Smart Money Concepts — abbreviated SMC — is a trading method that explains financial markets from the perspective of large institutional players: central banks, hedge funds, market makers. The core idea of SMC is simple: markets are not random. Price movements are driven by players who need liquidity to fill their positions, and as a retail trader you can learn to recognise those patterns.
SMC is largely based on the method of Michael Huddleston (ICT trading) but has been further developed by the trading community. In 2026, SMC has grown into one of the most widely used strategies among prop firm traders worldwide.
What is Smart Money Concepts exactly?
SMC teaches you to analyse markets from an institutional perspective — and to anticipate their actions instead of always reacting to them too late.
Why is it called "Smart Money"?
The term "smart money" refers to large institutional players that dominate the market. On the other side is "dumb money": the mass of retail traders who react to price action without understanding why the market is moving.
A concrete example: a large bank wants to build a $500 million long position in EURUSD. They can't do that all at once without moving the market. Instead, they manipulate price briefly lower — triggering retail stop losses — then buy large quantities at lower levels. Retail traders see this as an illogical move. SMC traders recognise it as a liquidity sweep.
Core concepts of SMC
1. Market Structure
Everything in SMC starts with market structure. You look at the sequence of highs and lows:
- Bullish structure: higher highs (HH) and higher lows (HL)
- Bearish structure: lower highs (LH) and lower lows (LL)
- Break of Structure (BOS): confirms the trend direction
- Change of Character (CHoCH): signals a potential trend reversal
You always analyse multiple timeframes. The higher timeframe (4H, daily) determines the bias; on lower timeframes (15m, 5m) you refine the entry.
2. Liquidity
Liquidity is one of the most central concepts in SMC. The market always moves toward liquidity — zones where many stop-loss orders sit. The most common liquidity zones:
- Equal highs / equal lows: levels that have been tested multiple times but not broken
- Previous swing highs/lows: clear swings on the higher timeframe
- Trendline liquidity: stops traders place below obvious trendlines
A liquidity sweep is the brief break beyond such a level, followed by a fast reversal. This is the sign that smart money has collected the liquidity and is now ready for the real directional move.
3. Order Blocks
An order block (OB) is the last bullish or bearish candle before a strong impulse move begins. When price returns to this level, the expectation is that smart money becomes active again and continues the trend.
- Bullish OB: the last bearish candle before a strong upward move
- Bearish OB: the last bullish candle before a strong downward move
4. Fair Value Gap (FVG)
A Fair Value Gap is a zone where price moved so fast that an imbalance was created across three candles. Read the full guide on Fair Value Gaps →
5. Premium and Discount
In a bullish market you want to buy in the discount zone (the lower 50% of a swing range); in a bearish market you want to sell in the premium zone (the upper 50%). This prevents you from buying too high or shorting too low.
6. Inducement
Inducement is a deliberate "trap" in the market: price moves briefly toward a seemingly obvious level to lure retail traders in — then reverses sharply in the opposite direction. Learning to recognise inducement helps you avoid many false entries.
What does an SMC trade setup look like?
SMC vs. traditional technical analysis
| Aspect | Traditional TA | SMC |
|---|---|---|
| Foundation | Patterns and indicators | Institutional behaviour |
| Indicators | RSI, MACD, Bollinger | None — pure price action |
| Stop loss | Below support / above resistance | Below swing low / order block |
| Timeframe | Usually single TF | Multi-timeframe analysis |
| Learning curve | Relatively low | High — several months |
Why SMC is popular with prop firm traders
Prop firms like FTMO and Funding Pips have strict rules: daily drawdown limits, maximum total drawdown. SMC fits well because:
- You're selective — only trades with a clear setup are taken
- Stop losses are small and precise — just below the swing low or order block
- Risk-reward ratios are favourable — 1:2 to 1:5 is realistic
- Killzones provide structure — you know when to trade and when to stay out
The pitfall: analysis without discipline
SMC gives you a powerful analytical framework, but it doesn't guarantee success. Most traders who learn SMC and still lose don't struggle with the strategy — they struggle with behaviour. Entering too early before the setup fully forms. Continuing to trade after two losses. Forcing a setup because the market is "almost ready".
That's exactly why keeping a trading journal is so valuable. Not to track P&L, but to discover your own behavioural patterns. When do you deviate from your rules? At what times do you make the most mistakes?
Read also: What is ICT Trading? · What is a Fair Value Gap?