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ICT HTF/BIAS

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ICT HTF/BIAS — Full Guide
What this indicator does

ICT HTF/BIAS plots multi-timeframe ICT PD Arrays (FVGs + Order Blocks) and provides a compact bias table that helps you quickly determine directional context across your selected timeframes.

It is designed to stay simple, readable, and ICT-based, while avoiding misleading signals.

Key features
1) ICT PD Arrays included

FVG (Fair Value Gap): classic ICT 3-candle imbalance (gap).

Order Blocks (OB): detected via BOS logic + pivot structure, then searching back for the last opposite candle as the OB anchor.

2) HTF confirmed zones (non-misleading behavior)

Zones are added only on the HTF close (confirmed higher timeframe bar).
This avoids “in-progress HTF candle” noise and reduces false/temporary zones.

3) SHOW vs CALC (decoupled by design)

Each TF has two independent depth controls:

Max SHOW = how many zones you want to draw on the chart (keep your chart clean).

Max CALC = how many zones the table/bias is allowed to analyze (keep your bias logic robust).

This prevents a common problem: changing how many boxes you display changes your bias output.
In this script, your bias can remain stable even if you hide most boxes.

4) Compact Bias Table (fast read)

The table shows:

FVG status: IN / OUT / N/A

OB status: IN / OUT / N/A

BIAS: ↑ / ↓ / “-”

GLOBAL bias: weighted across TF1..TF4

How to read the bias
Per-Timeframe Bias rules (ICT-based, simple)

For each timeframe:

If price is IN an OB (within CALC depth) → bias = OB direction

Else if price is IN a FVG (within CALC depth) → bias = FVG direction

Else fallback to the most recent direction (OB preferred, otherwise FVG)

GLOBAL bias (weighted)

The GLOBAL row uses a weighted sum:

TF1 weight = 1

TF2 weight = 2

TF3 weight = 3

TF4 weight = 4

Score > 0 → bullish global bias
Score < 0 → bearish global bias
Score = 0 → neutral

Chart TF “Guard” (prevents false LTF readings)

TradingView has limitations when requesting very low TF data from a much higher chart timeframe.
To avoid showing incorrect LTF (1m/5m/15m) statuses when you’re on a high chart TF, the script can display a small warning banner and treat certain LTF rows as N/A when appropriate.

Purpose: never show false information.

Recommended usage (most user friendly)
Step 1 — Choose your “Entry TF”

As a rule of thumb (ICT):

The lowest TF in your set should match your entry timeframe, or be close to it.

Examples:

Intraday / Scalping

TF1=1m, TF2=5m, TF3=15m, TF4=1H
(Use chart TF 1m–15m for best LTF accuracy.)

Higher timeframe trading

TF1=1H, TF2=4H, TF3=1D, TF4=1W
(Then you naturally don’t care about 1m/5m.)

Step 2 — Keep your chart clean with SHOW vs CALC

A practical approach:

Max SHOW: 1–2 (clean chart)

Max CALC: 3–10 (more stable bias/table logic)

Main settings (quick explanation)
Timeframes (Rows)

Enable TFx: enable/disable each row timeframe

Show Boxes TFx: show/hide zones for that timeframe

Max SHOW / Max CALC

Max SHOW FVG / OB: visual draw limit

Max CALC FVG / OB: depth used by table and bias

Box Width (Per TF)

HTF bars: width scales by HTF size

Chart bars: fixed width in chart bars

OB Logic

Pivot length (BOS): higher = stricter / fewer OBs

OB lookback: how many HTF bars to search for the OB anchor candle

Notes / limitations

This is a context + confluence tool, not a “signal generator.”

LTF accuracy depends on chart TF; the Guard exists specifically to prevent misleading outputs.

One-line summary

ICT HTF/BIAS: multi-TF ICT PD Arrays + a clean bias table with SHOW vs CALC separation, so you can keep charts minimal while keeping bias logic consistent.
Notas de prensa
ICT HTF/BIAS — Full Guide (Updated)
What this indicator does

ICT HTF/BIAS plots multi-timeframe ICT PD Arrays (FVGs + Order Blocks) and provides a compact bias table to quickly determine directional context across your selected timeframes.

It is designed to stay simple, readable, and ICT-based, while avoiding misleading signals.

Key features
1) ICT PD Arrays included

FVG (Fair Value Gap): classic ICT 3-candle imbalance (gap).

Order Blocks (OB): detected via BOS logic + pivot structure, then searching back for the last opposite candle as the OB anchor.

2) HTF confirmed zones (non-misleading behavior)

Zones are added only on the HTF close (confirmed higher timeframe bar).
This avoids “in-progress HTF candle” noise and reduces false/temporary zones.

3) SHOW vs CALC (decoupled by design)

Each TF has two independent depth controls:

Max SHOW = how many zones you want to draw on the chart (keep your chart clean).

Max CALC = how many zones the table/bias is allowed to analyze (keep your bias logic robust).

This prevents a common problem: changing how many boxes you display changes your bias output.
In this script, your bias can remain stable even if you hide most boxes.

4) Compact Bias Table (fast read)

The table shows:

FVG status: IN / OUT / N/A

OB status: IN / OUT / N/A

BIAS: ↑ / ↓ / “-”

GLOBAL bias: weighted across TF1..TF4

NEAREST row: nearest untaken session High above and session Low below, displayed as distance in points to hit (instead of printing the raw price).

5) Session Liquidity Levels (Asia / London / NY AM / NY Lunch / NY PM)

This script can track completed session highs/lows and mark them as taken once swept.

Tracks closed session H/L only (clean, consistent behavior).

Stores multiple past sessions (user-defined max).

Optional “taken by wick” style marking (if enabled in your build).

Sessions are configurable in inputs and intended to run with a default UTC-5 reference.

How to read the bias
Per-Timeframe Bias rules (ICT-based, simple)

For each timeframe:

If price is IN an OB (within CALC depth) → bias = OB direction

Else if price is IN a FVG (within CALC depth) → bias = FVG direction

Else fallback to the most recent direction (OB preferred, otherwise FVG)

GLOBAL bias (weighted)

The GLOBAL row uses a weighted sum:

TF1 weight = 1

TF2 weight = 2

TF3 weight = 3

TF4 weight = 4

Score > 0 → bullish global bias
Score < 0 → bearish global bias
Score = 0 → neutral

Chart TF “Guard” (prevents false LTF readings)

TradingView has limitations when requesting very low TF data from a much higher chart timeframe.
To avoid showing incorrect LTF (1m/5m/15m) statuses when you’re on a high chart TF, the script can display a warning banner and treat certain LTF rows as N/A when appropriate.

Purpose: never show false information.

Recommended usage (most user friendly)
Step 1 — Choose your “Entry TF”

As a rule of thumb (ICT):
The lowest TF in your set should match your entry timeframe, or be close to it.

Examples:

Intraday / Scalping

TF1=1m, TF2=5m, TF3=15m, TF4=1H
(Use chart TF 1m–15m for best LTF accuracy.)

Higher timeframe trading

TF1=1H, TF2=4H, TF3=1D, TF4=1W
(Then you naturally don’t care about 1m/5m.)

Step 2 — Keep your chart clean with SHOW vs CALC

Practical approach:

Max SHOW: 1–2 (clean chart)

Max CALC: 3–10 (more stable bias/table logic)

Main settings (quick explanation)
Timeframes (Rows)

Enable TFx: enable/disable each row timeframe

Show Boxes TFx: show/hide zones for that timeframe

Max SHOW / Max CALC

Max SHOW FVG / OB: visual draw limit

Max CALC FVG / OB: depth used by table and bias

Box Width (Per TF)

HTF bars: width scales by HTF size

Chart bars: fixed width in chart bars

OB Logic

Pivot length (BOS): higher = stricter / fewer OBs

OB lookback: how many HTF bars to search for the OB anchor candle

Sessions (Liquidity)

Session enable toggles (Asia/London/NY AM/NY Lunch/NY PM)

Session time windows (per session)

Max stored sessions (per session)

NEAREST row uses untaken session levels and prints points-to-hit

Notes / limitations

This is a context + confluence tool, not a “signal generator.”

LTF accuracy depends on chart TF; the Guard exists specifically to prevent misleading outputs.

Session levels depend on your configured session windows and timezone assumptions (default intended: UTC-5).

One-line summary

ICT HTF/BIAS: multi-TF ICT PD Arrays + a clean bias table with SHOW vs CALC separation, plus session liquidity tracking and a NEAREST row showing points-to-hit for the closest untaken session levels.
Notas de prensa
ICT HTF/BIAS — Full Guide (Updated)
What this indicator does

ICT HTF/BIAS plots multi-timeframe ICT PD Arrays (FVGs + Order Blocks) and provides a compact bias table to quickly determine directional context across your selected timeframes.

It is designed to stay simple, readable, and ICT-based, while avoiding misleading signals.

Key features
1) ICT PD Arrays included

FVG (Fair Value Gap): classic ICT 3-candle imbalance (gap).

Order Blocks (OB): detected via BOS logic + pivot structure, then searching back for the last opposite candle as the OB anchor.

2) HTF confirmed zones (non-misleading behavior)

Zones are added only on the HTF close (confirmed higher timeframe bar).
This avoids “in-progress HTF candle” noise and reduces false/temporary zones.

3) SHOW vs CALC (decoupled by design)

Each TF has two independent depth controls:

Max SHOW = how many zones you want to draw on the chart (keep your chart clean).

Max CALC = how many zones the table/bias is allowed to analyze (keep your bias logic robust).

This prevents a common problem: changing how many boxes you display changes your bias output.
In this script, your bias can remain stable even if you hide most boxes.

4) Compact Bias Table (fast read)

The table shows:

FVG status: IN / OUT / N/A

OB status: IN / OUT / N/A

BIAS: ↑ / ↓ / “-”

GLOBAL bias: weighted across TF1..TF4

NEAREST row: nearest untaken session High above and session Low below, displayed as distance in points to hit (instead of printing the raw price).

5) Session Liquidity Levels (Asia / London / NY AM / NY Lunch / NY PM)

This script can track completed session highs/lows and mark them as taken once swept.

Tracks closed session H/L only (clean, consistent behavior).

Stores multiple past sessions (user-defined max).

Optional “taken by wick” style marking (if enabled in your build).

Sessions are configurable in inputs and intended to run with a default UTC-5 reference.

How to read the bias
Per-Timeframe Bias rules (ICT-based, simple)

For each timeframe:

If price is IN an OB (within CALC depth) → bias = OB direction

Else if price is IN a FVG (within CALC depth) → bias = FVG direction

Else fallback to the most recent direction (OB preferred, otherwise FVG)

GLOBAL bias (weighted)

The GLOBAL row uses a weighted sum:

TF1 weight = 1

TF2 weight = 2

TF3 weight = 3

TF4 weight = 4

Score > 0 → bullish global bias
Score < 0 → bearish global bias
Score = 0 → neutral

Chart TF “Guard” (prevents false LTF readings)

TradingView has limitations when requesting very low TF data from a much higher chart timeframe.
To avoid showing incorrect LTF (1m/5m/15m) statuses when you’re on a high chart TF, the script can display a warning banner and treat certain LTF rows as N/A when appropriate.

Purpose: never show false information.

Recommended usage (most user friendly)
Step 1 — Choose your “Entry TF”

As a rule of thumb (ICT):
The lowest TF in your set should match your entry timeframe, or be close to it.

Examples:

Intraday / Scalping

TF1=1m, TF2=5m, TF3=15m, TF4=1H
(Use chart TF 1m–15m for best LTF accuracy.)

Higher timeframe trading

TF1=1H, TF2=4H, TF3=1D, TF4=1W
(Then you naturally don’t care about 1m/5m.)

Step 2 — Keep your chart clean with SHOW vs CALC

Practical approach:

Max SHOW: 1–2 (clean chart)

Max CALC: 3–10 (more stable bias/table logic)

Main settings (quick explanation)
Timeframes (Rows)

Enable TFx: enable/disable each row timeframe

Show Boxes TFx: show/hide zones for that timeframe

Max SHOW / Max CALC

Max SHOW FVG / OB: visual draw limit

Max CALC FVG / OB: depth used by table and bias

Box Width (Per TF)

HTF bars: width scales by HTF size

Chart bars: fixed width in chart bars

OB Logic

Pivot length (BOS): higher = stricter / fewer OBs

OB lookback: how many HTF bars to search for the OB anchor candle

Sessions (Liquidity)

Session enable toggles (Asia/London/NY AM/NY Lunch/NY PM)

Session time windows (per session)

Max stored sessions (per session)

NEAREST row uses untaken session levels and prints points-to-hit

Notes / limitations

This is a context + confluence tool, not a “signal generator.”

LTF accuracy depends on chart TF; the Guard exists specifically to prevent misleading outputs.

Session levels depend on your configured session windows and timezone assumptions (default intended: UTC-5).

One-line summary

ICT HTF/BIAS: multi-TF ICT PD Arrays + a clean bias table with SHOW vs CALC separation, plus session liquidity tracking and a NEAREST row showing points-to-hit for the closest untaken session levels.

Exención de responsabilidad

La información y las publicaciones no constituyen, ni deben considerarse como asesoramiento o recomendaciones financieras, de inversión, de trading o de otro tipo proporcionadas o respaldadas por TradingView. Más información en Condiciones de uso.