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Trader Profile · The Market Wizards

Peter Steidlmayer

Contemporary · Chicago Board of Trade trader; creator of the Market Profile & Auction Market Theory

He turned the abstract idea that markets are two-sided auctions into a concrete, visual tool — the Market Profile — that shows where value forms and price is discovered.

Market ProfileAuction market theoryValuePrice discovery
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J. Peter Steidlmayer · CBOT

1 The Story

The trader who made the auction visible

J. Peter Steidlmayer joined the Chicago Board of Trade in 1963 and traded there for decades. In the early 1980s, seeking a way to read value as it formed during the day, he organised price and time data into a bell-shaped distribution he called the Market Profile, and while on the CBOT Board of Directors (1981–83) he initiated both the Profile and the Liquidity Data Bank.1

The Market Profile was introduced to the public in 1985, and Steidlmayer taught it through the Market Logic School and books including Markets and Market Logic (1986) and Steidlmayer on Markets.2

2 The Big Idea

The market is a two-sided auction seeking value

Price advertises opportunity; the market spends most of its time trading at value.

Steidlmayer's insight was to treat every market as a continuous auction whose job is to find the price that facilitates trade — 'value.' Most of the time price hovers there; it probes the extremes to discover whether higher or lower prices attract business. The Market Profile makes that process visible.1

3 The Method

Reading the auction with the Profile

The auction seeks value

The market continuously auctions to find the price that facilitates the most trade. Read whether it's accepting or rejecting prices.

The Market Profile (TPO)

Organise the session's prices into a distribution. A wide 'value area' (~70% of trade) forms around a 'point of control' — the most-traded price.

Balance vs. imbalance

A bell-shaped profile means a balanced, two-sided range; an elongated profile means an imbalanced, trending day.

Market-generated information

Let the auction itself — not an indicator — tell you whether buyers or sellers are in control and where value is shifting.

The Market Profile: where the auction finds valuehighlow← point of control (most-traded price)value area ≈ 70%price spends most time at value, and probes the extremes to discover new value
The Market Profile organises a session's prices into a distribution: a wide value area (~70% of trade) around the point of control, with the extremes where price was rejected.1

4 Try It Today

Test the idea for yourself

A no-risk exercise

On a charting site that offers a 'volume profile' or 'market profile' (many do), pull up a session and find the widest part of the distribution — the point of control — and the value area around it. Notice how price kept returning to value and was rejected at the extremes. That's Steidlmayer's auction in action.

5 The Books & Their Big Ideas

What he wrote — and what to take from it

Markets and Market Logic / Steidlmayer on Markets

J. Peter Steidlmayer · 1986 onward
  • Auction market theory — the market as a two-sided auction discovering value.2
  • The Market Profile — reading value, balance, and price discovery from a price-time distribution.1

6 Watch & Read

Go deeper

▶ Curated video embeds here
(YouTube embed, credited)

§ Sources

  1. "Market profile," Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Market_profile
  2. J. Peter Steidlmayer & Steven Hawkins, Steidlmayer on Markets: Trading with Market Profile.