Crypto signal order book spoofing depth library

Crypto Signal Order Book Spoofing Depth Library

Neutral worksheets for checking bid walls, ask walls, spoofing risk, thin order books, imbalance, liquidity sweeps, stop hunts, iceberg claims, spread expansion, and multi-venue depth mismatch.

Start With The Safe Default

Choose the scenario and order-book check closest to the reader’s question. Each page gives a short answer, records to save, stronger-proof questions, neutral status boundaries, and internal links into deeper CryptoSignalsReview risk surfaces.

The library does not recommend providers, trades, exchanges, bots, leverage settings, or copy-trading access. It helps readers separate visible order-book evidence from missing execution and risk proof.

Bid Wall Support Signal

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a long signal that cites a visible bid wall, buy wall, or depth cluster as support. The weak point is that a bid wall can be real support, passive interest, iceberg masking, or a spoof that disappears before price reaches it.

Ask Wall Breakout Signal

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a breakout signal that points to an ask wall, sell wall, or resistance depth as the level to clear. The weak point is that an ask wall can be absorbed by real demand, pulled before price arrives, or used to trap breakout buyers.

Spoofed Liquidity Wall Alert

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that treats a moving or disappearing wall as useful evidence without checking spoofing risk. The weak point is that large visible orders can be placed to influence perception and canceled before execution.

Thin Order Book Breakout

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that expects price to move quickly because depth is thin above or below the current market. The weak point is that thin depth can create fast movement, but it also increases slippage, failed fills, and sharp reversals.

Order Book Imbalance Signal

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that uses bid-versus-ask depth imbalance as confirmation for direction. The weak point is that book imbalance can flip quickly and may not represent executed demand or supply.

Liquidity Sweep Confirmation

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that cites a sweep of resting liquidity, stops, or visible depth as confirmation. The weak point is that a sweep can be continuation, stop hunt, forced liquidation, or simple illiquidity unless the close and follow-through agree.

Stop Hunt Order Book Signal

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that claims price is hunting stops around visible liquidity or prior high/low levels. The weak point is that a stop-hunt label can explain a wick after the fact without proving who traded, what liquidity was swept, or whether trend resumed.

Iceberg Order Detection Claim

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that claims hidden or iceberg orders are absorbing price and confirming direction. The weak point is that iceberg detection is probabilistic and can be confused with repeated passive orders, fragmented venues, or normal refresh behavior.

Spread Expansion Danger Signal

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal where bid-ask spread widens before or after an alert, changing whether the trade is executable. The weak point is that a direction idea can be correct while spread expansion makes entry, stop, or exit quality unacceptable.

Multi Venue Depth Mismatch

Use this group when the reader needs to inspect a signal that uses one exchange order book while followers may execute on another venue. The weak point is that depth, spread, walls, and slippage can differ sharply across exchanges and pairs.