What Is Volume Profile?
π‘ Definition
Volume Profile displays how much volume traded at each price (horizontal histogram) over a chosen period. It highlights where market participation occurred β revealing value areas, imbalances, and levels likely to act as support/resistance.
Unlike time-based indicators, Volume Profile focuses on price acceptance. Where volume is heavy, the market βagreedβ on value; where itβs light, price moved quickly through β areas often revisited or skipped in future moves.
Visual Representation
Profile Anatomy: VAH / VAL / POC & HVN/LVN
POC marks the single most-traded price. The Value Area (typically 70% of volume) sits between VAL and VAH. HVNs imply acceptance; LVNs imply rejection/inefficiency.
Key Concepts
π POC (Point of Control)
The price level with the highest traded volume. Often acts as a magnet during balance and a pivot during imbalance.
π¦ Value Area (VAH/VAL)
The price range containing ~70% of total volume. Rejections at the edges hint at continuation; acceptance beyond can signal a new value shift.
ποΈ HVN / π³οΈ LVN
HVN: Accepted price (thick nodes) β support/resistance zones.
LVN: Rejected price (thin nodes) β quick pass-through areas / breakout lanes.
π Profile Shapes
Normal (bell), Double Distribution, Trend, βPβ-shape (short covering), βbβ-shape (long liquidation). Shape hints at whoβs trapped and likely next move.
Why Volume Profile Works
- Auction Logic: Markets seek value; heavy volume marks acceptance.
- Liquidity Map: HVNs show where orders rest; LVNs show air pockets.
- Institutional Footprints: Big players transact at value β these zones matter.
- Regime Context: Balance favors mean-reversion; imbalance favors trend continuation.
How to Use Volume Profile
Practical Playbook
1. Identify Context: Are we in balance (rotational) or imbalance (trending)? This defines your bias.
2. Map Levels: Mark prior dayβs VAH/VAL/POC; note composite profile levels for higher TF.
3. Plan Scenarios: Rejection at VAH/VAL β revert toward POC; Acceptance beyond β seek trend into new value.
4. Trade LVNs: Breaks through LVNs often move fast; retests of LVNs can offer clean entries.
5. Confluence: Combine with S/R, trendlines, moving averages, and liquidity highs/lows.
6. Confirm: Use volume, delta, or order flow (if available) to validate rotations/breakouts.
Core Strategies
π Value Reversion
Fade moves from VAH back toward POC in balanced markets. Invalidation above acceptance beyond VAH.
π Value Migration
When price accepts above VAH (or below VAL), look for continuation toward forming a new value area; trail below emerging HVNs.
β‘ LVN Break & Go
Trade momentum through LVNs (thin zones). Expect swift moves; manage risk tightly on failed acceptance.
π§± HVN Bounce
HVNs act as shelves. Look for reaction (bounce or stall) at prior HVNs; use as targets or entries with confirmation.
Common Mistakes
β οΈ Avoid These Errors
- Treating VAH/VAL as exact lines β think zones and require acceptance/rejection signals.
- Fading strong trend days just because price is outside value.
- Ignoring timeframe alignment; intraday profile fights weekly composite.
- Assuming every LVN will βfillβ β context and flow matter.
- Forgetting to update levels as value migrates across sessions.
Advanced Concepts
π§± Composite Profiles
Build profiles over multiple days/weeks to spot major HVNs/LVNs that override intraday noise.
π Session vs. RTH/ETH
Profiles differ across Regular vs. Extended hours. Liquidity patterns can shift POC/VA β know your session.
π€ Market Profile vs. Volume Profile
TPO/time-based vs. volume-at-price. Many traders blend both for richer auction context.
π Profile Shapes & Traps
βPβ (short-cover), βbβ (long-liquidation), Double Distribution (midday trend) β use shapes to infer whoβs trapped.
The Bottom Line
Volume Profile turns charts into a map of participation and value. Use VAH/VAL/POC to frame trades, HVN/LVN to spot magnets and air pockets, and always anchor decisions in context: balance vs. imbalance. Pair with clean risk management and confluence for consistent execution.