lsr
Table of Contents
πΉ Strategy 3: Liquidity Sweep Reversal
- Setup: Price makes a wick above previous high (or below low), then closes back inside
- Trigger: Failed breakout (stop run)
- Entry: Enter on engulfing candle or OB confirmation
- Stop Loss: Wick high/low
- Take Profit: Mean reversion to VWAP or OB zone
π§ͺ LSR Quick Checklist
- Wick above/below previous swing
- Engulfing candle or reversal pattern
- High volume on sweep, fade into reversal
- Price reclaims range or OB zone
π What is a Liquidity Sweep Reversal?
A Liquidity Sweep Reversal occurs when smart money (large players) intentionally triggers stop orders near recent highs or lows to:
- Trap retail traders
- Fill large positions
- Reverse the price direction shortly after
π§ What It Tells You
- The initial breakout is fake β itβs a liquidity grab
- Price wicks above a recent high (or below a low), but fails to hold
- The real move happens in the opposite direction
π How to Spot It
- Price makes a wick above a previous high or below a low
- Closes back inside the range (false breakout)
- Watch for a reversal candle (engulfing or OB confirmation)
- Volume often spikes during the sweep, then fades into the reversal
β Why Itβs Powerful
- Reveals manipulation and intent
- Ideal for countertrend trades or early trend reversals
- Helps you avoid getting trapped in false breakouts
π« Liquidity Sweep (No Pullback)
Example:
- Price spikes above the previous dayβs high with a long upper wick, trapping breakout traders.
- It then drops immediately, closing back inside the range on heavy sell volume.
- Trade Entry: Short on the first bearish engulfing candle after the wick.
- Stop Loss: Above the sweep wick.
- Target: Mid-range or VWAP.
Why it worked: Classic stop run followed by a fast reversalβno pullback needed.
lsr.txt Β· Last modified: 2025/04/06 05:55 by lwattsii