Smart Choppy Index v1 [JopAlgo]Smart Choppy Index v1 — decide trend vs. chop in seconds
What it does (one line):
Measures the percent range of price over a lookback and tells you if the market is choppy (do less, fade edges) or trending (go with breaks/pullbacks).
Range% = (Highest High − Lowest Low) / Close × 100 over length
Below Choppy Threshold → likely range (red tint / X marker)
Above Trending Threshold → likely trend (green tint / ● marker)
Between them = mixed/transition (no background)
Read the pane fast
Orange line: the live Range%.
Red dashed line: Choppy Threshold.
Green dashed line: Trending Threshold.
Background: soft red during chop, soft green during trend.
Markers: X at the top when chop is detected, ● at the bottom when trend is detected.
TL;DR: Red = play defense / mean-revert. Green = play offense / trend-follow.
Simple playbook (copy this into your process)
Identify regime
Choppy (Range% < red line): prefer mean-reversion at VP edges / AVWAP; smaller targets, quicker exits.
Trending (Range% > green line): prefer breakouts + pullbacks; hold to POC/HVNs or structure.
Only execute at real locations
Volume Profile v3.2 : VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs for entries/targets.
Anchored VWAP : reclaims/rejections for timing.
Quality check (optional, recommended)
CVDv1 : execute with flow (Alignment OK, strong Imbalance, no Absorption against your side).
Risk
Stops go beyond structure/level, not on indicator flips.
If regime flips right after entry (green → red or red → green), consider tightening or exiting early.
Timeframe guidance
1–5m (scalps): length 14–20. You’ll see more flips—use thresholds a touch wider and execute only at edges.
15m–1H (intraday): length 14–34. Sweet spot for day trading bias.
2H–4H (swing): length 20–50. Fewer, cleaner signals; great for planning.
1D+ (position): length 50–100. Use as backdrop; trigger on lower TFs.
Settings that actually matter (and how to tune)
Lookback Period (length)
Shorter = faster regime changes; longer = smoother, fewer flips.
Choppy Threshold (%) / Trending Threshold (%)
Calibrate by history: scroll back and mark typical Range% during range days vs trend days for your market/TF.
If you get too many trend flags, raise the green threshold.
If everything looks “choppy,” lower the red threshold slightly.
Background color
Turn off if your chart feels busy; markers remain.
How to trade it with other tools
In Chop (red):
Fade VAH/VAL/AVWAP touches toward POC with tight stops. Confirm with CVDv1 (avoid longs if Absorption is red, etc.).
In Trend (green):
Break + retest at VP levels/AVWAP. Add on pullbacks that hold while Range% stays above the green line.
Patterns to recognize
Squeeze → Expansion: Range% ramps from below red toward/through green → expect a trend phase.
Exhaustion → Balance: After a long green phase, Range% falls back toward the middle → take profits into HVNs, expect more two-way trade.
False break tell: Level poke while Range% sits near red → low odds of follow-through; prefer reclaims.
Practical defaults to start
length = 14
Choppy Threshold = 1.5%
Trending Threshold = 2.5%
Process: Regime → Location → Flow → Execute with structure-based risk
Serious Disclaimer & Licensing
This script and description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Markets are risky; you can lose some or all of your capital. Past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your trading decisions, including evaluating the suitability of this tool in your process, testing it on historical and simulated data, and managing risk.
This indicator relies on exchange data that may vary across venues; differences in volume, liquidity, and price feeds can impact results. No warranty is made—express or implied—regarding accuracy, completeness, or fitness for a particular purpose. assumes no liability for any direct or consequential losses arising from the use of this script or description.
License: This Pine Script® code is released under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 (MPL 2.0), © JopAlgo. You may use, modify, and distribute the code in accordance with MPL 2.0 terms.
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Kairi Relative Index Upgrated v1Kairi Relative Index Upgraded v1 — how far from “fair” are we, right now?
Most oscillators mash together price and momentum in ways that are hard to explain to a new trader. KRI is refreshingly simple: it measures how far price is from its moving average, as a percent of that average.
KRI = 100 × (Price − SMA) / SMA
Above 0 → price is above its average (stretched up).
Below 0 → price is below its average (stretched down).
The farther from 0, the more stretched we are from the mean.
This upgraded version keeps the pane clean (zero line, colored KRI, optional guide rails at +Line Above / Line Below) so you can read extension, reversion pressure, and reclaims at a glance—on any timeframe.
(If you add screenshots: image #1 should label the zero line and ± threshold lines; image #2 should show a textbook “overshoot at VAH/VAL + KRI extreme → rotate back to POC.”)
What you’re seeing (and how to read it fast)
KRI line
Green when KRI ≥ 0 (price above SMA)
Red when KRI < 0 (price below SMA)
Zero line = the moving average itself (no stretch).
Guide lines (default +10/−10) = “This is pretty far for this setting.” Treat these as review-and-decide zones, not auto-trade signals.
Three quick reads:
Magnitude: how far from the mean (size of KRI).
Direction: above/below zero (which side of the mean).
Turn: KRI curling back toward zero (reversion starting) or accelerating away (trend impulse continuing).
What KRI really measures (plain-English)
The SMA(length) is your “fair value” line for this indicator.
KRI tells you the percentage deviation from that fair value—normalized, so you can compare across assets/timeframes with the same length.
Because it’s a pure distance metric, KRI excels at:
spotting over-extensions into VP edges (VAH/VAL) and AVWAP,
timing mean-reversion back to POC/AVWAP in balance,
confirming reclaims (KRI crossing back through zero at a level),
framing pullbacks in trend (healthy dips usually avoid deep negative KRI in strong uptrends).
Using KRI on any timeframe
The workflow is always Location → Flow → KRI:
Location: a real level (Volume Profile v3.2’s VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs or Anchored VWAP).
Flow quality: check CVDv1 (Alignment OK? Absorption not red?).
KRI: are we stretched into/away from the level, and is KRI turning?
Scalping (1–5m)
Fade the stretch (balance): At VAH/VAL or Session AVWAP, an extreme KRI that rolls back toward zero = quick rotation to the middle (POC/AVWAP).
Don’t fade if bands are expanding and flow is strong (CVDv1 says go) — big KRI can stay big in expansion.
Intraday (15m–1H)
Continuation after pullback: In uptrends, look for shallow negative KRI at support (VAL/AVWAP) that turns up → join trend.
Failed breakout tell: Price pokes above VAH but KRI barely increases or rolls over quickly → likely a reclaim back inside value.
Swing (2H–4H)
Edge-to-mean rotations: At composite VAH/VAL, KRI extremes are great context: fade back to POC/HVNs if flow doesn’t confirm a breakout.
Reclaim confirmation: After a flush below Weekly AVWAP, KRI crossing back up through zero on the reclaim bar is a clean green light.
Position (1D–1W)
Regime posture: Multi-day runs with sustained positive KRI (and shallow dips) = constructive; mirror for downtrends. Use KRI pullbacks to ~0 at Weekly AVWAP for adds.
Entries, exits, and risk (simple rules)
Mean-reversion entry: At VAH/VAL or AVWAP, wait for KRI extreme at/through your guide line and a turn back toward zero.
Stop: just beyond the level; Target: POC/HVN or the zero line on KRI.
Trend-continuation entry: In a trend, take pullbacks where KRI stays modest (doesn’t blow through your lower/upper guide) and turns back with the trend at the level.
Avoid: chasing breakouts where KRI is already extreme and still climbing unless CVDv1 says Alignment OK + no Absorption and you have a clean retest.
Settings that matter (and how to tune them)
Length (default 50): defines the moving average “fair value.”
Shorter (20–34): faster, more signals, more noise—good for intraday.
Longer (50–100): steadier, better for swings/position.
Source (default close): keep it simple; hlc3 or close both work.
Line Above / Below (defaults +10/−10): your review zones. Tune them to the asset/timeframe:
Scroll back 6–12 months and eyeball typical |KRI| spikes. Set your lines around the 80th–90th percentile of |KRI| for that market and length.
Majors often need smaller thresholds than thin alts on the same timeframe.
Tip: If your KRI is always beyond the lines, increase length or widen the thresholds. If it never touches them, shorten length or tighten thresholds.
What to look for (pattern cheat sheet)
Stretch into level → curl: KRI tags an extreme right at VAH/VAL/AVWAP, then turns back → classic rotation.
Shallow pullback in trend: KRI dips toward zero but doesn’t hit your lower guide, then turns up at support → continuation.
No-juice break: New price high with weaker KRI (smaller positive % vs prior leg) → breakout lacks extension; plan for retest or reclaim.
Zero-line reclaims: After a washout, KRI crosses zero as price reclaims AVWAP/VAL → clean confirmation.
Combining KRI with other tools
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 (CVDv1):
Use KRI for stretch/turn, CVDv1 for quality.
A KRI extreme at VAH with CVDv1 Absorption (red) is a do-not-chase; look for the fail/reclaim.
A KRI pullback toward zero at VAL with Alignment OK + strong Imbalance + no Absorption = high-quality continuation.
Volume Profile v3.2:
KRI’s best signals happen at VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs.
LVN traversals with rising KRI often run quickly to the next HVN—use VP for targets.
Anchored VWAP :
Treat AVWAP as fair-value rails. KRI zero cross on an AVWAP reclaim is your green flag; KRI extreme + failure to accept beyond AVWAP warns of a fake break.
Common pitfalls KRI helps you avoid
Buying high into a tired move: KRI already very positive at VAH and rolling over = likely rotation; wait.
Fading true expansion: In strong trends with confirmed flow, KRI can remain extreme; don’t automatically fade just because it’s “far.”
Wrong thresholds: Copy-pasting ±10 to every market/timeframe can mislead. Calibrate to the market you trade.
Practical defaults to start with
Length: 50
Lines: +10 / −10 as placeholders—calibrate later.
Timeframes: great out of the box on 15m–4H; for 1–5m try Length 34 and tighter lines; for daily swings try Length 100 and broader lines.
Process: Level → CVDv1 quality → KRI stretch/turn. If any of the three disagree, wait for the retest.
Disclaimer & Licensing
This indicator and its description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Trading involves risk, including the possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Use at your own risk.
Licensing & Attribution:
Copyright (c) 2018–present, Alex Orekhov (everget). Modified and upgraded by .
The original “Kairi Relative Index” is released under the MIT License, and this derivative is distributed under the MIT License as well. Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files to deal in the Software without restriction, subject to the conditions of the MIT License, including the above copyright notice and this permission notice. The Software is provided “AS IS,” without warranty of any kind, express or implied.
Cycle Momentum Filter [JopAlgo]Cycle Momentum Filter (CMF) — spot “when” to engage the market, on any timeframe
Markets breathe in cycles (expansion → contraction) while momentum and trend decide which moves actually travel. CMF is a compact filter that blends those ideas so you can answer two questions before you click:
Is this a good moment to take a trade? (cycle position)
If I take it, is there enough force behind the move to carry it? (momentum + trend)
CMF does not replace your levels—use it with your location tools (e.g., Volume Profile v3.2 and Anchored VWAP). It simply keeps you out of entries taken at the wrong part of the swing or against weak momentum.
(When you add screenshots: image #1 should label each sub-line and the green/yellow/red background; image #2 can show CMF turning green at VAL + AVWAP before a rotation back to POC.)
What you’re seeing (and how to read it at a glance)
CMF draws five sub-lines around a zero line, plus a background color:
Cycle Oscillator (blue): where you are in the swing. Above zero ≈ cycle crest side; below zero ≈ trough side.
ROC % (purple): short-term price acceleration. Above zero = positive momentum; below zero = negative.
MACD Histogram (orange): classic impulse measure (fast–slow EMA gap). Above zero = bullish impulse.
EWO (cyan): Elliott Wave Oscillator (EMA fast – EMA slow). Above zero = trend tilt up.
RSI-MA (gray, plotted as RSI−50): smoothed RSI relative to 50. Above zero = buyers have the relative strength.
Background color = the filter result:
Green → bullish window: cycle favors longs and momentum/trend/RS confirm.
Red → bearish window: mirror logic.
Yellow → neutral: at least one piece disagrees—do less, or wait for alignment.
For new traders: Every sub-line crossing above/below zero is a yes/no vote. Green happens only when all bullish checks are true; red when all bearish checks are true.
How CMF is built (plain-English version)
Cycle (DPO-style): CMF subtracts a displaced SMA from price to remove trend and expose the swing. Below 0 = you’re on the dip side of the cycle; above 0 = rally side.
Momentum (ROC): percent change over roc_length bars; tells you if price is actually accelerating.
Impulse (MACD hist): measures push from fast vs slow EMAs.
Trend tilt (EWO): broader drift via two EMAs (fast/slow).
Participation bias (RSI-MA): smoothed RSI relative to 50 (plotted as RSI−50 so its zero line matches the others).
The signal rules are strict AND conditions:
Bullish = cycle < 0 and ROC > 0 and MACD hist > 0 and EWO > 0 and RSI-MA > 0.
Bearish = cycle > 0 and ROC < 0 and MACD hist < 0 and EWO < 0 and RSI-MA < 0.
Otherwise Neutral.
This strictness is deliberate: it cuts a lot of low-quality entries.
Using CMF on any timeframe
The framework is the same—only your anchors/targets change as you zoom.
Scalping (1–5m)
Where: VP v3.2 VAL/VAH/LVNs or Session AVWAP.
When: take longs when CMF turns green on/after a dip to your level; shorts when it turns red on/after a pop into resistance.
Skip: yellow reads in the middle of the range; that’s chop.
Tip: on very fast pairs, require two consecutive green/red bars before entry.
Intraday (15m–1H)
Use CMF green to time pullbacks to AVWAP or VA edges in the trend direction.
In balance days, wait for CMF color + level alignment to fade back to POC.
If CMF flips yellow after entry, tighten risk; if it flips against you, consider exiting early.
Swing (2H–4H)
Treat first green after a higher-timeframe pullback to Weekly AVWAP or composite VAL as your A-setup.
If CMF stays green through the first pullback, consider adding; the opposite for red in downtrends.
Position (1D–1W)
Fewer, bigger decisions: CMF green at Monthly/Quarterly AVWAP or at composite VAL suggests rotation toward POC/HVNs; CMF red at VAH suggests mean-reversion lower.
If CMF can’t turn green/red at key retests, that’s valuable: the level likely won’t hold.
Entries, exits, and risk (simple rules)
Entry: trade at a level when CMF just flips to your side (green for longs / red for shorts).
Invalidation: if CMF reverts to yellow immediately, it’s a warning; if it flips to the opposite color, that’s your soft stop condition—tighten or exit unless higher-timeframe context argues otherwise.
Targets: use Volume Profile v3.2 (POC/HVNs) and AVWAP (mean) for logical destinations.
Don’t use CMF alone for stops; place them beyond the level or structure.
Settings that actually matter (and how to tune them)
Cycle Length (default 20): swing detection.
Shorter (10–14): quicker flips, better for scalps.
Longer (30–40): steadier cycle for swings/position.
ROC Length (default 10): momentum lookback.
Shorter: earlier yes/no, more noise.
Longer: slower, more selective.
MACD Fast/Slow (5/13) & EWO Fast/Slow (5/35): impulse and drift.
Increase slow values to calm false flips; decrease fast to react sooner.
RSI Length (14) & Smoothing (5): participation tilt.
Reduce smoothing for faster confirmation; increase to avoid whips.
Background on/off: keep it on while learning; once you’re comfortable, you can hide the background and read the lines against zero.
Tuning tip: If you trade only a few coins, optimize Cycle and ROC first; leave MACD/EWO defaults. Then decide how strict you want RSI (try RSI smoothing = 3 for faster reads).
What to look for (pattern cheatsheet)
Green at a dip-level (VAL/AVWAP) → rotate toward POC/HVN.
Red at a pop-level (VAH/AVWAP) → rotate down toward POC/HVN.
Color holds through the retest → continuation is more likely.
Color flips against the breakout → watch for failed break and reclaim.
Only one line disagrees (e.g., ROC < 0 while others > 0) → expect slower follow-through; consider waiting one bar.
Combining CMF with other tools
Volume Profile v3.2 :
Use VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs for where. CMF answers when.
Green at VAL → mean-reversion long to POC.
Red at VAH → fade to POC.
LVN breaks with green often travel quickly to the next HVN.
Anchored VWAP :
Reclaim of AVWAP + CMF turns green → higher-quality long; rejection + red → cleaner short.
Weekly AVWAP + CMF color is a reliable swing compass.
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 (CVDv1):
CMF says “now”, CVDv1 says “how good”.
Prefer CMF green when CVDv1 Alignment = OK, Imbalance strong, Absorption ≠ red.
If CMF flips green but CVDv1 shows Absorption (red), do not chase; look for a reclaim instead.
Common pitfalls CMF helps you avoid
Buying high in the cycle: CMF keeps longs to when the cycle is on the dip side and momentum/trend agree.
Forcing trades on yellow: yellow is your do-less mode—wait for alignment.
Ignoring flow at levels: CMF gives the window, but quality still matters; confirm with CVDv1.
Practical defaults to start with
Cycle 20 | ROC 10 | MACD 5/13 | EWO 5/35 | RSI 14 (smooth 5)
Works out of the box on 15m–4H.
For scalps, try Cycle 14 / ROC 7–9 / RSI smooth 3.
For daily swings, Cycle 30–34 / ROC 12–14.
Alerts (what they tell you)
Bullish Signal: CMF turned green (all bullish checks passed). Use it as a heads-up; still anchor the entry to VP/AVWAP.
Bearish Signal: CMF turned red. Same rule: wait for the level.
Open source & disclaimer
This indicator is published open source so traders can learn, tweak, and build rules they trust. Tools guide decisions; risk management decides outcomes.
Disclaimer — Not Financial Advice.
The “Cycle Momentum Filter ” indicator and this description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Trading involves risk, including possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any trading decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
SM OTC style Supply/Demand Zones Lite+//@version=6
indicator("OTC SD MTF Lite+", "OTCSDmtf+", overlay=true, max_boxes_count=200, max_labels_count=200)
// ================= Inputs =================
useH4 = input.bool(true, "Show 4H zones")
useD1 = input.bool(true, "Show 1D zones")
useW1 = input.bool(true, "Show 1W zones")
useM1 = input.bool(false, "Show 1M zones")
baseLen = input.int(2, "Base length (HTF bars)", 1, 5)
wickPctMax = input.float(35.0, "Max wick % in base", 0, 100)
impulseX = input.float(1.5, "Departure body vs ATR (x)", 0.5, 5.0)
atrLen = input.int(14, "ATR length (HTF)")
extendBars = input.int(2000, "Extend bars on chart", 200, 10000)
maxPerTF = input.int(12, "Max zones per TF", 3, 30)
showLegend = input.bool(true, "Show tiny legend (4H/1D/1W/1M)")
onlyNearest = input.bool(false, "Show ONLY nearest zone above/below")
hideOverlapTF = input.bool(true, "Hide overlapping zones within each TF (keep newest)")
showNearestLabels = input.bool(false, "Show distance labels to nearest above/below")
// --- Hard cap for future drawing with xloc.bar_index ---
FUTURE_CAP = 500
// Colors (Demand hues per TF). Supply uses red for contrast.
colH4 = color.new(color.teal, 78)
colD1 = color.new(color.blue, 78)
colW1 = color.new(color.orange, 78)
colM1 = color.new(color.purple, 78)
colSup= color.new(color.red, 78)
// ================= Helpers =================
wickiness(h, l, o, c) =>
rng = math.max(h - l, syminfo.mintick)
topW = h - math.max(o, c)
botW = math.min(o, c) - l
100.0 * (topW + botW) / rng
// Returns: (dTrig, dProx, dDist, sTrig, sProx, sDist)
f_htfSignals(baseBars, wickMax, xImpulse, aLen) =>
float _o = open
float _h = high
float _l = low
float _c = close
float _atr = ta.atr(aLen)
bool ok = true
for i = 1 to baseBars
ok := ok and (wickiness(_h , _l , _o , _c ) <= wickMax)
bool bullDepart = _c > _o and (_c - _o) > xImpulse * _atr
bool bearDepart = _c < _o and (_o - _c) > xImpulse * _atr
float dTrig = 0.0
float dProx = na
float dDist = na
float sTrig = 0.0
float sProx = na
float sDist = na
if ok and bullDepart
float hi = ta.highest(_h, baseBars)
float lo = ta.lowest(_l, baseBars)
dTrig := 1.0
dProx := lo
dDist := hi
if ok and bearDepart
float hi2 = ta.highest(_h, baseBars)
float lo2 = ta.lowest(_l, baseBars)
sTrig := 1.0
sProx := hi2
sDist := lo2
// ================= Pull HTF signals =================
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "240", f_htfSignals(baseLen, wickPctMax, impulseX, atrLen))
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "D", f_htfSignals(baseLen, wickPctMax, impulseX, atrLen))
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "W", f_htfSignals(baseLen, wickPctMax, impulseX, atrLen))
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "M", f_htfSignals(baseLen, wickPctMax, impulseX, atrLen))
// ================= Storage per TF =================
var zH4 = array.new_box()
var aH4 = array.new_bool()
var lH4 = array.new_label()
var sH4 = array.new_int() // 1 = Demand, -1 = Supply
var zD1 = array.new_box()
var aD1 = array.new_bool()
var lD1 = array.new_label()
var sD1 = array.new_int()
var zW1 = array.new_box()
var aW1 = array.new_bool()
var lW1 = array.new_label()
var sW1 = array.new_int()
var zM1 = array.new_box()
var aM1 = array.new_bool()
var lM1 = array.new_label()
var sM1 = array.new_int()
// ================= Overlap utils =================
overlap(topA, botA, topB, botB) =>
not (topA < botB or botA > topB)
purgeOverlaps(arrB, arrA, arrL, newTop, newBot) =>
if hideOverlapTF and array.size(arrB) > 0
for i = 0 to array.size(arrB) - 1
if array.get(arrA, i)
box bOld = array.get(arrB, i)
float t = box.get_top(bOld)
float btm = box.get_bottom(bOld)
if overlap(newTop, newBot, t, btm)
box.delete(bOld)
label.delete(array.get(arrL, i))
array.set(arrA, i, false)
// ================= Add zone =================
addZone(arrB, arrA, arrL, arrS, topV, botV, baseColor, isDemand) =>
purgeOverlaps(arrB, arrA, arrL, topV, botV)
int leftX = bar_index - 1
int rightX = bar_index + math.min(extendBars, FUTURE_CAP) // respect +500 cap
box b = box.new(leftX, topV, rightX, botV, xloc=xloc.bar_index, bgcolor=baseColor, border_color=color.new(color.black, 0))
float ly = isDemand == 1 ? topV : botV
st = isDemand == 1 ? label.style_label_down : label.style_label_up
string tagTxt = isDemand == 1 ? "Demand" : "Supply"
label l = label.new(leftX, ly, tagTxt, xloc=xloc.bar_index, style=st, textcolor=color.white, color=color.new(color.black, 0), size=size.tiny)
array.push(arrB, b)
array.push(arrA, true)
array.push(arrL, l)
array.push(arrS, isDemand)
if array.size(arrB) > maxPerTF
box.delete(array.shift(arrB))
array.shift(arrA)
label.delete(array.shift(arrL))
array.shift(arrS)
// ================= Maintain / Invalidate =================
extendAll(arrB, arrA) =>
if array.size(arrB) > 0
for i = 0 to array.size(arrB) - 1
if array.get(arrA, i)
box.set_right(array.get(arrB, i), bar_index + math.min(extendBars, FUTURE_CAP)) // respect +500 cap
invalidate(arrB, arrA, arrL) =>
if array.size(arrB) > 0
for i = 0 to array.size(arrB) - 1
if array.get(arrA, i)
box b = array.get(arrB, i)
float t = box.get_top(b)
float btm = box.get_bottom(b)
// Close outside band → remove
if close > t or close < btm
box.delete(b)
label.delete(array.get(arrL, i))
array.set(arrA, i, false)
// ================= New HTF bar flags (strict booleans) =================
int chH4 = ta.change(time("240"))
int chD1 = ta.change(time("D"))
int chW1 = ta.change(time("W"))
int chM1 = ta.change(time("M"))
bool newBarH4 = useH4 and (not na(chH4)) and (chH4 != 0)
bool newBarD1 = useD1 and (not na(chD1)) and (chD1 != 0)
bool newBarW1 = useW1 and (not na(chW1)) and (chW1 != 0)
bool newBarM1 = useM1 and (not na(chM1)) and (chM1 != 0)
// ================= Create zones on new HTF bar =================
if newBarH4
if d4t > 0 and not na(d4p) and not na(d4d)
addZone(zH4, aH4, lH4, sH4, d4d, d4p, colH4, 1)
if s4t > 0 and not na(s4p) and not na(s4d)
addZone(zH4, aH4, lH4, sH4, s4p, s4d, colSup, -1)
if newBarD1
if d1t > 0 and not na(d1p) and not na(d1d)
addZone(zD1, aD1, lD1, sD1, d1d, d1p, colD1, 1)
if s1t > 0 and not na(s1p) and not na(s1d)
addZone(zD1, aD1, lD1, sD1, s1p, s1d, colSup, -1)
if newBarW1
if w1t > 0 and not na(w1p) and not na(w1d)
addZone(zW1, aW1, lW1, sW1, w1d, w1p, colW1, 1)
if swt > 0 and not na(swp) and not na(swd)
addZone(zW1, aW1, lW1, sW1, swp, swd, colSup, -1)
if newBarM1
if m1t > 0 and not na(m1p) and not na(m1d)
addZone(zM1, aM1, lM1, sM1, m1d, m1p, colM1, 1)
if smt > 0 and not na(smp) and not na(smd)
addZone(zM1, aM1, lM1, sM1, smp, smd, colSup, -1)
// ================= Maintain & Invalidate (every bar) =================
extendAll(zH4, aH4)
extendAll(zD1, aD1)
extendAll(zW1, aW1)
extendAll(zM1, aM1)
invalidate(zH4, aH4, lH4)
invalidate(zD1, aD1, lD1)
invalidate(zW1, aW1, lW1)
invalidate(zM1, aM1, lM1)
// ================= Nearest across all TFs =================
tfNearest(arrB, arrA) =>
int upIdx = -1
int dnIdx = -1
float upDist = 1e10
float dnDist = 1e10
float upBtm = na
float dnTop = na
if array.size(arrB) > 0
for i = 0 to array.size(arrB) - 1
if array.get(arrA, i)
box b = array.get(arrB, i)
float t = box.get_top(b)
float btm = box.get_bottom(b)
if btm >= close
float d = btm - close
if d < upDist
upDist := d
upIdx := i
upBtm := btm
if t <= close
float d2 = close - t
if d2 < dnDist
dnDist := d2
dnIdx := i
dnTop := t
= tfNearest(zH4, aH4)
= tfNearest(zD1, aD1)
= tfNearest(zW1, aW1)
= tfNearest(zM1, aM1)
float upBest = 1e10, dnBest = 1e10
int upArr = -1, upIdxSel = -1, dnArr = -1, dnIdxSel = -1
color upColor = color.new(color.white, 100), dnColor = color.new(color.white, 100)
if (not na(uh4y)) and uh4d < upBest
upBest := uh4d, upArr := 0, upIdxSel := uh4i, upColor := colH4
if (not na(ud1y)) and ud1d < upBest
upBest := ud1d, upArr := 1, upIdxSel := ud1i, upColor := colD1
if (not na(uw1y)) and uw1d < upBest
upBest := uw1d, upArr := 2, upIdxSel := uw1i, upColor := colW1
if (not na(um1y)) and um1d < upBest
upBest := um1d, upArr := 3, upIdxSel := um1i, upColor := colM1
if (not na(dh4y)) and dh4d < dnBest
dnBest := dh4d, dnArr := 0, dnIdxSel := dh4i, dnColor := colH4
if (not na(dd1y)) and dd1d < dnBest
dnBest := dd1d, dnArr := 1, dnIdxSel := dd1i, dnColor := colD1
if (not na(dw1y)) and dw1d < dnBest
dnBest := dw1d, dnArr := 2, dnIdxSel := dw1i, dnColor := colW1
if (not na(dm1y)) and dm1d < dnBest
dnBest := dm1d, dnArr := 3, dnIdxSel := dm1i, dnColor := colM1
// ================= Nearest-only visibility (optional) =================
hideAll(arrB, arrA) =>
if array.size(arrB) > 0
for i = 0 to array.size(arrB) - 1
if array.get(arrA, i)
box.set_bgcolor(array.get(arrB, i), color.new(color.white, 100))
box.set_border_color(array.get(arrB, i), color.new(color.white, 100))
showOne(arrB, arrA, arrS, idx, demColor) =>
if idx >= 0 and idx < array.size(arrB)
if array.get(arrA, idx)
bool isDemand = array.get(arrS, idx) == 1
color c = isDemand ? demColor : colSup
box.set_bgcolor(array.get(arrB, idx), c)
box.set_border_color(array.get(arrB, idx), color.new(color.black, 0))
if onlyNearest
hideAll(zH4, aH4), hideAll(zD1, aD1), hideAll(zW1, aW1), hideAll(zM1, aM1)
if upArr == 0
showOne(zH4, aH4, sH4, upIdxSel, upColor)
if upArr == 1
showOne(zD1, aD1, sD1, upIdxSel, upColor)
if upArr == 2
showOne(zW1, aW1, sW1, upIdxSel, upColor)
if upArr == 3
showOne(zM1, aM1, sM1, upIdxSel, upColor)
if dnArr == 0
showOne(zH4, aH4, sH4, dnIdxSel, dnColor)
if dnArr == 1
showOne(zD1, aD1, sD1, dnIdxSel, dnColor)
if dnArr == 2
showOne(zW1, aW1, sW1, dnIdxSel, dnColor)
if dnArr == 3
showOne(zM1, aM1, sM1, dnIdxSel, dnColor)
// ================= Nearest distance labels (optional) =================
var label nearUp = na
var label nearDn = na
makeNearLabel(y, txt) =>
label.new(bar_index, y, txt, xloc=xloc.bar_index, style=label.style_label_left, color=color.new(color.black, 0), textcolor=color.white, size=size.tiny)
if showNearestLabels
if not na(nearUp)
label.delete(nearUp)
if not na(nearDn)
label.delete(nearDn)
if upArr != -1
box bUp = upArr == 0 ? array.get(zH4, upIdxSel) : upArr == 1 ? array.get(zD1, upIdxSel) : upArr == 2 ? array.get(zW1, upIdxSel) : array.get(zM1, upIdxSel)
float upBtm = box.get_bottom(bUp)
float pctUp = math.round(10000.0 * (upBtm - close) / close) / 100.0
nearUp := makeNearLabel(upBtm, "Nearest Above ~ " + str.tostring(pctUp) + "%")
if dnArr != -1
box bDn = dnArr == 0 ? array.get(zH4, dnIdxSel) : dnArr == 1 ? array.get(zD1, dnIdxSel) : dnArr == 2 ? array.get(zW1, dnIdxSel) : array.get(zM1, dnIdxSel)
float dnTop = box.get_top(bDn)
float pctDn = math.round(10000.0 * (close - dnTop) / close) / 100.0
nearDn := makeNearLabel(dnTop, "Nearest Below ~ " + str.tostring(pctDn) + "%")
// ================= Tiny legend (dots) =================
var table legend = na
if showLegend and na(legend)
legend := table.new(position.top_left, 4, 1)
if showLegend and not na(legend)
table.cell(legend, 0, 0, "● 4H", text_color=color.white, bgcolor=color.new(color.black, 0))
table.cell(legend, 1, 0, "● 1D", text_color=color.white, bgcolor=color.new(color.black, 0))
table.cell(legend, 2, 0, "● 1W", text_color=color.white, bgcolor=color.new(color.black, 0))
table.cell(legend, 3, 0, "● 1M", text_color=color.white, bgcolor=color.new(color.black, 0))
table.cell_set_bgcolor(legend, 0, 0, color.new(color.teal, 70))
table.cell_set_bgcolor(legend, 1, 0, color.new(color.blue, 70))
table.cell_set_bgcolor(legend, 2, 0, color.new(color.orange, 70))
table.cell_set_bgcolor(legend, 3, 0, color.new(color.purple, 70))
DTM 444 BANDS 🚀DTM 444 BANDS 🚀:
The DTM 444 BANDS 🚀 is a powerful, multi-purpose trading indicator combining Supertrend, Dynamic Band Levels, Breakout Signals, and Volume Confirmation to help traders identify high-probability trade setups across different timeframes.
🔧 Key Features
✅ Multi-Timeframe Support
Analyze price action across any timeframe using the Timeframe input.
All band calculations (High, Low, Midline, and Supertrend) are pulled from a higher timeframe for clearer context.
✅ Dynamic Bands Based on Supertrend
High Band: Rolling highest of Supertrend over hiLen period.
Low Band: Rolling lowest of Supertrend over loLen period.
Midline: Midpoint of the above.
Acts like dynamic support/resistance, ideal for trend-following and breakout strategies.
✅ Dual Signal System
Breakout Signals (Buy and Sell): Triggered when price breaks the bands with volume confirmation.
Supertrend Crossover Signals (Buy1 and Sell1): Classic momentum entries with a confirmation twist.
Exit Signals: Optional take-profit/neutral indicators when price reverses.
✅ Volume Confirmation Filter (Optional)
Only triggers signals if the volume exceeds its 20-period SMA.
Helps filter out false breakouts and weak trends in low-liquidity periods.
✅ Visual Enhancements
Color-coded candles based on band positioning (e.g., red = weak, green = strong, etc.)
On-chart labels for each signal for quick reference.
Real-time Signal Dashboard using Pine Script tables showing:
Current signal
Volume filter status
Live volume vs volume SMA
🧪 Practical Use Cases
Trend Traders: Use the Supertrend cross and band breakouts to ride trends early.
Breakout Traders: Catch high-probability moves outside established ranges.
Swing Traders: Time entries and exits using color-coded bars and exit labels.
Volume-Sensitive Traders: Focus on trades with strong volume backing.
📊 Backtest Snapshot
Based on the example chart for Reliance Industries (RELIANCE.NS) on the weekly timeframe:
Several profitable buy and breakout signals during uptrends.
Timely exits and breakdown alerts before reversals.
Volume filter keeps trades clean and avoids noise.
⚙️ Customizable Parameters
High Length and Low Length (default: 19)
Supertrend Multiplier and ATR Length
Volume Filter: Toggle ON/OFF
Volume SMA Length: Default 20
Custom Timeframe: Choose any higher timeframe for multi-timeframe analysis
📢 Alerts Ready
Fully integrated with TradingView alerts:
Breakout & Breakdown
Supertrend crossovers
All alerts respect the volume filter setting
🏁 Final Thoughts
DTM 444 BANDS 🚀 is a versatile and adaptive trading system that blends trend analysis, volatility bands, and volume validation. Whether you're a trend trader, breakout hunter, or swing trader — this tool gives you a structured edge with clear visual cues and real-time alerts.
FEI: Futures Entry Identifier📘 FEI: Futures Entry Identifier
FEI is a modular, futures-grade entry engine designed for precision trading across GC1!, MNQ1!, ES1!, and related contracts. It combines manual SVP structure, CHoCH detection, and Colby-style candle strength filters to identify high-probability long and short entries.
🔧 Features
• Manual SVP inputs (VAH, VAL, POC)
• Symbol-aware filters for micro vs standard contracts
• Multi-timeframe signal logic (3m, 5m, 10m, 15m, 30m)
• CHoCH detection with optional engulfing filter (default off)
• FRVP entry zone plotting after CHoCH confirmation
• Candle coloring on CHoCH trigger
• Session-aware logic (ETH default, optional RTH-only)
• Narratable visuals and audit-safe alerts
🧭 How to Use
1. Input VAH, VAL, and POC manually
2. Select signal timeframe (e.g. 3m or 5m)
3. Watch for CHoCH (white candle = structural shift)
4. Entry line plots at top/bottom of recent range
5. Long/short markers appear when SVP + candle strength align
6. Toggle RTH-only mode if needed
🌟 Why It’s Unique
FEI is built for traders who demand clarity, structure, and precision. Every signal is narratable, audit-safe, and resolution-aware—ideal for futures overlays and sniper-grade entries.
KAPITAS CBDR# PO3 Mean Reversion Standard Deviation Bands - Pro Edition
## 📊 Professional-Grade Mean Reversion System for MES Futures
Transform your futures trading with this institutional-quality mean reversion system based on standard deviation analysis and PO3 (Power of Three) methodology. Tested on **7,264 bars** of real MES data with **proven profitability across all 5 strategies**.
---
## 🎯 What This Indicator Does
This indicator plots **dynamic standard deviation bands** around a moving average, identifying extreme price levels where institutional accumulation/distribution occurs. Based on statistical probability and market structure theory, it helps you:
✅ **Identify high-probability entry zones** (±1, ±1.5, ±2, ±2.5 STD)
✅ **Target realistic profit zones** (first opposite STD band)
✅ **Time your entries** with session-based filters (London/US)
✅ **Manage risk** with built-in stop loss levels
✅ **Choose your strategy** from 5 backtested approaches
---
## 🏆 Backtested Performance (Per Contract on MES)
### Strategy #1: Aggressive (±1.5 → ∓0.5) 🥇
- **Total Profit:** $95,287 over 1,452 trades
- **Win Rate:** 75%
- **Profit Factor:** 8.00
- **Target:** 80 ticks ($100) | **Stop:** 30 ticks ($37.50)
- **Best For:** Active traders, 3-5 setups/day
### Strategy #2: Mean Reversion (±1 → Mean) 🥈
- **Total Profit:** $90,000 over 2,322 trades
- **Win Rate:** 85% (HIGHEST)
- **Profit Factor:** 11.34 (BEST)
- **Target:** 40 ticks ($50) | **Stop:** 20 ticks ($25)
- **Best For:** Scalpers, 6-8 setups/day
### Strategy #3: Conservative (±2 → ∓1) 🥉
- **Total Profit:** $65,500 over 726 trades
- **Win Rate:** 70%
- **Profit Factor:** 7.04
- **Target:** 120 ticks ($150) | **Stop:** 40 ticks ($50)
- **Best For:** Patient traders, 1-3 setups/day, HIGHEST $/trade
*Full statistics for all 5 strategies included in documentation*
---
## 📈 Key Features
### Dynamic Standard Deviation Bands
- **±0.5 STD** - Intraday mean reversion zones
- **±1.0 STD** - Primary reversion zones (68% of price action)
- **±1.5 STD** - Extended zones (optimal balance)
- **±2.0 STD** - Extreme zones (95% of price action)
- **±2.5 STD** - Ultra-extreme zones (rare events)
- **Mean Line** - Dynamic equilibrium
### Temporal Session Filters
- **London Session** (3:00-11:30 AM ET) - Orange background
- **US Session** (9:30 AM-4:00 PM ET) - Blue background
- **Optimal Entry Window** (10:30 AM-12:00 PM ET) - Green highlight
- **Best Exit Window** (3:00-4:00 PM ET) - Red highlight
### Visual Trade Signals
- 🟢 **Green zones** = Enter LONG (price at lower bands)
- 🔴 **Red zones** = Enter SHORT (price at upper bands)
- 🎯 **Target lines** = Exit zones (opposite bands)
- ⛔ **Stop levels** = Risk management
### Smart Alerts
- Alert when price touches entry bands
- Alert on optimal time windows
- Alert when targets hit
- Customizable for each strategy
---
## 💡 How to Use
### Step 1: Choose Your Strategy
Select from 5 backtested approaches based on your:
- Risk tolerance (higher STD = larger stops)
- Trading frequency (lower STD = more setups)
- Time availability (different session focuses)
- Personality (scalper vs swing trader)
### Step 2: Apply to Chart
- **Timeframe:** 15-minute (tested and optimized)
- **Symbol:** MES, ES, or other liquid futures
- **Settings:** Adjust band colors, widths, alerts
### Step 3: Wait for Setup
Price touches your chosen entry band during optimal windows:
- **BEST:** 10:30 AM-12:00 PM ET (88% win rate!)
- **GOOD:** 12:00-3:00 PM ET (75-82% win rate)
- **AVOID:** Friday after 1 PM, FOMC Wed 2-4 PM
### Step 4: Execute Trade
- Enter when price touches band
- Set stop at indicated level
- Target first opposite band
- Exit at target or stop (no exceptions!)
### Step 5: Manage Risk
- **For $50K funded account ($250 limit): Use 2 MES contracts**
- Stop after 3 consecutive losses
- Reduce size in low-probability windows
- Track cumulative daily P&L
---
## 📅 Optimal Trading Windows
### By Time of Day
- **10:30 AM-12:00 PM ET:** 88% win rate (BEST) ⭐⭐⭐
- **12:00-1:30 PM ET:** 82% win rate (scalping)
- **1:30-3:00 PM ET:** 76% win rate (afternoon)
- **3:00-4:00 PM ET:** Best EXIT window
### By Day of Week
- **Wednesday:** 82% win rate (BEST DAY) ⭐⭐⭐
- **Tuesday:** 78% win rate (highest volume)
- **Thursday:**
Trend/Range Composite (Single-Line) v1.4🔹 Step 1: Add it to your chart
Copy the whole script.
In TradingView → Pine Editor → paste it.
Click Add to chart.
It will show a white line in a subwindow, plus thresholds at 40 and 60, and a colored background.
Optional: You’ll see a status box (top-right of chart) with details like ADX, ATR, slope, etc.
🔹 Step 2: Understand the Score
The indicator compresses all signals into a 0–100 “Trend Strength Score”:
≥ 60 = TREND (teal background)
→ Market is trending, consider trend strategies like vertical spreads, runners, breakouts.
≤ 40 = RANGE (orange background)
→ Market is choppy/sideways, consider range strategies like butterflies, condors, mean-reversion fades.
40–60 = MIXED (gray background)
→ Indecision / chop. Best to reduce size or wait for clarity.
🔹 Step 3: Use with Your Trading Plan
Intraday (5m, 15m, 30m)
Score < 40 → play support/resistance bounces, fade extremes.
Score > 60 → play momentum breakouts or pullback continuations.
Daily chart
Good for swing context (is this month trending or just chopping?).
🔹 Step 4: Alerts
You can set TradingView alerts:
Cross above 60 → market entering trend mode.
Cross below 40 → market entering range mode.
Useful if you don’t want to watch constantly.
🔹 Step 5: Confirm with Price Levels
The score tells you “trend vs range”, but you still need levels:
If score < 40 → mark PDH / PDL (previous day high/low), VAH/VAL, VWAP. Expect rejections/fades.
If score > 60 → watch for breakouts beyond PDH/PDL or supply/demand zones.
Long Elite Squeeze (LES 2.1) NV/CDV AI LindsayLES 2.1 — Long Elite Squeeze
Creator: Hunter Hammond •: Elite × FineFir H.H (AI “Lindsay”)
Discord: elitexfinefir
LES (“Long Elite Squeeze”) is a momentum + flow-aware long strategy built for small-float, high-velocity stocks. It blends a classic squeeze engine (BB/KC), adaptive RVOL/RSI gating, VWAP slope, ADX trend filtering, WaveTrend timing, and new Net-Volume/CVD flow exits—all wrapped with on-chart HUDs, a trade tracker, trap detection, and a lightweight AI selector to adapt entries to live conditions.
Who it’s for (and where it thrives)
LES 2.1 is tuned for the morning session and stocks that can really move:
Top Pre-Market and Day Gainers
Highest or Top Volume on Day
Float: ≤ 40M
Price: ≤ $20
Volume: ≥ 5× the 30-day average (intraday RVOL pop)
Catalyst: ideally a fresh news driver / “day gainer”
Timeframe: 1-minute (designed & tuned for 1m). Works on 2m/3m/5m, but wasn’t specifically designed for them (see tuning tips below).
Evolution at a glance
LES 1.0 — The foundation
Squeeze engine using Bollinger vs. Keltner to detect expansion (“squeeze OFF”).
EMA – ATR offset line (dynamic risk anchor) with EMA as trend filter.
RSI guard for overheated moves.
RVOL confirmation using average volume lookback.
WaveTrend (WT + Signal) to time entries/exits.
Basic buy/sell logic + simple on-chart labels.
LES 2.0 — Quality-of-life & timing upgrades
AI Lindsay assistant v2 (periodic / contextual commentary).
VWAP Slope Detector with sensitivity modes (Loose → Very Strict).
Manual defaults pre-tuned for ease of use.
Double-EMA trailing (visual take-profit helper).
Improved on-chart commentary and Trade Summary (10:30am snapshot).
AI Version Suggester (V1/V2/V3 modes) with stickiness/cooldown.
Trap Detector Pro (sweep, VWAP reject, blow-off, etc.) with scored severity.
Trade Tracker HUD + Entry Checklist HUD.
Overall stability & UX polish.
LES 2.1 — Flow-based exit superpowers
New Flow Exit: integrates 1m Net Volume and 5m CVD-style pressure:
1m NetVol window (rolling sum of signed volume)
5m CVD window (downsampled, smoothed)
Debounce (consecutive red bars to avoid one-tick fakes)
Optional ATR Guard (only exit if the move is meaningful vs ATR)
Cooldown after a flow exit to avoid re-chop
Chart labels: “SELL (NV/CVD)” when flow triggers
Keeps you in good trends, but kicks you out when aggressive sellers actually show up.
How the engine works (plain English)
Market prep: We confirm trend & energy using EMA/ATR, RSI, RVOL, Squeeze OFF, and Price > VWAP.
Entry mode (V1/V2/V3):
V1 — Balanced trades (default “safe” behavior)
V2 — Fast trades (more aggressive when action heats up)
V3 — Trending trades (stricter; waits for strong slope & trend)
You can pick a version manually or let the AI Suggester switch modes based on slope/ADX/RVOL/acceleration (with a cooldown so it doesn’t flip-flop).
Entry timing: WaveTrend and squeeze momentum improve timing while VWAP slope avoids buying flat tape.
Risk anchor: The EMA – (ATR × Multiplier) “offset line” is your dynamic stop/line in the sand.
Exits:
Base exits (version-aware): WT crossback, momentum fade, price losing offsetLine or EMA.
Flow Exit (2.1): If 1m NetVol and 5m CVD both turn decisively red (with debounce and optional ATR guard), close—no arguing.
Entry rules (exactly what has to be true)
Buy (Core) — fires when all are true:
Not already in a trade
Close > EMA and Close > OffsetLine (offsetLine = EMA − ATR × Mult)
RVOL confirmed (meets dynamic RVOL multiplier)
RSI below the overbought ceiling (version-aware slack in V3)
Squeeze OFF (BBs expanded outside Keltner)
Price > VWAP (toggleable)
Extra for V3 (Trending trades):
VWAP slope gate passes (and, if set, VWAP must be green)
ADX strong (≥ 25 by design, ≥ 20 baseline)
Minimum slopePctPerBar met (default V3 expects ≥ 0.05%/bar)
AI Suggester (optional):
Scores V1/V2/V3 from conditions like ADX, VWAP slope, RVOL, intrabar acceleration, then locks a pick for aiSwitchCoolBars bars.
On-chart help:
Checklist HUD lights up ✅/❌ for each gate (EMA, ATR, RVOL, RSI, VWAP, Slope, etc.).
Trade Quality Rating (🌟x/10) appears on buy bars if enabled.
Exit rules (every sell condition)
Base sells (V1/V2):
WaveTrend crossback (signal crosses over WT) OR
Momentum fade (two darker squeeze momentum bars) OR
Close < OffsetLine OR Close < EMA
Base sells (V3):
Close < OffsetLine OR Close < EMA (trend-respecting; ignores WT/momentum so you’re not shaken out early)
Flow Exit (2.1, applies to all versions if enabled):
In trade AND Flow Exit enabled
1m NetVol window is red (and ≥ Min |NetVol|)
5m CVD (smoothed) is red
**Deb
*** FYI: Play with settings until it fits your style, everything thats set default when script is loaded is what I run currently. I made LES 2.1 more customizable than ever to meet every trades style and execution. LES 2.1 with Lindsay upgrade new AI trade tracking feature (when enabled) and risk management LES 2.1 is something special to meet many challenges a trader faces everyday.
Gap ZonesThis TradingView indicator automatically detects daily price gaps and plots them clearly on any timeframe (intraday or daily).
It helps visualize where unfilled gaps are sitting, track whether they’ve been filled, and control how far the zone extends.
Key Features
1. Daily Gap Detection
• Works even when you’re on intraday charts (uses daily OHLC data).
• Marks both gap up (potential support zones) and gap down (potential resistance zones).
2. Shaded Gap Zones
• Each gap is highlighted as a band (greenish for up, reddish for down).
• Option to turn shading off if you just want horizontal lines.
3. Hide When Filled
• Once price closes or touches the far side of the gap, it disappears (configurable: Touch vs Close).
4. Lookback Window
• Gaps only show if they occurred within the past X trading days (default: 30).
• Prevents your chart from being cluttered with ancient gaps.
5. Multiple Gaps Tracked
• Can track up to 5 recent gaps simultaneously.
• Oldest gaps “roll off” as new ones form.
6. Finite Right-Edge Guides
• Optional horizontal guide lines extend to the right, but only for a fixed number of bars (default: 50).
• Cleaner than infinite extensions.
7. Gap-Day Marker
• Optional vertical line drawn on the bar where the gap first occurred.
⸻
⚙️ Inputs & Settings
When you apply the indicator, you’ll see these options:
• Lookback (trading days): How far back to scan for gaps (default 30).
• Max gaps to show (1..5): How many simultaneous gap zones to display.
• Min gap size (% of prior close): Filter out tiny gaps (default 0.25%).
• Hide gaps once filled: Removes a gap from the chart once filled.
• Fill rule uses CLOSE (off = Touch):
• Touch = filled when price trades through the level intraday.
• Close = filled only when a candle close crosses it.
• Show shading: Toggle zone fills on/off.
• Show vertical marker on gap day: Toggle gap-day marker line.
• Show finite right-edge lines: Toggle horizontal lines extending right.
• Right line length (bars): How far those lines extend (default 50 bars).
⸻
🟢 How to Use It
1. Apply on Any Chart
• Works best on daily or intraday (5m, 15m, 1h).
• Gaps are always calculated from daily data, so intraday charts will show higher-timeframe gaps correctly.
2. Interpret Colors
• Green shading = Gap Up (often acts as support).
• Red shading = Gap Down (often acts as resistance).
3. Watch for Fills
• When price re-enters the gap zone, the indicator checks if it’s “filled” (based on your Touch/Close setting).
• If “Hide When Filled” is on, the zone vanishes.
4. Trade Context
• Many traders use gaps as targets (expecting a fill) or levels of support/resistance.
• Combined with your bull put/bear call spread strategies, it helps confirm strong levels.
Market Sentiment Trend Gauge [LevelUp]Market Sentiment Trend Gauge simplifies technical analysis by mathematically combining momentum, trend direction, volatility position, and comparison against a market benchmark, into a single trend score from -100 to +100. Displayed in a separate pane below your chart, it resolves conflicting signals from RSI, moving averages, Bollinger Bands, and market correlations, providing clear insights into trend direction, strength, and relative performance.
THE PROBLEM MARKET SENTIMENT TREND GAUGE (MSTG) SOLVES
Traditional indicators often produce conflicting signals, such as RSI showing overbought while prices rise or moving averages indicating an uptrend despite market underperformance. MSTG creates a weighted composite score to answer: "What's the overall bias for this asset?"
KEY COMPONENTS AND WEIGHTINGS
The trend score combines
▪ Momentum (25%): Normalized 14-period RSI, capped at ±100.
▪ Trend Direction (35%): 10/21-period EMA relationships,
▪ Volatility Position (20%): Price position, 20-period Bollinger Bands, capped at ±100.
▪ Market Comparison (20%): Daily performance vs. SPY benchmark, capped at ±100.
Final score = Weighted sum, smoothed with 5-period EMA.
INTERPRETING THE MSTG CHART
Trend Score Ranges and Colors
▪ Bright Green (>+30): Strong bullish; ideal for long entries.
▪ Light Green (+10 to +30): Weak bullish; cautiously favorable.
▪ Gray (-10 to +10): Neutral; avoid directional trades.
▪ Light Red (-10 to -30): Weak bearish; exercise caution.
▪ Bright Red (<-30): Strong bearish; high-risk for longs, consider shorts.
Reference Lines
▪ Zero Line (Gray): Separates bullish/bearish; crossovers signal trend changes.
▪ ±30 Lines (Dotted, Green/Red): Thresholds for strong trends.
▪ ±60 Lines (Dashed, Green/Red): Extreme strength zones (not overbought/oversold); manage risk (tighten stops, partial profits) but trends may persist.
Background Colors
▪ Green Tint (>+20): Bullish environment; favorable for longs.
▪ Red Tint (<-20): Bearish environment; caution for longs.
▪ Light Gray Tint (-20 to +20): Neutral/range-bound; wait for signals.
Extreme Readings vs. Traditional Signals
MSTG ±60 indicates maximum alignment of all factors, not reversals (unlike RSI >70/<30). Use for risk management, not automatic exits. Strong trends can sustain extremes; breakdowns occur below +30 or above -30.
INFORMATION TABLE INTERPRETATION
Trend Score Symbols
▲▲ >+30 strong bullish
▲ +10 to +30
● -10 to +10 neutral
▼ -30 to -10
▼▼ <-30 strong bearish
Colors: Green (positive), White (neutral), Red (negative).
Momentum Score
+40 to +100 strong bullish
0 to +40 moderate bullish
-40 to 0 moderate bearish
-100 to -40 strong bearish
Market vs. Stock
▪ Green: Stock outperforming market
▪ Red: Stock underperforming market
Example Interpretations:
-0.45% / +1.23% (Green): Market down, stock up = Strong relative strength
+2.10% / +1.50% (Red): Both rising, but stock lagging = Relative weakness
-1.20% / -0.80% (Green): Both falling, but stock declining less = Defensive strength
UNDERSTANDING EXTREME READINGS VS TRADITIONAL OVERBOUGHT/OVERSOLD
⚠️ Critical distinctions
Traditional Overbought/Oversold Signals:
▪ Single indicator (like RSI >70 or <30) showing momentum excess
▪ Often suggests immediate reversal or pullback expected
▪ Based on "price moved too far, too fast" concept
MSTG Extreme Readings (±60):
▪ Composite alignment of 4 different factors (momentum, trend, volatility, relative strength)
▪ Indicates maximum strength in current direction
▪ NOT a reversal signal - means "all systems extremely bullish/bearish"
Key Differences:
▪ RSI >70: "Price got ahead of itself, expect pullback"
▪ MSTG >+60: "Everything is extremely bullish right now"
▪ Strong trends can maintain extreme MSTG readings during major moves
▪ Breakdowns happen when MSTG falls below +30, not at +60
Proper Usage of Extreme Readings:
▪ Risk Management: Tighten stops, take partial profits
▪ Position Sizing: Reduce new position sizes at extremes
▪ Trend Continuation: Watch for sustained extreme readings in strong markets
▪ Exit Signals: Look for breakdown below +30, not reversal from +60
TRADING WITH MSTG
Quick Assessment
1. Check trend symbol for direction.
2. Confirm momentum strength.
3. Note relative performance color.
Examples:
▲▲ 55.2 (Green), Momentum +28.4, Outperforming: Strong buy setup.
▼ -18.6 (Red), Momentum -43.2, Underperforming: Defensive positioning.
Entry Conditions
▪ Long: stock outperforming market
- Score >+30 (bright green)
- Sustained green background
- ▲▲ symbol,
▪ Short: stock underperforming market
- Score <-30 (bright red)
- Sustained red background
- ▼▼ symbol
Avoid Trading When:
▪ Gray zone (-10 to +10).
▪ Rapid color changes or frequent zero-line crosses (choppy market).
▪ Gray background (range-bound).
Risk Management:
▪ Stop Loss: Exit on zero-line crossover against position.
▪ Take Profit: Partial at ±60 for risk control.
▪ Position Sizing: Larger when signals align; smaller in extremes or mixed conditions.
KEY ADVANTAGES
▪ Unified View: Weighted composite reduces noise and conflicts.
▪ Visual Clarity: 5-color system with gradients for rapid recognition.
▪ Market Context: Relative strength vs. SPY identifies leaders/laggards.
▪ Flexibility: Works across timeframes (1-min to weekly); customizable table.
▪ Noise Reduction: EMA smoothing minimizes false signals.
EXAMPLES
Strong Bull: Trend Score 71.9, Momentum Score 76.9
Neutral: Trend Score 0.1, Momentum Score -9.2
Strong Bear: Trend Score -51.7, Momentum Score -51.5
PERFORMANCE AND LIMITATIONS
Strengths: Trend identification, noise reduction, relative performance versus market.
Limitations: Lags at turning points, less effective in extreme volatility or non-trending markets.
Recommendations: View on multiple timeframes, combine with price action and fundamentals.
RVol+ Enhanced Relative Volume Indicator📊 RVol+ Enhanced Relative Volume Indicator
Overview
RVol+ (Relative Volume Plus) is an advanced time-based relative volume indicator designed specifically for swing traders and breakout detection. Unlike simple volume comparisons, RVol+ analyzes volume at the same time of day across multiple sessions, providing statistically significant insights into institutional activity and breakout potential.
🎯 Key Features
Core Volume Analysis
Time-Based RVol Calculation - Compares current cumulative volume to the average volume at this exact time over the past N days
Statistical Z-Score - Measures volume in standard deviations from the mean for true anomaly detection
Volume Percentile - Shows where current volume ranks historically (0-100%)
Sustained Volume Filter - 3-bar moving average prevents false signals from single-bar spikes
Breakout Detection
🚀 Confirmed Breakouts - Identifies price breakouts validated by high volume (RVol > 1.5x)
⚠️ False Breakout Warnings - Alerts when price breaks key levels on low volume (high failure risk)
Multi-Timeframe Context - Weekly volume overlay prevents chasing daily noise
Advanced Metrics
OBV Divergence Detection - Spots bullish/bearish accumulation/distribution patterns
Volume Profile Integration - Identifies institutional positioning
Money Flow Analysis - Tracks smart money vs retail activity
Extreme Volume Alerts - 🔥 Labels mark unusual spikes beyond the display cap
Visual Intelligence
Smart Color Coding:
🟢 Bright Teal = High activity (RVol ≥ 1.5x)
🟡 Medium Teal = Caution zone (RVol ≥ 1.2x)
⚪ Light Teal = Normal activity
🟠 Orange = Breakout confirmed
🔴 Red = False breakout risk
Comprehensive Stats Table:
Current Volume (formatted as M/K/B)
RVol ratio
Z-Score with significance
Volume percentile
Historical average and standard deviation
Sustained volume confirmation
📈 How to Use
For Swing Trading (1D - 3W Holds)
Perfect Setup:
✓ RVol > 1.5x (bright teal)
✓ Z-Score > 2.0 (⚡ alert)
✓ Percentile > 90%
✓ Sustained = ✓
✓ 🚀 Breakout label appears
Avoid:
✗ Red "Low Vol" warning during breakouts
✗ RVol < 1.0 at key levels
✗ Sustained volume not confirmed
Signal Interpretation
⚡ Z>2 Labels - Statistically significant volume (95th+ percentile) - highest probability moves
↗️ OBV+ Labels - Bullish accumulation (OBV rising while price consolidates)
↘️ OBV- Labels - Bearish distribution (OBV falling while price rises)
🔵 Blue Background - Weekly volume elevated (confirms daily strength)
⚙️ Customization
Basic Settings
N Day Average - Number of historical days for comparison (default: 5)
RVol Thresholds - Customize highlight levels (default: 1.2x, 1.5x)
Visual Display Cap - Prevent extreme spikes from compressing view (default: 4.0x)
Advanced Metrics (Toggle On/Off)
Z-Score analysis
Weekly RVol context
OBV divergence detection
Volume percentile ranking
Breakout signal generation
Table Customization
Position - 9 placement options to avoid chart overlap
Size - Tiny to Huge
Colors - Full customization of positive/negative/neutral values
Transparency - Adjustable background
Debug Mode
Enable Pine Logs for calculation transparency
Adjustable log frequency
Real-time calculation breakdown
🔬 Technical Details
Algorithm:
Binary search for historical lookups (O(log n) performance)
Time-zone aware session detection
DST-safe timestamp calculations
Exponentially weighted standard deviation
Anti-repainting architecture
Performance:
Optimized for max_bars_back = 5000
Efficient array management
Built-in function optimization
Memory-conscious data structures
📊 What Makes RVol+ Different?
vs. Standard Volume:
Context-aware (time-of-day matters)
Statistical significance testing
False breakout filtering
vs. Basic RVol:
Z-Score normalization (2-3 sigma detection)
Multi-timeframe confirmation
OBV divergence integration
Sustained volume filtering
Smart visual scaling
vs. Professional Tools:
Free and open-source
Fully customizable
No black-box algorithms
Educational debug logs
💡 Best Practices
Wait for Confirmation - Don't enter on first bar; wait for sustained volume ✓
Combine with Price Action - RVol validates, price structure determines entry
Weekly Context Matters - Blue background = institutional interest
Z-Score is King - Focus on ⚡ alerts for highest probability
Avoid Low Volume Breakouts - Red ⚠️ labels = high failure risk
🎓 Trading Psychology
Volume precedes price. When RVol+ shows:
High RVol + Rising OBV = Accumulation before breakout
High RVol at Resistance = Test of conviction
Low RVol on Breakout = Retail-driven (fade candidate)
Z-Score > 3 = Potential "whale" positioning
📝 Credits
Based on the time-based RVol concept from /u/HurlTeaInTheSea, enhanced with:
Statistical analysis (z-scores, percentiles)
Multi-timeframe integration
OBV divergence detection
Professional-grade visualization
Swing trading optimization
🔧 Version History
v2.0 - Enhanced Edition
Added Z-Score analysis
Multi-timeframe volume context
OBV divergence detection
Breakout confirmation system
Smart color coding
Customizable stats table
Debug logging mode
Performance optimizations
📚 Learn More
For optimal use with swing trading:
Combine with support/resistance levels
Watch for volume clusters in consolidation
Use weekly timeframe for trend confirmation
Monitor OBV divergence for early warnings
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational purposes. Volume analysis is one component of trading decisions. Always use proper risk management, consider multiple timeframes, and validate signals with price structure. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
🚀 Getting Started
Add indicator to chart
Adjust "N Day Average" to your preference (5-10 days typical)
Position stats table to avoid overlap
Enable features you want to monitor
Watch for 🚀 breakout confirmations!
Happy Trading! 📈
Sector RSI (Auto-Select)This indicator measures the relative strength momentum of any stock against its most closely correlated sector ETF, using the Relative Strength Index (RSI).
Auto sector selection: The script computes correlations between your symbol’s short-term returns and all major SPDR sector ETFs (XLB, XLE, XLF, XLI, XLK, XLP, XLU, XLV, XLY, XTN). The sector with the highest correlation is automatically chosen as the benchmark.
Sector vs Symbol RSI: It calculates RSI (default 14-period) for both the chosen sector and the current chart’s symbol.
Display modes:
Line mode: Plots both RSIs with colored fill (red if the sector RSI is stronger, green if the symbol RSI is stronger).
Histogram mode: Shows the difference between Sector RSI and Symbol RSI as a column chart.
RSI bands: Standard 70/50/30 reference lines are available in line mode.
Status line: The selected sector’s ticker is shown on the TradingView status line so you always know which sector is being used.
Use Cases:
Identify whether a stock’s momentum is driven by its sector or if it’s showing independent relative strength.
Detect sector rotations: when the stock begins to outperform or underperform its sector on momentum basis.
Combine with absolute RSI levels (overbought/oversold) to filter signals.
Notes:
This tool infers sector membership via rolling correlation, not from static classification metadata. This means in some cases (e.g. diversified companies or news shocks) the “best” sector may not be the official one, but the one most correlated in the current market regime.
Use min positive correlation input to filter out weak matches and enforce a fallback (defaults to Technology XLK).
Regression Channel (ShareScope-style, parallel)What it does
Replicates ShareScope’s Trend of displayed data look: a single straight linear-regression line (dashed) across a chosen window with parallel, constant-width bands above and below, plus optional shading.
Use it to see the overall trend gradient for a period and a statistically sized channel based on the fit’s residual error.
How it works (math, short)
Computes an OLS regression once over the analysis window.
Residual standard error s is derived from SSE and degrees of freedom (n−2).
Band half-width is constant across the window:
Mean CI (narrower): half = z * s / √n
Prediction (wider): half = z * s * √(1 + 1/n)
Three straight, parallel lines are drawn from the regression endpoints; midline is dashed.
This is intentionally not a tapered CI (which widens at the ends). It matches the visual behaviour of ShareScope’s shaded trend line channel.
Inputs
Source – Price series (Close, High, Low, HL2, etc.).
Use last N bars / N (bars) – Rolling window length.
From / To (date mode) – Alternative fixed date window.
Confidence (%) – 90 / 95 / 99 / Custom (uses z≈t).
Custom Z (t) – Override the quantile if desired.
Prediction bands – Use wider prediction envelope instead of mean CI.
Shade region + colors / opacity / line width.
Usage
To mimic ShareScope exactly, pick the same date span (use date mode) and set Confidence 99%.
Choose Prediction OFF for a tighter “confidence” look; ON for a wider, more permissive channel.
If ShareScope used High as source, set Source = High here as well.
Notes & limitations
TradingView does not expose the visible viewport to Pine. The script cannot auto-read “displayed data.” Use last N bars or date range.
Bands are parallel by design. Prices may close outside; the channel does not bend.
Window capped at 5,000 bars for performance. No alerts are emitted.
Differences vs TV’s native tools
Linear Regression (drawing) – manual object; no statistical sizing or shading.
Linear Regression Channel (indicator) – uses price standard deviations around the regression; width is a user stdev multiple.
This script – uses residual error of the OLS fit and a z/t quantile to size a statistically meaningful parallel channel.
Changelog
r3.1 – Guard fix (no return at top level), minor refactor, stable line updates.
r3 – Switched to single-fit OLS with parallel constant-width bands (ShareScope look).
(Earlier experimental builds r1–r2.2 implemented rolling/tapered CI; superseded.)
Disclaimer: Educational use only. Not investment advice.
DCA vs One-ShotCompare a DCA strategy by choosing the payment frequency (daily, weekly, or monthly), and by choosing whether or not to pay on weekends for cryptocurrency. You can add fees and the reference price (opening, closing, etc.).
Debt Refinance Cycle + Liquidity vs BTC (Wk) — Overlay Part 1Debt Refi Cycle - Overlay script (BTC + Liquidity + DRCI/Z normalized to BTC range)
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) [KedArc Quant]Description:
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) trades with the latest confirmed Supply/Demand zone using a single, configurable Fib pullback (0.3/0.5/0.6). Trade only in the direction of the most recent zone and use a single, configurable fib level for pullback entries.
• Detects market structure via confirmed swing highs/lows using a rolling window.
• Draws Supply/Demand zones (bearish/bullish rectangles) from the latest MSS (CHOCH or BOS) event.
• Computes intra zone Fib guide rails and keeps them extended in real time.
• Triggers BUY only inside bullish zones and SELL only inside bearish zones when price touches the selected fib and closes back beyond it (bounce confirmation).
• Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + fib next to the triangle markers.
What it does
Finds structure using confirmed swing highs/lows (you choose the confirmation length).
Builds the latest zone (bullish = demand, bearish = supply) after a CHOCH/BOS event.
Draws intra-zone “guide rails” (Fib lines) and extends them live.
Signals only with the trend of that zone:
BUY inside a bullish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back above it.
SELL inside a bearish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back below it.
Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + Fib next to triangles for quick context
Why this is different
Most “zone + fib + signal” tools bolt together several indicators, or fire counter-trend signals because they don’t fully respect structure. TFZB is intentionally minimal:
Single bias source: the latest confirmed zone defines direction; nothing else overrides it.
Single entry rule: one Fib bounce (0.3/0.5/0.6 selectable) inside that zone—no counter-trend trades by design.
Clean visuals: you can show only the most recent zone, clamp overlap, and keep just the rails that matter.
Deterministic & transparent: every plot/label comes from the code you see—no external series or hidden smoothing
How it helps traders
Cuts decision noise: you always know the bias and the only entry that matters right now.
Forces discipline: if price isn’t inside the active zone, you don’t trade.
Adapts to volatility: pick 0.3 in strong trends, 0.5 as the default, 0.6 in chop.
Non-repainting zones: swings are confirmed after Structure Length bars, then used to build zones that extend forward (they don’t “teleport” later)
How it works (details)
*Structure confirmation
A swing high/low is only confirmed after Structure Length bars have elapsed; the dot is plotted back on the original bar using offset. Expect a confirmation delay of about Structure Length × timeframe.
*Zone creation
After a CHOCH/BOS (momentum shift / break of prior swing), TFZB draws the new Supply/Demand zone from the swing anchors and sets it active.
*Fib guide rails
Inside the active zone TFZB projects up to five Fib lines (defaults: 0.3 / 0.5 / 0.7) and extends them as time passes.
*Entry logic (with-trend only)
BUY: bar’s low ≤ fib and close > fib inside a bullish zone.
SELL: bar’s high ≥ fib and close < fib inside a bearish zone.
*Optionally restrict to one signal per zone to avoid over-trading.
(Optional) Aggressive confirm-bar entry
When do the swing dots print?
* The code confirms a swing only after `structureLen` bars have elapsed since that candidate high/low.
* On a 5-min chart with `structureLen = 10`, that’s about 50 minutes later.
* When the swing confirms, the script plots the dot back on the original bar (via `offset = -structureLen`). So you *see* the dot on the old bar, but it only appears on the chart once the confirming bar arrives.
> Practical takeaway: expect swing markers to appear roughly `structureLen × timeframe` later. Zones and signals are built from those confirmed swings.
Best timeframe for this Indicator
Use the timeframe that matches your holding period and the noise level of the instrument:
* Intraday :
* 5m or 15m are the sweet spots.
* Suggested `structureLen`:
* 5m: 10–14 (confirmation delay \~50–70 min)
* 15m: 8–10 (confirmation delay \~2–2.5 hours)
* Keep Entry Fib at 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in strong trends, 0.6 in chop.
* Tip: avoid the first 10–15 minutes after the open; let the initial volatility set the early structure.
* Swing/overnight:
* 1h or 4h.
* `structureLen`:
* 1h: 6–10 (6–10 hours confirmation)
* 4h: 5–8 (20–32 hours confirmation)
* 1m scalping: not recommended here—the confirmation lag relative to the noise makes zones less reliable.
Inputs (all groups)
Structure
• Show Swing Points (structureTog)
o Plots small dots on the bar where a swing point is confirmed (offset back by Structure Length).
• Structure Length (structureLen)
o Lookback used to confirm swing highs/lows and determine local structure. Higher = fewer, stronger swings; lower = more reactive.
Zones
• Show Last (zoneDispNum)
o Maximum number of zones kept on the chart when Display All Zones is off.
• Display All Zones (dispAll)
o If on, ignores Show Last and keeps all zones/levels.
• Zone Display (zoneFilter): Bullish Only / Bearish Only / Both
o Filters which zone types are drawn and eligible for signals.
• Clean Up Level Overlap (noOverlap)
o Prevents fib lines from overlapping when a new zone starts near the previous one (clamps line start/end times for readability).
Fib Levels
Each row controls whether a fib is drawn and how it looks:
• Toggle (f1Tog…f5Tog): Show/hide a given fib line.
• Level (f1Lvl…f5Lvl): Numeric ratio in . Defaults active: 0.3, 0.5, 0.7 (0 and 1 off by default).
• Line Style (f1Style…f5Style): Solid / Dashed / Dotted.
• Bull/Bear Colors (f#BullColor, f#BearColor): Per-fib color in bullish vs bearish zones.
Style
• Structure Color: Dot color for confirmed swing points.
• Bullish Zone Color / Bearish Zone Color: Rectangle fills (transparent by default).
Signals
• Entry Fib for Signals (entryFibSel): Choose 0.3, 0.5 (default), or 0.6 as the trigger line.
• Show Buy/Sell Signals (showSignals): Toggles triangle markers on/off.
• One Signal Per Zone (oneSignalPerZone): If on, suppresses additional entries within the same zone after the first trigger.
• Show Signal Text Labels (Bull/Bear + Fib) (showSignalLabels): Adds a small label next to each triangle showing zone bias and the fib used (e.g., BULL 0.5 or BEAR 0.3).
How TFZB decides signals
With trend only:
• BUY
1. Latest active zone is bullish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone (between top and bottom).
3. The bar’s low ≤ selected fib and it closes > selected fib (bounce).
• SELL
1. Latest active zone is bearish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone.
3. The bar’s high ≥ selected fib and it closes < selected fib.
Markers & labels
• BUY: triangle up below the bar; optional label “BULL 0.x” above it.
• SELL: triangle down above the bar; optional label “BEAR 0.x” below it.
Right-Panel Swing Log (Table)
What it is
A compact, auto-updating log of the most recent Swing High/Low events, printed in the top-right of the chart.
It helps you see when a pivot formed, when it was confirmed, and at what price—so you know the earliest bar a zone-based signal could have appeared.
Columns
Type – Swing High or Swing Low.
Date – Calendar date of the swing bar (follows the chart’s timezone).
Swing @ – Time of the original swing bar (where the dot is drawn).
Confirm @ – Time of the bar that confirmed that swing (≈ Structure Length × timeframe after the swing). This is also the earliest moment a new zone/entry can be considered.
Price – The swing price (high for SH, low for SL).
Why it’s useful
Clarity on repaint/confirmation: shows the natural delay between a swing forming and being usable—no guessing.
Planning & journaling: quick reference of today’s pivots and prices for notes/backtesting.
Scanning intraday: glance to see if you already have a confirmed zone (and therefore valid fib-bounce entries), or if you’re still waiting.
Context for signals: if a fib-bounce triangle appears before the time listed in Confirm @, it’s not a valid trade (you were too early).
Settings (Inputs → Logging)
Log swing times / Show table – turn the table on/off.
Rows to keep – how many recent entries to display.
Show labels on swing bar – optional tags on the chart (“Swing High 11:45”, “Confirm SH 14:15”) that match the table.
Recommended defaults
• Structure Length: 10–20 for intraday; 20–40 for swing.
• Entry Fib for Signals: 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in stronger trends and 0.6 in choppier markets.
• One Signal Per Zone: ON (prevents over trading).
• Zone Display: Both.
• Fib Lines: Keep 0.3/0.5/0.7 on; turn on 0 and 1 only if you need anchors.
Alerts
Two alert conditions are available:
• BUY signal – fires when a with trend bullish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bullish zone.
• SELL signal – fires when a with trend bearish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bearish zone.
Create alerts from the chart’s Alerts panel and select the desired condition. Use Once Per Bar Close to avoid intrabar flicker.
Notes & tips
• Swing dots are confirmed only after Structure Length bars, so they plot back in time; zones built from these confirmed swings do not repaint (though they extend as new bars form).
• If you don’t see a BUY where you expect one, check: (1) Is the active zone bullish? (2) Did the candle’s low actually pierce the selected fib and close above it? (3) Is One Signal Per Zone suppressing a second entry?
• You can hide visual clutter by reducing Show Last to 1–3 while keeping Display All Zones off.
Glossary
• CHOCH (Change of Character): A shift where price breaks beyond the last opposite swing while local momentum flips.
• BOS (Break of Structure): A cleaner break beyond the prior swing level in the current momentum direction.
• MSS: Either CHOCH or BOS – any event that spawns a new zone.
Extension ideas (optional)
• Add fib extensions (1.272 / 1.618) for target lines.
• Zone quality score using ATR normalization to filter weak impulses.
• HTF filter to only accept zones aligned with a higher timeframe trend.
⚠️ Disclaimer This script is provided for educational purposes only.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Trading involves risk, and users should exercise caution and use proper risk management when applying this strategy.
Shamji's Liquidity Sweep + FVG (Follow-up + Filters) Purpose (what it does)
This indicator looks for two related price structures used by many smart-money / liquidity-hunt traders:
Liquidity Sweeps — candles that wick beyond a recent swing high (for buy-side stop-hunts) or swing low (for sell-side stop-hunts), then close back inside. These are flagged as potential stop-hunt events that clear obvious liquidity.
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) — simple 3-bar style gaps where an older bar’s high is below the current low (bullish FVG) or an older bar’s low is above the current high (bearish FVG). When an FVG appears after a sweep (within a configurable window), this is considered a follow-up alignment.
The script adds optional filters (volume spike and candle-range vs ATR) to increase confidence, and can restrict marking/alerts to only events that meet the follow-up and filter rules.
Order Block Volumatic FVG StrategyInspired by: Volumatic Fair Value Gaps —
License: CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial–ShareAlike).
This script is a non-commercial derivative work that credits the original author and keeps the same license.
What this strategy does
This turns BigBeluga’s visual FVG concept into an entry/exit strategy. It scans bullish and bearish FVG boxes, measures how deep price has mitigated into a box (as a percentage), and opens a long/short when your mitigation threshold and filters are satisfied. Risk is managed with a fixed Stop Loss % and a Trailing Stop that activates only after a user-defined profit trigger.
Additions vs. the original indicator
✅ Strategy entries based on % mitigation into FVGs (long/short).
✅ Lower-TF volume split using upticks/downticks; fallback if LTF data is missing (distributes prior bar volume by close’s position in its H–L range) to avoid NaN/0.
✅ Per-FVG total volume filter (min/max) so you can skip weak boxes.
✅ Age filter (min bars since the FVG was created) to avoid fresh/immature boxes.
✅ Bull% / Bear% share filter (the 46%/53% numbers you see inside each FVG).
✅ Optional candle confirmation and cooldown between trades.
✅ Risk management: fixed SL % + Trailing Stop with a profit trigger (doesn’t trail until your trigger is reached).
✅ Pine v6 safety: no unsupported args, no indexof/clamp/when, reverse-index deletes, guards against zero/NaN.
How a trade is decided (logic overview)
Detect FVGs (same rules as the original visual logic).
For each FVG currently intersected by the bar, compute:
Mitigation % (how deep price has entered the box).
Bull%/Bear% split (internal volume share).
Total volume (printed on the box) from LTF aggregation or fallback.
Age (bars) since the box was created.
Apply your filters:
Mitigation ≥ Long/Short threshold.
Volume between your min and max (if enabled).
Age ≥ min bars (if enabled).
Bull% / Bear% within your limits (if enabled).
(Optional) the current candle must be in trade direction (confirm).
If multiple FVGs qualify on the same bar, the strategy uses the most recent one.
Enter long/short (no pyramiding).
Exit with:
Fixed Stop Loss %, and
Trailing Stop that only starts after price reaches your profit trigger %.
Input settings (quick guide)
Mitigation source: close or high/low. Use high/low for intrabar touches; close is stricter.
Mitigation % thresholds: minimal mitigation for Long and Short.
TOTAL Volume filter: skip FVGs with too little/too much total volume (per box).
Bull/Bear share filter: require, e.g., Long only if Bull% ≥ 50; avoid Short when Bull% is high (Short Bull% max).
Age filter (bars): e.g., ≥ 20–30 bars to avoid fresh boxes.
Confirm candle: require candle direction to match the trade.
Cooldown (bars): minimum bars between entries.
Risk:
Stop Loss % (fixed from entry price).
Activate trailing at +% profit (the trigger).
Trailing distance % (the trailing gap once active).
Lower-TF aggregation:
Auto: TF/Divisor → picks 1/3/5m automatically.
Fixed: choose 1/3/5/15m explicitly.
If LTF can’t be fetched, fallback allocates prior bar’s volume by its close position in the bar’s H–L.
Suggested starting presets (you should optimize per market)
Mitigation: 60–80% for both Long/Short.
Bull/Bear share:
Long: Bull% ≥ 50–70, Bear% ≤ 100.
Short: Bull% ≤ 60 (avoid shorting into strong support), Bear% ≥ 0–70 as you prefer.
Age: ≥ 20–30 bars.
Volume: pick a min that filters noise for your symbol/timeframe.
Risk: SL 4–6%, trailing trigger 1–2%, distance 1–2% (crypto example).
Set slippage/fees in Strategy Properties.
Notes, limitations & best practices
Data differences: The LTF split uses request.security_lower_tf. If the exchange/data feed has sparse LTF data, the fallback kicks in (it’s deliberate to avoid NaNs but is a heuristic).
Real-time vs backtest: The current bar can update until close; results on historical bars use closed data. Use “Bar Replay” to understand intrabar effects.
No pyramiding: Only one position at a time. Modify pyramiding in the header if you need scaling.
Assets: For spot/crypto, TradingView “volume” is exchange volume; in some markets it may be tick volume—interpret filters accordingly.
Risk disclosure: Past performance ≠ future results. Use appropriate position sizing and risk controls; this is not financial advice.
Credits
Visual FVG concept and original implementation: BigBeluga.
This derivative strategy adds entry/exit logic, volume/age/share filters, robust LTF handling, and risk management while preserving the original spirit.
License remains CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (non-commercial, attribution required, share-alike).
Iron Condor Pro v6 – Full EngineIronCondor Engine v6.6 is a multi-mode options strategy tool for planning and managing iron condors, straddles, strangles, and butterflies. It supports both setup planning and live trade tracking with modeled delta, risk-based strike selection, IV rank estimation, and visual breach alerts.
Use Setup Mode to preview strike structures based on IV proxy, ATR, delta targeting, and risk tier (High/Mid/Low/Delta). Use Live Mode to track real trades, enter strike/premium data, and monitor live P&L, delta drift, and range status.
This script does not connect to live option chains. Volatility and delta are modeled using price history. All strikes and premiums must be confirmed using your broker before placing trades. Best used with strong support/resistance levels and high IV rank (30%+).
For educational purposes only.
Workflow Guide
Use this flow whether you're setting up on Sunday night or any day before placing a trade.
Step 0: Pre-Script Preparation
Before using the script:
Identify major support and resistance zones on your chart. Define the expected range or consolidation area. Use this context to help evaluate strike placement
1. Setup Phase (Pre-Trade Planning)
Step 1 – Load the Script
Add: IronCondor Engine v6.6 – Full Risk/Decay Edition to your chart
Step 2 – Set Mode = Setup
This enables planning mode, where the engine calculates strike combinations based on:
Your selected risk profile (High, Mid, Low, or Delta)
Historical volatility (20-day log return)
ATR (Average True Range)
Target short delta (adjustable)
Step 3 – Review Setup Table
Enable Show Setup Table to view calculated strikes and width by risk tier.
Adjust any of the following as needed:
Target Short Delta
Strike Interval ($)
Width multipliers (High/Mid/Low)
Risk tier under Auto-Feed Choice
Step 4 – Evaluate the Setup
Is the net credit at least 1.5–2.0x your max risk?
Are the short strikes clearly outside support/resistance zones?
Are the short deltas between 0.15 and 0.30?
Is the range wide enough to handle normal price movement?
Step 5 – Prep for Execution
Enable Auto-Feed Setup → Live to carry Setup strikes into Live mode
Or disable it if you prefer to manually enter strikes later
2. Trade Execution (Live Tracking Mode)
Step 1 – Place the Trade with Your Broker
Use your brokerage (TOS, Tasty, IBKR, etc.) to place the iron condor or other structure
Step 2 – Set Mode = Live
In Live mode:
If Auto-Feed is ON, the Setup strikes auto-populate
If Auto-Feed is OFF, manually enter:
Short and long strikes (Call and Put)
Premiums collected/paid per leg
Total net credit (Entry Credit)
Optional: Input current mid prices for each leg in the "Live Chain" section to track live mark-to-market P&L
Once all required fields are valid, the script activates:
Real-time profit/loss tracking
Max risk estimate
Delta monitoring on short legs
IV Rank estimate
Breach detection system
Chart visuals (if enabled)
3. Trade Management (During the Week)
While the trade is active, use the dashboard and visuals to monitor:
Key Metrics:
Unrealized P/L %
Mark-to-market value vs entry credit
Daily decay (theta)
Days until expiration
Breach status:
In Range
Near Breach
Breached
Alerts:
Price near short strike → suggests roll
Price breaches long strike → breach alert
50% or 75% profit → optional exit signal
Delta exceeds threshold → exposure may need adjustment
Management Tips:
At 50–75% profit: consider closing early
If price nears a short leg: roll, hedge, or manage
If nearing expiry: decide whether to hold or close
If IV collapses: may accelerate time decay or reduce exit value
4. End-of-Week or Expiration Management
If Profit Target Hit
Close early to reduce risk and lock gains
If Still Open Near Expiry
Close the position or
Hold through expiration only if you're fully prepared for pinning/gamma/assignment scenarios
Avoid holding open spreads over the weekend unless part of a defined strategy
Reference Notes
Strike Width
Defined as:
Width = Distance between Short and Long strike
Used for calculating max loss and breach visuals
Delta Guidelines
0.15–0.20 = safer, wider range, lower credit
0.25–0.30 = more aggressive, tighter range, higher credit
Use Target Short Delta input to adjust auto-selected strikes accordingly
Credit Example
Sell Call: $1.04
Sell Put: $0.23
Buy Call + Put wings: $0.14
Net Credit = $1.13 = $113 per contract (max profit)
This is the max profit if price stays between short strikes through expiration
IV Rank (Estimated)
This script does not use options chain IV data.
Instead, it calculates a volatility proxy:
ivRaw = ta.stdev(log returns, 20) * sqrt(252)
IV Rank is then calculated as the percentile of this value within the last 252 bars.
High IV Rank (30%–100%) → better premium-selling conditions
Low IV Rank (<30%) → lower edge for condors
Ideal to sell premium when IV Rank is above 30–50%
Disclosures and Limitations
This script is for educational use only
It does not connect to live option chains
All strikes, deltas, and premiums must be validated through your broker
Always confirm real-time IV, delta, and pricing before placing a trade
Inversion Fair Value Gap Signals [AlgoAlpha]🟠 OVERVIEW
This script is a custom signal tool called Inversion Fair Value Gap Signals (IFVG) , designed to detect, track, and visualize fair value gaps (FVGs) and their inversions directly on price charts. It identifies bullish and bearish imbalances, monitors when these zones are mitigated or rejected, and extends them until resolution or expiration. What makes this script original is the inclusion of inversion logic—when a gap is filled, the area flips into an opposite "inversion fair value gap," creating potential reversal or continuation zones that give traders additional context beyond classic FVG analysis.
🟠 CONCEPTS
The script builds on the Smart Money Concepts (SMC) principle of fair value gaps, where inefficiencies form when price moves too quickly in one direction. Detection requires a three-bar sequence: a strong up or down move that leaves untraded price between bar highs and lows. To refine reliability, the script adds an ATR-based size filter and prevents overlap between zones. Once created, gaps are tracked in arrays until mitigation (price closing back into the gap), expiration, or transformation into an inversion zone. Inversions act as polarity flips, where bullish gaps become bearish resistance and bearish gaps become bullish support. Lower-timeframe volume data is also displayed inside zones to highlight whether buying or selling pressure dominated during gap creation.
🟠 FEATURES
Automatic detection of bullish and bearish FVGs with ATR-based thresholding.
Inversion logic: mitigated gaps flip into opposite-colored IFVG zones.
Volume text overlay inside each zone showing up vs down volume.
Visual markers (△/▽ for FVG, ▲/▼ for IFVG) when price exits a zone without mitigation.
🟠 USAGE
Apply the indicator to any chart and enable/disable bullish or bearish FVG detection depending on your focus. Use the colored gap zones as areas of interest: bullish gaps suggest possible continuation to the upside until mitigated, while bearish gaps suggest continuation down. When a gap flips into an inversion zone, treat it as potential support/resistance—bullish IFVGs below price may act as demand, while bearish IFVGs above price may act as supply. Watch the embedded up/down volume data to gauge the strength of participants during gap formation. Use the △/▽ and ▲/▼ markers to spot when price rejects gaps or inversions without filling them, which can indicate strong trending momentum. For practical use, combine alerts with your trade plan to track when new gaps form, when old ones are resolved, or when key zones flip into inversions, helping you align entries, targets, or reversals with institutional order flow logic.
CCI vs Two EMAs + Trendlines + Breakout HighlightPerfect indicator which analyzes the cci4000 & 2 EMAS.
MA Pack + Cross Signals (Short vs Long)Overview
A flexible moving average pack that lets you switch between short-term trend detection and long-term trend confirmation .
Short-term mode: plots 5, 10, 20, and 50 MAs with early crossovers (10/50, 20/50).
Long-term mode: plots 50, 100, 200 MAs with Golden Cross and Death Cross signals.
Choice of SMA or EMA .
Alerts included for all crossovers.
Why Use It
Catch early trend shifts in short-term mode.
Confirm institutional trend levels in long-term mode.
Visual signals (triangles + labels) make spotting setups easy.
Alert-ready for automated trade monitoring.
Usage
Add to chart.
In settings, choose Short-term or Long-term .
Watch for markers:
Green triangles = bullish cross
Red triangles = bearish cross
Green label = Golden Cross
Red label = Death Cross
Optional: enable alerts for notifications.