Home -
Original -
Main body -

WikiFX Express

XM
FXTM
IC Markets Global
EC markets
TMGM
FOREX.com
HFM
pepperstone
octa
D prime

How Trading Volume Tells You If a Price Move is Real

WikiFX
| 2026-04-27 11:30

Abstract:Trading volume is a crucial tool for confirming whether a sudden market move has genuine strength behind it. This article explains how beginners can use volume to validate breakouts and avoid traps, while also demystifying the automated algorithms and legal insider trading rules that often drive market activity.

Default Image

When you look at a trading chart, price tells you only half the story. The other half is volume. Many beginners jump into a trade the moment a candlestick pushes past a resistance line, only to watch the price violently reverse against them. Often, the missing ingredient in their analysis is simply checking whether there was actual weight—or volume—behind the move.

Understanding volume helps you measure the true activity and liquidity of a market, keeping you out of weak setups and fake breakouts.

What Exactly is Trading Volume?

At its core, volume is the amount of an asset that changes hands between buyers and sellers over a specific period.

In the stock market, this means counting the exact number of shares traded during a given day. However, because foreign exchange is a decentralized market without a single clearinghouse, you cannot count every single currency lot traded globally.

Instead, retail Forex platforms use “tick volume.” Tick volume measures how many times the price changes within a specific timeframe. Because prices change much more frequently when there is heavy trading activity, tick volume acts as a highly accurate, practical stand-in for actual trade volume. When trade volume is high, you generally see better liquidity, tighter spreads, and faster order execution.

Using Volume to Test Market Strength

In technical analysis, volume acts as a lie detector for price moves. It measures the relative significance of what you see on the chart.

Think of volume as the fuel backing a price movement. If a market moves a large amount supported by high volume, that move gains credibility. It means heavy participation from buyers or sellers is driving the trend. You can trust the momentum.

Conversely, if the price moves up but the volume remains low, you should view that move with deep skepticism. Low volume indicates very few participants are involved. The momentum lacks strength, and the price represents a weak push that could easily reverse.

Confirming Breakouts at Key Levels

Volume is your best tool for navigating support (floor) and resistance (ceiling) levels.

If you want to validate a breakout above resistance, look closely at the volume bars at the bottom of your chart. To trust the breakout, you need to see high buying volume. If the price breaks the ceiling but the volume is lower than average, the market is likely setting a trap.

The same logic applies to reversals. If the price reaches a resistance level and bounces off it, high selling volume confirms that the downward reversal is strong.

Who Drives the Volume?

When watching volume spikes, beginners often assume a massive group of individual traders suddenly decided to buy or sell. In modern markets, the reality is largely automated.

Between 60% and 80% of daily trading volume globally is now conducted by High-Frequency Trading (HFT) algorithms. These automated trading platforms are programmed to execute thousands of trades in fractions of a second. This explains why you will often see aggressive, immediate volume spikes the exact second key economic data is released.

Understanding Stock CFDs and Volume Spikes

Many Malaysian beginners eventually expand from trading currency pairs to trading US company stock CFDs. If you do this, you might notice sudden, massive volume spikes driven by major corporate insiders—like directors or CEOs—selling off stock.

Beginners often worry that insiders are dumping shares based on secret bad news. However, the US SEC regulates this heavily through Rule 10b5-1. This rule allows major insiders (those owning more than 10% of voting shares) to sell company stock legally, provided they set up a strict, predetermined trading plan.

Under Rule 10b5-1, the executives must specify the amount, price, and sell dates via a formula far in advance. They must sign a contract with a broker when they have absolutely no material nonpublic information (MNPI), and they must wait through a mandatory “cooling-off” period before any trading begins. Since May 2024, these stock trades settle on a T+1 basis (one business day). Knowing this rule helps you understand that scheduled insider selling is normal corporate mechanics, not necessarily a panic signal.

A Practical Takeaway

Before you enter a trade based on a sudden price surge, glance down at your volume indicator. Look for higher-than-average bars to confirm the market actually has the strength to sustain the direction it is heading.

When trading volatile sessions characterized by heavy volume and algorithmic spikes, reliable order execution is critical. Before depositing your funds, always use the WikiFX app to verify your broker's regulatory status and check user reviews regarding slippage, ensuring your platform can actually handle high-volume market conditions fairly.

Default Image
Default Image

WikiFX Express

XM
FXTM
IC Markets Global
EC markets
TMGM
FOREX.com
HFM
pepperstone
octa
D prime

WikiFX Broker

FXTM

FXTM

Regulated
TICKMILL

TICKMILL

Regulated
Exness

Exness

Regulated
IC Markets Global

IC Markets Global

Regulated
FXCM

FXCM

Regulated
D prime

D prime

Domestic Regulation
FXTM

FXTM

Regulated
TICKMILL

TICKMILL

Regulated
Exness

Exness

Regulated
IC Markets Global

IC Markets Global

Regulated
FXCM

FXCM

Regulated
D prime

D prime

Domestic Regulation

WikiFX Broker

FXTM

FXTM

Regulated
TICKMILL

TICKMILL

Regulated
Exness

Exness

Regulated
IC Markets Global

IC Markets Global

Regulated
FXCM

FXCM

Regulated
D prime

D prime

Domestic Regulation
FXTM

FXTM

Regulated
TICKMILL

TICKMILL

Regulated
Exness

Exness

Regulated
IC Markets Global

IC Markets Global

Regulated
FXCM

FXCM

Regulated
D prime

D prime

Domestic Regulation

Latest News

The May inflation numbers are due out Wednesday morning. Here's what to expect

WikiFX
2026-06-10 02:54

The Market's Ledger: Why Price Returns to Fill Liquidity Voids

WikiFX
2026-06-09 11:00

Keeping Your Forex Profits Safe With Trailing Stop Losses

WikiFX
2026-06-08 10:00

Review 2026: Japan FSA Regulation, Platform Access, and Complaint Signals

WikiFX
2026-06-08 11:00

HEADWAY Review: Broker Complaints Point to Withdrawals, Zeroed Balances, and Login Blocks

WikiFX
2026-06-08 11:00

Indian Stocks Take a Beating, Sensex Falls by Over 600 Points Today: Check Out Why

WikiFX
2026-06-08 13:14

Dollar Hits Two-Month High Amid Surging Yields

WikiFX
2026-06-08 12:00

Getting Started in Forex: Understanding Currency Pairs, Central Banks, and Legal Risks

WikiFX
2026-06-08 13:30

India Left Reeling as Net FDI Crashes from $28 Billion to Just $1 Billion in Two Years

WikiFX
2026-06-09 20:58

WTI Slumps As Treasury Yields Surge

WikiFX
2026-06-08 10:00

Rate Calc

USD
CNY
Current Rate: 0

Amount

USD

Available

CNY
Calculate

You may also like

PROLIFIC FX INVESTORS

PROLIFIC FX INVESTORS

POLARISINVESTLTD

POLARISINVESTLTD

PRIME SIGNAL FINANCE

PRIME SIGNAL FINANCE

RECENTRADE

RECENTRADE

MEGA COIN TRADERS

MEGA COIN TRADERS

legal.com.de

legal.com.de

Coinelementors

Coinelementors

CRYPTO FUND TRADER

CRYPTO FUND TRADER

GLOBALDIGITALASSET

GLOBALDIGITALASSET

PHINIXTRADEX

PHINIXTRADEX