Smart Money Concepts
ICT-inspired price action — order blocks, fair value gaps, liquidity sweeps, inducement, and market structure shifts.
Overview
Smart Money Concepts (SMC) is a modern price action methodology popularised by the Inner Circle Trader (ICT). It focuses on how institutional participants create liquidity, leave footprints through order blocks and imbalances, and engineer liquidity sweeps to fill large orders. SMC traders aim to align their positions with institutional order flow rather than retail sentiment.
Topics Covered
Order Blocks
An order block is the last opposing candle before a strong institutional move — the final bearish candle before a bullish impulse (bullish OB) or the final bullish candle before a bearish impulse (bearish OB). Order blocks represent zones where institutions placed large orders, and price tends to return to these zones for continuation.
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs)
A Fair Value Gap is a three-candle pattern where the wicks of candle 1 and candle 3 do not overlap, creating an imbalance or gap in price. FVGs represent areas where price moved so aggressively that there was insufficient opposite-side liquidity. Price tends to retrace into FVGs before continuing, making them excellent entry zones.
Liquidity Sweeps
Liquidity sweeps (also called stop hunts or liquidity grabs) occur when price moves through an obvious support or resistance level to trigger stop losses and pending orders, then reverses. Institutions use these sweeps to fill large orders at better prices. Identifying potential liquidity pools (clusters of stops) is central to SMC trading.
Break of Structure (BOS)
A Break of Structure occurs when price breaks a previous swing high (in an uptrend, confirming continuation) or swing low (in a downtrend, confirming continuation). BOS confirms the prevailing trend and is used to trail bias. Internal BOS occurs within a trend leg; external or structural BOS breaks the last significant swing.
Change of Character (ChoCH)
A Change of Character is the first break of structure AGAINST the prevailing trend. In an uptrend, ChoCH is the first lower low. In a downtrend, ChoCH is the first higher high. ChoCH signals a potential trend reversal and is one of the most important SMC concepts for identifying turning points.
Premium & Discount Zones
Premium and Discount zones divide the current price range (from the swing low to swing high) into halves using the equilibrium (50%) level. Discount = below 50% (cheap, look to buy). Premium = above 50% (expensive, look to sell). This concept ensures traders are buying low and selling high relative to the current range.
Kill Zones & Session Timing
Kill zones are specific time windows during the trading day when institutional activity peaks and the most significant moves occur. ICT identifies four main kill zones: Asian session (20:00–00:00 ET), London Open (02:00–05:00 ET), New York Open (07:00–10:00 ET), and London Close (10:00–12:00 ET). Trading only during kill zones improves probability.
Institutional Candles
Institutional candles (also called displacement candles or impulse candles) are large-bodied candles with little to no wicks that represent strong institutional activity. They break through structure and create FVGs. The characteristics of these candles — body size, wick ratio, volume — reveal where institutions are committing capital.
Inducement Patterns
Inducement is a Smart Money Concept describing the deliberate engineering of liquidity pools by institutional traders to attract retail orders before reversing price. Inducement patterns occur when price creates minor highs or lows that entice retail traders to enter positions or place stops, providing the liquidity that smart money needs to fill large orders in the opposite direction.
Mitigation Blocks
Mitigation blocks are price levels where institutional traders return to 'mitigate' or close out prior losing positions before continuing in the new trend direction. When smart money takes a position that initially moves against them, they mark the level for re-entry — when price returns, they close the losing trade at break-even and add to their new directional position. This creates a powerful support or resistance zone.