obvious liquidity · Previous day high/low = major liquidity levels · Breakout without liquidity sweep = low conviction · Always ask: who gets trapped by this move?
Break and Retest (B&R)
One of the most studied concepts in intraday trading. Price breaks through a key level — a prior day's high, a range boundary, a supply/demand zone — and then pulls back to retest that same level before continuing. The former resistance becomes support (or vice versa for shorts).
The critical element is the No Trade Zone (NTZ) — the range between the previous day's high and premarket low where price tends to chop with no clear edge. Executing inside the NTZ is a common mistake. The edge comes from waiting for a clean break outside the range, then entering on the retest.
Confirmation entry: a candle that wicks into the level and closes in your direction. Stop goes just beyond the invalidation point. First target is the prior high/low; partial profits are taken there, runners held.
Key study points
Wait for break, then retest — never enter during the break itself · Bullish wicks and strong closes confirm longs on retest · Failed pushes back above confirm shorts · NTZ = no-trade area
PO3 — Power of Three (Accumulation, Manipulation, Distribution)
PO3 is a three-phase price model that describes how a single trading session or swing move typically unfolds. Accumulation is the quiet phase where price consolidates, usually during the Asian session for forex and futures. Manipulation is a false move against the true direction — a stop hunt that traps retail traders. Distribution is the real move, where price delivers in the intended direction.
Understanding PO3 changes how you read a session. When you see a sharp early move that quickly reverses, that is likely the manipulation phase. The entry opportunity comes when manipulation is confirmed complete — after the stop sweep and the first signs of the true direction emerging.
This concept aligns with session timing. The manipulation often occurs at the London open or the first 30 minutes of New York. The distribution is the sustained move that follows.
Key study points
Asian range = accumulation zone · London/NY spike that reverses = manipulation · True trend follows manipulation · Align on Daily, 4H, 1H to confirm the phase
OTE — Optimal Trade Entry (Fibonacci Pullback)
After a confirmed market structure break and displacement move, price often pulls back before continuing. The OTE framework identifies the high-probability retracement zone using Fibonacci levels. A Fibonacci retracement is drawn from the swing low to swing high of the impulse move (or the reverse for shorts).
The OTE zone sits between the 0.62 (62%), 0.705 (70.5%), and 0.79 (79%) Fibonacci levels. If price pulls back into this zone after a genuine displacement, the probability of continuation is studied as elevated. Entry below the 50% level is considered too early and provides insufficient reward relative to risk.
Stop loss goes at the 1.0 level (the start of the Fibonacci leg). First take profit sits at the 0.0 level (the end of the leg). This creates predictable R-multiples: a 70.5% entry yields approximately 3.75R to target.
Key study points
OTE zone: 0.62 / 0.705 / 0.79 fib · Below 50% pullback = skip the trade · Stop = 1.0 fib · Target = 0.0 fib · Requires prior displacement candle as confirmation
Fair Value Gap (FVG) and Imbalance
A Fair Value Gap (also called an imbalance or inefficiency) is a three-candle pattern where the middle candle moves so aggressively that the wicks of the first and third candles do not overlap. This creates a gap zone on the chart where no two-way price action occurred — only one-sided momentum.
FVGs are studied as magnetic zones. Price has a tendency to return and partially or fully fill these gaps before continuing in the original direction. Traders who study this concept use the 50% level of the FVG (called the consequent encroachment) as the key reference point for entries on retracement.
The higher the timeframe on which the FVG forms, the stronger its study relevance. A daily FVG carries more weight than a 5-minute FVG. Session FVGs formed during London or New York are considered particularly significant.
Key study points
3-candle pattern where wicks don't overlap · 50% of gap = consequent encroachment · Higher timeframe FVGs = stronger relevance · Price tends to return and react from FVG before continuing
Order Block (OB) and Breaker Block
An Order Block is the last candle in the opposite direction before a significant displacement move. It represents a zone where large institutional orders were likely placed. When price pulls back to this zone, it is studied as a high-probability reversal area because the original orders may defend that price.
A Breaker Block is an order block that has been broken and is now acting in reverse. For example, a bearish order block that was broken to the upside now acts as a support zone on retest. The concept of "what was resistance becomes support" applies here but with a structural, order-flow basis rather than a simple technical rule.
The most valid order blocks are those that sit at key higher timeframe levels and have a Fair Value Gap or displacement candle associated with them. Isolated order blocks without context have lower study reliability.
Key study points
OB = last opposing candle before displacement · Breaker = OB that has been broken and flipped · Best OBs have FVG + HTF alignment · Context matters more than the candle itself
Top-Down Multi-Timeframe Analysis
Top-down analysis means starting on the highest relevant timeframe and working downward to the entry timeframe. The higher timeframe defines the bias — the direction in which trades are studied as valid. Lower timeframes are used only for precise entry, stop, and target identification.
A typical framework: Daily or Weekly for overall bias and key levels → 4H for structure within the current range → 1H for confirmation entries → 15M or 5M for precise execution. Each timeframe must be in alignment before an entry is considered. If the Daily is bearish but the 15M shows a long setup, the study framework says to skip it — lower timeframe noise works against higher timeframe context.
The 50% level of the HTF range is a key reference — above 50% is considered premium (better for shorts), below 50% is discount (better for longs). This prevents buying at the top of a range or selling at the bottom.
Key study points
Always start on Daily/4H for bias · Never fight HTF direction on LTF entries · Above 50% = premium (short bias) · Below 50% = discount (long bias) · All timeframes must align
Kill Zones — Session Timing Windows
Kill zones are specific time windows within a trading day when price typically has the highest probability of making significant directional moves. They coincide with major session transitions and institutional participation windows.
The London Kill Zone (approximately 2:00–5:00 AM EST / 7:30–10:30 AM IST) is where European institutional participants begin engaging the market after the quieter Asian session. Significant manipulation and the beginning of true daily range development often occurs here. The New York Kill Zone (7:00–11:30 AM EST / 12:30–5:00 PM IST) is when the highest volume and the most reliable continuation moves are studied.
Setups taken outside kill zones are studied as lower probability regardless of how valid they look on the chart. Timing is a filter — even a perfect technical setup at 3 AM EST or midday New York may not deliver because the volume and institutional participation aren't present to drive the move.
Key study points
London KZ: 2:00-5:00 AM EST · NY KZ: 7:00-11:30 AM EST · Avoid midday sessions (12:00-2:00 PM EST) · Timing is a filter, not a guarantee · Even great setups fail outside kill zones
EMA Stack and Trend Momentum Filter
Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) stacked in order — short period above medium period above long period — are studied as a visual confirmation of trend momentum. The key is not any single EMA in isolation, but the alignment of the entire stack. When EMAs fan out cleanly in order (5 above 9 above 21 above 200), momentum is considered strong.
The 21 EMA is particularly studied in intraday frameworks as a dynamic pullback entry zone. When price is trending and pulls back to touch the 21 EMA, this area is considered a potential entry for trend continuation — but only after confirmation that the pullback is complete.
The 200 EMA on the daily chart is widely studied as a macro bias indicator — price above 200 EMA = bullish macro structure, price below = bearish. The 200 EMA is not used for short-term entry timing but for determining which side of the market to study setups on.
Key study points
Clean EMA stack = strong momentum · 21 EMA = intraday pullback entry zone · 200 EMA = macro bias filter · Tangled/crossing EMAs = choppy, low-conviction market · Stack alignment must match HTF direction
Trendline Break Pocket — Momentum Shift Entry
This concept describes a specific entry condition that occurs when three events happen simultaneously: price reaches a key higher-timeframe level, a trendline breaks (showing momentum failure), and the last swing point in the prior direction breaks (confirming the momentum shift). When all three align, a setup is considered to have formed — called the "pocket".
The entry is taken on the pullback to the 21 EMA after the momentum shift. This is the primary entry method. An alternative entry — used when price does not return to the EMA — is a breakout from a small consolidation that forms on the correct side of the broken structure.
A critical filter: before entering, look left on the chart. There must be clean air — no major structural level or zone blocking the path to the 2R target. If a key level sits in the middle of the expected move, the trade is skipped. Two overshoots of the same trendline void the setup.
Key study points
Three-condition setup: HTF level + trendline break + swing break · Entry: 21 EMA pullback or consolidation breakout · Clean-air rule: 2R target must be unobstructed · Two overshoots = setup invalid
Mean Reversion and Capitulation Reversal
Mean reversion is the study of price returning to a statistical average after an extreme move away from it. When a price moves in a parabolic, accelerating fashion — far beyond its average range, with volume spikes — the probability of a reversal back toward equilibrium is studied as elevated. This is not a trend-following concept but a fade concept.
The specific setup studied is capitulation — the final exhausted move of a trend, often characterized by extremely wide candle ranges, volume climaxes, and accelerating momentum. Capitulation buyers (buying in panic into a parabolic spike) and capitulation sellers (panic-selling into a vertical crash) are the fuel that exhausts the move.
Confirmation of reversal: the break of a prior bar high (for bottoms) or prior bar low (for tops). Stop goes above the parabolic extreme. The trade captures the reversion toward equilibrium — not the entire opposite trend. Scale out as price returns toward the mean.
Key study points
Parabolic + volume spike = exhaustion signal · Break of prior bar = reversal confirmation · Stop above/below the extreme · Target = equilibrium, not full reversal · Scale out on the way back to mean
SMT Divergence — Correlated Instrument Analysis
SMT (Smart Money Tool) Divergence is the study of two correlated instruments that should move together — when one makes a new high or low but the other does not. This divergence is studied as a sign that the move lacks genuine participation and may be a manipulation or trap.
Classic example: two equity index futures that typically move in tandem. If one makes a fresh high but the other fails to confirm, the new high in the first instrument is studied as potentially engineered — not organically driven. After a manipulation sweep of one while the other holds, a reversal back in the opposite direction is the studied trade.
This concept requires access to both instruments simultaneously and is most relevant during active session times (New York morning) when volume is sufficient for the divergence to carry meaning. It's used as a confirmation tool alongside other structural criteria, not as a standalone signal.
Key study points
Two correlated instruments diverge = potential trap · One makes new high, other doesn't = manipulation signal · Used as confirmation, not standalone entry · Requires active session timing to be meaningful
Volume Profile and Market Auction Theory
Volume Profile displays how many transactions occurred at each price level rather than at each time interval. This creates a horizontal histogram that reveals where the market has spent the most time and transacted the most volume — called the High Value Area (HVA). Zones with little transaction volume — Low Value Areas (LVA) — are areas where price typically moves through quickly without stopping.
The study concept: price moves from one high-value area (balance) to another, passing through low-value areas rapidly. When the market is out of balance, it is seeking new balance. The trade is to enter in the direction of the imbalance at the LVN (low volume node) — a sharp edge of a high-value area — and target the next area of balance (POC — Point of Control).
When the market is in balance (rotating within a range), the study approach changes: fade extremes back toward the POC. The daily bias from the weekly chart (whether the weekly candle shows a high-volume reversal at a value edge) determines which direction to trade the intraday setups.
Key study points
HVA = high transaction zone (price stalls) · LVA = thin volume zone (price moves fast) · Out of balance = trade the direction toward new balance · POC = target for most trades · Weekly bias determines intraday direction
Order Flow and Market Depth Reading
Order flow analysis goes below the surface of price bars and studies the actual transactions happening in the market in real time — specifically the battle between aggressive buyers (hitting the ask) and aggressive sellers (hitting the bid). This requires tools like footprint charts, depth of market (Level II), and cumulative volume delta (CVD).
The study principle: aggressive participants move the market. When aggressive buyers are repeatedly hitting offers at a price level and the market is not going up — sellers are absorbing all that buying — the structure shows distribution. When aggressive sellers cannot push price lower because buyers are absorbing every bid, the structure shows accumulation.
CVD (Cumulative Volume Delta) tracks the net difference between buy and sell aggression. Divergence between price and CVD — price making new highs while CVD declines — is studied as a warning sign of weakening participation. This concept is most applicable in centralized markets (futures, equities) where real volume data exists.
Key study points
Aggressive buyers hitting offers = demand · Aggressive sellers hitting bids = supply · Absorption = the other side refusing to give ground · CVD divergence = weakening participation · Only reliable in centralized markets with real volume
Intraday Liquidity Model — Session High/Low Raids
This model identifies specific liquidity levels that form during each trading session and then studies how the next session interacts with those levels. The Asian session high and low, London session high and low, and previous day high and low are all marked as zones where stop orders accumulate from traders who entered or placed orders based on those boundaries.
During the New York session, one of these session highs or lows is typically taken out — this is the liquidity raid. After the raid (stop hunt), price often reverses. The entry setup is found on the lower timeframe after the raid: a Fair Value Gap, Market Structure Shift, Breaker Block, or Turtle Soup pattern confirms the reversal entry.
The model studies a specific window between 9:30 AM and 11:30 AM EST as the primary zone for these raids. Entries are taken inside the FVG or on the market structure shift. Stop sits above the high of the sweep. Targets are the opposite session's liquidity or nearby FVGs.
Key study points
Mark Asian high/low, London high/low, PDH/PDL each day · NY session raids one level → reversal follows · Entry: FVG or MSS after the raid · 9:30-11:30 AM EST = primary study window · Stop above the sweep high
Trident Pattern — FVG + Doji Confirmation
The Trident Pattern is a specific candlestick confirmation sequence studied within the context of a Fair Value Gap during a kill zone. The pattern requires three specific events: a three-candle Fair Value Gap forms on the 30-minute chart during the kill zone, a small-bodied doji candle forms immediately after with its wick reaching the 50% level of the FVG (the consequent encroachment), and the candle following the doji closes below the doji's high (confirming sellers could not hold above).
Each element has a specific role. The FVG identifies the imbalance and the potential reversal zone. The doji shows indecision — sellers tried to push lower but were absorbed by buyers at the FVG midpoint. The confirmation candle validates that the doji's low held and the move is beginning.
This pattern is considered a high-specificity filter — many setups may have FVGs but not produce the Trident sequence. Only when all three elements align during an active kill zone window is the full setup considered formed.
Key study points
3-candle FVG → Doji wick to 50% → Confirmation candle below doji high · All three required — no shortcuts · Kill zone timing mandatory · Doji wick = seller absorption by buyers · Invalid if confirmation candle closes above doji high
VIX and Volatility Index as a Market Filter
The VIX (Volatility Index) measures the market's expectation of future volatility in equity markets. While it is most directly applicable to equity index trading, the concept of using a volatility measure as a filter — rather than a directional indicator — is widely studied. When VIX is rising sharply, it typically signals increasing fear and often coincides with downward pressure on equities.
The study application: when VIX breaks a key resistance level or spikes to a significant high, equity indices (ES, NQ) tend to show coordinated selling pressure. When VIX reaches a major support level and shows signs of reversal (finding support, forming a base), indices often find a tradeable low. VIX support and resistance levels are studied on their own chart and used as context for equity index direction.
An extreme VIX reading — a parabolic spike with volume — followed by a reversal structure is studied as a capitulation signal in the VIX itself, which historically coincides with tradeable lows in equity indices. The concept is used as macro context, not as a precise entry tool.
Key study points
Rising VIX = increasing fear, often correlates with equity selling · VIX at resistance = potential equity top · VIX at support = potential equity bottom · VIX capitulation spike = watch for equity reversal · Used as macro context, not entry trigger
Structure-Based Top-Down Trade Plan (HTF POI + LTF Entry)
This concept formalizes the process of combining higher timeframe structure with lower timeframe execution. The framework: identify a clear market structure break (MSB) on the HTF — a swing that definitively breaks a prior significant high or low. From that MSB, mark the Point of Interest (POI) — the order block, breaker, or FVG that caused the break. This POI becomes the target zone for the anticipated pullback.
Once price pulls back to the HTF POI, the trader drops to the LTF (one or two timeframes lower) and looks for confirmation. The confirmation is a market structure shift on the LTF — a mini-version of the same concept applied to the shorter timeframe within the POI zone. The entry is placed on the LTF MSB, stop below/above the LTF liquidity sweep that preceded the shift.
Minimum risk-reward requirement in this framework: 2:1. If the next HTF liquidity level (target) is less than 2R from the entry based on the LTF stop, the trade is skipped. This maintains the mechanical expectancy of the model across many trades.
Key study points
HTF MSB → HTF POI → LTF confirmation entry · POI = OB, Breaker, or FVG at the MSB zone · Minimum 2:1 RR — skip if below threshold · Stop below LTF liquidity sweep · Target = next HTF external liquidity
Trader Development Framework — The Five Stages
Beyond technical concepts, professional trading education includes studying how a trader develops over time. The five-stage development model describes the psychological and skill progression from novice to expert. Stage 1 (Novice): learning structure, concepts, and basic process. Not focused on making money yet — focused on building repeatable habits. Stage 2 (Developing): beginning to recognize patterns, still making process errors, journaling daily.
Stage 3 (Consistent): has a defined edge, is consistent in process even if not yet consistent in outcomes, understands risk deeply. Stage 4 (Advanced): can execute under pressure, manages size appropriately, has internalized the model so deeply that decisions feel natural. Stage 5 (Expert): process is automatic, psychological control is stable, adapts to changing market conditions.
The key insight from this framework: most traders rush through early stages trying to reach profitability before they have built the foundational process. The traders who succeed are typically the ones who respect each stage, spend adequate time in it, and do not skip ahead. Speed is not an asset in trading development — depth is.
Key study points
Stage 1-2: Build process, not profits · Stage 3: Consistency in process before consistency in outcome · Stage 4-5: Size management and psychological stability · Rushing stages = most common failure mode · Journal everything — data accelerates development
How These 19 Concepts Connect
These concepts are not independent strategies — they form a layered system. The top layer is macro context: multi-timeframe bias, session awareness, VIX reading. The middle layer is structural setup identification: liquidity pools, PO3, order blocks, FVGs. The entry layer is precision execution: OTE, Trident pattern, EMA pullback, break and retest. Running beneath everything is the trader development framework — without the right stage of development, even perfect technical knowledge produces poor results.
Study these concepts systematically. Backtest each one in isolation. Then begin combining them — a setup that aligns liquidity, PO3, FVG, OTE, and kill zone timing simultaneously is the type of confluence that professional price action study identifies as the highest-probability theoretical setup. That is the goal of deep study: finding moments where multiple independent concepts all point to the same conclusion.