Now that you understand what Depth of Market (DOM) is and how order flow works, it’s time to get practical.
In this article, we focus on real, executable Depth of Market Strategies for Futures Trading—the exact setups traders use to enter and exit trades based on liquidity, order flow, and market behavior.
This is where theory turns into execution.
The Core Principle of DOM Trading
Before jumping into strategies, lock in this idea:
You are not trading price — you are trading intentions behind price.
Every move in the market is driven by:
- Buyers lifting offers
- Sellers hitting bids
Your job is to read that interaction in real time.
Strategy 1: Liquidity Bounce (Support & Resistance via DOM)
Concept:
Large orders act as temporary barriers in the market.
What to Look For:
- Big buy orders below price → support
- Big sell orders above price → resistance
Entry Setup:
Long Trade:
- Price approaches large bid wall
- Selling slows down
- Buyers step in
Short Trade:
- Price approaches large ask wall
- Buying slows down
- Sellers step in
Entry Trigger:
- First sign of rejection (price stalls or ticks reverse)
Stop Loss:
- Just beyond the liquidity level
Take Profit:
- Small, quick moves (scalping approach)
Strategy 2: Momentum Ignition (Following Aggressive Orders)
Concept:
Strong moves happen when market orders overwhelm the order book.
What to Look For:
- Rapid execution of orders on one side
- Price moving quickly with little resistance
- Thin liquidity ahead
Entry Setup:
- Jump in with momentum, not after it
DOM Signals:
- Buyers aggressively lifting offers → go long
- Sellers aggressively hitting bids → go short
Key Tip:
If you hesitate, you’re late.
This strategy requires speed and confidence.
Strategy 3: Absorption (Hidden Strength)
Concept:
A large player is quietly absorbing orders without letting price move.
What to Look For:
- High volume at a level
- Price not moving significantly
- Orders repeatedly filled
Example:
- Sellers keep hitting bids
- Price doesn’t drop
→ Strong buyer absorbing
Entry:
- Enter after absorption confirms
- Trade in direction of absorbing side
Why It Works:
You’re aligning with institutional accumulation or distribution.
Strategy 4: Fake Breakout (Liquidity Trap)
Concept:
The market creates a false breakout to trap traders before reversing.
What to Look For:
- Large orders suddenly disappear
- Price breaks a level
- No follow-through
DOM Clues:
- Liquidity gets pulled
- Opposite side strengthens quickly
Entry:
- Wait for failure confirmation
- Enter opposite direction of breakout
Example:
- Price breaks resistance
- Buyers fail to push higher
- Sellers step in → short
Strategy 5: Order Book Imbalance
Concept:
When one side of the order book dominates, price often follows.
What to Look For:
- Significantly more volume on bid or ask
- Persistent imbalance across levels
Trade Logic:
- Strong bid imbalance → bullish bias
- Strong ask imbalance → bearish bias
Important:
This is not a standalone signal—combine with:
- Price location
- Market context
Timing Your Entries (Critical Skill)
DOM trading is all about timing.
Bad Entry:
- Jumping in too early
- Reacting to a single large order
Good Entry:
- Waiting for confirmation:
- Absorption
- Rejection
- Momentum shift
- Absorption
Combining DOM with Market Context
DOM works best when combined with:
1. Key Levels
- Previous highs/lows
- Support/resistance zones
2. Market Sessions
- London open
- New York open
3. News Events
- High-impact releases can override DOM signals
Example Trade Workflow
Scenario: Long Trade Using DOM
- Price approaches support level
- Large buy orders appear
- Sellers attempt to push price lower
- Price holds steady (absorption)
- Buyers step in aggressively
Execution:
- Enter long
- Stop below support
- Target quick move upward
Speed vs Patience (Balancing Both)
DOM trading requires a paradox:
- Patience to wait for the right setup
- Speed to execute when it appears
Most traders fail because they:
- Rush bad setups
- Hesitate on good ones
Tools That Enhance DOM Trading
To maximize effectiveness, combine DOM with:
- Time & session tools (for liquidity timing)
- Economic calendar (to avoid volatility spikes)
- Sentiment indicators (for directional bias)
This creates a multi-layered edge.
Key Takeaways
- DOM is about real-time decision-making
- Focus on:
- Liquidity
- Order flow
- Execution timing
- Liquidity
- The best setups come from:
- Absorption
- Momentum
- Liquidity reactions
- Absorption
What’s Next (Article 3/3)
In the final article, we’ll cover:
- Advanced DOM tactics used by professionals
- Risk management strategies specific to order flow trading
- How to build a consistent edge using DOM
This is where you transition from strategy user → strategic trader.
Useful Links
- Learn this and more with the Complete A to Z Forex & Futures Course
- Automate Your Trading with the Award Winning Patrex Pro Forex Bot





