RelicusRoad - Signal LineWhen you have charts full of too many indicators, it can mess up with your analysis and cause analysis paralysis. Use RelicusRoad Signal Line to simply your charts with a beautiful color changing moving average line as per the strategies selected.
4 different strategies to choose from:
1) MACD
2) PMACD (Price Action + MACD)
3) Parabolic SAR
4) Momentum
GREEN: BUY ZONE
RED: SELL ZONE
FUNCTIONS OVERVIEW
MACD: Moving average convergence divergence ( MACD ) is a trend-following momentum indicator that shows the relationship between two moving averages of a security’s price. The MACD is calculated by subtracting the 26-period exponential moving average ( EMA ) from the 12-period EMA .
The result of that calculation is the MACD line. A 9 EMA of the MACD called the "signal line," is then plotted on top of the MACD line, which can function as a trigger for buy and sell signals. Traders may buy the security when the MACD crosses above its signal line and sell—or short—the security when the MACD crosses below the signal line. Moving average convergence divergence ( MACD ) indicators can be interpreted in several ways, but the more common methods are crossovers, divergences, and rapid rises/falls.
Moving average convergence divergence ( MACD ) is calculated by subtracting the 26-period exponential moving average ( EMA ) from the 12-period EMA .
MACD triggers technical signals when it crosses above (to buy) or below (to sell) its signal line.
The speed of crossovers is also taken as a signal of a market is overbought or oversold.
MACD helps investors understand whether the bullish or bearish movement in the price is strengthening or weakening.
PMACD: It's an improvement to MACD that you can use the Red/Green indications to make better decisions.
Parabolic SAR: The parabolic SAR indicator, developed by J. Wells Wilder, is used by traders to determine trend direction and potential reversals in price. The indicator uses a trailing stop and reverse method called "SAR," or stop and reverse, to identify suitable exit and entry points. Traders also refer to the indicator as the parabolic stop and reverse , parabolic SAR , or PSAR.
The parabolic SAR indicator appears on a chart as a series of dots, either above or below an asset's price, depending on the direction the price is moving. A dot is placed below the price when it is trending upward, and above the price when it is trending downward.
The parabolic SAR (stop and reverse) indicator is used by technical traders to spot trends and reversals.
The indicator utilizes a system of dots superimposed onto a price chart.
A reversal occurs when these dots flip, but a reversal signal in the SAR does not necessarily mean a reversal in the price. A PSAR reversal only means that the price and indicator have crossed.
Momentum: On paper, momentum investing seems less like an investing strategy and more like a knee-jerk reaction to market information. The idea of selling losers and buying winners is seductive, but it flies in the face of the tried and true Wall Street adage, "buy low, sell high."
Momentum investing is a trading strategy in which investors buy securities that are rising and sell them when they look to have peaked.
The goal is to work with volatility by finding buying opportunities in short-term uptrends and then sell when the securities start to lose momentum.
Then, the investor takes the cash and looks for the next short-term uptrend, or buying opportunity, and repeats the process.
Skilled traders understand when to enter into a position, how long to hold it for, and when to exit; they can also react to short-term, news-driven spikes or selloffs.
Risks of momentum trading include moving into a position too early, closing out too late, and getting distracted and missing key trends and technical deviations.
在脚本中搜索"momentum"
+ Rate of ChangeNOTE!* If you were using my previous + Rate of Change (and OBV) indicator, I will not be updating that. OBV was moved to my + Breadth & Volume indicator.
This indicator here is basically and updated version of the old indicator, without OBV.
The Rate of Change, or RoC, is a momentum indicator that measures the percentage change in price between the current period and the price n periods ago.
It oscillates above and below a zeroline, basically showing positive or negative momentum.
I applied the OBV's calculation to it, but without the inclusion of volume (also added a lookback period) to see what would happen. I rather liked the result.
I call this the "Cumulative Rate of Change." I only recently realized that this is actually just the OBV without volume, however the OBV does not have a lookback period, and this indicator does.
Doing some more fiddling, I realized that removing both the signum and the volume from the calculation gets you basically a price chart, but calculated as the change in price over n periods. I'm leaving this in because maybe someone discovers they really like having a line chart with moving averages or some other indicator on it to leave their main chart indicator free (giving a more clear look at price action). Can't hurt, right?
Default lookback is set to 1, but play with longer settings (especially if using the traditional RoC, which is by default in TV set to 10, and is nigh on useless at 1--I like 13).
Default source is set to each candle close, but give ohlc4 a look. It smooths out the indicator a bit, and because it's an average of the open, high, low, and close it should give a better idea of what price in general is doing.
Moving averages, Bollinger Bands, Donchian Channels, candle coloring and alerts are my usual additions.
Below are some comparison images of the different indicators wrapped up in here.
Comparison of Cumulative Rate of Change with two different sources. Lookback set to 1.
Cumulative Rate of Change as a price chart, essentially.
And, lastly, the traditional Rate of Change indicator.
Comet Coloring SpaceManBTC Comet Coloring SpaceManBTC
Comet Coloring is a trend coloring tool used to provide additional confluences to trading. Using the tools together on dip entries the color shift can be used to detect a change in trend/show a weakening trend. Green for an uptrend, Red for downtrend and yellow for waning momentum.
Comet Coloring also comes with a guide line for trading, the line itself is not used in the calculation of trend but has its own trend analysis applied to determine an entry point on failures of claiming the line from either side allowing for directional plays long or short. This can be disabled in settings.
The Trend analysis comes in 2 forms, normal and smoothed , smoothed will filter some noise in sacrifice of early detections.
Aggregator is a proprietary determinent of how much data can be referenced, lowering the aggregate is better and produces more accurate results, the downside is load times.
Auto Aggregator is the primary difference by providing its own calculations very different to how previous auto calculations have worked in spacemanbtc indicators, this aggregator is a work in progress but should produce results that can be replicated accross all coins. Doing so allows for chart by chart switching and is useful for anyone who is in need of quick trend analysis.
The benefits of waning momentum , waning momentum was shown to show potential weakness in trend but also give oppurtunity to enter trend on a pull back, it can signify stagnation or minimal decrease in price allowing for a pull back entry on a strong uptrend.
To Do:
Reversion weakness detection is being considered.
Highlight areas where guide line reclaim has failed
+ Rate of Change (and OBV)The Rate of Change, or RoC, is a momentum indicator that measures the percentage change in price between the current period and the price n periods ago. It oscillates above and below a zeroline, basically showing positive or negative momentum. I applied the OBV's calculation to it, but without the inclusion of volume (also added a lookback period) to see what would happen.
Actually what happened was I was looking at hot-rodding the OBV indicator, but then wondered if I could apply the cumulative calculation to another indicator to see what would happen. Not sure why I chose the Rate of Change, but it seemed a neat idea. And it worked! And so I called it the "Cumulative Rate of Change." I only recently realized that this is actually just the OBV without volume, HOWEVER the OBV does not have a lookback period, and its source is the close of each period. Basically, when you look at the calculation for the OBV you'll notice that it's a cumulative measure of the "change" of the closing price against the previous close times the volume. The Rate of Change is basically that measurement over more than one period, excluding the volume, and is not cumulative. Thus the "Cumulative Rate of Change" is basically an OBV without the volume but with the capability to adjust the lookback period.
Anyway, after days and weeks of playing with the indicator pretty infrequently I did decide that I actually really liked it, especially with the addition of moving averages and bollinger bands. So I decided to play with it a bit more.
I added a drop-down menu to include the standard Rate of Change indicator, and then thought I may as well add the OBV too, in case someone might like to compare that to the C-RoC, or just wants an OBV with myriad moving averages and bollinger bands.
By default I have the indicator set to the "C-RoC" and the lookback is set to 1, but play with longer settings (this is pretty much necessary if using the traditional RoC, which is by default set to 10 in TradingView, and is nigh on useless at 1).
I also recommend playing with the source. 'Close' is nice, but 'ohlc4' provides some very nice signals as well, as it follows the price flow for each period completely, filtering the noisiness of 'close' as source.
Hope you guys like this. With the bollinger bands and your preferred moving average settings this can be a powerful tool for re-entering trades in trend, taking profits, determining momentum swings.
MTF MomentumUniqueness:
MTF Momentum is designed to provide true multiple-timeframe information at once on a single screen with as little clutter as possible. What makes MTF Momentum unique is the way it condenses the perspectives of our other internal models into a single bullish or bearish slope near the current candle, then automatically draws the same bullish or bearish momentum slopes of the next higher timeframes. The structure is engineered to highlight shifts in momentum as they happen on the current candle (angled lines), marking potential reversal points as they build (red and green diamonds), and provides a numerical Q-Score that draws a horizontal marker for elevated Q-Score exhaustion. The design avoids telling you when to buy or sell. Instead, it structures the raw inputs in a way that makes interpretation easier. That makes it useful whether you’re trading actively or simply learning to recognize how momentum flows across layers.
Usefulness:
This indicator is designed to work across multiple timeframes. Instead of juggling the same indicator on 3 different screens, you can see a unified picture that captures both the local momentum and higher timeframes that provide time-dimensional context. When short-term and higher-timeframe angles point in the same direction, MTF Momentum makes that visible in a straightforward way and may help highlight when momentum is consistent across multiple timeframes. When short-term layers push against a stronger higher timeframe, it signals that momentum may be shifting or exhausting. This indicator provides an efficient workflow and helps reduce clutter.
How It Works:
At its core, MTF Momentum is a blend of momentum readings from multiple sources — RSI slopes, EMA stacks, Gaussian smoothing, Fisher-style transforms, and MACD widening analysis built from the same shared core mathematical engines as our other indicators. The uniqueness of this indicator is not tied to any single formula as each component is well-known, but it is in the way they are layered, smoothed, and consolidated that entirely new readings are created.
The process begins with multiple RSI calculations, offset and averaged to reduce jitter. These are smoothed through EMA stacks of varying lengths, then run through Gaussian-style filters that emphasize directional change while filtering noise. The slope differences across these layers form the foundation of the momentum calculation. This momentum reading is then checked against MACD widening conditions. MACD gap expansion is treated as a momentum confirmation — widening gaps with price in agreement add weight, while narrowing gaps or misaligned candles reduce confidence. Additional derivative logic, including Fisher-style transforms, is applied to normalize the outputs and make them more stable across different assets.
Multi-timeframe integration comes from using request.security to pull higher timeframe versions of the same structures that are on the base chart. For example, you can see a one-minute chart overlaid with five-minute and fifteen-minute context. The blending is seamless — higher timeframe momentum is displayed alongside lower timeframe signals that help the user see where current timeframe momentum is in relation to higher timeframes.
How to Use the MTF Momentum Indicator:
Applying the MTF Momentum indicator is straightforward, but interpretation depends on your process.
To use, load the indicator on your preferred base timeframe. Use this general guideline to setup your indicators:
Base timeframe -> 1st HTF -> 2nd HTF
1min -> 5min -> 15min
5min -> 15min -> 1hr
15min -> 1hr -> 4hr
1hr -> 4hr -> 1day
4hr -> 1day -> Weekly
1day -> Weekly -> Monthly
Weekly -> Monthly -> Yearly
When used at base timeframes at 1 hour or lower, higher timeframe lines ARE drawn automatically.
When using a base timeframe above 1 hour (e.g., 4h, Daily), higher-timeframe slopes are NOT drawn automatically. To view them, switch to the higher-timeframe chart itself (for example, Daily or Weekly) and draw an arrow along the slope using TradingView’s drawing tools. Once placed, the arrow will remain visible when you return to your lower base timeframe chart, giving you the higher-timeframe context alongside your current view. This step is optional, purely for visual reference, and does not affect the indicator’s calculations.
These are your higher timeframe momentum angles that can help provide context to the automatically drawn angle on your current timeframe. You can even practice drawing these lines on the lower timeframes such as using a 5min base and 15min and 1hr HTF charts. You can compare your manually drawn angles with the automatic HTF lines by enabling them in the INPUTS tab of the MTF Momentum settings menu.
Q-SCORE:
The Q-Score label presents two values ranging from 0 to 100. These values are a numerical translation of the same momentum conditions our other indicators display visually. Higher values indicate stronger readings of exhaustion within the current trend model, while lower values indicate less. You can think of this as similar to a distribution curve, where some states occur less frequently at the extreme ends of the range and more frequently near the middle. Q-Score values are provided as contextual information only and do not predict reversals or guarantee outcomes.
Blue Dotted & Solid Horizontal line:
The aqua blue horizontal line is a visual representation of the Q-Score values. When one or both numerical values is below 85 the line stays dotted -- it is only when both numerical values exceed 85 that the line changes from dotted to solid.
Green & Red Diamonds:
Diamonds mark areas where the underlying model detects counter-trend behavior. They may flicker on the current candle during intrabar calculations but are locked in at candle close and never get altered or repainted.
Red diamonds highlight points where the model detects counter-trend pressure during a bullish phase. Green diamonds highlight counter-trend pressure during a bearish phase. These markers reflect where momentum conditions have shifted relative to the prevailing trend. They appear where short-term dynamics differ from the broader trend. Traders can interpret these areas in their own context; the diamonds themselves do not predict reversals or guarantee outcomes.
Example ways to use the MTF Momentum indicator:
Look for agreement -- when both your base timeframe and higher timeframe momentums are pointing in the same direction, it reflects stronger alignment. This may help identify areas of trend continuation.
Watch for divergence -- if your short-term momentum pushes opposite to the higher timeframe, it flags a potential transition.
Disclaimer:
This tool does not generate buy or sell signals. It is a framework for visualizing momentum across layers, allowing you to incorporate that information into your own decision-making. How you apply it depends entirely on your goals, timeframe, and risk tolerance. This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, trading advice, or investment recommendations. Trading involves risk, and you may lose some or all of your capital. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. You are solely responsible for any decisions you make — always trade to the best of your own abilities and within your own risk tolerance.
Release Notes:
v1.0 (Initial Release)
Triple Momentum Core v1🧠 Technical Structure:
Triple Momentum Core analyzes the underlying wave of price movement through a three-stage system:
1. 🔵 Follow Line – The First Spark of Momentum:
Constructed using Bollinger Bands and ATR, this line detects the very first signs of directional price expansion. It gently whispers when the market begins stretching with force in one direction.
2. 🟢 SuperTrend – Confirmation and Directional Validation:
After the initial move, SuperTrend acts as the second checkpoint — validating whether the price action is evolving into a genuine trend or fading out. It confirms whether the impulse has the strength to sustain.
3. 🔴 PMax – Core Trend & Structural Anchor:
Based on Moving Average and ATR logic, PMax tracks the heartbeat of the trend. It serves as a dynamic structural boundary — critical for identifying trend continuation and managing risk.
4. 🟡 PMax MA Line – Smooth Trend Pulse & Adaptive Guide:
This yellow moving average line within the PMax system softly follows the overall trend flow, without reacting to sharp price noise. It acts as a balanced, stable guide to gauge the solidity of the trend’s body structure.
(If you prefer a cleaner view without any moving average lines, you can disable it from the settings.)
🧠 Technical Structure:
Triple Momentum Core analyzes the underlying wave of price movement through a three-stage system:
1. 🔵 Follow Line – The First Spark of Momentum:
Constructed using Bollinger Bands and ATR, this line detects the very first signs of directional price expansion. It gently whispers when the market begins stretching with force in one direction.
2. 🟢 SuperTrend – Confirmation and Directional Validation:
After the initial move, SuperTrend acts as the second checkpoint — validating whether the price action is evolving into a genuine trend or fading out. It confirms whether the impulse has the strength to sustain.
3. 🔴 PMax – Core Trend & Structural Anchor:
Based on Moving Average and ATR logic, PMax tracks the heartbeat of the trend. It serves as a dynamic structural boundary — critical for identifying trend continuation and managing risk.
4. 🟡 PMax MA Line – Smooth Trend Pulse & Adaptive Guide:
This yellow moving average line within the PMax system softly follows the overall trend flow, without reacting to sharp price noise. It acts as a balanced, stable guide to gauge the solidity of the trend’s body structure.
(If you prefer a cleaner view without any moving average lines, you can disable it from the settings.)
💡 Why “Triple Momentum Core”?
Because this indicator doesn’t just detect movement — it breaks it down into its essential phases:
Ignition, validation, and confirmation.
Each layer captures a unique and essential part of price behavior:
The first reaction (Follow Line) ignites the initial spark.
The second reaction (SuperTrend) confirms whether that spark will become a real trend.
The third and final layer (PMax) structurally anchors and follows that trend.
That’s why we call it Triple Momentum Core:
A synchronized 3-engine momentum system working in harmony to capture the lifecycle of a trend — from spark to structure.
Weighted Average Volume Depth [QuantraSystems]Weighted Average Volume Depth
Introduction
The Weighted Average Volume Depth (𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓) indicator is calibrated to provide extensive insights, calculated using volumetric price action and volume depth, and provides dynamic adjustments based upon historical volatility.
This indicator is a valuable asset for traders and investors, aiming to capture trends, measure dynamic volatility, and provide market reversion analysis in a systematic way.
Legend
Volumetric Top Cap: Plotted at y = 0, this line represents the probabilistic maximum value, or ‘cap’ for the signal line. It is colored using a binary color scheme, and indicates the dominant trend direction - green for an uptrend and purple for a downtrend.
Base Line: Calculated using a volume-weighted volatility measurement, this line is used as the benchmark to calculate momentum in the 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓 indicator.
Signal Line: The signal line represents the volume and volatility weighted measurements, and oscillates between the Base Line and Top Cap. Its position between these levels provides the depth of insights available in this script.
When the signal line is remaining in close proximity to the base line, this is indicative of a low volatility market environment. These periods are also reflected as muted bar coloring when the ‘Trend Intensity’ setting is enabled.
Conversely, when the signal line approaches, or even breaks above the Top Cap, this is characteristic of an unsustainable trending action - and probabilistically speaking, a reversion or consolation is likely to occur at these levels.
Highlighting: When this setting is enabled, background coloring is applied when the Signal Line breaks above the Top Cap. This highlights green as an oversold zone, and purple as an overbought zone.
Reversal Signals: When price begins to reverse from a zone of overextension, a signal is plotted when this reversion occurs from a high probability zone.
Circle - Shows a possible bullish reversal.
Cross - Shows a possible bearish reversal.
Case Study
In the above image, we showcase three distinct trades in short succession, showcasing the 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓’s speed and accuracy under the right conditions.
The first long trade was initiated upon receiving a bullish reversal signal. The trade was then closed after the price experienced a sharp upwards movement - and an overbought signal was indicated by the purple shading.
The second, short trade was entered on the next bar, after a bearish reversal signal was printed by the indicator (a white cross). Similarly, this trade was closed upon the oversold signal.
Once again, a reversal signal was indicated by the 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓 indicator. This time a bullish signal (a white circle), and hence a long position was opened. However, this trade was held until a negative trend confirmation (signaled by the Top Cap’s shift in color). This makes apparent the indicator’s flexible nature, and showcases the multiple signaling types available for traders to use.
Recommended Settings
The optimal settings for the 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓 indicator will vary upon the chosen asset’s average level volatility, as well as the timeframe it is applied to.
Due to increased volatility levels on lower timeframes, it is recommended to increase the 'Top Cap Multiplier' to take into account the increased frequency of false signals found in these trading environments. The same can be said when used on highly volatile assets - a trader will likely benefit from using a higher 'Top Cap Multiplier.'
On more price-stable assets, as well as any asset on higher timeframes, there is merit to tightening the length of the 'Top Cap Multiplier,' due to the slower nature of price action.
Methodology
The 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓 starts with calculating the volume weighted average price and the volume weighted variance - which is the expectation of the squared deviation of a variable from its mean, giving insights into the distribution of trading volume.
Using the volume weighted variance, a standard deviation value is calculated based on user input. This value acts as the ‘Volumetric Top Cap’ - seen in the 𝓦𝓐𝓥𝓓 indicator window as the zero line.
The signal line is calculated as the difference between the current price and the theoretical upper or lower VWAP deviation bands. This line acts as the trigger for identifying prevailing trends and high probability reversal points.
The base line serves as a reference point for historical momentum. It is calculated using an exponential moving average of the lowest signal line values over a defined lookback period. This baseline helps in assessing whether the current momentum is high or low relative to historical norms.
Notes
Bar coloring can be turned off - especially useful when stacking multiple indicators as recommended, or set to 'Trend Intensity,' or 'Binary Trend' (which reflects the top cap coloring).
It is always recommended to never rely on a single indicator - and instead build and test multiple strategies utilizing more than one indicator as confirmation.
TTM Waves ABC ATR AO MOM SQZ//All code picked from many indicators, if you recognize your code, pls comment so people can see your awesome work! I only edited and added them all together so people don't use all their indicator slots. Hope this indicator helps as many people as it can. LFG!!!
AO (Awesome Oscillator) Useful to find potential reversals in trend.
MOM (Momentum) An oscillator that measures momentum.
ATR (Average True Range) Measures the upside and downside from the average price movement occuring. 1 ATR is the general measurement. Many traders use 2ATR to set a stop and 4ATR to set take profit from their entry based on current reading from the ATR.
SQZ ( TTM Squeeze) Measures when bollinger bands have left the interior of the Keltner Channel in an attempt to predict volatility thats about to happen to either side. Green = Move is probably about to happen.
TTM Waves ( Waves A, B, and C) Measure the previous candles to determine chop, positive or negative trends. C measures the previous 30 candles or so, B the last 15 or so, and A measures the last 8 or so. You can use all three or just one. You can sneak in a move if the 2 fastest ones have moved into your preferred area. (Positive or Negative) If the wave is not fully positve or negative then that is probably chop.
-Penguincryptic
CoffeeShopCrypto 3pl MAThe CoffeeShopCrypto 3pl MA indicator is a technical analysis tool that uses three different moving averages to identify trends in the price of an asset. The three moving averages have lengths of 12, 26, and 50. If these numbers sound familiar its because they are based off the standard of the MACD indicator, and can be either simple moving averages (SMA) or exponential moving averages (EMA), depending on user preference.
The following is plotted on the chart
The fast EMA/SMA (based on the 12-period length) in yellow.
The mid EMA/SMA (based on the 26-period length) in gray.
The slow EMA/SMA (based on the 50-period length) in either green or red, depending on whether the current close price is above or below the Overall Trend MA.
In addition to the moving averages, the indicator also calculates the MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence), and uses it to color the bars based on the momentum of the asset.
The MACD is calculated using two user-defined lengths (fast and slow), as well as a user-defined smoothing length for the signal line. The oscillator and signal line can be either SMA or EMA, and the colors of the MACD bars are based on whether the histogram is growing or falling, and whether it is above or below the zero line.
Overall, this indicator provides traders with a comprehensive tool for understanding the trend of an asset, as well as the momentum behind that trend. The moving averages provide a clear visual representation of the trend, while the MACD bars give insight into the strength of that trend and potential shifts in momentum.
---------------LONG ENTRY----------------
MA1 above MA2 and Overall trend = Green
IF RSI is above its midline you are confirmed for a long entry
-----------Short Entry--------------
MA1 below MA2 and Overall trend = Red
IF RSI is below its midline you are confirmed for a short entry
Leading MACD (Expo)Leading MACD (Expo) is designed to anticipate future price action, enabling traders to predict market movements ahead of time. The idea of a leading indicator is that traders can get in before the price move happens and ride the entire trend.
█ Moving average convergence divergence (MACD) is considered one of the most effective momentum and trend-following oscillators. However, the MACD is based on historical price action, making it a lagging indicator. A lagging indicator usually provides signals or insight once the price movement has passed or is in progress. That is why lagging indicators often are used to confirm a price trend or a move. On the other hand, the MACD histogram is more of a leading feature that can act as a sign of future trend changes.
█ The Leading MACD indicator takes all advantages of the traditional MACD and converts it into a fast-moving and leading oscillator that provides real-time insights about potential future price moves. As a result, it gives traders time to analyze a possible upcoming price move before it happens and be prepared for what's coming. However, the leading MACD should be combined with other forms of technical analysis to confirm potential entries and exits.
█ Leading vs. Lagging MACD
The leading MACD looks ahead and helps traders prepare for potential price moves. The traditional (lagging) MACD confirms price action that already has happened. A leading indicator reacts quicker to price changes, while a lagging indicator reacts slower. The different types of MACD have their own advantages and drawbacks, so make sure you understand the leading MACD and see if it fits in with your trading strategy.
█ HOW TO USE
Use the Leading MACD to get insights about potential price changes ahead of time. Get insights about whether a bullish or bearish move is strengthening or weakening. Other common ways are looking for divergences, finding trends, and measuring current momentum.
-----------------
Disclaimer
Copyright by Zeiierman.
The information contained in my Scripts/Indicators/Ideas/Algos/Systems does not constitute financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities of any type. I will not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from the use of or reliance on such information.
All investments involve risk, and the past performance of a security, industry, sector, market, financial product, trading strategy, backtest, or individual's trading does not guarantee future results or returns. Investors are fully responsible for any investment decisions they make. Such decisions should be based solely on an evaluation of their financial circumstances, investment objectives, risk tolerance, and liquidity needs.
My Scripts/Indicators/Ideas/Algos/Systems are only for educational purposes!
Williams %R - SmoothedFrom TradingView's description:
Williams %R (%R) is a momentum-based oscillator used in technical analysis, primarily to identify overbought and oversold conditions. The %R is based on a comparison between the current close and the highest high for a user defined look back period. %R Oscillates between 0 and -100 (note the negative values) with readings closer to zero indicating more overbought conditions and readings closer to -100 indicating oversold. Typically %R can generate set ups based on overbought and oversold conditions as well overall changes in momentum.
What's special?
This indicator adds two additional EMA lines to the original Williams %R indicator. Default EMA lengths are 5 and 13. The result is 2 smoother average lines, which are easier to read.
This indicator includes:
- signals for EMA crosses. EMA crosses can help indicate confirmed trend changes. Default colors are green and red
- signals for trend reversals on the faster EMA line. Default colors are blue and orange
Alerts available for bullish/bearish crossovers and reversals.
Enjoy~~!
MarketSniffer BMarketSniffer B is a custom made indicator made by 2 friends that combined 2 strategies to make 1 indicator. It can detect good moments to buy and sell based on our strategy.
The indicator gives the same signals als marketsniffer A but has a diffrent way of showing it by using a histogram to make the momentum more clear when a buy / sell signal will be printed.
Marketsniffer B can be used in any market since its for a big part based on momentum. Although we recommend using it in the crypto market since it was tested and mainly made for crypto.
How to use it: MarketSniffer B can be used in many ways, own strategies can be made.
Example strategy: Lower timeframes (anything below the 1d) if the price is trading above the yellow 200 EMA, take the buy signals. If its trading below the 200 ema and you see a sell signal then sell / short
Example strategy: Higher timeframes (anything above the 1d) Any timeframe above the 1d, the 200 ema rule doesn't exist. Any buy signals should be good for taking a spot position. The sell signals therfore are NOT short signals but sell signals. Its just points to take profit from the buy signal.
Example strategy: Divergences and trendlines can be drawn on the waves as strategy. This indicator also had a RSI with EMA that can be used for this.
Its recommended to use the small timeframe signals (anything below 1d) for leverage trading. Any signals above 1day timeframe should be spot trading.
This indicator should be used in combination with MarketSniffer A
Use the link on our profile to get acces to this indicator.
Stochastic CandlesA series of up to 28 stochastics oscillators used to form an average stochastic value, which is then used to colour the candles based on the momentum.
Each candle can be coloured one of ten colours and each one represents a position on the stochastic oscillator.
The indicator helps traders to visualise the momentum and helps trend following.
Inputs:
MA: multiple smoothing methods
Theme: multiple colours
Increment: stochastic length start and increments
End: stochastic length end
Smooth: smooth stochastic
UCS_Top & Bottom CandleThis is an experimental Indicator based on Momentum. Picks the Top & Bottom Candle for most Swing. Please post your opinion or suggestion to improve this indicator.
I have not back tested this completely. This is recently developed Indicator.
Cycle-Synced Channel Breakout📌 Cycle-Synced Channel Breakout – Detect Breakouts Confirmed by Candles and Momentum Cycles
📖 Overview
The Cycle-Synced Channel Breakout indicator is a precision breakout detection tool that combines the power of:
• Adaptive Keltner Channels
• Dominant Cycle Period Analysis (Ehlers-inspired)
• Candlestick Pattern Recognition (Engulfing)
This multi-layered approach helps identify true breakout opportunities by filtering out noise and false signals, making it ideal for swing traders and intraday traders seeking high-probability directional moves.
⚙️ How It Works
1. Keltner Channel Envelope
A dynamic volatility channel based on the EMA and ATR defines the upper and lower bounds of price movement.
2. Engulfing Candle Detection
The script detects strong bullish and bearish engulfing patterns, which often signal trend reversals or momentum continuations.
3. Dominant Cycle Momentum (Ehlers-inspired)
Using a smoothed power oscillator derived from a detrended price series, the indicator assesses whether momentum is accelerating during the breakout — filtering out weak moves.
4. Signal Confirmation Logic
A signal is only shown when:
• An engulfing pattern is detected, and
• Price breaks out of the Keltner Channel, and
• Momentum (cycle power) is rising
5. Visual Feedback
• Breakout signals are plotted with “BUY” or “SELL” labels
• Faded green/red background highlights confirmed breakouts
• Optional display of engulfing candles with triangle markers
⸻
🛠️ Key Features
• ✅ Adaptive Keltner Channels
• ✅ Bullish/Bearish Engulfing Candle Recognition
• ✅ Ehlers-style Cycle Momentum Confirmation
• ✅ Background highlights for confirmed breakouts
• ✅ Optional candle pattern visualization
• ✅ Lightweight and Pine v6 compatible
⸻
🧪 Inputs
• Keltner Length – EMA period for channel basis
• Multiplier – Multiplied with ATR to determine band width
• Cycle Lookback – Used to calculate smoothed cycle power
• Show Engulfing Candles? – Toggles candlestick signals
• Show Breakout Signals? – Toggles breakout labels and backgrounds
⸻
🧠 How to Use
• Look for “BUY” or “SELL” labels when:
• An engulfing candle breaks through the Keltner Channel
• Cycle momentum confirms strength behind the move
• The background color will faintly highlight the breakout direction.
• Use in combination with other trend or volume indicators for added confluence.
🔒 Notes
• This indicator is not repainting.
• It is designed for educational and research purposes only.
• Works across all timeframes and asset classes (stocks, crypto, forex, etc.)
Gabriel's Squeeze Momentum📊 Gabriel’s Squeeze Momentum — Deluxe Volatility + Momentum Suite
An advanced, all-in-one squeeze & momentum framework that times volatility compression/expansion and trend shifts, with optional CVD (cumulative volume delta) momentum, ATR zone context, Discontinued Signal Lines (DSL) scalps, Colored DMI trend label, Williams VIX Fix (WVF) low-volatility exhaustion pings, Buff’s VTTI/VPCI volume confirmation, and real-time divergence detection.
What it does:
Discover Squeezes. They occur when volatility contracts, often preceding significant price moves.
Measures momentum with a fast, ATR-normalized linear regression—optionally on Price or CVD—so you see direction and “how hard it’s pushing.”
🧭 Signal Legend ~ Colors the squeeze so you instantly know regime:
🟡 / 🟣 (Tight/Very Tight): Coiled spring; prepare a plan.
🔴 / ⚫ = (Regular/Wide): Watch for Divergences between Price and Momentum.
🟢 (Fired): Expansion started; trade with momentum cross and bias.
Adds context bands at ±1/±2/±3 ATR (“trend / expansion / OB-OS”) to filter late or weak signals.
DSL (Discontinued Signal Lines) give early scalp flips on momentum vs. adaptive bands.
DMI label & triangles communicate trend strength and whether +DI / −DI is in control.
Williams VIX Fix flags capitulation/exhaustion style spikes (with optional VIX proxy).
VTTI/VPCI modules confirm when volume aligns with price trend or contradicts it.
Divergences (regular & hidden) auto-draw with optional live (may repaint) or on-close.
🎢 Squeeze Momentum — How the Logic Works 🎢
The Squeeze Momentum model is built on the principle of volatility compression and expansion. In markets, periods of low volatility are often followed by explosive moves, while high volatility eventually contracts. The “squeeze” seeks to identify these compression phases and prepare traders for the likely expansion that follows.
This indicator achieves that by comparing Bollinger Bands (BB) to Keltner Channels (KC).
Bands: Bollinger vs. Keltner
Bollinger Bands (BB): Calculated using a Simple Moving Average (SMA) of price and standard deviations (σ) of the closing price. The bands expand and contract depending on volatility.
Keltner Channels (KC): Built from an SMA plus/minus multiples of the Average True Range (ATR). Unlike some simplified squeeze indicators that approximate ATR, this implementation uses a true ATR-based KC, ensuring accuracy across different assets and timeframes.
By comparing whether the Bollinger Bands are inside or outside the Keltner Channels, the indicator identifies different squeeze regimes, each representing a distinct volatility environment.
📦 Regime Colors
The squeeze states are color-coded for quick interpretation:
🔹Wide Squeeze (⚫): BB inside KC with a high ATR multiplier. Extremely low volatility, often before major expansion.
🔹Normal Squeeze (🔴): BB inside KC with a moderate ATR multiplier (about 25% more sensitive than Wide). Typical compression setting.
🔹Narrow Squeeze (🟡): BB inside KC with a lower ATR multiplier (about 50% more sensitive than Wide). Signals tighter compression.
🔹Very Narrow Squeeze (🟣): BB inside KC with the lowest ATR multiplier (100% more sensitive than Wide). Indicates extreme coiling.
🔹Fired Squeeze (🟢): BB break outside KC. Marks the release of volatility and potential trend acceleration.
This multi-layered system improves upon classical SQZPRO by using precisely calculated Keltner Channels and multiple sensitivity levels, giving traders more granular information about volatility states.
🔒 Multi-Timeframe Support
The indicator automatically adjusts squeeze thresholds for different timeframes — hourly, 4-hour, daily, weekly, and monthly charts. Each regime has been manually tuned for its timeframe, allowing traders to use the same tool whether scalping, swing trading, or holding longer-term positions.
🎯 Momentum Core
Detecting a squeeze is only half the equation — the indicator also includes a momentum engine to determine direction and strength.
Price momentum is measured as the distance of Close from its Highest High and Lowest Low range, smoothed with a Simple Moving Average, and refined with Linear Regression.
This value is then divided by ATR, normalizing momentum relative to volatility.
Optionally, CVD Mode (Cumulative Volume Delta ÷ Volume) can replace price momentum for assets where order-flow and volume dynamics dominate (e.g., crypto).
🦆 Signal Line
Momentum is paired with a Simple Moving Average signal line:
🔹Bullish: Momentum > Signal.
🔹Bearish: Momentum < Signal.
This crossover logic provides directional bias and filters for false squeezes.
🚀 When to Use Price vs. CVD
CVD Mode (Crypto, FX with tick volume): Best for assets with strong volume/order-flow signals.
Price Mode (Equities, Commodities, Higher TFs): Best for assets with irregular or thin volume data.
🛢️ATR Zones (context filter) 🛢️
Its design is straightforward yet effective: it measures the difference between the current price from its highest highs, lowest lows, and a moving average over a chosen period, then expresses that difference in terms of the Average True Range (ATR) over the same period. By normalizing price deviations against volatility, ATR provides a clear sense of how far and how fast price is moving relative to its “normal” range.
Interpreting the Zone
Positive Values: When it is above zero, price is trading above its HH, LL, and moving average, suggesting bullish momentum. The higher the value, the stronger the momentum relative to volatility.
Negative Values: When the Momentum is below zero, price is trading below its HH, LL, and moving average, signaling bearish momentum. The deeper the reading, the stronger the downside pressure.
Magnitude Matters: Because the Momentum is expressed in ATR units, traders can immediately gauge whether the move is small (less than 1 ATR), moderate (1–2 ATRs), or extreme (3+ ATRs). This makes it especially useful for assessing overbought or oversold conditions in a normalized way.
Strengths:
🔹Volatility-Normalized: Unlike simple squeeze momentum oscillators that have different OB/OS levels, this Momentum adjusts for volatility. This makes signals more consistent across assets with different volatility profiles.
🔹Simplicity:
±1 ATR: trending zone (bulls above +1, bears below −1)
±2 ATR: expansion (keep, add, or trail). Stretch/risk of mean reversion.
±3 ATR: potential exhaustion/mean-revert zone.
🔹Momentum Clarity: By framing momentum in ATR terms, it is easier to distinguish between a small deviation from trend and a genuinely significant move. Sometimes it is a good sign that it trend to ±3/2 ATR, looks for similar directional moves.
Color: The script shades +2/+3 (OB) and −2/−3 (OS) areas and provides swing alerts at ±1 ATR.
💚 What Are Discontinued Signal Lines (DSL)? 💚
In technical analysis, one of the most common tools for smoothing out noisy data is the signal line. This concept appears in many indicators, such as the MACD or stochastic oscillator, where the raw value of an indicator is compared to a smoothed version of itself. The signal line acts as a lagging filter, making it easier to identify shifts in momentum, crossovers, and directional changes.
While useful, the classic signal line approach has limitations. By design, a single smoothed line introduces lag, which means traders may receive signals later than ideal. Additionally, a one-size-fits-all smoothing process often struggles to adapt to different levels of volatility or rapidly changing market conditions.
This is where Discontinued Signal Lines (DSL) come in. DSL is an advanced extension of the traditional signal line concept. Instead of relying on just one smoothed comparison, DSL employs multiple adaptive lines that adjust dynamically to the current state of the indicator. These adaptive lines effectively “discontinue” the dependence on a single, fixed smoothing method, producing a more flexible and nuanced representation of market conditions.
How DSL Works?
Traditional Signal Line: Compares an the Momentum against its own moving average. Provides crossover signals when the raw indicator value moves above or below the smoothed line.
Strength: reduces noise. Weakness: delayed signals and limited adaptability.
DSL Extension: Uses multiple adaptive lines that respond differently to the indicator’s current behavior. Instead of one static moving average, the DSL approach creates faster and slower “reaction lines.” These lines adapt dynamically, capturing acceleration or deceleration in the indicator’s state.
Result: Traders see how momentum is evolving across multiple adaptive thresholds. This reduces false signals and improves responsiveness in volatile conditions.
Benefits of Discontinued Signal Lines
🔹Nuanced Trend Detection
DSL doesn’t just flag when momentum changes direction—it shows the quality of that shift, highlighting whether it is gaining strength, losing steam, or consolidating.
🔹Adaptability Across Markets
Because DSL adjusts to the Momentum’s own dynamics, it works well across different asset classes and timeframes, from equities and futures to forex and crypto.
🔹Earlier Signal Recognition
Multiple adaptive lines allow traders to spot developing trends earlier than with a single smoothed signal line, without being overwhelmed by raw indicator noise.
🔹Better Confirmation
DSL is particularly useful for confirmation. If both adaptive lines agree then a fill is applied in the direction, confidence in the trend is higher as the color turns bull/bear.
🔹Practical Uses
Momentum Trading: Spot acceleration or deceleration in trend strength.
Trend Confirmation: Verify whether a breakout has momentum behind it.
Noise Filtering: Smooth out erratic moves while retaining adaptability.
⚖️ Colored Directional Movement Index (CDMI) ⚖️
The Directional Movement Index (DMI), created by J. Welles Wilder, is one of the most respected trend-following indicators in technical analysis. It is actually a family of three separate indicators combined into one: the +DI (Positive Directional Indicator), the –DI (Negative Directional Indicator), and the ADX (Average Directional Index). Together, they measure not only whether the market is trending but also the strength of that trend. Traders have used the DMI for decades to identify trend direction, gauge momentum, and filter out periods of market noise.
However, despite its reliability, the traditional DMI can be challenging to interpret. Reading three separate lines at once and extracting meaningful signals requires both experience and careful observation. This complexity often discourages newer traders from fully utilizing its power.
The Colored Directional Movement Index (CDMI) is a modern reinterpretation of Wilder’s classic tool. It condenses the same information into a single visual line while using color, shape, and density to communicate what’s happening beneath the surface. The goal is simple: make the DMI’s insights faster to read, easier to act upon, and more intuitive to integrate into trading decisions.
Key Features of CDMI
🔹Color Scale for Trend Strength
The main triangle changes its base color depending on the strength of the DI reading. Dark Red or Green, colors correspond to stronger trends, while faded Gray or lighter yellow tones signal weaker or fading trends. This makes it visually clear when the market is consolidating versus trending strongly.
🔹Color Density for Momentum
Beyond strength, the CDMI uses color density to represent momentum in the trend’s strength. If the ADX is rising (trend gaining momentum), the triangles grows more darker. If the ADX is falling (trend losing momentum), the triangle becomes paler. This provides an instant sense of whether a trend is accelerating or decelerating.
🔹Directional Triangles for Trend Direction
To replace the separate +DI and –DI lines, the CDMI plots small triangle shapes along the bottom axis. An upward-facing triangle indicates that +DI is dominant, confirming bullish direction. A downward-facing triangle signals –DI dominance, confirming bearish direction. This way, both strength and direction are shown without the clutter of multiple overlapping lines.
🔹Label Display for Detailed Values
For traders who want precise data alongside the visuals, CDMI includes a label that shows:
Current trend strength (ADX value).
Current +DI and –DI values.
Momentum status of the ADX (rising or falling).
Historical values of DMI readings, so traders can track how the indicator has evolved over time.
Tooltips are also available to explain “How to read the colored DMI line”, making this version more beginner-friendly.
Why CDMI Matters
The CDMI retains the proven reliability of Wilder’s DMI while solving its biggest drawback—interpretation difficulty. Instead of juggling three separate plots, traders get a single, information-rich line supplemented with intuitive shapes and labels. This streamlined format makes trend verification, momentum analysis, and signal confirmation much faster.
For trading applications, the CDMI can help:
Confirm Entries by showing whether the market is trending strongly enough to justify a position.
Avoid False Signals by filtering out periods of low ADX (weak trend).
Enhance Timing by tracking momentum shifts in trend strength.
By simplifying the complexity of the original DMI into an elegant, color-coded tool, the CDMI makes one of technical analysis’ most advanced indicators practical for everyday use.
😅 The VIX, the Williams Vix Fix, and Market Bottoms 😎
The VIX, formally known as the CBOE Volatility Index, has long been considered one of the most reliable indicators for spotting major market bottoms. Often referred to as the “fear gauge,” it measures the market’s expectation of volatility in the S&P 500 over the next 30 days. When fear grips investors and volatility spikes, the VIX rises sharply. Historically, these moments of extreme fear often coincide with powerful buying opportunities, as markets have a tendency to rebound once panic selling exhausts itself.
Larry Williams, a well-known trader and author, developed the Williams Vix Fix as a way to replicate the insights of the VIX across any tradable asset. While the VIX itself is tied specifically to S&P 500 options, Williams wanted a tool that could capture similar panic-driven dynamics in stocks, futures, forex, and other markets where the VIX is not directly applicable. His “fix” uses price action and volatility formulas to approximate the same emotional extremes reflected in the official VIX, creating almost identical results in practice. This makes the Williams Vix Fix a powerful addition to the trader’s toolbox, allowing the same principle that works on U.S. equities to be applied universally.
One of the most important characteristics of both the VIX and the Williams Vix Fix is that they are far more reliable at signaling market bottoms than market tops. The reason is psychological as much as it is mathematical. At market bottoms, fear and panic are widespread. Retail investors often capitulate, selling in a frenzy as prices drop. This panic drives volatility higher, producing the spikes we see in the VIX. At the same time, professional traders and institutions—those with larger capital and more disciplined strategies—tend to step in when volatility is stretched. They buy when others are fearful, using the panic of retail investors as an opportunity to acquire assets at discounted prices. This confluence of retail panic and institutional buying power is what makes the VIX such a strong bottom-finding tool.
In contrast, at market tops, the dynamic is very different. Tops tend not to be marked by panic or fear. Instead, they form quietly as enthusiasm fades, liquidity dries up, and buying interest wanes. Investors are often complacent, assuming prices will continue to rise, while professional money begins distributing their positions. Because there is no surge in fear, volatility remains muted, and the VIX does not offer a clear warning. This is why traders who rely on the VIX or the Williams Vix Fix must understand its limitations: it is exceptional for detecting bottoms but less useful for anticipating tops.
For traders, the lesson is straightforward. When you see the VIX or Williams Vix Fix spiking to extreme levels, it often indicates a high-probability environment for a rebound. These tools should not be used in isolation, but when combined with support levels, sentiment indicators, and market breadth, they can provide some of the most reliable bottom-fishing signals available. While no indicator is perfect, few have stood the test of time as consistently as the VIX—and thanks to Williams’ adaptation, its power can now be applied to nearly every market.
Indicator Signals (Great in risk-off charts):
🔹Flags spike events (tops/bottoms) with both original and filtered (AE/FE) criteria.
🔹Great as a risk overlay: tighten stops into AE/FE, or require “no spike” to enter.
🤯 Volume Comfirmation: VTTI & VPCI (Buff Dormeier) 🤯
Volume Trend Technical Indicator (VTTI)
The Volume Trend Technical Indicator (VTTI) is a momentum-style tool that analyzes how volume trends interact with price movement. Unlike basic volume measures that simply report how many shares or contracts were traded, the VTTI evaluates whether volume is expanding or contracting in the same direction as the prevailing price trend. The underlying logic is that healthy trends are supported by rising volume, while weakening trends often occur on shrinking volume.
At its core, VTTI looks at the rate of change in volume compared to price movements. By smoothing and normalizing these relationships, the indicator helps traders determine whether momentum is accelerating, decelerating, or diverging.
Rising VTTI: Suggests that volume is confirming the current price trend, strengthening the case for continuation. Flips BG Green after crossing it's signal.
Falling VTTI: Indicates that the trend may be losing participation, often a sign of possible consolidation or reversal. Flips BG Red after crossing it's signal.
Traders often use VTTI to filter entries and exits. For example, if price breaks out but VTTI does not rise above zero, the breakout may lack conviction. On the other hand, when both price and VTTI are aligned, probability of continuation improves.
Volume Price Confirmation Indicator (VPCI)
The Volume Price Confirmation Indicator (VPCI), developed by Buff Dormeier, takes the relationship between price and volume a step further. While traditional indicators like On-Balance Volume (OBV) or Chaikin Money Flow look at cumulative patterns, VPCI breaks price and volume into trend and volatility components and then recombines them to measure how well they confirm each other.
In essence, VPCI asks: “Does volume confirm what price is signaling?”
The formula integrates:
Price Trend Component – whether the market is trending upward or downward.
Volume Trend Component – whether trading activity supports that price trend.
Volatility Adjustments – to account for irregular swings.
The resulting oscillator fluctuates around a zero line:
Positive VPCI: Indicates that price and volume trends are in agreement (bullish confirmation).
Negative VPCI: Suggests that price and volume are diverging (bearish warning or false move).
Crossovers of Zero: Can serve as potential buy or sell signals, depending on context.
A key strength of VPCI is its sensitivity to divergence. When prices continue rising but VPCI begins falling, it often foreshadows a weakening rally. Conversely, a rising VPCI during a flat or down market can highlight early accumulation.
VTTI (Entry Signal) vs. VPCI (Exit Signal)
While both indicators study price-volume dynamics, their focus differs:
VTTI is simpler, emphasizing the trend of volume relative to price for momentum confirmation.
VPCI is more advanced, decomposing both price and volume into multiple components to produce a nuanced oscillator.
Used together, they provide complementary insights. VTTI helps quickly spot whether volume is supporting a move, while VPCI offers deeper confirmation and highlights subtle divergences.
Note: The Up/Down Volume Alert works better on the 4 HR, for Daily scalps or 30 minute for HR scalps. Intraday it's 2/10 minute.
🦅 Divergence toolkit 🦅
Divergences in Technical Analysis
Divergence occurs when the price action of an asset moves in one direction while a technical indicator, such as RSI, MACD, or Momentum, moves in the opposite direction. This disagreement between price and indicator often signals a shift in underlying market dynamics. Traders use divergences to anticipate either potential reversals or continuations in trends.
There are two main types of divergences: regular divergences, which typically precede reversals, and hidden divergences, which suggest continuation of the current trend.
Regular Divergence (Reversal Signals)
A regular divergence occurs when price and indicator disagree during a trend extension. These divergences signal that momentum is no longer fully supporting the current trend and that a reversal may be imminent.
🔹Regular Bullish Divergence
Price Action: Forms a lower low.
Indicator: Forms a higher low.
Interpretation: Price is making new lows, but the indicator is gaining strength. This suggests that selling pressure is weakening, and a reversal to the upside may occur.
Example: RSI rising while price dips to fresh lows.
🔹Regular Bearish Divergence
Price Action: Forms a higher high.
Indicator: Forms a lower high.
Interpretation: Price is reaching new highs, but the indicator shows weakening momentum. This implies that buying pressure is fading, warning of a potential downside reversal.
Example: MACD histogram falling while price makes higher highs.
Regular divergences are often spotted near the end of trends and are most powerful when aligned with key support/resistance levels or overbought/oversold conditions.
Hidden Divergence (Continuation Signals)
A hidden divergence occurs during retracements within a trend. Unlike regular divergences, hidden divergences suggest that the prevailing trend still has strength and is likely to continue.
🔹Hidden Bullish Divergence
Price Action: Forms a higher low.
Indicator: Forms a lower low.
Interpretation: Price is retracing within an uptrend, but the indicator is overshooting downward. This shows that momentum remains intact, supporting continuation upward.
🔹Hidden Bearish Divergence
Price Action: Forms a lower high.
Indicator: Forms a higher high.
Interpretation: Price is retracing within a downtrend, while the indicator overshoots upward. This indicates that bearish momentum remains strong, supporting continuation downward.
Hidden divergences often appear during pullbacks, helping traders time entries in the direction of the prevailing trend.
Practical Use of Divergences
🔹Trend Reversal Alerts – Regular divergences are early warnings that a trend may be ending.
🔹Trend Continuation Signals – Hidden divergences help confirm that retracements are simply pauses, not full reversals.
🔹Confluence with Other Tools – Divergences are more reliable when combined with support/resistance, candlestick patterns, or volume analysis.
🔹Multi-Timeframe Analysis – Spotting divergences on higher timeframes often produces stronger signals.
🕭🔔🛎️ Alert 🛎️🔔🕭
🔹Squeeze
🟢 Fired Squeeze
⚫ Low (Wide) Squeeze / 🔴 Normal / 🟡 Tight / 🟣 Very Tight
🔹Momentum
🐂 Bullish Trend Reversal (Crossover of Momentum and Signal from sub −2)
🐻 Bearish Trend Reversal (Crossover of Momentum and Signal from above +2)
📈 Bullish Swing (cross above +1 ATR) / 📉 Bearish Swing (cross below −1 ATR)
🔹DSL
💚 Bullish DSL Scalp / 💔 Bearish DSL Scalp
🔹Volume
🎯 Strong Up Volume (VPCI > 0 and VTTI up)
⏳ Strong Down Volume (VPCI < 0 and VTTI down)
🔹Divergences
🦅 Bullish, 🦆 Bearish, 🦅 Bullish Hidden, 🦆 Bearish Hidden
Management: Search Vanguard ETFs in your browser, look up full list of VOO holdings. Download it, or copy paste all the ticker symbols. Place that with a AI, just ask it to place , in between each ticker. NVDA, TSLA, AVGO, etc. Create a new watchlist, in the + add all tickers separated by commas. Place a watchlist alert ⚠️ only available for premium + subscribers.
Practical playbook
1) Classic Squeeze Break
Setup: 🔴(D)/🟡(2D)/🟣(3D) squeeze → wait for 🟢(1HR) Fired.
Confirm: Momentum > Signal and above +1 ATR (or DMI strong & rising).
Manage: add on pullbacks that hold +1 ATR; scale near +2 ATR or WVF AE/FE.
2) DSL Scalp in Trend
Setup: Clear trend (DMI strong) + DSL bull/bear trigger in the direction of trend.
Filter: avoid tight/very tight yellow/purple unless you want micro-scalps.
Exit: opposite DSL or ATR midline loss.
3) Mean-Reversion Fade
Setup: Momentum extended to ±3 ATR, WVF spike, and a regular divergence.
Entry: Counter signal only when mom crosses back through ±3 ATR toward mid. Exit early if squeeze ⚫/🔴, Momentum may extend to ±3/2 ATR in the same direction.
Risk: reduce size; this is a fade, not trend following.
4) Volume-Confirmed Breakout
Setup: Squeeze → 🟢 Fired + VPCI > 0 and VTTI up → trend continuation.
Manage: trail behind +1 ATR (long) or −1 ATR (short). 9 SMA works good.
Inputs at a glance (key ones)
Mode: Price or CVD momentum; Squeeze Sensitivity (σ); Momentum Length; Signal Length; ATR Smoothing.
🧮 Colors:
SQZMOM: per squeeze regime, momentum, ATR fills.
DSL: On/Off, Fast/Slow, Length.
ATR Zones: Bullish/Bearish levels (±1), ±2/±3 zone lines & fills.
DMI: Lengths, key & weak thresholds, label on/off.
WVF/VIX: Lookbacks, bands, AE/FE toggles, VIX proxy symbol.
VTTI/VPCI: Fast/slow/signal (VTTI), Short/Long (VPCI), and volume source (Tick/CVD/NVI/PVI/OBV/PVT/AccDist/VWAP).
Divergences: Regular/Hidden toggles, Sensitivity %, Lifetime, Live vs On-Close, Lines/Labels.
🔎 Suggested defaults (feel free to tweak)
Calibration: Size Momentum, so that when it's above zero the asset is trending up. For the signal, it can be kept the same or lower.
Intraday (60–240m): σ = 2.0, 18~20, 3~5, DSL Fast, DMI key 23, weak 17.
Daily/Weekly: keep σ = 2.0, consider DSL Slow, DMI key 25, weak 20, widen ATR filters; lean on VPCI/VTTI (4-HR).
CVD mode: use where tick/volume quality is high (index futures, liquid equities, crypto majors).
🪟 Tips & caveats
Swing Screener: Favor liquid underlyings (index futures/ETFs, large caps). Large-Cap, 2 M Vol, Mid-Cap, 500K Vol. Squeeze: BB( 20) upper < KC (20) upper, and BB (20) lower > KC (20) lower. Optional: Price above 9 SMA, 21 SMA, and 50 SMA, they are my SMA of choice. 200 SMA too, unless you are willing to fish in a bear market. Vice-versa for shorts. Optional: ADX 4 HR > 17, or 23 depending on what you are looking for.
Scalp Screener: Same as above, change the D 9 SMA to 5, and the BB/KC from D to 1 HR. Scalps may last 2~3 days.
Position Screener: Change all daily setting to W, aside from Volume. Optional: PEG < 1.5, FCF > 0, ROA > 8% or ROE > 6%.
Good with Moving averages (9/21/50) and low-volume zones.
Position size by IV, ATR, and account risk. Consider stop/hedge rules around ±2/±3 ATR.
Let alerts stage your watchlist; act only on combined squeeze + momentum signals.
Divergences in live mode can repaint (Real-Time); for algo or alerts, use on-close.
Tight/Very tight squeezes are great for scalps but choppy; combine with DMI rising + VPCI>0.
±3 ATR is exhaustion context, not an auto-fade—look for WVF/Div/DSL confirmation.
For alerts, pair “Fired Squeeze + Bullish Swing” (or bearish) to avoid false starts.
🎯 How to Trade Entry ~ Recap:
Tight/very tight squeeze → fires → momentum crosses up (or DSL bull).
Exit/Flip: Momentum crosses down into/after expansion or hits +2/+3 ATR with fade signs. Filter: Avoid fresh longs at +3 ATR; avoid fresh shorts at −3 ATR unless fading with confirmation.
📐 Options Integrations
✅ Risk Reversal/Modified Risk Reversal (Bullish: Short Put + Long Call)
Use when: Squeeze fires up from 🟡/🟣 and momentum crosses above signal (or zero/DSL).
Playbook Entry: On or just after the bullish fire and momentum upcross. DMI or Volume supports trend as well.
Structure: Sell a put at/just below the −2 ATR reference (or recent swing support). Buy a call at/above the breakout zone (prior high/mid-range +1 to +2 ATR).
A classic risk reversal is a long call plus a short put. That’s a very bullish structure—you gain if the price rallies (via the call), and you collect a premium by selling a put. But it has a naked downside risk. The modified risk reversal fixes that by adding a long lower put (making the short put into a defined put credit spread).
Management: If momentum stays above signal, ride toward +2 → +3 ATR. Sell the put near the current price → receive big premium. Buy the lower put → spend part of that premium (risk cap). Buy the call above the current price → spend more, but the short put premium mostly pays for it.
Exits/Adjust: Momentum downcross or squeeze flips back on (new compression) → reduce. If price retests −1/−2 ATR and holds, you can roll the short put down/out.
Breakout = Big Success; No Breakout = you keep the initial credit. Reversal = Max loss is capped by the long lower put.
✅ Iron Condor (Neutral: Short OTM Put Spread + Short OTM Call Spread)
Use when: Squeeze is active (🟡/🟣), momentum is flat near zero, and there is no directional edge. 🟢 lasts for around 5~8 bars typically. I measure the historical duration of it, and wait for a range period to occur.
Playbook Entry: During compression, set wings outside ±2 ATR (or recent range extremes). I prefer identifying boxes where the rectangle pattern occurs on the chart.
Management: Time decay works while price remains trapped in the coil. High-winrate ~80%, but 1 loser can wipe most of the gains.
Exits/Adjust: If a squeeze fires and momentum breaks hard one way, close the losing side, consider converting to a vertical or rotating to a directional spread aligned with momentum.
4HR-Bullish, closing one wing:
Tip: Align daily/weekly context with your intraday entries. 9 > 50 on Weekly, similar on Daily. Sell premium into compression; switch to directional spreads on expansion and momentum confirmation.
✅ Naked Call/Puts (Directional: 10~30 Delta Calls)
Stick to naked calls and puts when the squeezes are fired from either 🔴 or ⚫.
Look for Strikes slightly out of the money with an OI and Volume spread less than <10%.
If Strike Date is >45, manage 21 Days before expiration. Scalp: Expiration Strikes of 1/4 of the Squeeze period. Leap: Expiration Strikes of 1.75x of the Squeeze period.
📐 Futures Integrations
Playbook Entry:
Verify if the squeeze on the hourly is red or green, and enter on the 2- or 5-minute during a similar squeeze state.
Trend-Following: Traditional 2 Renko Block above 21 SMA and Momentum is bullish, or vice versa. (2~ES, 5~NQ)
Structure: Go long at/just below the ATR reference (or recent swing support). Exit below the breakout zone (prior high/mid-range +1 to +2 ATR).
Management: If momentum stays above +1 ATR ride toward +2 → +3 ATR, etc. House-money, should be kept.
Exits/Adjust: Momentum downcross or squeeze flips back on (new compression) → exit. On Renko Charts, lower the sensitivity to 0.7~1. If price retests 0/−1/−2 ATR and holds, you can enter when the 9 SMA flips. The 50 SMA is better for Daily and up; I wouldn't trade against it then.
📌 FOMO Trading Playbook
Credits & License
Credits: @JF10R (Multi-Timeframe Squeeze), @BigBeluga (DSL), @OskarGallard (Colored DMI base), @ChrisMoody (WVF ideas), @PineCodersTASC (VTTI/VPCI), @EliCobra (Divergence toolkit).
License: Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL-2.0).
Author: © GabrielAmadeusLau
VSOVSO
This is similar to LazyBear's WaveTrend oscillator but handles momentum calculation differently and has some extra components for trade analysis.
The oscillator calculates an adaptive mean, then measures how far price deviates from that mean. Instead of just looking at raw deviation, it normalizes this by dividing by smoothed absolute deviation values.
The key difference is how it separates momentum - it splits the deviation into positive (up) and negative (down) components, then applies directional strength smoothing to each separately before combining them:
100 * (up_strength - down_strength) / (up_strength + down_strength)
This directional strength calculation gives more weight to sustained moves in either direction rather than just price volatility. The result is the main Momentum Wave oscillating between -100 and +100. The Signal Wave is just a smoothed version of this. The Momentum Gap shows the difference between them.
You'll see the Momentum Wave as a colored area/line with four color states, the Signal Wave as a white area, the Momentum Gap as a yellow line, the Drip Rate as cyan/purple area, and Velocity as a colored line at the bottom. The overbought/oversold zones are shaded, volatility bands adapt to current conditions, and major/minor signals show up as circles when the waves cross.
For trading, the Drip Rate is your long-term signal for bigger shifts. When it makes lower lows into resistance, look for reversals. Works great across multiple timeframes. Volatility squeezes signal big moves coming - use these with support/resistance and divergences. Top/bottom signals show momentum shifts and usually lead to pumps or drops.
Velocity shows breakout speed or rejections. Higher readings mean faster moves, regardless of direction. Wave colors reveal continuation patterns - green to purple to green means strong continuation up, red to cyan to red means continuation down.
The Momentum Gap can signal divergence on its own. The angle it crosses zero often hints at how fast the next move will be. When momentum goes outside the volatility bands, watch the next wave for divergence or confirmation.
Works best when you combine the Drip Rate across timeframes with squeeze setups and color changes for high-probability entries.
Works well with Heikin Ashi candles, or use the smoothed candle mode in the settings to mimic them. You can set the candle colors to the momentum wave colors as well, it can be helpful.
Here is a trade setup and how you can use it to take trades.
Hull Moving Average Quantum Pro - Advanced Trading SystemThe Hull Moving Average Quantum Pro is a next-generation technical analysis tool that combines the legendary smoothness of Alan Hull's HMA formula with advanced quantum field visualization technology. This professional-grade indicator features three synchronized Hull Moving Average periods working in harmony to identify high-probability trading opportunities.
🎯 KEY FEATURES:
• Multi-Timeframe HMA Confluence - Triple HMA system (9, 21, 55 periods) for comprehensive trend analysis
• Quantum Field Visualization - Fibonacci-based dynamic support/resistance bands with 0.618, 1.0, and 1.618 ratios
• Energy Flow Momentum - Real-time visual representation of market momentum and directional bias
• Confluence Zone Detection - Automatically highlights areas where multiple HMAs converge for high-probability setups
• Professional Holographic Dashboard - Real-time trend strength, momentum, and market status display
• Three Visual Themes - Dark Intergalactic (Quantum Trading), Light Minimal (Clean Charts), Pro Modern (Low Saturation)
⚡ WHAT MAKES IT UNIQUE:
Unlike traditional moving average indicators, the HMA Quantum Pro eliminates lag while maintaining smoothness, providing traders with faster signals without sacrificing reliability. The quantum field visualization adds a new dimension to price action analysis by creating dynamic zones that adapt to market volatility.
📊 PERFECT FOR:
• Day Trading & Scalping - Fast HMA (9) provides quick entry/exit signals
• Swing Trading - Medium HMA (21) confirms trend continuation
• Position Trading - Slow HMA (55) identifies major trend changes
• All Markets - Forex, Stocks, Crypto, Futures, Indices
🔧 ADVANCED SETTINGS:
• Customizable HMA periods for any trading style
• Adjustable confluence threshold for precision filtering
• Visual intensity control for optimal chart clarity
• Field transparency settings for multi-indicator setups
💡 HOW TO USE:
1. Strong Bullish Signal - All three HMAs aligned upward with price above quantum fields
2. Strong Bearish Signal - All three HMAs aligned downward with price below quantum fields
3. Confluence Zones - High probability reversal/continuation areas
4. Energy Flow - Confirms momentum direction and strength
⭐ FREE VERSION FEATURES:
This free version includes all visual features and calculations. Premium version (coming soon) will add advanced alerts, multi-timeframe analysis, and AI-powered trade suggestions.
Created by professional traders for serious market participants. The Hull Moving Average formula was created by Alan Hull to reduce lag while maintaining smoothness - this indicator enhances that foundation with modern visualization technology.
RAMS TrapMaster ConfluenceOverview:
The TrapMaster Confluence indicator is a tactical multi-factor confirmation system designed to identify high-probability intraday and swing trade setups. It aligns multiple technical signals—momentum, trend, volume, and price action—to generate a clear bias score. By requiring confluence across several dimensions, it filters out weak or noisy signals and highlights trades with broader technical agreement. This tool is tailored for semi-advanced retail traders across equities, futures, and crypto who seek objective, structured confirmations before entering a position.
Confluence Components:
RSI (Relative Strength Index):
Evaluates momentum strength and trend bias. The script dynamically checks for crossovers at the 50 midline and extreme overbought/oversold zones to determine directional pressure.
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence):
Detects momentum shifts using signal line crossovers and MACD histogram polarity. The script uses MACD direction and histogram flips to contribute to bullish or bearish pressure.
SMA 5 vs. SMA 20:
Captures short-term trend shifts via fast–slow moving average crossovers. A rising 5-SMA over a falling 20-SMA supports a bullish thesis and vice versa.
SMA 50 vs. SMA 200:
Used to confirm longer-term trend bias (e.g. golden cross or death cross) and add weight to the broader market structure.
SMA 5 Trend Direction:
Assesses immediate trend slope. An upward or downward slope of the 5-SMA confirms recent price acceleration or deceleration.
Volume Spike:
Flags high-volume price moves, helping validate whether momentum is supported by institutional participation or liquidity interest.
Rising Volume Bars:
Confirms directional strength through consistent increases in volume during trends. Sustained rising volume suggests growing conviction.
VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price):
Anchors price to institutional average cost per session. Price above VWAP typically indicates bullish sentiment; below signals bearish sentiment.
Candlestick Confirmation:
Confirms signals using recent price action (e.g. engulfing candles, breakouts with volume). Adds an extra layer of price behavior validation.
Contrarian Mode (Optional):
This feature flips the typical logic to catch high-probability reversal zones. When many signals align in one direction, contrarian mode allows the user to search for exhaustion points in sentiment or momentum, potentially capturing mean reversions.
Each confluence factor contributes a vote to a composite bias count. Users define a threshold (e.g., 4 out of 6 conditions) to trigger a signal. The indicator does not rely on any one signal, but instead rewards alignment across multiple technical aspects.
Signal Generation & Alerts:
When the defined confluence threshold is met, a signal label appears on the chart with directional context (long or short). Alerts can be tied to these signals, allowing the user to be notified in real time when actionable setups occur. The system supports “next candle confirmation,” which delays signal printing until the bar closes, minimizing premature alerts. All labels are limited to the most recent few to reduce chart clutter.
Dashboard Overview:
The optional real-time dashboard shows which confluence components are active on the current candle. This visual panel is customizable, updating dynamically and remaining hidden when no conditions are met. It includes:
Each factor with active/inactive status
Current bullish and bearish score counts
Real-time snapshot of bias development
Customization & Controls:
All components can be toggled on or off. Traders can choose to require stricter or looser confirmation thresholds. Label visibility, signal timing, and dashboard position/size are fully adjustable. This allows the indicator to adapt across timeframes and trading styles — whether scalping or swing trading.
Suggested Use with Trendlines and support and resistance:
TrapMaster becomes significantly more powerful when used alongside manual or automated support/resistance and trendline analysis. Confluence signals occurring near:
major support zones,
resistance levels,
trendline retests.
Fibonacci retracements,
help validate the price’s reaction to those areas. Traders can pre-mark key price zones, then use TrapMaster to confirm entries as momentum builds at those levels. This strengthens conviction and supports timing decisions when structure and indicators align.
Why It’s Different:
Most scripts offer a single signal or simplistic crossover logic. TrapMaster offers multi-dimensional logic that evaluates a comprehensive set of confluence factors—each customizable—with real-time logic that updates on every bar. The built-in dashboard provides a highly readable tactical summary. Its optional contrarian bias engine, dashboard visuals, factor-level customization, and risk-filtering logic (e.g. delayed confirmation and volume context) make it a flexible and advanced system not commonly found in traditional retail indicators.
Disclaimers:
This tool is for educational and analytical use only. It is not intended as trading or financial advice. All trading carries risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always use proper risk management and conduct your own independent analysis before making trading decisions.
Developed by: TRAPPER-RAMS
Jul 24
Release Notes
This is the official update to RAMS TrapMaster Confluence, featuring massive enhancements across visual clarity, confluence accuracy, and real-time alert precision.
What's New:
Accurate Confluence Dashboard
Triple-row layout: Bullish , Bearish , and clear headers
Bull/Bear condition separation for total clarity
SMA 5/20 & 50/200 cross states tracked and displayed
Fully Integrated Alerts
Alerts for 5/20 and 50/200 SMA crosses
Bullish 💸 and Bearish 💰 confluence entry alerts
Instant trigger-ready setup
Visual Label Overhaul
💸 = Buy Signal (normal mode)
💰 = Sell Signal (normal mode)
🧨 = Contrarian Bull Flip
💣 = Contrarian Bear Flip
Cross labels show exact bar: "5/20 X", "50/200 X"
CoolDown & Memory-Efficient Label Logic
• Configurable label cooldown per N bars
• Old signals auto-deleted to prevent overflow
Use Cases:
This update is ideal for traders looking for precision entry timing, while understanding the full bull/bear backdrop in real-time.
The Great Anchors: Dual AVWAP Powered by RSI
The Great Anchors
*Dual Anchored Volume Weighted Average Price Powered by RSI*
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📌 Overview
The Great Anchors is a dual AVWAP-based indicator that resets dynamically using RSI extremes — either from the current asset or a master symbol (e.g., BTCUSDT). It identifies meaningful shifts in price structure and momentum using these "anchored" levels.
It’s designed to help traders spot trend continuations, momentum inflection points, and entry signals aligned with overbought/oversold conditions — but only when the market confirms through volume-weighted price direction.
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🛠 Core Logic
• AVWAP 1 (favwap): Anchored when RSI reaches overbought levels (top anchor)
• AVWAP 2 (savwap): Anchored when RSI reaches oversold levels (bottom anchor)
• AVWAPs are recalculated each time a new OB/OS condition is triggered — acting like "fresh anchors" at key market turning points.
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⚙️ Key Features
🔁 Auto or Manual RSI Thresholds
→ Automatically determines dynamic RSI OB/OS levels based on past peaks and troughs, or lets you set fixed levels.
🧠 Master Symbol Control
→ Use the RSI of a separate asset (like BTCUSDT, ETHUSDT, SOLUSDT, BNBUSDT, SUPRAUSDT) or indices (like TOTAL, TOTAL2, BFR) to control resets — ideal for tracking how BTC/major coins impacts altcoins/others.
🔍 Trend-Filtering Signal Logic
→ Signals are filtered for less noise and are triggered when:
- Both AVWAPs are rising (bullish) or falling (bearish)
- Price action confirms the structure
🎯 Visual Markers & Alerts
→ "💥" for bullish signals and "🔥" for bearish ones. Alerts included for automation or push notifications.
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🎯 How to Use It
1. Add the indicator to your chart.
2. Choose whether to use RSI from the current symbol or a master symbol (e.g., BTC).
3. Select auto-adjusted or manual OB/OS levels.
4. Watch for:
- AVWAP(s) making a significant change (at this point it's one of the AVWAPs resetting)
- Check if price flip it upwards or downwards
- If price goes above both AVWAPs thats a likely bullish trend
- If price can't go above both AVWAPs up and fall bellow both that's a likely bearish trend
- Price retesting upper AVWAP and bounce
- likely bullish continuation
- Price retesting lower AVWAP and dip
- likely bearish continuation
- Signal icons on chart ("💥 - Bullish" or "🔥- Bearish")
Best suited for:
• Swing traders
• Momentum traders
• Traders timing altcoin entries using BTC/Major asset's RSI
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🔔 Signal Explanation
💥 Bullish Signal =
• Both AVWAPs rising
• Higher lows in price structure
• Bullish candle close
• Triggered from overbought RSI reset
🔥 Bearish Signal =
• Both AVWAPs falling
• Lower highs in price structure
• Bearish candle close
• Triggered from oversold RSI reset
Signals reset by opposite signals to prevent noise or overfitting.
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⚠️ Tips & Notes
• Use AVWAPs as dynamic support/resistance, even without signal triggers
• Pair with volume or divergence tools for stronger confirmation
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🧩 Credits & Philosophy
This tool is built with a simple philosophy:
"Anchor your trades to meaningful moments in price — not arbitrary time."
The dual AVWAP concept helps you see how price reacts after momentum peaks, giving you a cleaner bias and more precise trade setups.
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TradersAID - Adaptive Smoothing Velocity ColoringTradersAID – Adaptive Smoothing Velocity Coloring
1. Overview
TradersAID – Adaptive Smoothing Velocity Coloring is a momentum visualization tool designed to highlight bullish or bearish pressure directly on price bars — helping you intuitively read directional strength and velocity shifts in any market or timeframe.
Using a Kalman-inspired estimation framework originally developed for aerospace and autonomous navigation, this tool analyzes the velocity of price movement and assigns a contextual candle color — offering a clean and readable way to interpret short-term flow.
Whether you’re navigating ranges or watching for trend continuation, this visualization simplifies complex data into actionable visual rhythm.
2. What It Does
Instead of measuring only price, the script focuses on price velocity — the rate of change over time. It computes this through a proprietary estimator that continuously adapts to volatility and momentum shifts.
The output is color-coded candles that reflect velocity dynamics:
• Green shades represent bullish acceleration
• Red shades reflect bearish velocity
• Neutral tones indicate fading momentum or transition phases
This allows you to quickly assess market tone:
• In strong trends: Watch for fading momentum (weaker colors)
• In ranges: Spot subtle shifts that hint at upcoming breakout direction
• Near potential reversals: Diverging velocity and price can stand out at a glance
3. How to Use It
• Momentum Insight:
Use color intensity to judge whether the current move is gaining or losing strength.
• Breakout Anticipation:
In sideways markets, shifting colors within the range can help anticipate which side may take control next.
• Divergence Reading:
Look for double tops or bottoms where price holds but velocity changes — often a hint that the move is maturing.
• Visual Confirmation Layer:
Combine with structural tools (like TradersAID Warning Dots or Trend Bands) to add a layer of momentum awareness.
4. Key Features
• Adaptive Velocity Model: Kalman-filter-like algorithm continuously tracks price velocity
• Gradient Candle Coloring: Smooth scale from deep red (strong bearish) to deep green (strong bullish)
• Flexible Sensitivity Modes:
o Slow – smoothest interpretation
o Regular – balanced tone
o Fast – more responsive
• RSI Normalization: Translates raw velocity into a familiar oscillator scale
• Full Overlay Integration: Candle coloring works seamlessly with other studies on the same chart
5. Technical Basis (Why It’s Closed Source)
The tool is built on a proprietary Unscented Kalman Filter implementation that estimates both price and its velocity simultaneously.
This advanced approach is rare in retail tools, drawing from real-time estimation techniques used in robotics and aerospace applications.
While the source remains closed to protect the performance logic and smoothing implementation, the core concepts — adaptive filtering, velocity-based analysis, and visual gradient output — are fully explained here for transparency and compliant understanding.
6. Settings
• Sensitivity Modes: Fast / Regular / Slow
• RSI Length: Adjustable to control the smoothness of velocity normalization
• Color Theme: Intuitive gradient from red (bearish) to green (bullish)
• Compatible Timeframes: Designed to work across all timeframes — no restriction
7. Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not offer financial advice, predict outcomes, or generate trading signals. Always use in conjunction with your own analysis and supporting systems.
Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator [Alpha Extract]The Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator combines the smoothing characteristics of Heikin-Ashi candlesticks with mean reversion analysis to create a powerful momentum oscillator. This indicator applies Heikin-Ashi transformation twice - first to price data and then to the oscillator itself - resulting in smoother signals while maintaining sensitivity to trend changes and potential reversal points.
🔶 CALCULATION
Heikin-Ashi Transformation: Converts regular OHLC data to smoothed Heikin-Ashi values
Component Analysis: Calculates trend strength, body deviation, and price deviation from mean
Oscillator Construction: Combines components with weighted formula (40% trend strength, 30% body deviation, 30% price deviation)
Double Smoothing: Applies EMA smoothing and second Heikin-Ashi transformation to oscillator values
Signal Generation: Identifies trend changes and crossover points with overbought/oversold levels
Formula:
HA Close = (Open + High + Low + Close) / 4
HA Open = (Previous HA Open + Previous HA Close) / 2
Trend Strength = Normalized consecutive HA candle direction
Body Deviation = (HA Body - Mean Body) / Mean Body * 100
Price Deviation = ((HA Close - Price Mean) / Price Mean * 100) / Standard Deviation * 25
Raw Oscillator = (Trend Strength * 0.4) + (Body Deviation * 0.3) + (Price Deviation * 0.3)
Final Oscillator = 50 + (EMA(Raw Oscillator) / 2)
🔶 DETAILS Visual Features:
Heikin-Ashi Candlesticks: Smoothed oscillator representation using HA transformation with vibrant teal/red coloring
Overbought/Oversold Zones: Horizontal lines at customizable levels (default 70/30) with background highlighting in extreme zones
Moving Averages: Optional fast and slow EMA overlays for additional trend confirmation
Signal Dashboard: Real-time table showing current oscillator status (Overbought/Oversold/Bullish/Bearish) and buy/sell signals
Reference Lines: Middle line at 50 (neutral), with 0 and 100 boundaries for range visualization
Interpretation:
Above 70: Overbought conditions, potential selling opportunity
Below 30: Oversold conditions, potential buying opportunity
Bullish HA Candles: Green/teal candles indicate upward momentum
Bearish HA Candles: Red candles indicate downward momentum
MA Crossovers: Fast EMA above slow EMA suggests bullish momentum, below suggests bearish momentum
Zone Exits: Price moving out of extreme zones (above 70 or below 30) often signals trend continuation
🔶 EXAMPLES
Mean Reversion Signals: When the oscillator reaches extreme levels (above 70 or below 30), it identifies potential reversal points where price may revert to the mean.
Example: Oscillator reaching 80+ levels during strong uptrends often precedes short-term pullbacks, providing profit-taking opportunities.
Trend Change Detection: The double Heikin-Ashi smoothing helps identify genuine trend changes while filtering out market noise.
Example: When oscillator HA candles change from red to teal after oversold readings, this confirms potential trend reversal from bearish to bullish.
Moving Average Confirmation: Fast and slow EMA crossovers on the oscillator provide additional confirmation of momentum shifts.
Example: Fast EMA crossing above slow EMA while oscillator is rising from oversold levels provides strong bullish confirmation signal.
Dashboard Signal Integration: The real-time dashboard combines oscillator status with directional signals for quick decision-making.
Example: Dashboard showing "Oversold" status with "BUY" signal when HA candles turn bullish provides clear entry timing.
🔶 SETTINGS
Customization Options:
Calculation: Oscillator period (default 14), smoothing factor (1-50, default 2)
Levels: Overbought threshold (50-100, default 70), oversold threshold (0-50, default 30)
Moving Averages: Toggle display, fast EMA length (default 9), slow EMA length (default 21)
Visual Enhancements: Show/hide signal dashboard, customizable table position
Alert Conditions: Oversold bounce, overbought reversal, bullish/bearish MA crossovers
The Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator provides traders with a sophisticated momentum tool that combines the smoothing benefits of Heikin-Ashi analysis with mean reversion principles. The double transformation process creates cleaner signals while the integrated dashboard and multiple confirmation methods help traders identify high-probability entry and exit points during both trending and ranging market conditions.
Delta AO + Regular AO (Normalized)🔀 Delta AO + Regular AO (Normalized) – Visualizing Market moods becomes simpler 🔀
🧠 Introduction
The Delta AO + Regular AO (Normalized) is a custom oscillator that fuses the power of classic momentum analysis with volume-derived delta flow to give traders a dual-perspective edge.
This tool was born from a need to better visualize internal market thrust (via delta) while still respecting the time-tested signal power of the traditional Awesome Oscillator (AO).
🔍 What makes it unique?
✅ Volume-based Delta Calculation – Models upward/downward delta using a custom volatility-weighted volume allocation method, not simple tick-delta or raw buys/sells.
✅ Cumulative Delta Candles – Instead of just plotting bars, the indicator rebuilds the market structure using cumulative delta logic.
✅ Dual AO Display – Shows both custom delta AO and traditional price AO simultaneously.
✅ Normalized Scaling – Each AO is independently normalized by its standard deviation (volatility-adjusted), making both indicators visually comparable without distortion.
🧮 Under the Hood
Let’s break down the components:
1. Delta Logic 📊
Rather than using raw delta or tick-level data, this script simulates net effort:
Delta Up = Volume × a smart weighting when the candle is bullish
Delta Down = Volume × weighting when the candle is bearish
The weighting dynamically adjusts based on candle body-to-wick ratio. This provides a more refined delta estimate based on candle structure.
This delta is accumulated (cumulative delta) and used to form a synthetic OHLC candle structure.
2. AO Calculations ⚖️
Custom AO: Calculated from the median of synthetic delta candles
Regular AO: Classic (median price 5-period SMA - 34-period SMA)
Both are normalized using their own 34-bar standard deviation, improving comparability and visualization in one pane.
3. Color Coding 🎨
For the delta AO histogram:
Lime: Bullish + Increasing Momentum
Green: Bullish + Weakening Momentum
Red: Bearish + Increasing Momentum (to the downside)
Maroon: Bearish + Weakening Momentum
This lets you immediately spot momentum shifts and strength behind volume-based moves.
📈 How to Use – Trading Guide
🔧 Recommended Setup:
Timeframe: Works well on all intraday and higher timeframes (5m–1D)
Symbol: Especially effective on liquid instruments (futures, indices, large caps)
✅ Entry Signals
🔹 Buy Setup
Delta AO turns green or lime above zero, and Regular AO is also rising
Ideal confirmation: Lime bar (strong bullish delta momentum) and a crossover above zero
🔹 Sell Setup
Delta AO turns maroon or red below zero, and Regular AO is also falling
Ideal confirmation: Red bar (strong bearish delta momentum) and AO falling further below zero
🔄 Momentum Confirmation
Look for divergence between the Delta AO and Regular AO.
🔼 If Delta AO is rising but Regular AO is flat or falling → Volume is leading price (possible breakout ahead)
🔽 If Regular AO is strong but Delta AO fades → Price may be unsustainable (fakeout risk)
🛑 Exit / Reversal Clues
Sudden color shifts (e.g., Lime → Green → Maroon) can signal momentum exhaustion
Both AOs converging to zero suggests consolidation phase ahead
📌 Pro Tips
Use this with volume profile, support/resistance, or market structure zones for maximum confluence
Works great as a secondary confirmation tool for your existing strategy
💬 Final Thoughts
This oscillator is not just a pretty double AO — it's a strategic fusion of price and volume time-series designed to help you anticipate shifts before they’re obvious in price alone.
If you're looking for:
A modernized AO
Volume-integrated signal clarity
Normalized, noise-filtered momentum visual
Then this tool belongs in your chart arsenal.
📈 Try it. Test it. Pair it. If you find value, consider sharing or following for more next-gen indicators.
Please note this is an educational idea and past performance is not assurance of future performance.
Happy trading!
— @Pratik_4Clover