Banks and large institutions cannot fill orders in one go — they need retail traders' stop losses and breakout orders to build their positions. SMC teaches you to identify where that institutional activity leaves footprints and trade alongside them, not against them.
Retail traders buy breakouts, place stops at obvious levels, and chase momentum. Institutions use this predictable behavior to get filled — they push price into retail stops, collect liquidity, then reverse.
Instead of reacting to price, SMC traders anticipate where institutions will act. They wait for a liquidity raid, then enter in the direction of the true institutional move with a tight stop.
Central banks, hedge funds, commercial banks, and market makers. Their volume is so large that they leave identifiable patterns: order blocks, imbalances, and displacement candles.
Price moves from one liquidity pool to another. It raids one side (stops), then drives to the opposing side. Repeat. Understanding this loop is the entire game.