Tape Reading Guide: How to Read Time & Sales in Crypto
The tape shows you what charts can't: real-time order flow, large players committing capital, and the battle between buyers and sellers as it unfolds.
- Tape reading is analyzing time & sales—the real-time stream of executed trades showing size, price, and aggressor.
- Large prints and buy/sell imbalances reveal institutional activity and short-term direction.
- Thrive highlights large orders and calculates buy/sell pressure so you don't miss important prints.
See the Tape in Action
Watch simulated time & sales and learn to identify key patterns:
Watch for large orders and aggressive prints
- Large buy at ask: Aggressive buyer willing to pay market price—bullish
- Large sell at bid: Aggressive seller hitting bids—bearish
- Massive prints: Institutional activity—watch for follow-through
- Rapid fire: Many small prints same direction = algorithmic activity
What Is Tape Reading?
Tape reading is the analysis of real-time trade executions. The "tape" refers to the time & sales feed—a continuous stream showing every trade: time, price, size, and whether it executed at the bid (sell) or ask (buy).
While charts show aggregated data (candles summarize many trades), the tape shows each individual transaction. This granularity reveals order flow dynamics: who is aggressive, where large players are active, and how price responds to buying vs selling pressure.
Reading Individual Prints
Buy Prints (At Ask)
When a trade executes at the ask price, a buyer placed a market order that lifted the ask. This is aggressive buying—they wanted in immediately and paid the higher price. Many buy prints = buying pressure.
Sell Prints (At Bid)
When a trade executes at the bid price, a seller placed a market order that hit the bid. This is aggressive selling—they wanted out immediately and accepted the lower price. Many sell prints = selling pressure.
Print Size
Size matters. Small prints (1-5 BTC) are usually retail. Large prints (50+ BTC) often indicate institutional activity. Watch for clusters of large prints at key levels—that's where big players are committing capital.
| Print Type | What It Shows | Signal | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Large buy at ask | Aggressive institutional buyer | Bullish | Watch for follow-through |
| Large sell at bid | Aggressive institutional seller | Bearish | Watch for breakdown |
| Buy absorbed (no price move) | Passive sellers absorbing | Bearish short-term | Resistance building |
| Sell absorbed (no price move) | Passive buyers absorbing | Bullish short-term | Support building |
| Rapid small prints | Algorithmic activity | Noise | Filter and focus on large |
Measuring Buy/Sell Pressure
Track the ratio of buy volume to sell volume over time. This gives you a running sense of who's in control.
- 60%+ buy pressure: Buyers dominant. Price likely to rise if sustained.
- 60%+ sell pressure: Sellers dominant. Price likely to fall if sustained.
- 50/50 balanced: Neither side dominant. Wait for one side to take control.
Sudden shifts in buy/sell ratio often precede price moves. If selling pressure was 60% and suddenly flips to 40%, buyers are stepping in—watch for reversal.
Identifying Absorption
Absorption is when aggressive orders are absorbed by passive orders without significant price movement. This reveals hidden supply/demand.
Bid Absorption (Bullish)
Heavy selling hits the bid but price doesn't drop. A passive buyer is absorbing all sells. When selling exhausts, price often pops. The passive buyer accumulated at their price.
Ask Absorption (Bearish)
Heavy buying lifts the ask but price doesn't rise. A passive seller is absorbing all buys. When buying exhausts, price often drops. The passive seller distributed at their price.
Absorption events often mark exact turning points. The price level where absorption occurred becomes significant support/resistance.
Spotting Large Orders
Large orders reveal institutional intent. While algorithms can slice large orders into smaller pieces (iceberging), significant prints still appear.
- Single large print: Immediate conviction. Someone wanted size and took market impact.
- Cluster of large prints: Sustained institutional interest at this level. Very significant.
- Large print against trend: Someone buying into selling or vice versa. Contrarian institutional activity.
Related reading: Order Flow Trading and Whale Watching Guide
Tape Reading at Key Levels
The tape is most useful at significant price levels. Random tape in the middle of a range is noise. Tape at support, resistance, or volume profile levels is signal.
- At support: Watch for bid absorption (bullish) or large sell prints breaking through (bearish).
- At resistance: Watch for ask absorption (bearish) or large buy prints breaking through (bullish).
- At breakout level: Volume and print size confirm or deny breakout validity.
Common Tape Reading Mistakes
- Watching every print: Filter for large orders. Small prints are noise.
- Ignoring context: A large print in ranging market differs from one at breakout level.
- Acting on single prints: One print isn't a trade signal. Watch for patterns and confirmation.
- Not accounting for algos: Rapid-fire small prints are often algorithmic. Don't read intent into noise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is tape reading in trading?
Tape reading is analyzing the time & sales (T&S) feed—the real-time stream of executed trades. Each print shows time, price, size, and whether it was a buy (at ask) or sell (at bid). Tape reading reveals order flow that charts don't show.
What is a large order print?
A large order print is a single trade significantly larger than average. These often represent institutional activity. Large prints at key levels are especially significant—they show where big players are committing capital.
What does aggressive buying mean?
Aggressive buying means market orders lifting asks—buyers paying the higher ask price to execute immediately. This shows urgency and conviction. Many aggressive buys = strong buy pressure. Watch for large aggressive prints.
What does aggressive selling mean?
Aggressive selling means market orders hitting bids—sellers accepting the lower bid price to execute immediately. This shows urgency to exit. Many aggressive sells = strong sell pressure. Large aggressive sells are bearish.
How do I identify institutional orders?
Look for: (1) Large single prints (50+ BTC, 500+ ETH), (2) Clusters of large prints at same level, (3) Unusual size during quiet periods, (4) Prints that absorb counter-pressure without price moving. These suggest institutional activity.
What is absorption on the tape?
Absorption is when large aggressive orders hit but price doesn't move—someone is absorbing the pressure with passive limit orders. Heavy sell prints without price drop = bid absorption (bullish). Heavy buy prints without price rise = ask absorption (bearish).
How fast do I need to read the tape?
In volatile crypto markets, the tape moves fast. Focus on: (1) Large prints (filter out small trades), (2) Prints at key levels, (3) Sudden changes in buy/sell ratio. You don't need to see every trade—focus on significant ones.
Can bots manipulate the tape?
Yes, algorithmic traders can create misleading tape activity—many small prints to simulate momentum, spoofing, etc. Focus on large prints (harder to fake), cumulative pressure over time, and prints that actually move price.