Who Is ICT?
ICT (Inner Circle Trader) is the alias of Michael J. Huddleston, a trader and educator who has been teaching institutional trading concepts since the 2010s through YouTube and mentorship programs. His methodology forms the foundation of what the broader trading community now calls Smart Money Concepts (SMC).
Whether you call it ICT or SMC, the underlying principles are identical: markets are driven by institutional order flow, and retail traders can profit by learning to read the footprints institutions leave in price action.
Core ICT Concepts
Order Blocks: ICT defines order blocks as the last down-close candle before a bullish move or the last up-close candle before a bearish move. These mark institutional entry zones. ICT emphasizes that the order block must cause a displacement โ a sharp, aggressive move away from the zone.
Fair Value Gaps (Imbalances): Three-candle patterns where the middle candle creates a gap between the wicks of candles one and three. ICT teaches that these gaps are "unfair" prices where institutions didn't allow normal two-sided trading. Price tends to return and fill them.
Liquidity: ICT's concept of buy-side and sell-side liquidity is perhaps his most important contribution. Every stop loss is a target. Equal highs and equal lows are the most obvious liquidity pools. Institutions sweep these pools to fill their orders before the real move begins.
Optimal Trade Entry (OTE): ICT combines Fibonacci retracement with order blocks. The zone between 62% and 79% retracement after a BOS is the "optimal" zone for entry. When an OB sits within this zone, you have maximum confluence. Learn more in our OTE academy lesson.
The Power of Three (AMD)
ICT's Power of Three describes how each session unfolds in three phases:
Accumulation: The first phase where price moves in a tight range. Institutions are building positions quietly. On the daily chart, this is often the Asian session.
Manipulation: The second phase where price makes a fake move to sweep liquidity. At London open, this is the Judas Swing โ the fake breakout designed to trap retail traders.
Distribution: The final phase where price moves in the true direction. This is where the majority of the day's range is established and where profits are made.
How Quantum Algo Implements ICT Concepts
Quantum Algo automates every core ICT concept: order block detection with quality grading, FVG identification and mitigation tracking, liquidity pool mapping, BOS and CHoCH detection, and multi-timeframe analysis. The indicator translates ICT theory into actionable real-time signals on your TradingView chart.
ICT Killzones: Trading the Right Time Windows
One of ICT's most distinctive contributions is the concept of killzones โ specific time windows during which the highest-probability setups occur. The three primary killzones are the Asian killzone (20:00โ00:00 EST), the London killzone (02:00โ05:00 EST), and the New York killzone (07:00โ10:00 EST). Each killzone has a characteristic behavior: the Asian session typically builds the range that London then sweeps, and the New York session either continues the London direction or reverses it.
The practical application of killzones is attention management. Rather than monitoring charts all day, ICT traders focus their analysis on these specific windows. Outside killzones, market movements tend to be less clean, less institutional, and less predictable. By restricting trading to killzones, you automatically filter out the low-quality, choppy price action that occurs during off-hours, reducing both your screen time and your number of false signals.
The ICT Silver Bullet Setup
The Silver Bullet is a specific intraday setup that targets Fair Value Gaps during the 10:00โ11:00 AM EST window. During this hour, the market often creates a retracement that fills a morning FVG before continuing in the session's direction. The setup involves identifying the FVG left by the morning's initial impulse move, waiting for price to retrace into the gap during the 10โ11 AM window, and entering in the direction of the morning trend with a stop below the FVG (for longs) or above it (for shorts).
The Silver Bullet works because the 10:00โ11:00 AM window is when European markets begin to slow down and early New York traders reassess the morning's direction. This creates a natural pullback that often fills the morning's imbalance before the afternoon trend reasserts itself. It is one of the most replicable, time-specific setups in the ICT methodology, and it performs well on indices (NAS100, SPX500) and major forex pairs (EUR/USD, GBP/USD).
ICT vs Standard SMC: Which to Learn First
If you are new to institutional analysis, start with standard SMC before ICT. The reason is that SMC teaches the foundational principles (market structure, order blocks, FVGs, liquidity) in a more flexible, timeframe-agnostic way. Once you understand why price reacts at certain levels and how institutional order flow creates structural patterns, you have a framework that works on any asset and any timeframe. ICT then adds time-specific precision and additional filtering criteria on top of this foundation.
Learning ICT without first understanding SMC is like trying to learn advanced calculus without algebra. ICT's concepts (OTE, displacement, liquidity grabs, smart money reversals) all presuppose an understanding of market structure, order flow, and institutional behavior that SMC provides. Traders who jump straight into ICT often struggle because they are learning both the conceptual framework and the specific application simultaneously. Build the SMC foundation first (3โ6 months), then layer on ICT's time-specific refinements.
Applying ICT to Different Markets
ICT concepts were originally developed for forex and indices, but they translate effectively to other markets with adaptation. On crypto, killzone timing needs adjustment because the 24/7 market does not have a traditional session structure. Many ICT crypto traders use the US session open (9:30 AM EST) as their primary killzone and the Asian session low/high as their liquidity reference points. The Power of Three model (accumulation-manipulation-distribution) works particularly well on Bitcoin during US trading hours when institutional volume peaks.
On commodities like gold and oil, ICT's time-based concepts align naturally with the London and New York sessions where the majority of institutional futures volume trades. The London fix times (10:30 AM and 3:00 PM London) create particularly clean ICT setups on gold because these are the moments when physical gold pricing is established, attracting concentrated institutional order flow. Oil traders can use the inventory report release time (10:30 AM EST on Wednesdays) as an additional high-probability killzone specific to the energy complex.
Common ICT Learning Mistakes
The most common mistake new ICT students make is trying to learn everything simultaneously. ICT's educational content spans hundreds of hours of video lectures covering dozens of individual concepts. Attempting to apply all of these concepts from the start creates information overload and inconsistent execution. The recommended approach is to focus on one concept at a time: spend 2โ4 weeks mastering market structure before moving to order blocks, then spend 2โ4 weeks on order blocks before adding FVGs, and so on. This sequential mastery approach builds competence from the foundation up.
Another frequent mistake is over-reliance on specific time-based setups without understanding the underlying market structure. The Silver Bullet setup, for example, works because of the FVG and structural context that typically exists during the 10โ11 AM window โ not because there is something magical about that specific time. If the structural context is absent (no morning impulse, no FVG, no clear directional bias), the Silver Bullet will fail regardless of the time. Always verify the structural requirements before relying on time-based filters.
Key Takeaways
Understanding ICT trading methodology provides a meaningful addition to your trading toolkit, but the real value emerges only when you integrate these concepts with a structured methodology like Smart Money Concepts. No single indicator, pattern, or analytical concept produces consistent profitability in isolation. The concepts covered in this guide become powerful when they serve as one layer in a multi-confirmation system that includes higher-timeframe directional bias, institutional zone identification, and disciplined risk management.
The most important practical step is to backtest before you trade live. Take the concepts from this guide and apply them to historical price data using TradingView's bar replay feature. Walk through at least 50 setups, recording the entry, stop, target, and outcome for each. This backtesting exercise accomplishes two things: it builds your pattern recognition for the specific setup types discussed in this article, and it gives you empirical data on the setup's actual performance โ win rate, average R:R, and maximum drawdown โ that you can use to make informed decisions about incorporating it into your live trading plan.
Your Next Steps
Now that you have a solid understanding of applying ICT concepts within your broader trading framework, the next step is implementation. This week, dedicate 30 minutes per day to chart markup practice focused specifically on the concepts covered in this guide. Use the daily and 4-hour charts of your primary trading assets. Mark every relevant setup you can find, then track how price interacts with those levels over the next few sessions. This deliberate practice builds the visual pattern recognition that eventually becomes automatic during live trading.
After two weeks of chart markup practice, begin incorporating these setups into your demo trading or your live trading with minimal position sizes. Start with your single highest-conviction setup type and trade only that setup for 30 consecutive trades. After 30 trades, review your journal data: which setups produced the best R:R? Which sessions were most productive? Which assets showed the cleanest patterns? Use this data to refine your approach, eliminate underperforming variants, and concentrate on the specific combinations that your data shows work best for your trading style and market.
Finally, remember that mastery is a journey measured in months and years, not days and weeks. The traders who achieve lasting success are the ones who commit to continuous improvement through consistent practice, honest self-assessment, and evidence-based refinement. Every session of chart markup, every journaled trade, and every weekly review compounds your skill and brings you closer to the level of unconscious competence where profitable trading becomes second nature. Stay patient, stay disciplined, and trust the process.