Futubull VWAPTo apply Futubull’s VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) indicator to TradingView, the key is to understand Futubull’s VWAP calculation logic and features, then replicate them using TradingView’s Pine Script language. Below are detailed steps and methods, incorporating the provided context and prior discussions, to help you create a custom VWAP indicator in TradingView that mirrors Futubull’s functionality. The script will be tailored for day trading CIEN (Ciena Corporation) on September 4, 2025, during pre-market (Hong Kong time 11:25 PM, equivalent to US Eastern Time 11:25 AM), leveraging its earnings-driven breakout ($115.50, +21.81%).
Patrones de gráficos
FlowScope [Hapharmonic]FlowScope: Uncover the Market's True Intent 🔬
Ever wished you could look inside the candles and see where the real action is happening? FlowScope is your microscope for the market's flow, designed to give you a powerful edge by revealing the volume distribution that price action alone can't show you.
Instead of just looking at the open, high, low, and close, FlowScope lets you dive deeper into the market's auction process. It groups candles together and builds a detailed Volume Profile for that period, showing you exactly where the trading happened and revealing the story behind the price action.
Let's explore how you can use it to gain a powerful new edge.
🧐 Core Concept: How It Works
At its heart, FlowScope does three key things:
It Groups Candles: You decide how many candles to group together. For example, setting " Group Candles " to 4 on a 5-minute chart effectively gives you a detailed 20-minute candle and profile. This helps you see the bigger picture and filter out market noise.
It Builds a Volume Profile: For each group, FlowScope analyzes the volume at every single price level. It then displays this as a horizontal histogram (we call this a "footprint" or profile). Longer bars mean more volume was traded at that price, indicating a "fair" price or an area of acceptance. Shorter bars mean price moved through quickly, indicating rejection.
It Creates a Custom "Grouped Candle": To summarize the group's overall price action, FlowScope draws a single, custom candle representing the entire group's:
Open: The open of the first candle in the group.
High: The absolute highest price reached within the group.
Low: The absolute lowest price reached within the group.
Close: The close of the last candle in the group.
This gives you a crystal-clear view of the group's net result, free from the back-and-forth noise of the individual candles inside it.
Below are some of the stunning preset color palettes you can choose from to customize your view:
🚀 How to Use: Practical Applications
FlowScope isn't just for looking pretty; it's a powerful analysis tool. Here are a few ways to integrate it into your trading:
Identify High-Volume Nodes (HVNs): Look for the longest bars in the profile. These are price levels where the market spent the most time and traded the most volume. HVNs often act as powerful "magnets" for price, becoming key areas of support and resistance.
Spot Low-Volume Nodes (LVNs): These are areas with very short bars or gaps in the profile. They represent price levels that the market moved through quickly and inefficiently. If price returns to an LVN, it's likely to move through it quickly again.
Analyze the Summary Box: This is where the real magic happens! ✨
Total Volume (Σ): The total volume for the entire group.
Buy (B) vs. Sell (S) Volume: FlowScope analyzes the lower timeframe action to estimate the buying and selling pressure that made up the total volume. Is a big red candle mostly aggressive selling, or was it just a lack of buyers? The B/S data gives you clues. A high-volume candle with nearly 50/50 buy/sell pressure might indicate absorption or a potential reversal.
Use the Grouped Candle for Clarity: Is the market in a clear uptrend, or is it just choppy? The grouped candle can give you a much clearer signal. A series of strong, green grouped candles shows much more conviction than a mix of small green and red candles.
⚙️ Settings & Customization
This is where you can truly make FlowScope your own. Let's walk through each setting.
Profile Settings
Group Candles: The number of standard chart candles you want to combine into a single FlowScope profile. A setting of 1 will analyze every single bar. A higher number gives you a broader market view. When Group Candles is set to 5, the data from the 5 individual candles are combined, and the volume is calculated accordingly.
Max Profile Boxes: This setting is more than just a number; it's a smart limit that ensures your profiles are always readable and relevant to the current market conditions.
Adaptive Sizing (The Ideal Goal): FlowScope first tries to create the perfect profile by making each volume box's height proportional to the current market volatility. It calculates an "ideal" box height based on the Average True Range ( ATR / 10 ). This is powerful because it automatically adapts: you get smaller, more detailed boxes in quiet, low-volatility markets, and larger, clearer boxes in volatile, fast-moving markets.
The Safety Cap (Your Setting): However, what if you group several candles during a massive price move? The price range could be huge! If we only used the small, ATR-based box height, you might end up with hundreds of tiny, unreadable boxes. This is where your Max Profile Boxes setting (defaulting to 50) comes in. It acts as a maximum detail cap . If the adaptive, volatility-based calculation determines that it would need more boxes than your setting (e.g., more than 50), the indicator will override it. It will then simply divide the entire price range of the group into exactly the number of boxes you specified (e.g., 50).
In short: You are setting the maximum allowable detail. FlowScope intelligently adapts the profile's granularity below that limit based on market volatility, ensuring you always get a clear and meaningful picture.
Style
Show Profile BG: A simple toggle to show or hide the faint background color behind the volume bars. Turning it off can create a cleaner look.
Color Mode: This dropdown controls how the volume profile text is colored.
Custom Gradient: This mode uses the three custom colors you select in the "Profile Colors" section to create a beautiful gradient across the profile.
Candle Color: This mode colors the profile based on whether the grouped candle was bullish (green) or bearish (red). The color will be a gradient, with the most intense color applied to the box with the highest volume; the colors of the other boxes will fade out from that point. It's a great way to see the profile's "mood" at a glance.
Profile Colors 🎨
Use Preset Palette: This is the master switch!
If checked: You can choose from 10 stunning, pre-designed color palettes from the Palette dropdown. The custom color pickers below will be disabled.
If unchecked (Default): The Palette dropdown will be disabled, and you can now choose your own three colors for the gradient.
Palette: (Only active when "Use Preset Palette" is checked) . Choose from 10 luxurious, eye-catching color schemes like "Solar Flare" or "Deep Space" to instantly change the look and feel of your chart.
Low Price / Mid Price / High Price: (Only active when "Use Preset Palette" is unchecked) . These three color pickers allow you to design your own unique gradient for the Custom Gradient color mode.
Candle Display
These settings control the custom "Grouped Candle" that summarizes the profile. When using the "Show Custom Candle" feature, you should change the chart's candlestick display to Bars for a cleaner view.
Show Custom Candle: This is the main toggle. When you check this box, the original chart candles will be hidden, and your custom FlowScope candle will be displayed instead. This custom candle is intentionally small to ensure it does not visually overlap with the volume profile boxes.
Show Body: (Only active when "Show Custom Candle" is checked) . Toggles the visibility of the candle's body.
Wick Width & Body Width: (Only active when "Show Custom Candle" is checked) . These sliders let you control the thickness of the wick and body lines to match your personal style.
Up Color / Down Color: (Only active when "Show Custom Candle" is checked) . Choose the colors for your bullish and bearish custom candles.
Experiment with the settings, find a style that works for you, and start seeing the market in a whole new light.
Happy trading! 📈😊
Kalkulator pozycji N100This indicator is a real-time position size calculator designed specifically for NASDAQ 100 futures (E-mini NQ and Micro NQ). It works on any timeframe, best on 1-minute charts, and calculates your position size based on candle body (ignoring wicks). This allows you to always see your exact risk and the number of contracts you can take before the candle closes.
DAILY WYCKOFF ATMWyckoff Confidence Dashboard
A clean, mobile-optimized Wyckoff phase and alignment dashboard built for serious traders.
This tool dynamically detects Accumulation, Distribution, Markup, and Markdown across multiple timeframes (1H/15M) and scores confidence based on:
• HTF trend direction
• Liquidity sweeps
• Fair Value Gap (FVG) presence
• Volume/OBV confirmation
• Multi-timeframe phase/action alignment
Includes smart alerts and a lightweight dashboard interface — no clutter, just actionable structure-based insight.
Great for SMC, Wyckoff, or price-action traders seeking high-confluence entries.
Trend River Pullback (Avramis-style) v1//@version=5
strategy("Trend River Pullback (Avramis-style) v1",
overlay=true, initial_capital=10000, commission_type=strategy.commission.percent, commission_value=0.02,
pyramiding=0, calc_on_order_fills=true, calc_on_every_tick=true, margin_long=1, margin_short=1)
// ===== Inputs
// EMA "река"
emaFastLen = input.int(8, "EMA1 (быстрая)")
ema2Len = input.int(13, "EMA2")
emaMidLen = input.int(21, "EMA3 (средняя)")
ema4Len = input.int(34, "EMA4")
emaSlowLen = input.int(55, "EMA5 (медленная)")
// Откат и импульс
rsiLen = input.int(14, "RSI длина")
rsiOB = input.int(60, "RSI порог тренда (лонг)")
rsiOS = input.int(40, "RSI порог тренда (шорт)")
pullbackPct = input.float(40.0, "Глубина отката в % ширины реки", minval=0, maxval=100)
// Риск-менеджмент
riskPct = input.float(1.0, "Риск на сделку, % от капитала", step=0.1, minval=0.1)
atrLen = input.int(14, "ATR длина (стоп/трейлинг)")
atrMultSL = input.float(2.0, "ATR множитель для стопа", step=0.1)
tpRR = input.float(2.0, "Тейк-профит R-множитель", step=0.1)
// Трейлинг-стоп
useTrail = input.bool(true, "Включить трейлинг-стоп (Chandelier)")
trailMult = input.float(3.0, "ATR множитель трейлинга", step=0.1)
// Торговые часы (по времени биржи TradingView символа)
useSession = input.bool(false, "Ограничить торговые часы")
sessInput = input.session("0900-1800", "Сессия (локальная для биржи)")
// ===== Calculations
ema1 = ta.ema(close, emaFastLen)
ema2 = ta.ema(close, ema2Len)
ema3 = ta.ema(close, emaMidLen)
ema4 = ta.ema(close, ema4Len)
ema5 = ta.ema(close, emaSlowLen)
// "Река": верх/низ как конверт по средним
riverTop = math.max(math.max(ema1, ema2), math.max(ema3, math.max(ema4, ema5)))
riverBot = math.min(math.min(ema1, ema2), math.min(ema3, math.min(ema4, ema5)))
riverMid = (riverTop + riverBot) / 2.0
riverWidth = riverTop - riverBot
// Трендовые условия: выстроенность EMAs
bullAligned = ema1 > ema2 and ema2 > ema3 and ema3 > ema4 and ema4 > ema5
bearAligned = ema1 < ema2 and ema2 < ema3 and ema3 < ema4 and ema4 < ema5
// Импульс
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLen)
// Откат внутрь "реки"
pullbackLevelBull = riverTop - riverWidth * (pullbackPct/100.0) // чем больше %, тем глубже внутрь
pullbackLevelBear = riverBot + riverWidth * (pullbackPct/100.0)
pullbackOkBull = bullAligned and rsi >= rsiOB and low <= pullbackLevelBull
pullbackOkBear = bearAligned and rsi <= rsiOS and high >= pullbackLevelBear
// Триггер входа: возврат в импульс (пересечение быстрой EMA)
longTrig = pullbackOkBull and ta.crossover(close, ema1)
shortTrig = pullbackOkBear and ta.crossunder(close, ema1)
// Сессия
inSession = useSession ? time(timeframe.period, sessInput) : true
// ATR для стопов
atr = ta.atr(atrLen)
// ===== Position sizing по риску
// Расчет размера позиции: риск% от капитала / (стоп в деньгах)
capital = strategy.equity
riskMoney = capital * (riskPct/100.0)
// Предварительные уровни стопов
longSL = close - atrMultSL * atr
shortSL = close + atrMultSL * atr
// Цена тика и размер — приблизительно через syminfo.pointvalue (может отличаться на разных рынках)
tickValue = syminfo.pointvalue
// Избежать деления на 0
slDistLong = math.max(close - longSL, syminfo.mintick)
slDistShort = math.max(shortSL - close, syminfo.mintick)
// Кол-во контрактов/лотов
qtyLong = riskMoney / (slDistLong * tickValue)
qtyShort = riskMoney / (slDistShort * tickValue)
// Ограничение: не меньше 0
qtyLong := math.max(qtyLong, 0)
qtyShort := math.max(qtyShort, 0)
// ===== Entries
if inSession and longTrig and strategy.position_size <= 0
strategy.entry("Long", strategy.long, qty=qtyLong)
if inSession and shortTrig and strategy.position_size >= 0
strategy.entry("Short", strategy.short, qty=qtyShort)
// ===== Exits: фиксированный TP по R и стоп
// Храним цену входа
var float entryPrice = na
if strategy.position_size != 0 and na(entryPrice)
entryPrice := strategy.position_avg_price
if strategy.position_size == 0
entryPrice := na
// Цели
longTP = na(entryPrice) ? na : entryPrice + tpRR * (entryPrice - longSL)
shortTP = na(entryPrice) ? na : entryPrice - tpRR * (shortSL - entryPrice)
// Трейлинг: Chandelier
trailLong = close - trailMult * atr
trailShort = close + trailMult * atr
// Итоговые уровни выхода
useTrailLong = useTrail and strategy.position_size > 0
useTrailShort = useTrail and strategy.position_size < 0
// Для лонга
if strategy.position_size > 0
stopL = math.max(longSL, na) // базовый стоп
tStop = useTrailLong ? trailLong : longSL
// Выход по стопу/трейлу и ТП
strategy.exit("L-Exit", from_entry="Long", stop=tStop, limit=longTP)
// Для шорта
if strategy.position_size < 0
stopS = math.min(shortSL, na)
tStopS = useTrailShort ? trailShort : shortSL
strategy.exit("S-Exit", from_entry="Short", stop=tStopS, limit=shortTP)
// ===== Visuals
plot(ema1, "EMA1", display=display.all, linewidth=1)
plot(ema2, "EMA2", display=display.all, linewidth=1)
plot(ema3, "EMA3", display=display.all, linewidth=2)
plot(ema4, "EMA4", display=display.all, linewidth=1)
plot(ema5, "EMA5", display=display.all, linewidth=1)
plot(riverTop, "River Top", style=plot.style_linebr, linewidth=1)
plot(riverBot, "River Bot", style=plot.style_linebr, linewidth=1)
fill(plot1=plot(riverTop, display=display.none), plot2=plot(riverBot, display=display.none), title="River Fill", transp=80)
plot(longTP, "Long TP", style=plot.style_linebr)
plot(shortTP, "Short TP", style=plot.style_linebr)
plot(useTrailLong ? trailLong : na, "Trail Long", style=plot.style_linebr)
plot(useTrailShort ? trailShort : na, "Trail Short", style=plot.style_linebr)
// Маркеры сигналов
plotshape(longTrig, title="Long Trigger", style=shape.triangleup, location=location.belowbar, size=size.tiny, text="L")
plotshape(shortTrig, title="Short Trigger", style=shape.triangledown, location=location.abovebar, size=size.tiny, text="S")
// ===== Alerts
alertcondition(longTrig, title="Long Signal", message="Long signal: trend aligned + pullback + momentum")
alertcondition(shortTrig, title="Short Signal", message="Short signal: trend aligned + pullback + momentum")
SESSIONS Golden Team SESSIONS — Multi-Session Forex Box & Range Analysis
This indicator displays the major Forex market sessions — London, New York, Tokyo, Sydney, and Frankfurt — directly on the chart. Each session is shown as a customizable colored box with optional Fibonacci levels and opening range markers.
It also calculates and displays the average pip range of each session over a user-defined number of past days, allowing traders to analyze volatility patterns for each trading period.
Key Features:
Configurable session times and time zones
Individual on/off toggle for each session
Custom colors, box transparency, and border styles
Optional Opening Range and Fibonacci retracement levels for each session
Average pip range table for quick volatility reference
Works on any intraday timeframe
How It Works:
The script identifies the start and end times of each session based on user settings.
A box is drawn around the high/low of the session period.
At the end of each session, the pip range is recorded, and an average is calculated over the last N sessions (default: 20).
The results are displayed in a statistics table showing average pips and whether the session is currently active.
Suggested Use:
Identify high-volatility sessions for breakout trading
Filter trades to active trading hours
Study historical volatility to refine entry timing
Event Contract Signal Predictor [10-min Chart]Description:
This script is designed for high-probability event contract trading on 10-minute charts. It combines proprietary LSMA wave trend analysis with custom high-pass filtering and dynamic volume-based order book detection to generate precise long and short entry signals.
Key Features:
• LSMA Wave Trend: Captures short-term momentum with a custom linear regression over smoothed RSI values.
• High-Pass Filter & Peak Detection: Reduces noise and identifies extreme price movements for precise timing.
• Dynamic Order Book Ratio: Monitors buy/sell volume imbalance in real-time to confirm trade validity.
• Signal Confluence: Long or short signals appear only when multiple conditions align (trend, momentum, volume), reducing false triggers.
• Immediate Signal Display: Signals appear on the first candle after condition confirmation; no need to wait for candle close.
• Adjustable Parameters: Users can customize resonance thresholds, smoothing periods, and trigger sensitivity for different markets.
How to Use:
1. Apply the script to a 10-minute chart.
2. Observe green circles (long) and red circles (short) marking potential entries.
3. Combine with your risk management strategy for optimal results.
Note:
This script is closed-source to protect proprietary logic. While the exact calculations are not revealed, this description provides enough context for traders to understand how signals are generated and applied.
Worstfx Fractal Sessions V1.0Worstfx Sessions V.1.0 (Eastern Timezone)
A simple but powerful session visualizer designed to keep your focus on the right market windows. This indicator is designed to outline major Forex/Futures market sessions.
It is built for traders who want visual clarity on sessions & important market structure zones.
✅ Features:
• Automatic shading of Asia, London, Pre-NY, and NY sessions.
• Centered session titles that adapt to each window.
• 6:00 pm ET day divider (new trading day) with vertical weekday labels.
• Lightweight design — no extra clutter, just structure.
⚙️Customization
• Session colors & opacity: change each session’s look.
• Titles: toggle on/off, adjust color and font size.
• Dividers: toggle day divider on/off, change line color, choose weekday label color/size
🦾 Strengths
• Forces traders to see the market in cycles instead of random candles.
• Makes fractal rhythm (Asia → London → NY) visual.
• Great for building timing & patience (when not to trade matters just as much).
🚧 Limitations:
• Traders still need skill in reading price action inside the sessions — the indicator frames the market, but doesn't "predict."
- Score: 9/10 - Extremely useful, especially for people who get lost in noise. It gives them a map.
Stay tuned for updates!
Shalev OB V2Indicator for OB for order blocks trade used to send an slert every time there is a new OB created or an old one is tuched
bygokcebey crt 1-5-9This script is designed to help you effortlessly track the 1 AM, 5 AM, and 9 AM timeframes, and monitor these levels across lower timeframes as well. It allows you to easily identify key price levels, such as the lowest, highest, and mid points during these crucial times, giving you a clear visual guide for trading decisions.
Key Features:
Defined Timeframes: The script specifically highlights the 1 AM, 5 AM, and 9 AM timeframes by drawing lines (representing the low, high, and mid levels) and adding labels (CRT Low, CRT High, and 50%) at these critical times.
Visibility of Time Levels: These key levels will appear only during the specified timeframes, ensuring a clean chart with relevant data at key moments.
Tracking in Lower Timeframes: These levels can also be followed in lower timeframes (e.g., 4-hour charts), allowing traders to monitor the important price levels continuously as they evolve.
Indicator Features:
The "bygokcebey crt 1-5-9" indicator will plot lines and labels only during the 1 AM, 5 AM, and 9 AM timeframes.
These levels can be tracked across lower timeframes, offering continuous reference points for your trades.
The lines and labels serve as visual markers, helping you track significant price points and providing a reliable guide to refine your trading strategy.
If you'd like to add more features or make any adjustments, feel free to let me know how I can assist further!
Multi-Timeframe HTS Retest Strategy v6Multi-Timeframe HTS Retest Strategy v6 is a trend-following tool designed to detect high-probability retest entries aligned with higher timeframe direction. The indicator applies HTS bands (short & long) on both the current and higher timeframe (4x–8x multiplier) to confirm market bias.
A strong trend is validated when HTS bands separate on the higher timeframe. On the lower timeframe, the strategy tracks price behavior relative to the bands: after breaking outside, price must retest either the fast (blue) or slow (red) band, confirmed by a rejection candle. This generates precise BUY or SELL retest signals.
Features include flexible average methods (RMA, EMA, SMA, etc.), customizable cross detection (final cross, 4 crosses, or both), volume-based retest conditions, and clear visual signals (dots for trend start, triangles for retests). Alerts are integrated for automation.
This strategy is suitable for forex, crypto, indices, and stocks, supporting both scalping and swing trading.
kings sessions and openEnhanced Liquidity, Sessions & Opens Indicator
📊 What it does:
A comprehensive trading indicator that combines three powerful features to help identify key market levels and timing.
⚡ Core Features:
🔥 Liquidity Sweeps (Default: ON)
Automatically detects pivot highs and lows
Draws horizontal lines at these levels
Removes lines when price "sweeps" the liquidity (breaks through)
Customizable colors, line styles, and maximum number of lines
🌍 Market Sessions (Default: ON)
Highlights major trading sessions: Asia, London, NY AM, NY PM
Shows session high/low levels with colored lines
Customizable session times and colors
Clean session labels without clutter
📈 Key Open Levels (Default: OFF)
Marks important market open times (8:30, 9:30, 10:00, etc.)
Shows horizontal lines at open prices
Customizable labels and lookback period
Optional feature - enable in settings if needed
🎯 Perfect for:
Scalpers looking for liquidity grabs
Day traders tracking session boundaries
Anyone wanting cleaner charts with key levels
Multi-timeframe analysis
Sequential Pattern Strength [QuantAlgo]🟢 Overview
The Sequential Pattern Strength indicator measures the power and sustainability of consecutive price movements by tracking unbroken sequences of up or down closes. It incorporates sequence quality assessment, price extension analysis, and automatic exhaustion detection to help traders identify when strong trends are losing momentum and approaching potential reversal or continuation points.
🟢 How It Works
The indicator's key insight lies in its sequential pattern tracking system, where pattern strength is measured by analyzing consecutive price movements and their sustainability:
if close > close
upSequence := upSequence + 1
downSequence := 0
else if close < close
downSequence := downSequence + 1
upSequence := 0
The system calculates sequence quality by measuring how "perfect" the consecutive moves are:
perfectMoves = math.max(upSequence, downSequence)
totalMoves = math.abs(bar_index - ta.valuewhen(upSequence == 1 or downSequence == 1, bar_index, 0))
sequenceQuality = totalMoves > 0 ? perfectMoves / totalMoves : 1.0
First, it tracks price extension from the sequence starting point:
priceExtension = (close - sequenceStartPrice) / sequenceStartPrice * 100
Then, pattern exhaustion is identified when sequences become overextended:
isExhausted = math.abs(currentSequence) >= maxSequence or
math.abs(priceExtension) > resetThreshold * math.abs(currentSequence)
Finally, the pattern strength combines sequence length, quality, and price movement with momentum enhancement:
patternStrength = currentSequence * sequenceQuality * (1 + math.abs(priceExtension) / 10)
enhancedSignal = patternStrength + momentum * 10
signal = ta.ema(enhancedSignal, smooth)
This creates a sequence-based momentum indicator that combines consecutive movement analysis with pattern sustainability assessment, providing traders with both directional signals and exhaustion insights for entry/exit timing.
🟢 Signal Interpretation
Positive Values (Above Zero): Sequential pattern strength indicating bullish momentum with consecutive upward price movements and sustained buying pressure = Long/Buy opportunities
Negative Values (Below Zero): Sequential pattern strength indicating bearish momentum with consecutive downward price movements and sustained selling pressure = Short/Sell opportunities
Zero Line Crosses: Pattern transitions between bullish and bearish regimes, indicating potential trend changes or momentum shifts when sequences break
Upper Threshold Zone: Area above maximum sequence threshold (2x maxSequence) indicating extremely strong bullish patterns approaching exhaustion levels
Lower Threshold Zone: Area below negative threshold (-2x maxSequence) indicating extremely strong bearish patterns approaching exhaustion levels
FibNexus [CHE]FibNexus — Auto-Fibonacci with Adaptive TrendLen + TFRSI Triggers
What it is.
FibNexus is a chart overlay that auto-anchors Fibonacci levels to the most relevant swing range without any manual timeframe picking. It does this by computing an adaptive trend length (“TrendLen”) from recent price behavior, then drawing retracements/extensions from the detected swing High/Low. A built-in TFRSI module adds LONG/SHORT triggers and ready-made alerts.
What makes FibNexus different (the TrendLen edge)
Most Fibonacci tools either (a) use fixed lookbacks or (b) force you to choose a higher reference timeframe (or a multiplier of it) and then place Fibs on those higher-TF swings. Your earlier Ultimate Fibonacci Trading Tool \ follows that higher-reference approach (auto TF, multiplier, or manual) and emphasizes custom level/label options. ( )
FibNexus flips that workflow:
* It doesn’t rely on a higher timeframe or a static lookback.
* Instead, it measures multiple window lengths inside the current chart timeframe and selects the one that best fits the data right now.
* From that data-driven window, it automatically finds the most recent swing high & low and draws the entire Fib stack from there.
* When the statistically “best” window changes, anchors update once, labels refresh cleanly, and then lines just extend to the right on each new bar.
Result: No more guesswork about “which timeframe or lookback should I use?”—FibNexus adapts the anchors to market conditions and keeps the drawing noise low.
How TrendLen works (transparent, deterministic)
1. Scan windows: The script evaluates a series of lookbacks (10, 20, …, 500 bars).
2. Score by correlation: For each window, it computes the correlation between price and its lagged version and picks the window with the highest correlation (the strongest, most self-consistent trend segment).
3. Anchor the swing: On a confirmed bar and only when TrendLen changes, it scans the last `TrendLen` bars to capture the highest high and lowest low and marks them with “X”.
4. Draw once, extend later: It deletes the old Fib objects, redraws the active levels from those anchors, and from then on extends the lines to the right as new bars print (no redraw spam).
This makes FibNexus responsive (it adapts when the structure shifts) and quiet (it doesn’t constantly repaint Fibs).
Fibonacci engine (levels, labels, direction)
* Retracements: 0.000 · 0.236 · 0.382 · 0.500 · 0.618 · 0.786 · 1.000
* Extensions: 1.618 · 2.618 · 3.618 · 4.236
* Label styles: *Default* (percent + price), *None*, *Percentage*, *Price*
* Label sizing: *tiny → huge*
* Bull/Bear context: Direction is inferred from mid-range positioning; prices are projected accordingly (retracement vs. extension math is handled for both cases).
* Selective toggles: You can show/hide any level and color it independently.
Momentum & signals (TFRSI module)
FibNexus embeds your TFRSI (“The Forbidden RSI \ ”) as the momentum/trigger layer. TFRSI is your open-source oscillator published on TradingView and designed for fast, normalized momentum readouts with customizable length/smoothing. ( )
* Defaults: `TFRSI length = 6`, `signal smoothing = 2`
* Triggers:
* LONG when TFRSI crosses up through the Long level (default 2.0)
* SHORT when TFRSI crosses down through the Short level (default 98.0)
* On-chart labels: Green LONG under the bar, red SHORT above the bar.
* Spam control: Keep only the N most recent labels to avoid clutter.
* Confirmed bars only: Signals/labels finalize at bar close to reduce flicker.
Alerts (ready for TradingView)
* LONG signal (TFRSI crossover)
* SHORT signal (TFRSI crossunder)
* TrendLen changed (anchors/Fibs recalculated)
* Price crossed a Fib level (any active level)
Use the provided `alertcondition(...)` entries in the TV dialog. Optionally enable instant `alert()` calls with verbose text (avoid duplicates if you also add alertconditions).
Typical use-cases & playbook
* Level reaction trading: In trends, watch 0.382 / 0.5 / 0.618 for reaction. A TFRSI up-cross near a retracement in an uptrend is a straightforward continuation setup; the opposite applies in downtrends.
* Breakout objectives: After clearing the 1.000 line (old swing), 1.618 is a common first extension target; beyond that, 2.618/3.618/4.236 map stretch objectives.
* Chop control: In range conditions, keep signals conservative (e.g., stick with the tight defaults 2.0/98.0 or raise thresholds). Always seek confluence (candlesticks, volume, HTF bias).
* Less micromanagement: You don’t need to babysit timeframe selection or anchors—TrendLen recomputes only when the data say so.
Inputs (by group)
* Core: TFRSI length & smoothing.
* Fibonacci Levels: Per-level toggles, numeric values, colors.
* Fibonacci Labels: Style (percentage/price/both/none) and size.
* Signals: Max number of visible LONG/SHORT labels (or 0 = off).
* TFRSI Trigger: Long/Short thresholds (defaults 2.0 / 98.0).
* Alerts: Master enable, per-event toggles, optional instant `alert()`.
Performance & UX
* Overlay indicator; efficient object handling.
* Clean redraw policy: Full re-draw only when TrendLen changes; otherwise Fibs extend horizontally.
* Clarity: Auto-marked swing anchors (“X”), configurable labels/colors.
Credits & references
* TFRSI – “The Forbidden RSI \ ” (open-source publication and description on TradingView). Used here as the momentum basis.
* “Ultimate Fibonacci Trading Tool \ ” (your earlier open-source tool on TradingView). Focuses on higher-reference timeframe selection (auto/multiplier/manual) and rich labeling controls; FibNexus replaces the fixed/higher-TF anchor logic with adaptive TrendLen in the current timeframe.
Risk disclaimer
This indicator is for educational/information purposes only and is not financial advice. No performance guarantees; past behavior does not predict future results. Trading involves substantial risk (including total loss). Always do your own research, test on demo, use risk management, and consult a licensed advisor where appropriate. Use at your own risk.
Disclaimer:
The content provided, including all code and materials, is strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument, or an offer of any financial product or service. All strategies, tools, and examples discussed are provided for illustrative purposes to demonstrate coding techniques and the functionality of Pine Script within a trading context.
Any results from strategies or tools provided are hypothetical, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading and investing involve high risk, including the potential loss of principal, and may not be suitable for all individuals. Before making any trading decisions, please consult with a qualified financial professional to understand the risks involved.
By using this script, you acknowledge and agree that any trading decisions are made solely at your discretion and risk.
Enhance your trading precision and confidence with FibNexus ! 🚀
Happy trading
Chervolino
Stacey Burke Signal Day LTE“Previously published as ‘Day Zero Fakeout Detector MTF’”
Stacey Burke Signal Day LTE
Automatic detection of Day Zero, Inside Days, and Outside Days for Stacey Burke’s intraday playbook
🔎 Stacey Burke’s Signal Days
This indicator highlights the key daily patterns that often lead to high-probability intraday setups in Stacey Burke’s methodology:
1️⃣ Day Zero
The reset days within a 3-day cycle (e.g. breakout → continuation → exhaustion/reversal).
Can mark the beginning of a new directional phase.
Trades back inside the prior range after a Peak Formation High (PFH) or Peak Formation Low (PFL).
Bias: Look for measured parabolic session moves. When combined with trend following indicators, these signal days can be very powerful.
2️⃣ Inside Day
A day where the entire range is contained within the prior day’s range.
Signals consolidation and energy build-up.
Often leads to explosive breakouts in the next session.
Bias: Trade breakouts of the inside day’s high/low or breakout reversal in the session at key timings in the direction of higher timeframe bias. When combined with trend following indicators, these signal days can be very powerful.
3️⃣ Outside Day (Engulfing Day)
`
A day where the range is larger than the prior day’s range, engulfing both high and low.
Marks trapped traders and fakeouts on both sides.
Often precedes strong continuations or sharp reversals from outside of the ranges.
Bias: Align trades with the true continuation move. When combined with trend following indicators, these signal days can be very powerful.
📌 How They Work Together
Day Zero → Signals the new cycle after PFH/PFL.
Inside Day → Signals compression → expect breakout setups.
Outside Day → Signals exhaustion/fakeouts → expect reversals or continuations.
Together, they give traders a clear daily roadmap for where liquidity sits and when to expect the highest-probability setups.
✅ Example in Practice
Market rallies for 3 days → PFH forms → Day Zero short bias.
Next day prints an Inside Day → watch for breakout continuation short, and breakout reversals.
Later, an Outside Day traps both longs and shorts → the following session offers a clean intraday reversal or continuation trade in line with the underlying MTF trend/bias.
⚙️ Features of This Indicator
Automatic detection of Day Zero, Inside Days, and Outside Days
Multi-Timeframe (MTF) support for cycle alignment
Visual markers for PFH/PFL and consolidation zones
Measured move projections for breakout targets
👉 Stacey Burke Signal Day LTE gives traders just a few of the most important signal days — Day Zero, Inside Day, and Outside Day — to structure their intraday trades around fake outs, breakouts, and reversals within the daily cycles of the week. (This is work in progress: Next up, FRD/FGD's, 3-day cycle detecting, 3DLs, 3DSs).
Trend Score with Dynamic Stop Loss HTF
How the Trend Score System Works
This indicator uses a Trend Score (TS) to measure price momentum over time. It tracks whether price is breaking higher or lower, then sums these moves into a cumulative score to define trend direction.
⸻
1. Trend Score (+1 / -1 Mechanism)
On each new bar:
• +1 point: if the current bar breaks the previous bar’s high.
• −1 point: if the current bar breaks the previous bar’s low.
• If both happen in the same bar, they cancel each other out.
• If neither happens, the score does not change.
This creates a simple running measure of bullish vs bearish pressure.
⸻
2. Cumulative Trend Score
The Trend Score is cumulative, meaning each new +1 or -1 is added to the total score, building a continuous count.
• Rising scores = buyers are consistently pushing price to higher highs.
• Falling scores = sellers are consistently pushing price to lower lows.
This smooths out noise and helps identify persistent momentum rather than single-bar spikes.
⸻
3. Trend Flip Trigger (default = 3)
A trend flip occurs when the cumulative Trend Score changes by 3 points (default setting) in the opposite direction of the current trend.
• Bullish Flip:
• Cumulative TS rises 3 points from its most recent low pivot.
• Marks a potential start of a new uptrend.
• A bullish stop-loss (SL) is set at the most recent swing low.
• Bearish Flip:
• Cumulative TS falls 3 points from its most recent high pivot.
• Marks a potential start of a new downtrend.
• A bearish SL is set at the most recent swing high.
Example:
• TS is at -2, then climbs to +1.
• That’s a +3 change, triggering a bullish flip.
⸻
4. Visual Summary
• Green background: Active bullish trend.
• Red background: Active bearish trend.
• ▲ Triangle Up: A bullish flip occurred this bar.
• Stop Loss Line: Shows the structural low used for risk management.
⸻
Why This Matters
The Trend Score measures trend pressure simply and objectively:
• +1 / -1 mechanics track real price behavior (breakouts of highs and lows).
• Cumulative changes of 3 points act like a momentum filter, ignoring small reversals.
• This helps you see true regime shifts on higher timeframes, which is especially useful for swing trades and investing decisions.
⸻
Key Takeaways
• Only flips after meaningful swings: prevents overreacting to single-bar noise.
• SL shows invalidation point: helps you know where a trend thesis fails.
• Works best on Daily or Weekly charts: for smoother, more reliable signals. Using Trend Score for Long-Term Investing
This indicator is designed to support decision-making for higher timeframe investing, such as swing trades, multi-month positions, or even multi-year holds.
It helps you:
• Identify major bullish regimes.
• Decide when to add to winning positions (DCA up).
• Know when to pause buying or consider trimming during weak periods.
• Stay disciplined while holding long-term winners.
Important Note:
These are suggestions for context. Always combine them with your own analysis, portfolio allocation rules, and risk tolerance.
⸻
1. Start With the Higher Timeframe
• Use Weekly charts for a broad investing view.
• Use Daily charts only for fine-tuning entry points or deciding when to add.
• A Bullish Flip on Weekly suggests the market may be entering a major uptrend.
• If Weekly is bullish and Daily also turns bullish, it’s extra confirmation of strength.
⸻
2. Building a Position with DCA
Goal: Grow your position gradually during strong bullish regimes while staying aware of risk.
A. Initial Buy
• Start with a small initial allocation when a Bullish Flip appears on Weekly or Daily.
• This is just a starter position to get exposure while the new trend develops.
B. Adding Through Strength (DCA Up)
• Consider adding during pullbacks, as long as price stays above the active SL line.
• Each add should be smaller or equal to your first buy.
• Spread out adds over time or price levels, instead of going all-in at once.
C. Pause Buying When:
• Price approaches or touches the SL level (trend invalidation).
• A Bearish Flip appears on Weekly or Daily — this signals potential weakness.
• Your total position size reaches your maximum allocation limit for that asset.
⸻
3. Holding Winners
When a position grows in profit:
• Stay in the trend as long as the Weekly regime remains bullish.
• The indicator’s green background acts as a reminder to hold, not panic sell.
• Use the SL bubble to monitor where the trend could potentially break.
• Avoid selling just because of small pullbacks — focus on big-picture trend health.
⸻
4. Taking Partial Profits
While this tool is designed to help hold long-term winners, there may be times to lighten risk:
• After large, rapid moves far above the SL, consider trimming a small portion of your position.
• When MFE (Maximum Favorable Excursion) in the table reaches unusually high levels, it may signal overextension.
• If the Weekly chart turns Neutral or Bearish, you can gradually reduce exposure while waiting for the next Bullish Flip.
⸻
5. Using the Stop Loss Line for Awareness
The Dynamic SL line represents a structural level that, if broken, may suggest the bullish trend is weakening.
How to think about it:
• Above SL: Market remains structurally healthy — continue holding or adding gradually.
• Close to SL: Pause adds. Be cautious and consider tightening your risk.
• Below SL: Treat this as a potential signal to reassess your position, especially if the break is confirmed on Weekly.
The SL is not a hard stop — it’s a visual guide to help you manage expectations.
⸻
6. Example Use Case
Imagine you are investing in a growth stock:
• Weekly Bullish Flip: You open a small starter position.
• Price pulls back slightly but stays above SL: You add a second, smaller tranche.
• Trend continues up for months: You hold and stop adding once your desired allocation is reached.
• Price doubles: You trim 10–20% to lock some profits, but continue holding the majority.
• Price later dips below SL: You slow down, reassess, and decide whether to reduce exposure.
This keeps you:
• Participating in major uptrends.
• Avoiding overcommitment during weak phases.
• Making adjustments gradually, not emotionally.
⸻
7. Suggested Workflow
1. Check Weekly chart → is it Bullish?
2. If yes, review Daily chart to fine-tune entry or adds.
3. Build exposure gradually while Weekly remains bullish.
4. Watch SL bubbles as awareness points for risk management.
5. Use partial trims during big rallies, but avoid exiting entirely too soon.
6. Reassess if Weekly turns Neutral or Bearish.
⸻
Key Takeaways
• Use this as a compass, not a command system.
• Weekly flips = big picture direction.
• Daily flips = timing and precision.
• Add gradually (DCA) while above SL, pause near SL, reassess below SL.
• Hold winners as long as Weekly remains bullish.
Trend Score with Dynamic Stop Loss RTH
📘 Trend Score with Dynamic Stop Loss (RTH) — Guide
🔎 Overview
This indicator tracks intraday momentum during Regular Trading Hours and flags trend flips using a cumulative TrendScore. It also draws dynamic stop-loss levels and shows a live stats table for quick decision-making and journaling.
⸻
⚙️ Core Concepts
1) TrendScore (per bar)
• +1 if the current bar makes a higher high than the previous bar (counted once per bar).
• –1 if the current bar makes a lower low than the previous bar (counted once per bar).
• If a bar takes both the prior high and low, the net contribution can cancel out within that bar.
2) Cumulative TrendScore (running total)
• The per-bar TrendScore accumulates across the session to form the cumulative TrendScore (TS).
• TS resets to 0 at session open and is cleared at session close.
• Rising TS = persistent upside pressure; falling TS = persistent downside pressure.
⸻
🔄 Flip Rules (3-point reversal of the cumulative TrendScore)
A flip occurs when the cumulative TrendScore reverses by 3 points in the opposite direction of the current trend.
• Bullish Flip
• Trigger: After a decline, the cumulative TrendScore rises by +3 from its down-leg.
• Interpretation: Bulls have taken control.
• Stop-loss: the lowest price of the prior (down) leg.
• Bearish Flip
• Trigger: After a rise, the cumulative TrendScore falls by –3 from its up-leg.
• Interpretation: Bears have taken control.
• Stop-loss: the highest price of the prior (up) leg.
Flip bars are marked with ▲ (lime) for bullish and ▼ (red) for bearish.
Note: If you prefer a different reversal distance, adjust the flip distance setting in the script’s inputs (default is 3).
⸻
📏 Stop-Loss Lines
• A dotted line is drawn at the prior leg’s extreme:
Green (below price) after a bullish flip.
Red (above price) after a bearish flip.
• Options:
Remove on touch for a clean chart.
Freeze on touch to keep a visual record for journaling.
• All stop lines are cleared at session end.
⸻
🧮 Stats Table (what you see)
• Trend: Bull / Bear / Neutral
• Bars in Trend: Count since the flip bar
• Since Flip: Current close minus flip bar close
• Since SL: Current close minus active stop level
• MFE-Maximum Favorable Excursion: Highest favorable move since flip
• MAE-Maximum Adverse Excursion: Largest adverse move since flip
Table colors reflect the current trend (green for bull, red for bear).
⸻
📊 Trading Playbook
Entries
• Aggressive: Enter immediately on a flip marker.
• Conservative: Wait for a small pullback that doesn’t violate the stop.
Stops
• Place the stop at the script’s flip stop-loss line (the prior leg extreme).
Exits
Choose one style and stick with it:
• Stop-only: Exit when the stop is hit.
• Time-based: Flatten at session close.
• Targets: Scale/close at 1R, 2R.
• Trailing: Trail behind minor swings once MFE > 1R.
Ultimately Exit choice is your own edge, so you must decide for yourself.
💡 Best Practices
• Skip the first few bars after the open (gap noise).
• Use regular candles (Heikin-Ashi will distort highs/lows).
• If you want fewer flips, increase the flip distance (e.g., 4 or 5). For more
responsiveness, use 2. Otherwise, increase your time frame to 5m, 10m, 15m.
• Keep SL lines frozen (not auto-removed) if you’re journaling.
50% of Previous 1H Candle (Color Logic)📌 Script Title: 50% Midpoint of Previous 1H Candle (Color Coded)
📝 Description:
This indicator draws a horizontal line at the 50% (midpoint) of the most recently closed 1-hour candle, helping traders visualize intraday support/resistance and sentiment bias.
🔹 Key Features:
Plots the midpoint of the last 1H candle as a horizontal line.
Color-coded line and label:
🟢 Green: Previous candle was bullish
🔴 Red: Previous candle was bearish
⚪ Gray: Neutral (doji or equal open/close)
Displays the exact price level with a floating label.
Works on any lower timeframe chart (e.g., 5m, 15m, 30m).
Automatically updates every hour after the 1H candle closes.
📈 Use Cases:
Trade around the 1H midpoint as a dynamic pivot zone.
Confirm or fade price breakouts/rejections at this level.
Use it with trendlines, supply/demand zones, or VWAP.
🔍 Technical Notes:
The midpoint is calculated using:
Midpoint = (High + Low) / 2
from the most recent closed 1H candle.
Color logic is based on whether the 1H candle closed above or below its open.
🚀 Enhancement Ideas (future updates):
Add optional alerts on cross of the midpoint.
Show multiple historical midpoint levels.
Input toggle to enable/disable color coding.
Whether you’re scalping intraday or watching for reaction zones, this tool gives you a clean, real-time level to anchor your trades around.
Happy trading! 💹
— Built with ❤️ in Pine Script v6
Zigzag Market Type OscillatorZigzag Market Type Oscillator
This indicator is a powerful tool for analyzing market conditions by categorizing price action into one of four states: Up-Trending, Down-Trending, Consolidating, or Ranging. It uses a Zigzag pattern to identify swings and then calculates the average size of upward and downward price movements to determine the prevailing market type.
How It Works:
Swing Detection: The script first uses a Zigzag algorithm (based on the Zigzag Depth input) to find significant highs and lows in the market. These swings are considered the "legs" of price movement.
Average Leg Size: It keeps track of the percentage change of the most recent upward and downward legs. The Number of Legs for Average setting controls how many past legs are used to calculate the average size of up-moves and down-moves.
Disparity Calculation: The core of the indicator is the Disparity value, which measures the difference between the average size of up-legs and down-legs.
- A positive disparity means up-legs are, on average, larger than down-legs.
- A negative disparity means down-legs are, on average, larger than up-legs.
- A disparity near zero means up-legs and down-legs are roughly the same size.
Market Type Classification: The indicator then uses the Disparity and Average Size values to color-code the oscillator, providing a clear visual signal of the market type:
Green (Up-Trending): The disparity is positive and above your Disparity Threshold. This suggests a strong upward trend where buyers are consistently making larger moves than sellers.
Red (Down-Trending): The disparity is negative and below your -Disparity Threshold. This suggests a strong downward trend where sellers are consistently making larger moves than buyers.
Blue (Ranging): The disparity is close to zero (within your Disparity Threshold), and the overall Average Size of the swings is small (below your Size Threshold). This indicates a tight, choppy, and indecisive market with no clear direction.
Silver (Consolidating or drifting in direction of most recent trend) : The disparity is close to zero, but the overall Average Size of the swings is large. This suggests a sideways market with wide swings, also known as a trading range.
How to Use It:
Trend Confirmation: Use the Green and Red signals to confirm the direction and strength of a trend. A sustained green plot suggests a good environment for long positions, while a sustained red plot favors short positions.
Identify Non-Trending Conditions: Use the Blue and Silver plots to identify when the market is not trending. During these periods, trend-following strategies may not be effective. You might look for breakout opportunities (from a blue plot) or use a range-bound trading strategy (within a silver plot).
Risk Management: The oscillator can serve as a warning sign. For example, if you are in an uptrending market (green plot) but the oscillator suddenly turns silver or blue, it may signal that the trend is losing momentum and that you should consider reducing your position or tightening your stop-loss.
Settings:
Zigzag Depth: This controls the sensitivity of the Zigzag, which in turn defines the "legs." A higher value will ignore smaller price fluctuations, focusing on larger swings. A lower value will capture more detail.
Number of Legs for Average: This determines the lookback period for the average size calculation. A higher number will create a smoother, more stable oscillator but will react more slowly to changes in market behavior.
Disparity Threshold: This is the key setting that determines the line between a trending market and a non-trending one. Adjust this to a level that you believe represents a significant difference between up and down moves.
Size Threshold (%): This separates Ranging (small swings) from Consolidating (large swings). Adjust this to define what you consider a "small" vs. a "large" price swing for the asset you are trading.
Opening Range Legstart FinderThis multi-faceted indicator uses 4 key time-based price levels to help traders identify when price is likely to revert or reverse. These key times are:
18:00 (Globex open)
00:00 (Midnight open)
9:30 (RTH open)
9:45 (End of first 15 minutes of RTH)
The key concept here is that price is likely to revert back into the current daily range if it is below all 4 of the time-based prices or above all of the time-based prices. When price is between those levels it will often chop around and be harder to navigate.
The first component of this indicator provides traders with a snapshot of price relative to those 4 levels across up to 6 different tradable instruments, indicating which direction price is expected to move for each of those instruments. This way, the trader can see which instruments are expected to potentially reverse and which ones are more likely to chop.
The second component are configurable price windows where the indicator will anticipate reversals in price. By default, the indicator is focused on price reversals that happen at the end or beginning of an hourly candle. As such, the default time windows are the last 15 minutes of one hour and the first 15 minutes of the next (ie. 9:45 to 10:15). The number of hours used is configurable by the user. We are looking to trade OHLC and OLHC of an hourly candle within these windows during which price is expected to reverse or have impulsive moves.
The third component is a structure shift detection mechanism. This mechanism is based on relative pivot strength of recent price action. New legs in price action form by breaking above or below the pivots based on recent price action. By default, the pivots are based on the current timeframe but can be adjusted to watch for price breaks above any timeframe larger than the current chart.
The fourth component of the indicator will is a mechanism to provide targets based on these new price legs. By default, in bullish scenarios, these targets will only be displayed if price is 'below all' of the price levels described above and we form a new price leg up during the specified time windows where we anticipate a reversal. Alternatively, in bearish scenarios, these targets will only be displayed if price is 'above all' of the price levels described above and we form a new price leg down during the specified time windows where we anticipate a reversal.
This default configuration can be changed to show targets regardless of relationship to the price levels above and/or to disregard the time windows configured above.
In all scenarios, targets are based on widely used fibonacci extensions on price leg patterns (ie. 2-2.5 and 4 standard deviations up from a move down).
Finally there is a volatility filter built-in to the indicator to prevent traders from trying to 'catch the falling knife' when price action is strongly moving in one direction and is likely to continue to do so. This filter is a custom implementation of the Ehlers Super PassBand Filter to accommodate for timeframes less than 1 minute.
This indicator is intended to be used on lower timeframes (15 seconds to 2 minutes) as the goal is to catch large reversals with minimal stops. When aligned with higher timeframe trends, the results can be impressive.
MTF MidpointsOverview :
The MTF Midpoints indicator provides comprehensive multi-timeframe analysis by displaying mid points that act as support / resistance. It also comes with the ability to view trend strength across multiple timeframes.
Key Features :
1) Multi-Timeframe Support -
- 1 Minute, 5 Minute, 15 Minute, 1 Hour, and 4 Hour timeframes.
- Each timeframe displays its calculated midpoint level.
- Toggle individual timeframes on/off as needed.
2) Dynamic Trend Calculation
- Calculates trend direction based on configurable lookback period (default: 30 bars).
- Identifies swing highs and lows to determine trend changes.
- Computes midpoint levels as the average between current swing high and low.
- Tracks price action relative to midpoint to gauge trend strength.
3) Visual Elements -
- Colored Lines : Each timeframe displays as a distinct colored line.
- Fill Areas : Main timeframe shows colored fills above and below midpoint.
- Info Table : Real-time summary of all timeframe data with trend percentages.
4) Customization Options -
- Colors : Individual color settings for each timeframe.
- Display : Adjustable line width, label sizes, and positioning.
- Labels : Toggle price display in labels, customize text color and size.
- Info Table: Configurable info table with trend strength indicators.
How It Works :-
The indicator uses a proprietary algorithm that:
1. Monitors price action over a specified lookback period.
2. Identifies trend direction changes based on new highs/lows.
3. Calculates dynamic support/resistance levels (midpoints).
4. Tracks closes above/below midpoint to determine trend bias.
5. Displays trend strength as a percentage in both table and candle colors.
Trading Applications :-
- Confluence Analysis : Identify where multiple timeframe midpoints align.
- Support/Resistance : Use midpoints as dynamic S/R levels.
- Trend Assessment : Gauge trend strength across different timeframes.
- Entry/Exit Points : Look for price reactions at key midpoint levels.
- Risk Management : Use midpoints to set stop losses and profit targets.
Disclaimer :
This indicator is for educational and analysis purposes. It does not constitute financial advice. Always conduct your own research and consider your risk tolerance before making trading decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Elliott Wave Rule EngineWhat this tool does
The indicator scans price for two concurrent swing structures—a Small (shorter-degree) and a Large (higher-degree) set—then applies an Elliott/NeoWave rule engine to the most recent 5-swing motive (1-2-3-4-5) or 3-swing corrective (A-B-C). It produces:
Blue lines for Small swings and Orange lines for Large swings.
A rule dashboard (optional) showing PASS/FAIL/WARN for core rules & guidelines.
Buy/Sell labels when (a) a valid motive completes and (b) loop “consensus,” alignment, and scoring gates are satisfied.
Reading the chart
Small swings: thin blue segments, built from your Small settings.
Large swings: thicker orange segments, from your Large settings.
Background tint: faint green when a motive (impulse/diagonal) is valid right now on Small.
Labels (if enabled):
“1…5” or “A-B-C” markers on the latest detected structure.
Buy/Sell label at the last pivot when all gates pass; text may include a score %.
How it works
For both Small and Large degrees the script:
- Loops over all (left, right) combinations you specify (e.g., Small Left = 3..6, Right = 0..0) and calls ta.pivothigh/low.
- Aggregates the results:
- Keeps the most extreme pivot found in the loop (highest high or lowest low) that’s newer than the last accepted swing.
- Gates acceptance by minimum % change versus the last opposite swing (inside the loop) and a post-aggregation filter (Small Minimum swing %, Large Minimum swing %).
- Merges back-to-back same-type swings (HH or LL) by keeping only the more extreme one.
- Keeps only the last N=lookbackWaves swings (default 100).
- Consensus (used for signals) comes from the loop counts:
- sBuyConsensus = small L-count / total-combos (bullish bias)
- sSellConsensus = small H-count / total-combos (bearish bias)
(and the same for Large). This is a data-driven “how many combos agreed” measure.
2) Rule engine (Impulse/Diagonal vs. Corrective)
When there are at least 6 Small swings, the engine tests 1-2-3-4-5:
Hard rules (must pass for an Impulse):
- Wave-2 not > 100% of Wave-1 (no retrace beyond start of W1).
- Wave-3 not the shortest among 1,3,5.
- Wave-4 doesn’t overlap Wave-1 (if it does, structure may be a Diagonal).
- Diagonal eligibility: Rules 1 & 2 pass but Rule 3 fails ⇒ eligible as a Diagonal (
Guidelines (7 checks, count toward a threshold you set):
- W2 retraces a Fib level (within ±fibTol).
- W4 retraces a Fib level (within ±fibTol).
- W3 strongest momentum (speed = |Δprice| / bars).
- Alternation: W2 vs W4 have meaningfully different “sharpness” (price per bar), threshold altSlopeThr.
- Proportion (Price): |W1| and |W3| within propTolP× each other.
- Proportion (Time): W1W3 and W2W4 durations within propTolT×.
- W5 weaker than W3 (momentum divergence proxy).
A Motive is valid if:
- Impulse: all 3 hard rules pass and guideline passes ≥ Min guideline passes.
- Diagonal: diagonal-eligible and guideline passes ≥ Min guideline passes.
- if motive fails, the engine still evaluates ABC as Zigzag and Flat to populate the table:
- Zigzag: B shallower than ~0.618A; C ≈ A or 1.618A (±fibTol).
- Flat: B ≥ ~0.9A; expanded flat if B > 1.0A and C in *A; “running” note if C < A.
3) Signal logic (consensus-gated & scored)
Signals fire only on new Small pivots and only if a Small motive just validated:Direction comes from the motive’s W1 (up = bull, down = bear).
Consensus checks (from the loop):
Use Sell consensus if the last pivot is a High, or Buy consensus if it’s a Low.Require it ≥ Min SMALL loop consensus and ahead of the opposite side by at least Min consensus margin.If you also require Large quality: check the corresponding Large consensus ≥ Min LARGE loop consensus.
Alignment: If Require small/large directional alignment is ON, Small and Large directions must match (or the Large motive must be complete).
Score:
- If Large not required: finalScore = smallConsensus × smallQuality.
- If Large required: finalScore = smallConsensus × smallQuality × largeQuality.
- Need finalScore ≥ Min final score.
When all gates pass, you’ll see “Buy xx%” or “Sell xx%” at the pivot.
Inputs (explained):
- Smaller Wave Swing Detection (Looped)
- Small Left Min / Max (default 3..6): ta.pivot* left widths to scan.
- Small Right Min / Max (default 0..0): right widths to scan (0 = earliest confirmation).
- Small Minimum swing % (post-aggregation) (0.3%): filters out tiny swings after the loop.
- Larger Wave Swing Detection (Looped)
- Large Left Min / Max (100..200) and Right Min/Max (0..0): higher-degree scan (defaults are big; adjust for intraday).
- Large Minimum swing % (post-aggregation) (1.5%).
- Loop Filters (inside the loop)
- Small loop min % change (0.20%): a candidate pivot counts only if move vs. last opposite Small swing ≥ this.
- Large loop min % change (1.50%): same idea for Large.
Rule Engine Tolerances
- Fibonacci tolerance (±%) (0.05 = 5%): closeness to Fib levels.
-Same-degree TIME proportion max (x) (2.00×) and PRICE proportion max (x) (3.00×).
- Alternation slope ratio threshold (0.10): higher = stricter alternation.
- Min guideline passes (0–7) (5): threshold for motive validity.
- Signal Probability (Loop Consensus)
- Min SMALL loop consensus (0.60).
- Min LARGE loop consensus (0.50) (used only if Large validation matters).
- Min consensus margin vs opposite (0.10): e.g., 0.60 vs 0.45 fails (margin 0.15 passes).
Require LARGE 1–5 valid (or diagonal) for signal (off by default).
Min final score (0.20): gate on the composite score.
Annotate label with score % (on).
WARN (orange): guideline not met—pattern can still be valid if total passes ≥ Min guideline passes.
FAQ
Q: Why did I get a diagonal instead of an impulse?
A: Wave-4 overlapped Wave-1 (Rule 3). If Rules 1 & 2 pass and guidelines meet your minimum, it’s eligible as a Diagonal.
Q: Where do Buy/Sell labels come from?
A: Only after a valid Small motive at a new pivot, and only if consensus, alignment, and final score gates pass (per your settings).
Q: It “missed” a wave in hindsight.
A: Pivots require right bars to confirm; extremely tight settings can filter that swing; adjust Small min % or ranges.
Q: Are there repaints?
A: No, It uses standard pivot confirmation; until a pivot is confirmed, recent swings can evolve. After confirmation, lines/labels are stable.
Limitations & disclaimers
Elliott/NeoWave rules are heuristics; markets are messy. Treat outputs as structured context, not certainty.
Consensus is pattern-scan agreement, not probability of profit Not investment advice; always couple with risk management.