Discipline · 4 min read

Is a volume spike against you an exit?

A huge volume bar prints just as price ticks against you, and it reads as a flood of orders arriving on the wrong side. But volume has no inherent direction — and the spike that feels like the end is often the middle.

Volume measures how much traded, not who won. A spike against your position could be aggressive sellers overwhelming buyers — or aggressive buyers being absorbed, or a continuation igniting, or simply a scheduled liquidity event. Live, on a single bar, you cannot reliably decode which. The directional story you attach is mostly projection.

What you seeA massive volume bar just hit against meBig players must be pushing my way outThis looks like the move is reversing hardI should exit into the spikeWhat the system seesVolume alone has no directionSpikes occur at continuations tooIntrabar, buyers and sellers both transactedThe strategy never used volume as an exit
A volume spike tells you activity was high, not which side won. The same spikes appear at trend continuations, breakouts, and reversals alike.

Spikes cluster at the interesting moments — all of them

High-volume bars appear at reversals, yes, but also at breakouts and trend accelerations that would have run in your favor. Selecting only the spikes that coincide with adverse ticks and calling them exits is textbook confirmation bias: you remember the ones that preceded reversals and forget the ones that preceded continuation.

If it's not a rule, it's noise

Unless your strategy explicitly conditions on volume, a spike is not actionable information for your exits. The tested edge already lived through countless volume spikes in both directions. Let the predefined stop handle the trades where the spike really was the end — those losses are already in the sample.

Volume tells you it was loud, not who won. A spike against you is ambiguous by nature — don't read an exit into a number with no direction.

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All figures and examples are hypothetical and illustrative, based on backtested data and Monte Carlo simulation. Past and simulated performance does not guarantee future results. This is educational content, not financial advice. Diagrams are schematic, not specific trade recommendations. Prop firm rules and Terms of Service compliance are your responsibility.