Institutions (mutual funds, FIIs, prop desks) move 70% of Indian market volume. Retail traders fight against them most days. Volume Profile + VWAP let you READ the institutional footprint — buy where they bought, sell where they distributed. Game changer once you see it.
VWAP — the institutional benchmark
Volume-Weighted Average Price = Σ(price × volume) / Σ(volume) over the session. The price at which the average institution accumulated today.
Why it matters: pension funds, mutual funds, FIIs are scored on execution vs VWAP. Trading above VWAP = paying premium to the day's institutional cost. Below VWAP = getting a discount.
How retail uses VWAP
- Intraday support/resistance: Price tends to gravitate toward VWAP during the day.
- Trend bias: Above VWAP = bullish day. Below = bearish.
- Entry filter: Take long entries near VWAP support in uptrend days. Short rejections at VWAP in downtrend days.
- Anchored VWAP: Drag VWAP start to a major news event / pivot. Tracks institutional accumulation from that point.
Volume Profile — where price spent time at volume
Horizontal histogram showing volume traded at each price level. Tall bars = high-volume price nodes. Short bars = low-volume gaps.
Key terms:
- POC (Point of Control): Single highest-volume price = where most trades happened = fair value consensus.
- Value Area (VA): Price range containing 70% of volume.
- VAH (Value Area High): Top of value area.
- VAL (Value Area Low): Bottom of value area.
- LVN (Low Volume Node): Price levels with minimal trading = thin liquidity zones.
The 3 institutional patterns retail can read
1. Accumulation at POC
Price stuck at POC for days = institutions building positions at that level. When price finally breaks UP from POC = often institutional buying complete + markup phase starts.
2. Distribution at VAH
Multiple rejections at VAH on declining volume = institutions distributing into retail enthusiasm. Bearish setup.
3. LVN breakouts
Low-volume nodes = price moved through quickly = no buyers/sellers stuck there. When price returns to LVN = often breezes through to next high-volume zone fast. Use as breakout/breakdown acceleration target.
VWAP + Volume Profile combo (the pro setup)
- Identify previous day's VAH, VAL, POC.
- Watch open: above POC = bullish bias. Below = bearish bias.
- Trade pullbacks to VWAP in the bias direction.
- Target prior session VAH (if bullish) or VAL (if bearish).
- Stop below LVN level past entry.
Win rate: 58-62% on liquid Nifty 50 stocks. R:R typically 1:2. Sample size 100+ trades needed to validate edge.
Indian market specifics
- Tradable on: Liquid stocks (daily volume > ₹50 cr). Mid/small caps too thin for reliable VWAP/profile reads.
- Best timeframes: 5m/15m for intraday. Daily volume profile for swing setups.
- FII heavy days: Days with high FII activity (FOMC, RBI policy days, election results) have stronger VWAP adherence.
- F&O influence: Stocks with high option open interest at strikes near current price often respect those strikes as VWAP-like levels.
Common mistakes
- Trading VWAP on illiquid stocks. Useless without institutional volume.
- Treating VWAP as exact level. ±0.5% zone, not a knife-edge.
- Ignoring opening drive direction. First 30 minutes set the bias. Counter-trend VWAP trades fail more often.
- Mixing daily and intraday VWAPs. Pick one timeframe per trade.
Tools to access
Most charting platforms (TradingView, Kite, Streak, Sensibull) include VWAP and Volume Profile. Free tier covers basics. Anchored VWAP usually paid feature.
Pair with support/resistance levels for confluence setups. Use the Position Sizing calculator with VWAP-based stops.