Orderbook Imbalance Trading: Read Supply & Demand
The orderbook shows where buyers and sellers are positioned right now. Learn to read imbalances, absorption, and liquidity to anticipate price movement.
- Bid-heavy = buying pressure/support. Ask-heavy = selling pressure/resistance. Watch for imbalances.
- Absorption shows hidden strength. Liquidity vacuums cause rapid moves. Spoofing = fake walls.
- Thrive visualizes orderbook depth with imbalance alerts and liquidity zone mapping.
Explore Orderbook Signals
Click through orderbook imbalance signals:
Significantly more bid (buy) orders than asks. Buyers are stacked and ready. Suggests buying pressure and support. Price likely to hold or rise.
What to Look For
Bid volume >> Ask volume
Bid-heavy at support = strong support. Can buy with confidence. If price drops through bid-heavy zone, support failed—exit quickly. Watch for spoofing.
What Is Orderbook Imbalance?
The orderbook shows pending orders. Bid side = buy orders waiting. Ask side = sell orders waiting. When one side significantly outweighs the other, that's an imbalance—and it tells you about supply and demand.
Heavy bids = strong buying interest = support. Heavy asks = strong selling interest = resistance. This is real-time supply/demand visualization.
Imbalance Signals
Bid-Heavy
Significantly more buy orders than sell orders. Buyers are stacked and ready. Price likely to hold or rise. Can buy with support from the book.
Ask-Heavy
Significantly more sell orders than buy orders. Sellers are stacked. Price likely to stall or fall. Resistance confirmed by the book.
Absorption
Large orders being eaten by aggressive flow without price moving. If a level absorbs selling and holds = strong hidden support.
Vacuum
Gaps in the book with few orders. Price can jump quickly through these zones. Identify vacuums as potential rapid-move zones.
| Signal | Orderbook | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bid-Heavy | Bids >> Asks | Support | Look for longs |
| Ask-Heavy | Asks >> Bids | Resistance | Look for shorts |
| Absorption | Orders eaten | Hidden strength | Trade absorbed side |
| Vacuum | Thin book | Fast move zone | Expect rapid move |
Watch for Spoofing
Not all orders are real. Spoofing is placing fake orders to create the appearance of support/resistance, then canceling before execution. How to spot it:
- Large orders that pull when price approaches
- Orders that flicker in and out
- Walls that disappear at the last moment
- Orders at round numbers that seem too convenient
Executed volume (tape) is more reliable than pending orders. Real support absorbs; spoofed support disappears.
Trading Imbalances
With Imbalance
Bid-heavy at support = strong support, buy with confidence. Ask-heavy at resistance = strong resistance, sell/short. Let imbalance confirm your level.
Breakout Through
If price pushes through heavy orders, momentum is strong. Bid wall broken = bears strong. Ask wall broken = bulls strong. Trade the break.
Common Mistakes
- Trusting all orders: Many orders never execute. Watch for spoofing.
- Orderbook alone: Combine with price action and tape. Book is just intent.
- Ignoring dynamics: Book changes constantly. What matters is how it changes.
- Single exchange: Aggregated orderbook across exchanges gives better picture.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is orderbook imbalance?
When bid volume significantly exceeds ask volume or vice versa. Bid-heavy = buying pressure, support likely. Ask-heavy = selling pressure, resistance likely.
How do I read orderbook depth?
Look at volume at each price level. Large orders create walls. Many small orders create gradual depth. Imbalances show where buyers/sellers are positioned.
What is a bid wall?
Large buy order(s) at a price level creating support. If wall absorbs selling without price falling = strong support. If wall pulls = spoofing/weak.
What is spoofing?
Fake large orders intended to manipulate perception. Placed to look like support/resistance but canceled before execution. Watch if walls pull when price approaches.
What is absorption?
Large passive orders absorbing aggressive flow without price moving. Shows hidden strength. If absorbing at level = that side is stronger than it appears.
What is a liquidity vacuum?
Gap in orderbook with few orders. Price can move quickly through vacuum to next liquidity zone. Identify vacuums to anticipate rapid moves.
How reliable is orderbook data?
Orderbook changes constantly. Large orders can be pulled (spoofing). Use as one input, not sole signal. Actual executed volume (tape) is more reliable.
Does orderbook analysis work for crypto?
Yes, especially on major exchanges with good depth. Crypto orderbooks more transparent than traditional markets. Watch for exchange-specific dynamics.