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Smt Divergence Detector Calculator

Calculate smt divergence detector with our free Smt divergence detector Calculator. Compare rates, see projections, and make informed financial decisions.

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Formula

Bullish SMT: Asset1 Lower Low + Asset2 No Lower Low | Bearish SMT: Asset1 Higher High + Asset2 No Higher High

SMT divergence is detected by comparing the swing structure of two correlated assets. For positively correlated pairs, if one asset makes a new extreme (higher high or lower low) but the correlated asset fails to confirm, a divergence exists indicating potential reversal.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Bullish SMT on EUR/USD vs GBP/USD

Problem: EUR/USD makes a new swing low at 1.0850 (previous low 1.0860) but GBP/USD holds above its previous low. Detect the divergence.

Solution: EUR/USD: Current Low 1.0850 < Previous Low 1.0860 = Lower Low (YES)\nGBP/USD: Current Low 1.2630 > Previous Low 1.2620 = Lower Low (NO)\nSince EUR/USD made a lower low but GBP/USD did NOT, bullish SMT divergence is present.\nThe liquidity sweep on EUR/USD was not confirmed by GBP/USD.

Result: Bullish SMT Divergence detected. Look for long entries on EUR/USD with bullish market structure shift.

Example 2: Bearish SMT on ES vs NQ

Problem: ES (S&P 500) makes a new high at 5,250 (previous high 5,240) but NQ (NASDAQ) fails to exceed its previous high of 18,500, reaching only 18,480.

Solution: ES: Current High 5,250 > Previous High 5,240 = Higher High (YES)\nNQ: Current High 18,480 < Previous High 18,500 = Higher High (NO)\nSince ES made a higher high but NQ did NOT confirm, bearish SMT divergence is present.\nSmart money is distributing while retail chases the new high.

Result: Bearish SMT Divergence detected. Look for short entries after market structure shift on the lower timeframe.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is SMT divergence in ICT trading methodology?

SMT stands for Smart Money Technique, and SMT divergence is a concept from the Inner Circle Trader methodology used to identify when institutional or smart money is positioning differently than what the retail market perceives. SMT divergence occurs when two positively correlated assets fail to make the same swing structure. For example, if EUR/USD makes a new swing low but GBP/USD does not make a corresponding new swing low, this discrepancy signals that smart money may be accumulating positions ahead of a reversal. The divergence reveals that the liquidity sweep on one asset was not confirmed by the correlated asset, suggesting the move was a manipulation rather than genuine market direction.

Which correlated pairs are best for detecting SMT divergence?

The most commonly used positively correlated pairs for SMT divergence include EUR/USD with GBP/USD, as both move inversely to the US dollar. The Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar pairs AUD/USD and NZD/USD also have strong positive correlation. For equity indices, ES (S&P 500) and NQ (NASDAQ 100) are the primary pairs, along with YM (Dow Jones) as an additional confirmation. In metals, gold and silver frequently exhibit SMT divergence. For negatively correlated pairs, EUR/USD and USD/CHF are classic choices, as are GBP/USD and USD/CAD. The key is selecting pairs that share a common fundamental driver, typically the US dollar for forex pairs.

How do I confirm an SMT divergence signal before trading?

Confirming SMT divergence requires multiple factors aligning. First, the divergence should occur at a significant level such as a weekly or daily order block, fair value gap, or institutional reference point. Second, check the time of day since the highest probability SMT signals occur during the London or New York trading sessions between 2 AM and 11 AM Eastern Time. Third, look for a market structure shift on the lower timeframe of the asset that shows the divergence. Fourth, the divergence should ideally occur after a liquidity sweep where price takes out a previous swing high or low before reversing. Finally, confluence with the higher timeframe bias greatly increases the reliability of the signal.

What is the difference between SMT divergence and regular divergence?

Regular or classical divergence compares price action to an oscillator indicator like RSI or MACD on the same asset. For example, price makes a higher high while RSI makes a lower high, suggesting weakening momentum. SMT divergence is fundamentally different because it compares the actual price structure of two separate but correlated assets. This makes SMT divergence a pure price action tool that does not rely on lagging indicators. SMT divergence is considered more reliable by ICT practitioners because it reflects actual order flow discrepancies between correlated markets rather than mathematical derivatives of a single price series. The divergence between two real markets reveals institutional positioning more accurately.

Can SMT divergence be used on multiple timeframes?

Yes, SMT divergence is applicable across all timeframes, but higher timeframes produce more reliable signals. On the weekly and daily charts, SMT divergence can signal major trend reversals worth hundreds of pips. On the 4-hour and 1-hour charts, it identifies intermediate swing trade opportunities. On the 15-minute and 5-minute charts, it is used for intraday entries during London and New York sessions. The most powerful setups occur when SMT divergence aligns across multiple timeframes, such as a daily SMT divergence with a 1-hour entry confirmation. As a general rule, use the higher timeframe divergence to establish directional bias and the lower timeframe divergence to time your entry with a tighter stop loss.

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References