Supply and demand is something that drives the markets all over the financial world. The law of demand says that the demand is inversely proportional to the price. When the price goes up, the demand is lower because the buyers do not want to spend too much money to buy a product. But when the price goes down, the demand is higher because the buyers buy eagerly. The law of supply says that the supply is directly proportional to the price. When the price is low, the supply is low because the sellers do not wish to sell at such a low price. But when the price is high, the supply also rises because the sellers wish to sell the products at the possible highest price.
These are the simple laws of supply and demand. Now, let’s see how to use the supply and demand zones in the markets to trade at IQ Option.
Recognizing the supply and demand zones at IQ Option
The supply and demand zones can be identified as the broad area of the support and resistance levels. But the idea behind them is different. Support and resistance levels work because they are connected to past peaks and bottoms which are obviously visible to market participants. Supply and demand are more about cheap or expensive. The demand is formed at the support level and the supply at the resistance.
To find the supply and demand zones, you should look for the long candles that appear subsequently. Then, you should identify the basis for the fast movement of the price which is typically the sideways fluctuation.
Trading with the supply and demand zones on the IQ Option platform
Typically, when the price falls into the demand zone, it is a signal for the upwards movement. This means you should open a buy position. On the IQ Option platform use currency pairs (CFDs) instead of Fixed Time Trades. Remember to set a Stop Loss just below demand zone (or above supply zone for sell positions).
When the price meets the supply zone, usually the price will soon fall. That is why you should enter short.
Sometimes, the demand becomes the supply zone or the opposite. It is similar to role switching between support and resistance.
There are several formations of supply and demand. Let’s take a closer look at a few most common ones.
Trend continuation patterns
Demand and supply can form trend continuation patterns. It occurs when the price is going up, then fluctuates creating the base level and continues to rise afterwards. Then we can say that demand area is created. You should enter a long position when the price revisits the demand level after the rally.
During the downtrend, the pattern is created when the price falls into the base and then breaks through and moves further down. Open a sell trade when the price returns to the supply zone after the rally.
Trend reversal patterns
When the price was falling, then it moves within the base for a while and after that, it changes the direction, we receive a demand zone and possible demand reversal pattern. You should open a buy position at the moment the price is touching the demand level again.
A supply reversal pattern develops when, after the uptrend and fluctuating within the base, the price moves downward. That is why you should open a sell trade here. Enter when the price is revisiting already created supply zone.
Flip zone
We call a flip zone the situation when the demand changes into the supply. Supply and demand zones will finally exhaust. It happens when the price passes the zone and moves further. Sometimes doing that the price will leave a new base for new supply/demand pattern. Then we can say that the zone has changed its role.