Read the Market’s Pulse: How to Use Trading Activity, Volume & Order Flow to Trade Smarter
Trading ActivityUnderstanding trading activity is essential for traders who want to align decisions with what’s actually happening in the marketplace. Trading activity isn’t just price — it’s the flow of orders, liquidity, volume patterns, and the behavior of different market participants. Here’s a practical guide to reading trading activity and using it to improve entries, exits, and risk management.
What to watch first
– Volume: Look for volume that confirms price moves.
Strong breakouts on above-average volume are more likely to sustain than moves on light volume. Watch relative volume (today’s volume versus typical volume for that time of day) for context.
– Price action vs. indicators: Use indicators like VWAP (volume-weighted average price) for intraday bias, and volume profile to identify high-interest price levels.
Indicators should confirm — not override — the raw price/volume relationship.
– Order flow: Level 2 quotes and time & sales reveal where liquidity sits and which orders are being executed. Persistent buys eating through offers suggest strong demand; repeated sells hitting bids indicate supply dominance.
– Volatility measures: ATR (average true range) helps size stops and set realistic targets based on current price movement.
Expect wider ranges around news events and tighter ranges during low-participation sessions.
Advanced signals that matter
– Unusual options activity: Spikes in options volume or concentrated purchases can hint at informed buying or hedging ahead of moves. Check put-call ratios and whether the activity is directional (single-stock calls/puts) or hedging (spreads, straddles).
– Block trades & dark pool prints: Large trades outside lit markets may reveal institutional positioning.
If dark pool activity consistently accumulates at a price, it can precede a public move.
– Short interest and borrow rates: High short interest can fuel sharp squeezes if buying pressure arrives. Rising borrow costs can deter new short positions and amplify short-covering dynamics.
– Flow imbalance indicators: Some platforms show buy/sell imbalances at open or close. Large imbalances can push price until market makers find liquidity.
Adapting strategy to activity
– Scalping and intraday: Focus on order flow, VWAP, and tight risk management. Avoid trading low-volume stocks where spreads and slippage hurt performance.
– Breakout trading: Require volume confirmation and a clear catalyst or structural reason. Use stop placement beyond recent consolidation and trail stops as trend momentum builds.
– Mean reversion: Use volume profile and time-of-day patterns to identify overextensions. Combine with volatility-based stops and scale into positions rather than all at once.
– Swing and position trading: Pay attention to institutional flows, options activity, and macro liquidity events. Use larger timeframes to filter noise, but watch volume to confirm continuation or exhaustion.
Risk control and process
– Position sizing: Base sizes on volatility and account risk. Use ATR-based stops or percentage-of-account limits to keep losses controlled.
– Trade journaling: Record order type, rationale, market conditions, and post-trade notes. Patterns in your journal reveal what works and what doesn’t under different market activity profiles.
– Execution quality: Slippage and commissions matter more in active trading.
Use limit orders in thin markets and check fill rates when using algos or dark pools.
![]()
Final thought
Trading activity offers a real-time read on who’s participating and how aggressively. Make volume and order flow your partners — they add context that price alone cannot provide. Build a routine to monitor the right signals for your timeframe, and let trading activity guide entry, sizing, and exits instead of guesswork.