Liquidity zones don’t appear by accident. They are created by trader behavior. Every time participants place stop losses, limit orders, or wait for a breakout, they build an area where volume accumulates. For large players, that’s a signal: liquidity is here, it’s worth coming here.
The most common places where liquidity builds up are:
- equal highs and lows
- post-consolidation ranges
- “clean” levels everyone sees
- areas where the market paused before a strong move
The problem is that most traders use the same references. Some place stops behind highs, others wait for breakouts, others enter on retests. The result is too much interest in one place. And the market often goes there not to continue the trend, but to collect that liquidity.
That’s why you so often see price:
- break a level cleanly and immediately reverse
- run stops and return into the range
- show a fake impulse before the real move starts
For traders who don’t understand liquidity, this looks like market manipulation. For those who do, it’s normal market behavior.
In crypto prop trading, this hurts even more. Moves are sharp, reactions are fast, and recovery is limited by rules. A few stop runs in a row, and you’re already close to the daily limit.
That’s why working with liquidity is mainly about understanding where the market will look for volume and not being the one supplying it.