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Understanding Depth of Market

Execution Precision

8 min read

Interpret the depth of market display to gauge available liquidity at each price level and anticipate support and resistance.

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Using Footprint Charts

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Absorption, Imbalance & Initiative

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Spoofing, Stacking & Iceberg Orders

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Order Flow Confirmation

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The order book is the market's nervous system. Before price moves, liquidity shifts. Learning to read depth of market lets you see where the fight is happening before the candle closes.


What the Order Book Shows

The Depth of Market (DOM), also called the order book, is a real-time display of all resting limit orders at each price level. It separates into two sides:

  • Bids -- buy limit orders sitting below the current price, representing demand
  • Asks -- sell limit orders sitting above the current price, representing supply

The gap between the best bid (highest buy order) and the best ask (lowest sell order) is the spread. In liquid markets like BTC/USDT on Binance, this spread is typically one tick.

ComponentLocationRole
Best BidHighest buy limitStrongest current demand
Best AskLowest sell limitNearest supply
SpreadGap between best bid and askCost of immediacy
DepthTotal volume at all levelsOverall liquidity landscape

Reading Bid-Ask Imbalance

The simplest and most useful DOM reading is comparing the total volume on the bid side versus the ask side. This bid-ask imbalance reveals which side has more resting liquidity.

Bid-heavy book: More volume resting on the buy side. This suggests participants are willing to defend lower prices. If price drops into thick bids, those orders may absorb selling pressure and create support.

Ask-heavy book: More volume resting on the sell side. Sellers are lining up above, and any rally will need to chew through that supply. This can act as overhead resistance.

Imbalance Ratios

A useful shorthand is the bid-ask ratio. If total bid volume within 0.5% of the current price is 3x the ask volume, that is a strong imbalance favoring buyers. Ratios above 2:1 are worth noting; ratios above 4:1 are significant.


Interactive: Order Book Depth

Explore how shifting bid and ask volume creates directional pressure. Notice how the ratio changes as one side of the book thickens or thins out.

Order Book Depth
2.02.96.05.67.48.08.88.29.210.812.912.112.413.714.13.34.15.97.37.17.09.88.58.711.510.511.113.813.014.5Mid PriceBidsAsks
Bid/Ask Ratio: 50% / 50%Neutral

Identifying Support and Resistance From Depth

Traditional support and resistance come from historical price levels. DOM-based support and resistance come from where liquidity currently sits.

Bid Walls as Support

A bid wall is a single price level with unusually large buy volume. For example, if BTC/USDT is trading at $94,200 and there are 150 BTC of resting buy orders at $94,000 compared to 5-10 BTC at surrounding levels, that wall may act as a floor.

Ask Walls as Resistance

The same logic applies above. A cluster of 200 BTC in sell orders at $95,000 while surrounding levels show 3-8 BTC creates a visible ceiling that price must absorb through to continue higher.

Walls Can Be Pulled

Large resting orders are not commitments. They can be canceled in milliseconds. A wall that disappears as price approaches it was never real support or resistance -- it was a signal to manipulate other participants. Always verify walls with actual trade prints.


Thin Books vs Thick Books

The total depth of the order book changes throughout the day and varies by market conditions.

Thin Book Characteristics

  • Low total volume on both sides
  • Common during off-peak hours or before major news events
  • Price moves faster and further on smaller volume
  • Slippage risk increases for market orders
  • Wicks and spikes are more common

Thick Book Characteristics

  • High volume stacked on both sides
  • Common during active trading sessions
  • Price moves require significant volume to shift
  • Tighter spreads and less slippage
  • More orderly price discovery

BTC/USDT example: During the Asian session open, the BTC/USDT book on Binance might show 800 BTC of total depth within 1% of price. During a low-volume weekend, that same range might hold only 200 BTC. A $5 million market sell order barely moves price in the first scenario but could cause a 0.3% wick in the second.


Depth Patterns to Watch

Stacking

Multiple price levels near each other all showing above-average volume. This creates a zone of liquidity rather than a single wall. Stacked bids across $93,800-$94,000 suggest a broad area of buyer interest, which tends to be more reliable than a single-level wall.

Absorption in Real Time

When price reaches a large resting order and that order holds -- trade volume prints at that level but the order keeps refilling -- genuine absorption is occurring. Someone is actively defending that price with real capital.

Vacuums

When one side of the book is nearly empty for a stretch of prices, a liquidity vacuum exists. If price breaks into a vacuum, it will travel quickly to the next cluster of resting orders. These vacuums above resistance or below support are where fast moves originate.


Spoofing Awareness

Spoofing is the practice of placing large orders with no intention of execution, designed to create a false impression of supply or demand. Recognizing it is essential for reading depth accurately.

Red flags that an order may be a spoof:

  • The order appears suddenly when price is still far away
  • The order is canceled or reduced as price approaches within a few ticks
  • The order reappears at a different level after being pulled
  • The size is dramatically larger than the surrounding context
Spoofing Is Illegal but Common

Spoofing is prohibited on regulated exchanges, but enforcement in crypto markets is limited. Treat all large resting orders as potentially unreliable until they are actually traded against. Confirmed absorption (visible on the tape) is the only proof that a wall is real.


Practical DOM Reading Workflow

  1. Check overall depth -- is the book thin or thick? This sets your expectations for how price will behave
  2. Identify significant levels -- look for walls, stacking zones, and vacuums within 0.5-1% of current price
  3. Note the imbalance -- which side has more resting liquidity?
  4. Watch for changes -- orders being added, pulled, or absorbed in real time provide more information than a static snapshot
  5. Cross-reference with price -- a level that has both historical significance and current DOM support is stronger than either alone

Key Takeaways

  • The order book shows all resting limit orders, revealing where participants intend to buy and sell
  • Bid-ask imbalance indicates which side has more resting liquidity and suggests directional bias
  • Walls and stacking zones can act as support and resistance, but only if the orders are genuine
  • Thin books produce volatile, fast moves; thick books produce orderly, grinding moves
  • Spoofing makes DOM reading unreliable without tape confirmation -- always verify that large orders are being traded against, not just displayed
  • Use DOM as one input in a broader confirmation framework, not as a standalone trading signal