Thanks J. Super-interesting.

That I was not knowledgeable about the word des-balance, but I know from the remainder of your case what you're referring to.
I have one further question based on such an illuion.

I know what the broker could be doing in slipping a few orders to cover this loss, but the way in practice would a broker ch some stops near? Can they temporarily expand their spreads to trigger a few stop losses, or would they control the quote (both buy and sell) on this pair temporarily up or down. Or would...
Actually the term ought to be unbalance. Uff. . terrible English.
In practice their handling software only grab stops nearby. Remember they're trying to unwind the loss of a commerce they took a few ticks before, but they still need to keep their quotes with the market for your new incoming orders. Their quotes tend to stay the market at all times and when they do expand the ask from the bid is likely because the whole market is the way.

Constantly keep in mind Keep that 1 pips above and one pip below current quotes is their own land. They ch what they need. Occasionally is our
occasionally we're in in same direction with them and we're ok. Finest thing to prevent that is to get a script that conceal the stops
or show them in a different place. Afterward, their software does not see them nearby.

J.