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7.26 Strategy: The Order Block Rejection (SMC)
In the world of Smart Money Concepts (SMC), an 'Order Block' is arguably the most powerful footprint left behind by institutional algorithms. It represents the specific price level where Tier 1 banks accumulated massive positions before initiating a strong, market-breaking move.
The strategy revolves around patience: We wait for the price to aggressively leave a zone, breaking structural highs or lows, and then we place our limit orders exactly at the origin of that move (the Order Block), anticipating a secondary test and massive rejection.
Step 1: Identifying the Institutional Move
You cannot find an Order Block without a resulting 'Break of Structure' (BOS). Look at your H4 or H1 chart. You need to see an explosive, aggressive move—usually consisting of large, full-bodied candles—that breaks a previous major high or low. This explosive move proves that institutional money has entered the market.
Step 2: Marking the Order Block
Once you see the explosive move, look backwards to the origin.
- Bullish Order Block: The very last down-candle (bearish candle) before the massive upward explosion.
- Bearish Order Block: The very last up-candle (bullish candle) before the massive downward crash.
Step 3: The Retracement and Entry
After the explosive move, retail traders will FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) and buy at the absolute top. The institutions will then slowly drag the price back down to their original Order Block. Why? Because when they initiated the massive move, they left behind unmitigated 'drawdown' positions that they need to close at breakeven before launching the true trend.
Your job is to wait patiently. Place a Limit Buy order at the top of the Bullish Order Block. Place your Stop Loss exactly 5 pips below the bottom wick of the Order Block. When price taps the zone, it will usually reject violently, giving you a massive Risk-to-Reward ratio (often 1:5 or 1:10).
Self-Evaluation Check
1. What is the defining characteristic of an Order Block?
2. Why do institutions drag the price back to the Order Block?
3. Where should your stop loss be placed when trading an Order Block?
4. Which timeframes are best for identifying structural Order Blocks?
5. What is required immediately following the Order Block to validate it?
