ICT AMD / PO3 Method Explained
The ICT (Inner Circle Trader) AMD / PO3 method is a price action model that describes how the market moves in three distinct phases within a trading session.
It’s based on the idea that price is manipulated to engineer liquidity before moving to its real target.
1. What Does AMD / PO3 Mean?
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A.M.D. → Accumulation, Manipulation, Distribution
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PO3 → Power of 3 (same concept but with a trading bias applied)
Both describe the same three-phase market behavior:
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Accumulation Phase (A) – Price moves sideways in a range, building orders and trapping traders.
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Manipulation Phase (M) – Price makes a false move to trigger stop losses or attract traders in the wrong direction.
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Distribution Phase (D) – The real move begins, targeting liquidity in the opposite direction of the manipulation.
2. Why Is This Important for Traders?
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Helps you avoid false breakouts.
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Shows you when not to enter.
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Helps identify high-probability setups within the daily range.
3. The 3 Phases in Detail
A. Accumulation
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Time: Usually during the Asian Session or early London Session.
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Price stays in a tight range.
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Purpose: Market makers gather buy & sell orders to fuel the coming move.
Example:
If the previous day closed at 1.2500, price might bounce between 1.2490 and 1.2510 for hours.
B. Manipulation
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Time: Often during London Open Killzone or New York Open Killzone.
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Price suddenly breaks the range in the wrong direction.
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Purpose: Take liquidity (stop hunts) and trap traders.
Example:
Price fakes a breakout above 1.2510 to 1.2530, hitting buy stops, then reverses hard.
C. Distribution
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Time: After the manipulation is done, the market moves strongly in the real direction.
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This is the true trend for the day/session.
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Targets: Previous day high/low, liquidity pools, or imbalance.
Example:
After faking the breakout upward, price drops from 1.2530 down to 1.2460.
4. PO3 – Power of 3
When applying this to trading bias:
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Accumulation → Market builds orders.
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Manipulation → Price fakes against your bias.
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Distribution → Price runs in your bias direction to target liquidity.
Key Tip:
PO3 works best when combined with daily bias from higher timeframes (HTF).
5. How to Trade AMD / PO3
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Identify Daily Bias → Bullish or Bearish using HTF (Daily/4H).
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Mark the Asian Range → High and Low.
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Wait for Manipulation → Price should take liquidity opposite to your bias.
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Enter After Confirmation → Look for reversal signs inside a kill zone.
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Target Liquidity → Previous day high/low, FVG, or significant level.
6. Example Trade Setup
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Bias: Bearish (HTF shows bearish market structure)
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Asian Range: 1.1020 – 1.1040
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London Open: Price spikes up to 1.1055 (manipulation)
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Entry: Short after bearish confirmation candle
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Target: 1.0980 liquidity pool
7. Common Mistakes
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Trading inside accumulation (low probability)
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Entering during manipulation (you get trapped)
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Ignoring time of day (ICT Kill Zones are critical)
8. Final Notes
The AMD / PO3 method is a powerful price action model, but it works best with:
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Time of day analysis
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Liquidity concepts
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Higher timeframe bias
Trade patiently. Wait for the 3 phases to play out, and only strike during the distribution phase in line with your bias.
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