Hello Traders!
Ever felt like the moment you enter a trade, the market just turns against you? You’re not alone. Today, we’ll break down why this happens and how you can avoid getting trapped. This common phenomenon is not just bad luck — it’s often a result of liquidity hunting, stop-loss triggering, and retail behavior predictability.
The Real Reason Behind Entry Reversals:
How to Avoid Getting Trapped:
Conclusion:
The market isn’t random — it’s designed to hunt the predictable. If you want to stay ahead, start thinking like the smart money. Avoid entering at the obvious point, understand where liquidity lies, and build a habit of confirmation-based trading.
Have you ever faced a market reversal just after your entry? Let’s talk about your experience and how you manage such traps in the comments below!
Ever felt like the moment you enter a trade, the market just turns against you? You’re not alone. Today, we’ll break down why this happens and how you can avoid getting trapped. This common phenomenon is not just bad luck — it’s often a result of liquidity hunting, stop-loss triggering, and retail behavior predictability.
The Real Reason Behind Entry Reversals:
- Liquidity Zones Near Obvious Entry Areas: Most traders enter at breakout or breakdown levels with tight stop-losses. Market makers and institutions know this and target these zones to fill their large orders.
- Stop-Loss Clusters = Opportunity: When many traders place SLs at the same level, it creates a liquidity pool. Big players trigger these to generate volatility and enter at better prices.
- Retail Predictability: Most traders use similar strategies – entering on breakout candles, using fixed SLs, or chasing momentum. Algos are trained to identify these patterns and act accordingly.
- No Confirmation Entry: Entering without waiting for confirmation — like candle close, volume spike, or retest — increases the chances of being trapped.
How to Avoid Getting Trapped:
- Don’t Enter at Obvious Levels: Instead of breakout candle entry, wait for retest or structure confirmation.
- Use Liquidity Awareness: Identify where other traders may be placing SLs — avoid entering right before those levels.
- Watch Volume and Price Behavior: Sharp moves on low volume are often traps. Entry should align with volume strength.
- Wait for Retests: A retest after breakout/breakdown gives better R:R and filters out fakeouts.
Conclusion:
The market isn’t random — it’s designed to hunt the predictable. If you want to stay ahead, start thinking like the smart money. Avoid entering at the obvious point, understand where liquidity lies, and build a habit of confirmation-based trading.
Have you ever faced a market reversal just after your entry? Let’s talk about your experience and how you manage such traps in the comments below!
Rahul Pal (TradingView Moderator)
Live Market Analysis on YouTube (8:45 AM - 3:30 PM): spf.bio/TArir
Free Telegram: spf.bio/c1lkb
Join Trading Community: realbullstrading.com
WhatsApp: wa.me/919560602464
Live Market Analysis on YouTube (8:45 AM - 3:30 PM): spf.bio/TArir
Free Telegram: spf.bio/c1lkb
Join Trading Community: realbullstrading.com
WhatsApp: wa.me/919560602464
Related publications
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.
Rahul Pal (TradingView Moderator)
Live Market Analysis on YouTube (8:45 AM - 3:30 PM): spf.bio/TArir
Free Telegram: spf.bio/c1lkb
Join Trading Community: realbullstrading.com
WhatsApp: wa.me/919560602464
Live Market Analysis on YouTube (8:45 AM - 3:30 PM): spf.bio/TArir
Free Telegram: spf.bio/c1lkb
Join Trading Community: realbullstrading.com
WhatsApp: wa.me/919560602464
Related publications
Disclaimer
The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.