How to Use Volume Price Analysis to Confirm Key Levels and Avoid Fakeouts
Ruben Leija
Volume Price Analysis (VPA) is one of the most overlooked but powerful tools in trading. While many traders obsess over indicators or patterns, VPA reveals what’s really happening behind the scenes—where the money is flowing, who’s trapped, and whether a price level will actually hold.
When paired with modern concepts like swept liquidity and key levels surfaced by Gextron, VPA becomes the confirmation layer that helps traders avoid traps and act with precision.
Let’s break it down.
What is Volume Price Analysis (VPA)?
VPA is the study of how volume interacts with price—candle by candle, level by level.
The principle is simple:
If price is moving, volume should support the move. If not, it’s likely a trap.
Examples:
Price rising with increasing volume? Strength.
Price rising with falling volume? Weakness or a fakeout.
Price falling on high volume? Institutional selling.
Price falling on low volume? Possible accumulation.
What is a Swept Low (or High)
A liquidity sweep happens when price temporarily breaks through a key level—like the low of a high-volume candle—then reverses.
This:
Triggers stop-losses
Baits breakout traders
Creates a spike in liquidity
Often leads to sharp reversals if reclaimed
Recognizing a sweep and confirming it with volume is a powerful way to spot traps or catch the start of a move.
How Gextron Identifies Key Levels
Gextron scans the market to surface high-probability support and resistance zones, such as:
Expected move highs/lows
High open interest strike clusters
Dealer hedging zones
Gamma walls and flip thresholds
These levels reveal where institutions and market makers are positioned or hedging—but not every level will hold.
That’s where VPA comes in.
Gextron gives you the zones that matter. VPA helps you decide whether to act on them.
How to Use VPA to Confirm or Reject a Key Level
Here’s how to combine both approaches:
Start with Gextron’s key levels
These are statistically meaningful areas of interest.