What Market Profile tells us
Market Profile, developed by J. Peter Steidlmayer at the CBOT in the 1980s, organizes price and time data into a distribution showing where the market spent the most time trading. The shape of this distribution reveals information about who is in control (buyers or sellers), whether the day is balanced or directional, and where prices are likely to gravitate.
The seven day types emerge from how price develops through the session — whether it expands range early or late, whether it probes above or below the initial balance, and whether it finds acceptance at new prices or rejects them.
Initial Balance (IB)
The Initial Balance is the price range established in the first hour of trading (9:30–10:30 ET). It represents the range where both buyers and sellers have accepted prices in early trade. The IB is the reference point for classifying the day type — whether price stays within it, expands above it, below it, or both determines the day structure.
The seven day types
- Trend Day: Price moves directionally from the open to close, expanding range throughout the day. The opening is near the day's extreme and the close is at or near the opposite extreme. The IB is small relative to the total range. High-conviction directional days — range is typically 2x or more the average. Trade with the trend; fading is dangerous.
- Double Distribution Trend Day: Price establishes an early balance (first distribution), then breaks out and establishes a new balance at a different price level (second distribution). There's a clear auction at two separate price levels. The breakout between distributions is often swift. Trade the trend between distributions; expect balance at the destination.
- Expanded Range Day (Normal Variation): Price extends beyond the IB but returns to trade within the IB range for most of the day. Range is slightly above average. The extension probes a level but doesn't find acceptance. Fade the extension back into the IB range.
- Normal Day: Price establishes the IB range and largely stays within it for the session. Both buyers and sellers are active but neither gains sustained control. Range is average or below. Intraday mean-reversion strategies work well; trend-following loses.
- Non-Trend Day: Extremely narrow range — tighter than average, often 50–60% of the average daily range. Low conviction from both buyers and sellers. Often precedes a directional move. Avoid overtrading; wait for range expansion.
- Neutral Day: Price extends both above and below the IB during the session, but closes within or near the IB. Neither side could sustain the extension. Indecision day — be cautious with directional bias.
- Neutral Extreme Day: Like a Neutral Day but with larger extensions in both directions. Price probes aggressively in both directions but rejects both extremes and closes near the IB center. The extensions create opportunity at the extremes for range traders.
Identifying the day type in real time
The earlier you can identify the emerging day type, the better. Key clues by 10:30 AM (after IB establishes):
- Small IB + strong directional move = potential Trend Day
- Large IB that fills quickly and then pauses = Normal Day setting up
- Tiny IB with low volume = potential Non-Trend Day — expect expansion later
- IB extension above + quick rejection = Expanded Range or Neutral setting up
Day type and GEX alignment
Day structure and GEX context work together. A Trend Day developing in negative GEX territory has fuel — dealer hedging amplifies the directional move. A Trend Day attempting to develop in strongly positive GEX territory is fighting dealer selling/buying flows; it's more likely to resolve as an Expanded Range Day with a reversal back into balance. When day type and GEX align, the signal is high-confidence. When they conflict, be cautious.
See day structure classification in QuantRadar
QuantRadar identifies the emerging day type in real time using Market Profile principles.
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