Are equal highs/lows against you an exit?
Price is stacking equal highs (or lows) on the side that would hurt you, and it reads as a liquidity pool the market is building to run — right through your stop. Liquidity does pool at equal levels. It also pools on the other side, all the time, which is why this rarely tells you to exit.
Equal highs and lows mark clusters of stop orders — liquidity the market may eventually reach for. The concept is sound. The problem is that this liquidity exists on both sides of price essentially always. A condition that is permanently present in both directions cannot, by itself, single out the moment to abandon your trade.
The raid you fear may be the fuel you need
When price does run an opposing liquidity pool, it frequently reverses afterward — back in your direction. Exit pre-emptively and you may be bailing right before the raid that resolves in your favor. You'd be reacting to the setup for a reversal while missing that it's also the setup for continuation.
Ambient conditions aren't signals
This mirrors the liquidity sweep logic: something the market does constantly carries little specific information about your one trade. If equal-level liquidity were a tested exit, it would be coded as one. Let the stop define the failure point and hold the rest.
Liquidity always pools on both sides — that's the market's normal state, not a warning aimed at you. Ambient is not actionable.
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