Institutional Order Flow Strategy – Masterclass

Institutional Order Flow Strategy – Masterclass

🧩 Chapter 1: Introduction to Institutional Trading

Traders out.

So that is the art of understanding equity. And if you know where will institution trap retail trader, if you know what place or what price range is the most important price range for the Institutions, you can take better trading decisions and that's the objective of this entire strategy, right? So that was like a brief sum up of auto flow. And liquidity Institute trading usually is based on these four major principles: the trend, money flow, liquidity and price.

πŸ“ˆ Chapter 2: Market Trends – The Foundation

Now, when I talk about trend, it's very simple. There are two major trends in the market. One is an uptrend. The other is a downtrend, and I am expecting most of you don't know this...

(Uptrend and downtrend with higher high, higher low structure explained...)

πŸ’Έ Chapter 3: Four Pillars of Institutional Trading

  1. Trend
  2. Money Flow / Order Flow
  3. Liquidity
  4. Price / Demand-Supply Zones

Money flow or auto flow is something that just beats you about the understanding of where Institutions are punching in their orders...

πŸ“œ Chapter 4: The Golden Rules of the Market

  1. Stock Market is a balance of profit and loss between traders
  2. Market Participants: Institutions vs Retail. (FII2DII, FII2HNI, I2R, R2R)
  3. Every Buyer Needs a Seller (and Vice Versa)
  4. Price = Intersection of Demand and Supply, basic economic elements.

The first rule is stock market is a zero sum game fairly simple rule to understand. If you're going to make 500 rupees in the market, someone in the market, has to lose that 500 rupees...

The second rule is there are only two broad kinds of market participants: retail traders and institutional traders...

The third rule, which is one of the most important rules for every buyer. Their has to be a seller and for every seller their has to be a buyer...

The fourth rule, very simple. Price is always a intersection of demand and supply...

🏦 Chapter 5: Understanding Institutions vs Retail

Who are institutions?

Investment banks, hedge funds, mutual funds, foreign institutions...

Institutions are always dependent on retail traders for liquidity...

Institutions always buy and sell big quantities and leave footprints...

🧠 Chapter 6: Retail Psychology and Institutional Strategy

You see a double bottom, or maybe stock bouncing off a support level, you place your buy orders here, stop loss here, target here...

The price moves, takes your stop loss, and then hits your target – this is stop loss hunting.

πŸͺ€ Chapter 7: How Institutions Create Traps

Example: breakout trade fails. Institutions wait for you to enter, then hit your stop loss and enter long themselves...

Liquidity lies at stop-loss zones. Institutions need sellers to buy from.

πŸ”Ž Chapter 8: Key Liquidity Zones

Where liquidity lies:

  • Above highs
  • Below lows
  • At stop-loss, entry, and target zones

Above every high and below every low, a lot of liquidity is found...

πŸ› Chapter 9: Institutional Strategy Architecture

Strategy Name: Order Block Strategy

Five Crucial Components:

  1. Displacement
  2. Rebalance
  3. Volume Dry-Up
  4. Order Block Marking
  5. Position Sizing, SL, and Target Setup

🀝 Chapter 10: Step-by-Step Strategy Workflow

Spotting displacement candle Identifying order block Waiting for rebalance with volume dry-up Entry point: green/red candle confirmation SL placement: below/above order block Target: swing high/low or 1:2 to 1:4 RR

πŸ”’ Chapter 11: Open Interest Strategy & Market Sentiment

Prices and OPEN INTEREST INCREASE = long buildup

πŸ’³ Chapter 12: Bullish vs Bearish Order Block Setup

Bullish setup: break previous high, red candle block Bearish setup: break previous low, green candle block

Entry with volume dry-up

πŸ“Š Chapter 13: Practical Examples from Live Charts

TAKE STOCK WITH HIGH VOLUMES ...

DAY FRAME Chart, MARK order block zones, BASED ON displacement candles AND volume analysis

πŸ“‰ Chapter 14: Intraday & Index Short Examples

Examples from Nifty, Bank Nifty

Setup logic on 10m, 15m timeframes

Trade examples with entries, SLs, and targets

πŸ’° Chapter 15: Commodities and Crypto Case Studies

Silver (daily, 15-min) BTC/USDT (15-min)

OB zone marking, entries, and exits

πŸš€ Chapter 16: Alerts, Automation & Trader Mindset

Setting alerts using platforms Patience in trading setups Avoiding perfection mindset Use technology to scale

✅ Chapter 17: Summary & Final Insights

Institutional logic over indicator-based logic Volume + structure = probability edge Review of all five order block rules


End of Webinar Transcript

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