📉 Why is it that sometimes when you buy, the price goes down, and when you sell, the price goes up?
This may seem like the market is against you, but it actually has to do with several technical factors:
1. Slippage and order book depth.
When you place a market order, your order sweeps the opposite orders in the book:
If you buy with market, you take the cheapest sell orders.
If you sell with market, you take the most expensive buy orders.
But if liquidity is low or there is little depth, your order can sweep through several levels and move the price in the opposite direction right after. Sometimes this causes an immediate technical reversal that seems like the price is moving away just when you enter.
2. Iceberg orders and algorithmic manipulation.
High-frequency trading bots see your order come in and react:
If you buy, the bots may interpret that it's time to sell because they identify your move as part of a retail strategy or FOMO.
If you sell, the bots detect weakness and absorb your sale to buy lower… causing the price to rise later.
Your order is information for other players faster than you.
3. "Stop hunting" and liquidity sweeps.
There are traders or institutions that do the opposite of your action to trap liquidity:
* You buy → they sell → they lower the price → they clean the stop-loss of buyers → they buy back cheaper.
* You sell → they buy → they raise the price → they clean out those who shorted late → they take profits.
This movement is designed to squeeze retail.
4. Market psychological feedback
When many retail traders buy at resistance, the market usually rejects.
When they sell at support, the price usually bounces.
It's not that the market is against you. It's that the market responds to your impulse.
—Your broker with an empire vision… and the patience of one who understands that each candle is a conversation between fear and strategy.