Here's the "brick wall" chart I posted last night in the Trading Psychology Weblog. This is the new version of Market Delta; let's take a look at the information we can glean from the chart.
As the arrows indicate, once we hit new highs for the day above 1313 in the December ES, large volume came in at the bid. We can see this from the red shading of the bars in the 13:00 CT time period and also from the magnitude of the numbers. At three different price levels, we saw more than 3000 contracts hitting the market at its bid price.
Now let's think like a professional trader for a moment. If you think a market is stalling out and you might want to lighten your long position, you are not going to rob yourself of a tick and bail out at the market. Rather, you'll expect that the market will trade at the bid, then the offer, then the bid, rotating back and forth as it stalls out. You'll work an order in the book, offering some of your inventory for sale to see if residual buyers will do your work for you.
On the other hand, if you're in a rush to get out of the market and think we're going lower, you're not going to play games and work an order to get an extra tick. "Don't be a dick for a tick" is what you'll tell yourself and you'll take what the market gives you, unloading some of your holdings at the bid.
That's pretty much how a market maker thinks. Now there's another class of trading professional that is less concerned with the moment to moment flow of prices around the bid and ask. This is a longer-timeframe participant who trades with an opinion. A hedge fund trader, for example, might have research that tells him or her that the odds of the market breaking its low for the day over the coming three sessions are quite high. That trader will use the rally--and the market's enhanced liquidity during the rise--to get into a short position and ride the anticipated move. Given the expectations of a 10+ point move in ES, the longer timeframe trader isn't going to get cute and work orders for an extra tick. If the bids are there in the book to be had, they'll hit them and get the position established.
When we see 5000+ contracts trading at a level over multiple price levels, we know that this is above average volume for this time of day. The odds are great that both of these groups of professional market participants are active. The skewing of volume from the green to the red--from the willingness to take offers to the need to sell shares--tells us clearly that their sentiment has taken a sharp U turn. That's the brick wall I referred to in my post.
When you see a brick wall, you note the price level and say "Sayonara". There is just too much supply relative to demand to sustain that price level. Conversely, in later market action, if we *do* take out that price level, what better market indicator could you have that the demand/supply equation has changed?
Now let's go to a different portion of the chart. Along the left side, you'll see a volume histogram and numbers along the chart's Y axis. What that's telling us is the volume that has printed at that price cumulatively through the day. When the numbers are green, we can see that the majority of the volume at that price during that day was at the market's offering price. Red indicates that the volume was at the bid. The histogram is broken down into green and red so that we can see, not only total volume relative to neighboring prices, but also the distribution relative to bid and offer.
Notice what happens to the histogram as we move from 1309 to the market's high price. We're seeing less cumulative volume at higher prices. What that tells us is that the market has not facilitated trade north of 1309. High volume at any price level tells you that, over time, the marketplace is accepting that price as value. What we have with the brick wall pattern is a rejection of value at a given price range. The "tail" left by a Market Profile (not displayed here) is also a tell-tale: a sign that supply overwhelmed demand on that occasion.
We also, if you notice, rejected value at the lower end of the market's range. That was a brick wall in a different direction: supply overwhelmed by demand. The observant trader will note those price levels well to see which side of the range will facilitate trade in the coming session. That will provide the demand/supply shift cues that alert you to a market breakout.
Props, BTW, to Market Delta for the major upgrade. There are a lot of features to the new version I haven't yet toyed with, but the triple display of volume breakdown--within bars at bid/offer; vertically by time (displayed on the X-axis); and horizontally by price (displayed by the histogram on the Y-axis)--provides a great deal of information that is relevant to short-term traders.