Zindarra Multi Alerts Advanced (8 Symbols, 8 Levels) by RRBZindarra Multi Alerts Advanced by RRB by RagingRocketBull 2018
Version 1.0
This indicator lets you configure multiple alert levels for several assets. Zindarra Multi Alerts Advanced supports 8 symbols with 8 custom alert levels.
You can have an M:M relationship betweeen symbols and levels, for example:
- 4 symbols each boxed by 2 alerts above/below the price
- 3 symbols with 1 alert each
- 2 symbols, 1st with 2 alerts, 2nd - with 6 alerts
- 1 symbol with 8 alerts etc
There are several versions: Simple, Pro, Advanced and Ultimate. This is the Advanced version. The Differences are listed below.
- Simple: 10 Alert Levels, 1 plot mode, alert type: cross, no colors/triggered alerts
- Pro: 9 Alert Levels, 2 plot modes: plot/price line, alert type: cross, +change/swap colors, +hide/disable triggered alerts, 2 penetration modes (close, high/low), trigger on confirmed close
- Advanced: 8 Symbols/Tickers, 8 Alert Levels, +alert types: cross up/cross down, no color change. Display sources as lines/candles, normalize, scale/shift independently
- Ultimate: 5 Symbols/Tickers, 8 Alert Levels, +alert types: volume/price %/abs change, volume/ema/time cross
Features:
- 8 custom symbols, symbols:levels = M:M
- 8 custom alert levels with labels. For each alert there must be a corresponding non-empty symbol (can be a duplicate)
- alert types: cross/cross up/cross down
- normalize symbols (and alert levels) to 100% to compare,
- scale and shift each symbol (and alert levels) to position on a chart independently
- 1 alert levels plot mode: plot
- 2 symbol types: line/candles
- colorize symbol candles
- high/low or close level penetration modes
- show/hide levels/labels
- keep or auto disable triggered alerts
- trigger alerts only after a confirmed close
You will see all symbols on a single chart at the same time with their corresponding alert levels. From this chart you can manage all alerts configured for multiple assets.
Although TradingView has 2 percentage scale modes (Percent, Indexed to 100), somehow they still fail to be usefull when comparing multiple assets.
This indicator lets you normalize all symbols to 100% making a direct single scale comparison between assets with vastly different price levels possible.
All alert levels will be normalized as well.
TradingView does not let you move the plots attached to left scale. When scaled they all remain stuck in the center and can't be moved vertically or relative to each other.
This indicator lets you position all symbols independently using individual scale and shift settings. For example, you can:
- split your screen in 3 horiz areas and have a symbol in each of them without overlapping or
- have several partially overlapping assets with different scale each or
- have all assets fully overlapping and normalized to the same 100% scale
You have to manually create an alert in Manage Alerts Panel and configure it to use with this indicator.
Free accounts are limited to only 1 alert slot and this indicator will take it (any existing alerts must be disabled/stopped).
Once the alert is configured, the indicator can be removed from chart to free a slot for another indicator, but you won't see the alert levels.
Usage:
1. attach indicator to a chart
2. define alert levels in UI settings
3. in TradingView's Manage Alerts panel on the right:
- for free accounts: disable/stop all existing alerts, you are limited to 1 alert slot only. Otherwise you won't be able to save.
- create a new Alert:
- select 'Multi Alerts' indicator name in the Condition dropdown box, leave Level 1 and Multi Alerts Cross as default options
- select 'Once Per Bar' or 'Once Per Minute' instead of 'Only Once' to trigger the alert multiple times
5. click Save. Your 9 alerts are enabled now.
Change Settings:
1. change levels/settings in UI. Any changes will also reset already triggered levels visibility.
2. in Manage Alerts panel:
- open/edit the alert you created
- select new instance of 'Multi Alerts' indicator name in the Condition dropdown box (appears at the bottom)
- check the Condition dropdown again - a single instance should remain selected.
3. click Save. Your alert settings are updated.
Notes on using alerts:
- attaching this indicator to a chart and configuring alert levels will not automatically enable the alerts - you have to manually create/configure a new alert in the Alerts Panel
- removing this indicator from chart will not disable the alerts, you have to manually disable the alert you created in the Alerts Panel
- your alert in the Alerts Panel uses another instance (copy) of indicator/settings. Any changes won't affect the alert. You have to manually update the alert every time you change any settings in the indicator.
- recompiling and attaching your own version of indicator will require creating a new Alert (delete the old one).
- alerts are designed to work in realtime. In replay mode you will see triggered alert levels hiding/changing colors but there will be no system alert messages. It's best to test the indicator in realtime on M1 (1 min) chart
- you will only see 1 system alert per bar/60 sec when multiple alert levels are crossed with a single bar or across several symbols at the same time. However all of these levels will hide in the indicator as expected.
- you can only see the alert levels when the indicator is attached to chart, they are not shown by the system alert.
- For source=high/low a directional level penetration is used automatically (crossunder/low and crossover/high). For source=close a standard bidirectional cross is used unless another alert type is specified.
- normalization breaks/distorts alert levels and symbol price - this is normal and is expected. To view the real price of alert levels uncheck normalize - the first 8 outputs are alert levels. Unnormalized levels are straight lines.
- you will see alerts from all symbols in the system alert message box of the current symbol - a bit confusing, but there's no workaround, you can't have a customized alert message for each symbol/level
- many tickers as arguments can stretch/break TradingView's Create New Alert dialog but it's still possible to push all required buttons and Save.
- duplicate symbols will be displayed by default. You can manually hide duplicates using show/hide flags.
- empty tickers (and corresponding alerts) are essentially disabled
1. uses plot*, cross*, barssince, highest, security, alertcondition
Buscar en scripts para "tradingview界面调整"
The Always Winning Holy Grail Strategy - Not (by ChartArt)How to win all the time if 1+1 = 2
The most upvoted strategies on Tradingview are those which seemingly work 100%, but they actually don't at all because they are repainting and would not work in live trading reality. They are using the multi-time-frame strategy testing bug and thereby trade during the backtest on close prices before the bar has closed in reality.
Top list of these cheating repainting strategies:
1569 upvotes ANN Strategy
877 upvotes Vdub FX SniperVX3 Strategy
481 upvotes Get Trend Strategy
I guess there are much more strategies among the top upvoted strategies on Tradingview which cheat with a multi-time-frame close price, but three examples are enough. The ANN Strategy uses the daily close price as multi-time-frame and cheats with that. The Vdub FX SniperVX3 Strategy uses the half-day (720 minute) close price to cheat and the Get Trend Strategy uses the 160 minute bar close for repaint cheating (at least here the author of this strategy explains that his strategy is only demo and would not work, which might be the reason why it has 1000 less upvotes than the ANN Strategy. I already wrote months ago a comment underneat these strategies to explain this issue but it hasn't stopped these strategies from getting more and more upvotes and staying in the top list.
I thought this way of cheating is lame, so I invented a new way to cheat my way to seemingly reach 100% profitable trades all the time by going long if 1+1 is equal to 2. Welcome to super wide stop losses. Simply use a extreme unrealistic large stop loss and take profit after a realistic amount of pips and according to Tradingview's current backtest module you win 100% all the time. Yay! :)
My recommendation for the Tradingview team is to add a function to let the user define a stop out and margin call level and maybe set a realistic setting as default, like 100%.
Please don't trade with this strategy!
Acc/Dist. Cloud with Fractal Deviation Bands by @XeL_ArjonaACCUMULATION / DISTRIBUTION CLOUD with MORPHIC DEVIATION BANDS
Ver. 2.0.beta.23:08:2015
by Ricardo M. Arjona @XeL_Arjona
DISCLAIMER
The Following indicator/code IS NOT intended to be a formal investment advice or recommendation by the author, nor should be construed as such. Users will be fully responsible by their use regarding their own trading vehicles/assets.
The embedded code and ideas within this work are FREELY AND PUBLICLY available on the Web for NON LUCRATIVE ACTIVITIES and must remain as is.
Pine Script code MOD's and adaptations by @XeL_Arjona with special mention in regard of:
Buy (Bull) and Sell (Bear) "Power Balance Algorithm by Vadim Gimelfarb published at Stocks & Commodities V. 21:10 (68-72).
Custom Weighting Coefficient for Exponential Moving Average (nEMA) adaptation work by @XeL_Arjona with contribution help from @RicardoSantos at TradingView @pinescript chat room.
Morphic Numbers (PHI & Plastic) Pine Script adaptation from it's algebraic generation formulas by @XeL_Arjona
Fractal Deviation Bands idea by @XeL_Arjona
CHANGE LOG:
ACCUMULATION / DISTRIBUTION CLOUD: I decided to change it's name from the Buy to Sell Pressure. The code is essentially the same as older versions and they are the center core (VORTEX?) of all derived New stuff which are:
MORPHIC NUMBERS: The "Golden Ratio" expressed by the result of the constant "PHI" and the newer and same in characteristics "Plastic Number" expressed as "PN". For more information about this regard take a look at: HERE!
CUSTOM(K) EXPONENTIAL MOVING AVERAGE: Some code has cleaned from last version to include as custom function the nEMA , which use an additional input (K) to customise the way the "exponentially" is weighted from the custom array. For the purpose of this indicator, I implement a volatility algorithm using the Average True Range of last 9 periods multiplied by the morphic number used in the fractal study. (Golden Ratio as default) The result is very similar in response to classic EMA but tend to accelerate or decelerate much more responsive with wider bars presented in trending average.
FRACTAL DEVIATION BANDS: The main idea is based on the so useful Standard Deviation process to create Bands in favor of a multiplier (As John Bollinger used in it's own bands) from a custom array, in which for this case is the "Volume Pressure Moving Average" as the main Vortex for the "Fractallitly", so then apply as many "Child bands" using the older one as the new calculation array using the same morphic constant as multiplier (Like Fibonacci but with other approach rather than %ratios). Results are AWSOME! Market tend to accelerate or decelerate their Trend in favor of a Fractal approach. This bands try to catch them, so please experiment and feedback me your own observations.
EXTERNAL TICKER FOR VOLUME DATA: I Added a way to input volume data for this kind of study from external tickers. This is just a quicky-hack given that currently TradingView is not adding Volume to their Indexes so; maybe this is temporary by now. It seems that this part of the code is conflicting with intraday timeframes, so You are advised.
This CODE is versioned as BETA FOR TESTING PROPOSES. By now TradingView Admins are changing lot's of things internally, so maybe this could conflict with correct rendering of this study with special tickers or timeframes. I will try to code by itself just the core parts of this study in order to use them at discretion in other areas. ALL NEW IDEAS OR MODIFICATIONS to these indicator(s) are Welcome in favor to deploy a better and more accurate readings. I will be very glad to be notified at Twitter or TradingView accounts at: @XeL_Arjona
US recessionsDisplays US recessions from 1900 - 2014 listed here: www.nber.org
Unix timestamp generated using this service: unixtimestamp.50x.eu For beginn/end of recession always taken the 15th day of the particular calendar month.
Tradingview has a bug by using unix timestamp: I had to add "000.0" to each generated timestamp to display the date in the tradingview correctly. Once the bug will get corrected, this cript will no more work!
The bug is described here: getsatisfaction.com
Unfortunately tradingview does not allow to display any (forecasted) recession into the future and or with later dates then 1900! This is disappointing.
NOTE: I can not code at all. PLEASE modify this script as much as you like. Particular would be helpful, if:
- there is only one background colour to edit
- there are tickboxes, where you can deselect the particular recession with titles of such recessions
- perhaps electively be able to display the title of the particular recession directly on its background within the chart
Pyramid EnterPyramid Enter — Educational Position-Scaling Study
Purpose
Pyramid Enter is a lightweight, educational visualization of additive entries (“pyramiding into strength”). It’s designed to help you study how layered entries might line up during persistent trends. This script does not execute orders, make predictions, or provide financial advice. It simply shows where entry candidates could appear under a simple crossover framework with an optional trend filter.
How it works (concept)
Computes a fast EMA of your chosen Source (default: close).
Applies a user-selected Smoother (SMA/EMA/RMA/WMA/None) to create a slower reference line.
Marks an Enter candidate when the fast EMA crosses above the smoothed line.
Optional EMA 8/21 trend filter can be enabled to allow marks only when EMA(8) > EMA(21).
Includes an adaptive-on-flip option: if the 8/21 filter turns on, a one-time Enter candidate is allowed (useful for studying “first add after trend resumes”).
This is strictly a visual study of where entries might layer during momentum continuation — exits, risk, and sizing are intentionally out of scope so you can analyze those topics separately.
Inputs
Inputs
Length: Period of the fast EMA applied to Source.
Source: Price series used for the fast EMA.
Offset: Visual offset only; no effect on logic.
Smoothing
Type: Choose “SMA / EMA / RMA / WMA / None” for the reference line.
Length: Period for the smoothing type above.
Visualization
Show Labels: Toggle the on-chart Enter labels.
EMA 8/21 Filter
Enable EMA 8/21 Filter: Only mark when EMA(8) > EMA(21).
Fast EMA / Slow EMA: Lengths for the filter (defaults 8/21).
Plot Filter EMAs: Display the 8/21 lines for context.
Adaptive entry when filter flips ON: Allows a one-time Enter candidate on the bar the trend filter turns on (handy when studying re-acceleration after a pullback).
Visuals
White line: Fast EMA of Source.
Blue line: Selected smoother (your slower reference).
Labels: “Pyramid Enter” markers at candidate spots (intrabar + bar-close confirmation are handled internally to keep charts tidy).
No alerts are included. This tool is for chart study only.
Suggested study workflow
Context first — Add your higher-timeframe tools or moving averages to understand the broader regime.
Enable the 8/21 filter if you want to restrict labels to uptrends only.
Experiment with the smoother — SMA is simple, but EMA/RMA/WMA can change sensitivity.
Review clusters of “Pyramid Enter” labels during strong trends to learn where scaling could be considered in a rules-based process.
Pair with your risk framework — Because this script intentionally omits exits/position sizing, use it alongside your own stop, trailing, and de-risking logic for research.
Good citizens of the chart
No repainting tricks.
Marks follow standard EMA/smoothing crossovers with a simple state lock to avoid duplicates.
Designed to be lightweight and readable on any timeframe or symbol.
Limitations & notes
This is not a signal provider, trading system, or performance model.
Labels are educational candidates only; they do not imply profitability or suitability.
Past chart behavior does not guarantee future results. Always do your own research and practice risk management.
Compatibility
Works on all symbols/timeframes supported by TradingView.
Overlay: true (prints on price chart).
No alerts included by design.
Changelog
v1.0 — Initial public release: minimal visual study, optional 8/21 filter, adaptive flip option, no alerts.
License
Michael Culpepper Gratitude License — Free to use and modify for education and research. Please credit the author if you remix or share. Not for sale. No warranty.
Tags / Category (suggested)
Category: Trend Analysis / Educational Tools
Tags: pyramid, scaling, trend, ema, crossover, education, study
Simple FVG - All GapsSimple FVG Indicator - Pure Fair Value Gap Detection
A clean, no-nonsense Fair Value Gap (FVG) script for TradingView. No filters, no overcomplication — just pure FVG detection with optional mitigation and visual control.
Pure FVG Logic : Detects imbalance using only low > high and high < low — the original ICT definition.
No False Filters : Zero reliance on volume, RSI, moving averages, or swing structure.
Accurate Mitigation : Choose between Touch, Mid, or Full fill with correct proximal/distal logic.
Smart Extension : Indefinite (until mitigated) or Fixed Bars (visual only).
Performance Optimized : Uses arrays + max 500 boxes to prevent lag.
Bullish FVG: Green translucent box from high to low
Bearish FVG: Red translucent box from low to high
Mitigated FVGs: Gray (or hidden) with extension stopped
"No fluff. Just gaps."
How to Use:
Add to chart
Enable Bullish/Bearish FVGs
Set Mitigation Type (Mid recommended)
Watch price react at unmitigated zones
🚀 DocBrown PRO Edition V14++(Institutional Level - Open Source - 1 month Development - Live Testing)
🚀 DocBrown PRO Edition V14++
Author: Jesús Nicolás Astorga
Telegram: @jesus_nicolas_astorga
Origin: Junín – Mendoza – Argentina
DocBrown PRO Edition V14++ is an institutional-level, adaptive trend-following strategy designed for precision and stability across crypto, forex, and index markets. It was developed with a scientific and systematic approach, merging volatility modeling, risk control, and market structure detection into one unified algorithm. The result is a robust system capable of adapting to any market condition while maintaining discipline and safety.
This version represents the evolution of the SuperTrader Pro framework, built to detect strong directional moves, avoid range traps, and manage trades with intelligent automation. It is optimized for high-quality entries, precise exits, and adaptive protection that minimizes drawdowns while allowing full trend exploitation.
The strategy integrates several cooperative subsystems that work together in real time:
Adaptive Regime Filter: Detects trending versus ranging conditions using ADX, Bollinger Band Width, and EMA slope normalized by ATR.
Dynamic Support and Resistance System: Identifies real-time S/R levels and automatically adjusts take-profit targets or triggers trailing after confirmed breakouts.
Derivative Anti-Loss Engine: Calculates multi-level price derivatives to identify adverse momentum and micro-reversals before they expand.
Volatility Adaptive Trailing Stop (VATS): A fully automatic volatility-based stop-loss that reacts dynamically to expansion and contraction phases.
ATR Dynamic Stop System: A classic trailing ATR layer, giving additional flexibility and control for long-term trade management.
Counter-Trend Logic: Detects exhaustion phases and closes positions when the trend shows weakening momentum, using derivative and volatility confirmation.
Drawdown Rescue Mechanism: Follows retracement bounces inside losing trades, exiting only when recovery strength is lost.
Bracket Protection System: Provides exchange-level safety by placing hard stop and limit orders to prevent liquidation events.
Technically, the strategy uses multiple EMA packs (5/13/21, 8/21/50, or 13/34/89), derivative and hysteresis control with ATR gating, dual stop systems (VATS + ATR), and a dynamic S/R-based take profit model. It includes anti-range logic that filters out weak ADX zones, breakeven-plus logic to secure early profits, consecutive-bar and volume-spike exits, and a real-time information panel showing metrics such as net profit, win rate, MFE, and derivative signal strength. It also includes multiple alert conditions for entries, exits, and stop-loss events.
Philosophically, DocBrown PRO Edition was designed with institutional discipline but remains accessible to all traders. Every mechanism was engineered to protect capital and maximize opportunity. It adapts to volatility, avoids noise, and seeks clean, directional movement. When markets sleep, it stands aside. When they awaken, it rides the wave with precision.
Recommended use:
Markets: Crypto Futures, Spot, Indices, or Forex
Timeframes: 5m to 1h (optimized for 10m)
Leverage: Up to 5x tested. Higher leverage requires tight safety brackets.
Risk Model: Approximately 1 USDT risk per trade (≈75 USDT notional at 5x isolated margin)
This system is the result of extensive testing, iteration, and refinement. It embodies a clear philosophy: control risk first, then capture trend momentum efficiently.
Every variable, condition, and exit trigger has been tuned to serve this principle.
If this strategy helps you in your trading journey — whether by improving your discipline, understanding market structure, or enhancing your performance — I invite you to follow my work and give this strategy a Boost on TradingView. Your support encourages further open research and helps develop even more advanced versions for the community.
— Jesús Nicolás Astorga
SuperTrader Pro Lab – Junín, Mendoza, Argentina
Ben's BTC Macro Fair Value OscillatorBen's BTC Macro Fair Value Oscillator
Overview
The **BTC Macro Fair Value Oscillator** is a non-crypto fair value framework that uses macro asset relationships (equities, dollar, gold) to estimate Bitcoin's "macro-driven fair value" and identify mean-reversion opportunities.
"Is BTC cheap or expensive right now?" on the 4 Hour Timeframe ONLY
### Key Features
✅ **Macro-driven**: Uses QQQ, DXY, XAUUSD instead of on-chain or crypto metrics
✅ **Dynamic weighting**: Assets weighted by rolling correlation strength
✅ **Mean-reversion signals**: Identifies when BTC is cheap/expensive vs macro
✅ **Validated parameters**: Optimized through 5-year backtest (Sharpe 6.7-9.9)
✅ **Visual transparency**: Live correlation panel, fair value bands, statistics
✅ **Non-repainting**: All calculations use confirmed historical data only
### What This Indicator Does
- Builds a **synthetic macro composite** from traditional assets
- Runs a **rolling regression** to predict BTC price from macro
- Calculates **deviation z-score** (how far BTC is from macro fair value)
- Generates **entry signals** when BTC is extremely cheap vs macro (dev < -2)
- Generates **exit signals** when BTC returns to fair value (dev > 0)
### What This Indicator Is NOT
❌ Not a high-frequency trading system (sparse signals by design)
❌ Not optimized for absolute returns (optimized for Sharpe ratio)
❌ Not suitable as standalone trading system (best as overlay/confirmation)
❌ Not predictive of short-term price movements (mean-reversion timeframe: days to weeks)
---
## Core Concept
### The Premise
Bitcoin doesn't trade in a vacuum. It's influenced by:
- **Risk appetite** (equities: QQQ, SPX)
- **Dollar strength** (DXY - inverse to risk assets)
- **Safe haven flows** (Gold: XAUUSD)
When macro conditions are "good for BTC" (risk-on, weak dollar, strong equities), BTC should trade higher. When macro conditions turn against it, BTC should trade lower.
### The Innovation
Instead of looking at BTC in isolation, this indicator:
1. **Measures how strongly** BTC currently correlates with each macro asset
2. **Builds a weighted composite** of those macro returns (the "D" driver)
3. **Regresses BTC price on D** to estimate "macro fair value"
4. **Tracks the deviation** between actual price and fair value
5. **Signals mean reversion** when deviation becomes extreme
### The Edge
The validated edge comes from:
- **Extreme deviations predict future returns** (dev < -2 → +1.67% over 12 bars)
- **Monotonic relationship** (more negative dev → higher forward returns)
- **Works out-of-sample** (test Sharpe +83-87% better than training)
- **Low correlation with buy & hold** (provides diversification value)
---
## Methodology
### Step 1: Macro Composite Driver D(t)
The indicator builds a weighted composite of macro asset returns:
**Process:**
1. Calculate **log returns** for BTC and each macro reference (QQQ, DXY, XAUUSD)
2. Compute **rolling correlation** between BTC and each reference over `corrLen` bars
3. **Weight each asset** by `|correlation|` if above `minCorrAbs` threshold, else 0
4. **Sign-adjust** weights (+1 for positive corr, -1 for negative) to handle inverse relationships
5. **Z-score normalize** each reference's returns over `fvWindow`
6. **Composite D(t)** = weighted sum of sign-adjusted z-scores
**Formula:**
```
For each reference i:
corr_i = correlation(BTC_returns, ref_i_returns, corrLen)
weight_i = |corr_i| if |corr_i| >= minCorrAbs else 0
sign_i = +1 if corr_i >= 0 else -1
z_i = (ref_i_returns - mean) / std
contrib_i = sign_i * z_i * weight_i
D(t) = sum(contrib_i) / sum(weight_i)
```
**Key Insight:** D(t) represents "how good macro conditions are for BTC right now" in a normalized, correlation-weighted way.
---
### Step 2: Fair Value Regression
Uses rolling linear regression to predict BTC price from D(t):
**Model:**
```
BTC_price(t) = α + β * D(t)
```
**Calculation (Pine Script approach):**
```
corr_CD = correlation(BTC_price, D, fvWindow)
sd_price = stdev(BTC_price, fvWindow)
sd_D = stdev(D, fvWindow)
cov = corr_CD * sd_price * sd_D
var_D = variance(D, fvWindow)
β = cov / var_D
α = mean(BTC_price) - β * mean(D)
fair_value(t) = α + β * D(t)
```
**Result:** A time-varying "macro fair value" line that adapts as correlations change.
---
### Step 3: Deviation Oscillator
Measures how far BTC price has deviated from fair value:
**Calculation:**
```
residual(t) = BTC_price(t) - fair_value(t)
residual_std = stdev(residual, normWindow)
deviation(t) = residual(t) / residual_std
```
**Interpretation:**
- `dev = 0` → BTC at fair value
- `dev = -2` → BTC is 2 standard deviations **cheap** vs macro
- `dev = +2` → BTC is 2 standard deviations **rich** vs macro
---
### Step 4: Signal Generation
**Long Entry:** `dev` crosses below `-2.0` (BTC extremely cheap vs macro)
**Long Exit:** `dev` crosses above `0.0` (BTC returns to fair value)
**No shorting** in default config (risk management choice - crypto volatility)
---
## How It Works
### Visual Components
#### 1. Price Chart (Main Panel)
**Fair Value Line (Orange):**
- The estimated "macro-driven fair value" for BTC
- Calculated from rolling regression on macro composite
**Fair Value Bands:**
- **±1σ** (light): 68% confidence zone
- **±2σ** (medium): 95% confidence zone
- **±3σ** (dark, dots): 99.7% confidence zone
**Entry/Exit Markers:**
- **Green "LONG" label** below bar: Entry signal (dev < -2)
- **Red "EXIT" label** above bar: Exit signal (dev > 0)
#### 2. Deviation Oscillator (Separate Pane)
**Line plot:**
- Shows current deviation z-score
- **Green** when dev < -2 (cheap)
- **Red** when dev > +2 (rich)
- **Gray** when neutral
**Histogram:**
- Visual representation of deviation magnitude
- Green bars = negative deviation (cheap)
- Red bars = positive deviation (rich)
**Threshold lines:**
- **Green dashed at -2.0**: Entry threshold
- **Red dashed at 0.0**: Exit threshold
- **Gray solid at 0**: Fair value line
#### 3. Correlation Panel (Top-Right)
Shows live correlation and weighting for each macro asset:
| Asset | Corr | Weight |
|-------|------|--------|
| QQQ | +0.45 | 0.45 |
| DXY | -0.32 | 0.32 |
| XAUUSD | +0.15 | 0.00 |
| Avg \|Corr\| | 0.31 | 0.77 |
**Reading:**
- **Corr**: Current rolling correlation with BTC (-1 to +1)
- **Weight**: How much this asset contributes to fair value (0 = excluded)
- **Avg |Corr|**: Average correlation strength (should be > 0.2 for reliable signals)
**Colors:**
- Green/Red corr = positive/negative correlation
- White weight = asset included, Gray = excluded (below minCorrAbs)
#### 4. Statistics Label (Bottom-Right)
```
━━━ BTC Macro FV ━━━
Dev: -2.34
Price: $103,192
FV: $110,500
Status: CHEAP ⬇
β: 103.52
```
**Fields:**
- **Dev**: Current deviation z-score
- **Price**: Current BTC close price
- **FV**: Current macro fair value estimate
- **Status**: CHEAP (< -2), RICH (> +2), or FAIR
- **β**: Current regression beta (sensitivity to macro)
---
## Installation & Setup
### TradingView Setup
1. Open TradingView and navigate to any **BTC chart** (BTCUSD, BTCUSDT, etc.)
2. Open **Pine Editor** (bottom panel)
3. Click **"+ New"** → **"Blank indicator"**
4. **Delete** all default code
5. **Copy** the entire Pine Script from `GHPT_optimized.pine`
6. **Paste** into the editor
7. Click **"Save"** and name it "BTC Macro Fair Value Oscillator"
8. Click **"Add to Chart"**
### Recommended Chart Settings
**Timeframe:** 4h (validated timeframe)
**Chart Type:** Candlestick or Heikin Ashi
**Overlay:** Yes (indicator plots on price chart + separate pane)
**Alternative Timeframes:**
- Daily: Works but slower signals
- 1h-2h: May work but not validated
- < 1h: Not recommended (too noisy)
### Symbol Requirements
**Primary:** BTC/USD or BTC/USDT on any exchange
**Macro References:** Automatically fetched
- QQQ (Nasdaq 100 ETF)
- DXY (US Dollar Index)
- XAUUSD (Gold spot)
**Data Requirements:**
- At least **90 bars** of history (warmup period)
- Premium TradingView recommended for full historical data
---
## Reading the Indicator
### Identifying Signals
#### Strong Long Signal (High Conviction)
- ✅ Deviation < -2.0 (extreme undervaluation)
- ✅ Avg |Corr| > 0.3 (strong macro relationships)
- ✅ Price touching or below -2σ band
- ✅ "LONG" label appears below bar
**Interpretation:** BTC is extremely cheap relative to macro conditions. Historical data shows +1.67% average return over next 12 bars (48 hours at 4h timeframe).
#### Moderate Long Signal (Lower Conviction)
- ⚠️ Deviation between -1.5 and -2.0
- ⚠️ Avg |Corr| between 0.2-0.3
- ⚠️ Price approaching -2σ band
**Interpretation:** BTC is cheap but not extreme. Consider as confirmation for other signals.
#### Exit Signal
- 🔴 Deviation crosses above 0 (returns to fair value)
- 🔴 "EXIT" label appears above bar
**Interpretation:** Mean reversion complete. Close long positions.
#### Strong Short/Avoid Signal
- 🔴 Deviation > +2.0 (extreme overvaluation)
- 🔴 Avg |Corr| > 0.3
- 🔴 Price touching or above +2σ band
**Interpretation:** BTC is expensive vs macro. Historical data shows -1.79% average return over next 12 bars. Consider exiting longs or reducing exposure.
### Regime Detection
**Strong Regime (Reliable Signals):**
- Avg |Corr| > 0.3
- Multiple assets weighted > 0
- Fair value line tracking price reasonably well
**Weak Regime (Unreliable Signals):**
- Avg |Corr| < 0.2
- Most weights = 0 (grayed out)
- Fair value line diverging wildly from price
- **Action:** Ignore signals until correlations strengthen
📋 Trading Checklist – Precision Entry SystemTake your trading discipline to the next level with this Precision Trading Checklist for TradingView. Designed for intraday traders following liquidity, structure, and Smart Money Concepts (SMC) AKA ICT Concepts, this overlay ensures you never miss a key confirmation before entering a trade.
Features:
✅ Pre-Market Preparation: Track previous session highs/lows, AM/PM sessions, and key liquidity zones.
✅ Bias & Narrative Check: Quickly confirm daily trend, price position relative to daily open, and higher timeframe confluence.
✅ Session-Specific Rules: Focused sessions like Silver Bullet (10:00–11:30), Afternoon (13:30–15:00), and Final Hour (15:00–16:00).
✅ Structure & Setup Validation: Confirm liquidity sweeps, market structure shifts, expansion candles, fair value gaps, and order blocks.
✅ Risk Management Reminders: Stop-loss, target points, risk percentage, breakeven management, and pyramiding rules.
✅ Post-Trade Journaling: Document entries, session, setup type, trade outcome, and grading for continuous improvement.
✅ Golden Rules: Visual reminders to enforce discipline, avoid emotional trades, and respect session limits.
Why Use It:
This checklist is perfect for traders who want to stay consistent, minimise mistakes, and follow a disciplined routine. Displayed as an overlay on your chart, it provides all essential checks in one glance, keeping you focused on the setup rather than scrolling through notes or separate trackers.
How to use:
Add the indicator to your chart
Click the settings/gear icon
Check off items as you complete them
The checklist on your chart updates in real-time with green checkmarks!
The checkboxes will persist as long as the indicator is on your chart,
making it perfect for tracking your pre-trade and post-trade routines!
Follow the checklist items step by step before entering trades.
Use the session-specific guidelines to filter setups.
Journal your trades post-execution for growth and analysis.
0DTE Options - Iron Condor & ButterflyTo help options traders:
Plan and structure Iron Condor or Butterfly spreads in “Setup Mode.”
Track live trades, including P&L, breach risk, and strike distances, in “Live Mode.”
Visualize the trade on the price chart with profit zones, breakeven lines, strike markers, and alerts.
Evaluate market conditions using IV Rank, ATR-based range modeling, and modeled Delta approximation.
Essentially, it turns your TradingView chart into an options risk graph + planning terminal.
⚙️ Core Modes of Operation
🧱 1. Setup Mode
Used for planning new trades. It automatically suggests strikes based on:
ATR (volatility proxy)
IV Rank
Target Delta
Chosen risk tier (High / Mid / Low / Delta)
You can:
Preview recommended short and long strikes.
See estimated credit, width, and risk/reward ratios in a setup table.
Auto-feed these calculated strikes into the Live Mode to track them later.
Example Use:
Before market open, choose Setup Mode → Mid Risk Tier → see what strike widths and credits make sense for the day.
📈 2. Live Mode
Used to track real trades you’ve already opened.
You can:
Paste your real trade data (strikes, credits, etc.) into the 📋 paste field.
Or auto-feed from Setup Mode (if “Auto-Feed” is enabled).
The indicator then plots:
Short/long strikes
Breakevens
Profit/loss zone
Real-time breach detection and delta drift
Alerts when price nears your strikes or exits your safe zone.
Example Use:
After opening an Iron Condor on SPX, paste in 626,628,620,618,1.20,1, and the chart visually shows your safe range and warning zones.
🧮 Built-In Calculations
1. IV Rank (Volatility Environment)
Uses a 20-day log return volatility model to calculate IV Rank (percentile of volatility over the last 252 bars).
You can use this automatically or manually override it if you have data from your broker.
→ High IV Rank (>50) = better for selling Iron Condors (more premium).
2. ATR (Average True Range)
Measures short-term volatility to estimate expected daily price movement.
Used in Setup Mode to model distance between strikes.
3. Strike Calculations (Setup Mode)
Based on risk tier:
High Risk → wide wings, high credit, high potential drawdown
Mid Risk → balanced setup
Low Risk → narrow wings, safer but less credit
Delta Mode → based purely on target delta (e.g., 0.20)
Uses ATR × multiplier to determine how far short strikes should be from current price.
4. Credit Estimation
Based on strike width × IV Rank multiplier:
IV > 50 → 30% of width
IV 30–50 → 25%
IV < 30 → 20%
5. Profit & Loss Modeling
The indicator computes:
Max Profit:
Iron Condor → credit × 100 × contracts
Butterfly → (wing width − debit) × 100 × contracts
Max Loss:
Iron Condor → width − credit
Butterfly → debit × 100 × contracts
Breakevens:
Iron Condor → short strikes ± credit
Butterfly → body ± debit
Current P&L: Approximated by where the underlying is relative to the short/long strikes.
6. Delta Modeling
Estimates each short strike’s modeled delta based on how far it is from current price.
Displays total delta balance to show directional bias.
If Delta drifts too high → market imbalance → consider rolling or adjusting.
7. Breach Detection System
Automatically classifies your trade as:
🟢 In Range: Price between short strikes (safe zone).
🟠 Near Breach: Price close to short strike (risk zone).
🔴 Breached: Price outside long strike (stop or adjust zone).
This dynamically changes color in your profit box and info label.
🎨 Visual Components
Element Meaning Color
Red Line Put side strikes 🔻 Red
Green Line Call side strikes 🔺 Green
Yellow Dotted Lines Breakevens 🟡 Yellow
Green Box Profit zone 🟩 Light green
Orange Box Adjustment zone (near breach) 🟧 Orange
Red Box Breach zone 🟥 Red
White Line Current price ⚪ White
Optional labels display strike details and distances (e.g., “📉 Short Put: 620 – 5 pts away”).
📊 Setup Table (Setup Mode Only)
Displays a grid comparing all risk tiers:
Tier Short Call Short Put Width Est. Credit R:R
High 632 614 4.0 $1.20 0.43
Mid 630 616 3.0 $0.90 0.43
Low 628 618 2.0 $0.60 0.43
Highlighted row = selected risk tier.
This lets you compare how wide/narrow each setup is before committing to a trade.
🧾 Info Box (Live Mode)
Displays real-time stats such as:
🔶 IRON CONDOR | 1 Contract
📊 Calls: 626 / 628 | Puts: 620 / 618
💵 Credit: $1.20 | 💰 Profit: $120 | 🔴 Loss: $180
⬆️ BE: 627.2 | ⬇️ BE: 618.8
📍 Current: $623 | 💵 P&L: +$35.00 (+29.1%)
📏 To Short Call: 3 | To Short Put: 3
📊 Delta: 0.05 | IV Rank: 56% (FAVORABLE)
🔴 BREACH STATUS: In Range
🚨 Alerts
The indicator generates TradingView alerts for:
⚠️ Approaching Call Zone → nearing short call
⚠️ Approaching Put Zone → nearing short put
🛑 Stop Loss Triggered → current P&L exceeds loss threshold
🟠 Near Breach → price entering adjustment zone
🔴 Breached → price outside protection (long strikes)
These alerts can be used with TradingView notifications or webhooks.
🧠 How to Use It Step-by-Step
A. Planning (Setup Mode)
Set mode to “Setup.”
Adjust:
Risk Tier (High / Mid / Low / Delta)
Target Delta (0.15–0.30 recommended)
Strike Interval (e.g., 1.0 or 5.0)
Check Setup Table → see suggested strikes & credits.
Optionally toggle Auto-Feed → Live to send to live mode later.
B. Executing (Broker)
Confirm and enter your trade in your brokerage (use the strikes shown).
Record your strikes, net credit/debit, and number of contracts.
C. Tracking (Live Mode)
Switch to “Live” mode.
Paste your strikes in the 📋 Paste Data field:
Iron Condor Example: 626,628,620,618,1.20,1
Butterfly Example: 600,620,640,2.50,2
The chart updates:
Lines = your strikes
Boxes = profit/risk zones
Labels = strike info, distance to price
Info box = P&L, delta, IV rank, breach status
Set alerts for automatic notifications.
D. Managing the Trade
When the chart turns orange or red, you’re approaching or breaching a strike.
Use this signal to roll, hedge, or close your trade.
Monitor Gamma Risk: warning appears when price nears short strikes (explosive delta risk).
📌 Summary
Feature Description
Mode Switching Plan (Setup) or Track (Live)
IV Rank & ATR Modeling Estimates volatility environment
Auto Strike Planning Suggests strikes based on risk/delta
Visual Range Map Profit, breakeven, and adjustment zones
Real-Time Alerts Warns when nearing or breaching strikes
Trade Info Box Displays live risk, reward, delta, IV, and P&L
Setup Table Compares setups across risk tiers
Fully Configurable Works for Iron Condors or Butterflies
Adil Hoca - US Market Score Only NasdaqMarket Score & Crash Detector Indicator
User Guide & Usage Instructions
This TradingView indicator provides a comprehensive market risk assessment, combining multiple financial metrics to detect potential market crashes, recessions, and overall trend regimes. It is especially designed to alert traders and investors about early warning signals before significant market downturns, enabling proactive decision-making.
Key Features
Multi-Metric Market Sentiment: Uses volatility indices, currency strength, yield spreads, breadth, and bond ratios to evaluate market health.
Crash Detection System: Monitors various conditions such as VIX spikes, breadth collapse, momentum cliffs, high-yield spread surges, and hidden market weaknesses.
Reccession Indicator: Incorporates the Sahm Rule, a proven recession indicator based on employment data.
Alert System: Sends real-time alerts for critical market conditions, including crashes, recession signals, and spreads alerts.
Visual Elements: Includes histograms, trend lines, threshold lines, and shape signals to visually interpret market states.
Customizable Parameters: Adjust weights, sensitivity, thresholds, and alert preferences to suit your trading style.
How it Works
1. Data Collection
The indicator fetches data from multiple sources:
Market volatility: VIX index
Currency strength: DXY index
Interest rates: SOFR, PCE inflation
Yield spreads: High Yield Credit Spread, Investment Grade Spread
Market Breadth: Ratio of QQQ to TLT (tech vs. bonds)
Bond Ratios: TMF/TMV (long-term bonds)
Employment Data: The Sahm Rule (monthly unemployment data)
2. Normalization
Data is normalized via z-score calculations over defined periods to standardize the metrics, making them comparable regardless of their original scale.
3. Composite Score Calculation
Each metric is weighted according to user-defined parameters, and a composite score is generated to represent the overall market sentiment, smoothed with an EMA for trend clarity.
4. Crash & Recession Detection
Crash System: Looks for conditions like VIX spikes, breadth collapse, momentum drops, high yield spread surges, and hidden weaknesses. If multiple conditions meet thresholds, alerts trigger.
Recession Indicator: Uses the Sahm Rule, which compares the current unemployment rate's three-month average to the lowest point over the past 12 months. When it exceeds a certain threshold, a recession signal is generated.
5. Alerts & Visualization
Sound & Shape Alerts: Signals like warning triangles, cross icons, and color changes.
Threshold Lines: Indicate levels like "Strong Bullish," "Strong Bear," and critical zones.
Dual Confirmation: Combines crash and recession signals for high-confidence alerts.
Usage & Customization
Placing the Indicator
Copy and paste the Pine Script code into TradingView's Pine Editor.
Save and add the script to your chart. Adjust inputs like weights, sensitivity mode, thresholds, and alert preferences via the input panel.
Key Inputs
Weights: Customize the importance of each metric.
Sensitivity Mode: Changes alert thresholds for early warnings.
Crash Sensitivity: Defines how many indicators need to trigger before issuing a crash alert.
Recession Thresholds: Set the unemployment level that signals recession.
Interpreting Visuals
Histogram: Shows the composite score; green means bullish, red indicates bearish.
Momentum Line: Highlights trend acceleration/deceleration.
Threshold Lines: Dotted/dashed lines showing critical zones.
Shape Shapes: Triangles or crosses appear for early signals or critical events.
Alerts
Crash Alerts: Warn of imminent market crashes.
Recession Alerts: Indicate economic downturns based on Sahm Rule.
Spread Alerts: Show high-yield credit spread surges signaling stress.
Double Confirmation: High-confidence signals when crash and recession conditions align.
Best Practices
Use on multiple timeframes for confirmation.
Combine with other technical analysis tools for better accuracy.
Adjust thresholds according to your risk appetite.
Follow alert signals for early warning but always consider overall context.
Final Notes
This indicator synthesizes a variety of leading and lagging indicators to give a holistic view of market health. It is designed to provide early warnings, especially in volatile or stressed environments, helping traders avoid severe drawdowns or position ahead of major downturns.
Feel free to modify input parameters for your preferences, or integrate additional data sources for further refinement.
This detailed explanation can be directly included as a description or documentation within your TradingView script, helping users grasp its full capabilities and optimal usage.
Simulated Fear & Greed (CNN-calibrated v2)🧭 Fear & Greed Index — TradingView Version (Simulated CNN Model)
🔍 Purpose
The Fear & Greed Index is a sentiment indicator that quantifies market emotion on a scale from 0 to 100, where:
0 represents Extreme Fear (capitulation, oversold conditions), and
100 represents Extreme Greed (euphoria, overbought conditions).
It helps traders assess whether the market is driven by fear (risk aversion) or greed (risk appetite) — giving a high-level view of potential turning points in market sentiment.
⚙️ How It Works in TradingView
Because TradingView cannot directly access CNN’s or alternative external sentiment feeds, this indicator simulates the Fear & Greed Index by analyzing in-chart technical data that reflect investor psychology.
It uses a multi-factor model, converting price and volume signals into a composite sentiment score.
🧩 Components Used (Simulated Metrics)
Category Metric Emotional Interpretation
Volatility ATR (Average True Range) High ATR = Fear, Low ATR = Greed
Momentum RSI + MACD Histogram Rising momentum = Greed, Falling = Fear
Volume Activity Volume Z-Score High positive deviation = Greed, Low = Fear
Trend Context SMA Regime Bias (50/200) Downtrend adds Fear penalty, Uptrend supports Greed
These elements are normalized into a 0–100 scale using percentile ranks (like statistical scoring) and then combined using user-adjustable weights.
⚖️ CNN-Style Calibration
The script follows CNN’s five sentiment bands for clarity:
Range Zone Colour Description
0–25 Extreme Fear 🔴 Red Panic, forced selling, capitulation risk
25–45 Fear 🟠 Orange Uncertainty, hesitation, early accumulation phase
45–55 Neutral ⚪ Gray Balanced sentiment, indecision
55–75 Greed 🟢 Light Green Optimism, trend continuation
75–100 Extreme Greed 💚 Bright Green Euphoria, risk of reversal
This structure aligns visually with CNN’s public gauge, making it easy to interpret.
MTF VFSMA SqueezeThe purpose of this indicator is to detect a market squeeze (lack of volatility) period and to identify the initiation and direction of the breakout.
It is based on Variety-Filtered, Squeeze Moving Averages indicator.
The original indicator created by Loxx identifies both squeeze zones and breakouts/breakdowns. A squeeze zone is defined when price is below a specific volatility threshold calculated as the difference between a fast- and slow-moving average and filtered using ATR- or Pips-based threshold.
It operates on a single timeframe and includes Loxx's Expanded Source Types, signals, alerts, etc. and 35+ Loxx's Moving Averages. These adaptive, minimal-lag indicators are built upon advanced mathematical and signal processing DSP techniques that far surpass traditional Moving Averages.
This currently published indicator includes the following main developments:
Squeeze Detection using Percentile Rank Method
It detects the Squeeze by applying a Percentile Rank to the historical distance (spread) between the two MAs.
MA Spread: The basis for Squeeze detection is the distance between the two moving averages.
Percentile Rank: A statistical measure that indicates the percentage of past Spread values within the set lookback period that are lower than the current MA Spread.
Squeeze State: A Squeeze occurs when the Percentile Rank is below the set Squeeze Threshold (%)).
Example: If the threshold is 20% and the Rank is 15%, it means the MA Spread is in its tightest 15% range, below the set threshold. Therefore, the condition is currently met.
Goal: Objective volatility measurement that adapts to market conditions.
Squeeze Duration Filter
A key condition for a Breakout signal is that the MAs must have remained in the Squeeze zone for a specified minimum duration.
Goal: To filter out market noise and False Breakouts.
Multi-Timeframe (MTF) Confluence
Multi-Timeframe trend and squeeze monitoring for 3 timeframes (TFs).
Provides confirmation using the MA status from two higher timeframes (TF2, TF3).
Goal: Trend and momentum confirmation from a broader market context.
Signals Only on Bar Close?
By selecting the signalOnClose parameter to enabled, it is possible to avoid repainting on the chart TF. If it is checked, all events on the chart (L/S signals, Squeeze Start/End, MA color change) will only appear after the bar has closed, preventing repainting. Higher TF events remain in real-time.
Goal: To increase the reliability of signals.
Multi-Level Alerts and Info Panel
Comprehensive, confluence-weighted alerts and real-time status display.
Enhanced Alerts based on multi-timeframe confluences. Alerts are ready to enable/disable for Any alert() function call and ready for watchlists. Alert Frequency is also configurable in Inputs window. „Once per bar close” is the most reliable for signals. „Always” or „Once per bar” alert frequencies may generate temporary signal alerts.
Please note that even if "Once per bar close" is selected as alert frequency, this only applies to the chart TF, and TF2 and TF3 status may be modified until the close of the relevant candle.
Goal: Transparent decision-making.
Other Improvements
Unlike the original indicator, the coloring of the MA curves on the chart depends on the relative positions of the fast MA and slow MA. The curves are colored bullish when the fast MA is above the slow MA, bearish when the opposite is true, and neutral in the squeeze zone.
Data Window with Squeeze Start/End, Buy/Sell, Status, Squeeze Percentile etc. on all 3 TFs.
Ready for Pine Screener.
Please be aware that currently only the chart TF is configurable in Pine Screener, TF2 and TF3 are set to their default values.
Pine Script® version 6.
Limitations
When setting the indicator parameters, please take into account the limitations of TradingView. (Lookback period of Percentile Rank and Moving Averages periods, Execution time limit (timeout) etc.)
For example, if a NaN% message appears as the Percentile Rank value, please reduce the lookback period.
How to use it
This indicator is a Breakout-following system, but it can also be the basis for Range Trading.
The Setup Phase
This is the preparation stage. The indicator signals low volatility as the bands tighten.
Squeeze Dynamics: Monitoring the Squeeze Duration is essential. The longer the price spends in the Squeeze zone, the more likely the resulting breakout will be powerful.
The Signal Phase (Breakout)
The Breakout signal appears on the bar where the Percentile Rank first crosses above the Squeeze threshold, indicating a sudden return of volatility.
Further condition: Meets the SqueezeDuration filter.
Breakout direction: Bullish: Fast MA > SLow MA, Bearish: Fast MA < SLow MA
Applying MTF Confluence:
The most promising trades that are in line with higher timeframes:
Total Confluence: Chart TF Signal + TF2 Bullish/Bearish + TF3 Bullish/Bearish. This is the strongest, highest-probability setup.
Simple signal: Only the Chart TF signals. This should be handled with caution, as the higher timeframes (TF2, TF3) might still be in a Squeeze or in a conflicting state.
Alternative Use: Range Trading within the Squeeze Bands
If the market has low volume, the squeeze bands can be used as dynamic support/resistance for bounces off the edges of the range:
The probability of a successful range trade increases if the boundaries of the squeeze zone have only been touched a few times previously. Each touch weakens the zone boundaries and increases the chance of a Breakout.
Suggested Tactics and Risk Management
When using Breakout strategies, strict risk management and the use of confirmations are essential:
Volume Confirmation: A strong, above-average volume Breakout candle increases the probability of a successful breakout.
False Breakout: If the breakout occurs on low volume, there is a higher chance of a pullback and a False Breakout.
Entry After Retest: A safer entry: wait until the price breaks out, but only enter if it returns to the squeeze zone and bounces back from there. This reduces the risk of a False Breakout trap.
The Risk of False Breakout:
False Breakouts are part of any Breakout strategy. Always have a strict Stop Loss set.
Reversal: Be prepared for the possibility that after a Breakout signal (e.g., Long), the price returns to the zone and then breaks out in the opposite (Short) direction.
Please note that all technical analysis and trading signals only indicate probabilities. Always use your own risk management rules and follow market regulations.
Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It is not financial advice.
Trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for every investor. Past performance shown in examples is not indicative of future results.
The indicator provides signals and calculations, but trading decisions are solely your responsibility. Always:
Test strategies on paper before using real money
Never risk more than you can afford to lose
Understand that all trading involves risk
Consider seeking advice from a licensed financial advisor
The publisher makes no guarantees regarding accuracy, profitability, or performance. Use at your own risk.
Central Limit Theorem Reversion IndicatorDear TV community, let me introduce you to the first-ever Central Limit Theorem indicator on TradingView.
The Central Limit Theorem is used in statistics and it can be quite useful in quant trading and understanding market behaviors.
In short, the CLT states: "When you take repeated samples from any population and calculate their averages, those averages will form a normal (bell curve) distribution—no matter what the original data looks like."
In this CLT indicator, I use statistical theory to identify high-probability mean reversion opportunities in the markets. It calculates statistical confidence bands and z-scores to identify when price movements deviate significantly from their expected distribution, signaling potential reversion opportunities with quantifiable probability levels.
Mathematical Foundation
The Central Limit Theorem (CLT) says that when you average many data points together, those averages will form a predictable bell-curve pattern, even if the original data is completely random and unpredictable (which often is in the markets). This works no matter what you're measuring, and it gets more reliable as you use more data points.
Why using it for trading?
Individual price movements seem random and chaotic, but when we look at the average of many price movements, we can actually predict how they should behave statistically. This lets us spot when prices have moved "too far" from what's normal—and those extreme moves tend to snap back (mean reversion).
Key Formula:
Z = (X̄ - μ) / (σ / √n)
Where:
- X̄ = Sample mean (average return over n periods)
- μ = Population mean (long-term expected return)
- σ = Population standard deviation (volatility)
- n = Sample size
- σ/√n = Standard error of the mean
How I Apply CLT
Step 1: Calculate Returns
Measures how much price changed from one bar to the next (using logarithms for better statistical properties)
Step 2: Average Recent Returns
Takes the average of the last n returns (e.g., last 100 bars). This is your "sample mean."
Step 3: Find What's "Normal"
Looks at historical data to determine: a) What the typical average return should be (the long-term mean) and b) How volatile the market usually is (standard deviation)
Step 4: Calculate Standard Error
Determines how much sample averages naturally vary. Larger samples = smaller expected variation.
Step 5: Calculate Z-Score
Measures how unusual the current situation is.
Step 6: Draw Confidence Bands
Converts these statistical boundaries into actual price levels on your chart, showing where price is statistically expected to stay 95% and 99% of the time.
Interpretation & Usage
The Z-Score:
The z-score tells you how statistically unusual the current price deviation is:
|Z| < 1.0 → Normal behavior, no action
|Z| = 1.0 to 1.96 → Moderate deviation, watch closely
|Z| = 1.96 to 2.58 → Significant deviation (95%+), consider entry
|Z| > 2.58 → Extreme deviation (99%+), high probability setup
The Confidence Bands
- Upper Red Bands: 95% and 99% overbought zones → Expect mean reversion downward as the price is not likely to cross these lines.
- Center Gray Line: Statistical expectation (fair value)
- Lower Blue Bands: 95% and 99% oversold zones → Expect mean reversion upward
Trading Logic:
- When price exceeds the upper 95% band (z-score > +1.96), there's only a 5% probability this is random noise → Strong sell/short signal
- When price falls below the lower 95% band (z-score < -1.96), there's a 95% statistical expectation of upward reversion → Strong buy/long signal
Background Gradient
The background color provides real-time visual feedback:
- Blue shades: Oversold conditions, expect upward reversion
- Red shades: Overbought conditions, expect downward reversion
- Intensity: Darker colors indicate stronger statistical significance
Trading Strategy Examples
Hypothetically, this is how the indicator could be used:
- Long: Z-score < -1.96 (below 95% confidence band)
- Short: Z-score > +1.96 (above 95% confidence band)
- Take profit when price returns to center line (Z ≈ 0)
Input Parameters
Sample Size (n) - Default: 100
Lookback Period (m) - Default: 100
You can also create alerts based on the indicator.
Final notes:
- The indicator uses logarithmic returns for better statistical properties
- Converts statistical bands back to price space for practical use
- Adaptive volatility: Bands automatically widen in high volatility, narrow in low volatility
- No repainting: yay! All calculations use historical data only
Feedback is more than welcome!
Henri
Order Blocks Zones with Signals█ OVERVIEW
“Order Blocks Zones with Signals” is a technical analysis tool that automatically identifies Order Blocks (OB) and optionally Fair Value Gaps (FVG) on the chart.
The script visualizes these zones as colored rectangles, offering full customization of style, transparency, and signal display.
It also generates entry and exit signals (Break & Exit) that can serve as confirmations in strategies based on price action and market structure.
Thanks to flexible candle size filters and rich visual options, the indicator maintains chart clarity and readability.
█ CONCEPTS
Order Blocks (OB) are key zones on the chart where significant price movements previously occurred — areas where large market participants (institutions, so-called smart money) initiated or closed positions.
An OB is the last candle that followed the prior trend before the market reversed (e.g., for a Bullish OB: the last bearish candle before a pivot low and a strong upward impulse).
The script detects these levels using local price pivots, analyzing candle direction to filter out less significant movements.
FVG (Fair Value Gaps) represent areas of imbalance between buyers and sellers — price gaps formed by a sharp impulse where full trading did not occur due to one-sided order dominance (e.g., excess buy or sell orders).
Why combine OB and FVG in one indicator?
Combining OB and FVG analysis is essential because these phenomena often occur sequentially in the institutional market cycle:
1. Order Block — institutions enter the market in the OB zone, absorbing orders and building positions.
2. Strong impulse — after smart money entry, a rapid price move creates an FVG (imbalance gap).
3. Retest — price naturally returns to these zones (OB or FVG), drawn by unfilled orders and the search for equilibrium.
Such areas strongly attract price, as they represent not only historical institutional levels but also open “holes” in the order book. Retests of OB and FVG are ideal entry opportunities with high reaction probability (rebound or breakout). The indicator combines these two interconnected elements, enabling comprehensive market structure analysis in a single tool.
Order Blocks are labeled as:
Bullish OB – demand zones, often accumulation areas before an upmove.
Bearish OB – supply zones, signaling potential impulse end or correction start.
█ FEATURES
Order Block Detection (OB Detection):
- Automatic identification of demand and supply zones based on pivots.
- OB is the last candle aligned with the prior trend, just before the market reversal — precisely identified through candle sequence analysis around the pivot.
- OB zones appear with a delay equal to Pivot Length (default 10 bars).
- Break signals trigger when a candle’s body (close) fully pierces the zone, causing the zone to disappear immediately (e.g., close < low of Bullish OB → Break Down and zone deletion).
- Minimum size filtering via OB Size Multiplier.
- Option to create OB without wicks (Include Wicks in OB): when disabled, OB zones are based solely on candle bodies (open/close), ignoring wicks (high/low).
Fair Value Gap Detection (FVG Detection):
- Optional, with enable/disable capability.
- FVG are detected without delay — immediately upon gap occurrence.
- Size filtering via Candle Size Period and FVG Size Multiplier.
Customizable Styling:
- Separate colors and border styles (Solid / Dashed / Dotted) for each zone type.
- Adjustable transparency and border thickness.
- Unified color for box, border, and signal of the same type.
Breakout and Exit Signals:
- Break Up – triggered when a candle’s close breaks above a Bearish OB, causing the zone to disappear.
- Break Down – triggered when a candle’s close breaks below a Bullish OB, causing the zone to disappear.
- Exit Up / Exit Down – temporary exit from the zone without full breakout (price leaves the zone but doesn’t close beyond it). Signal type selection: Break, Exit, or Both.
- Alerts: built-in alerts for all signal types — triggered automatically on candle close confirming breakout or exit from OB.
█ HOW TO USE
Adding to chart: import the code into Pine Editor and run the script on TradingView.
Settings configuration:
- Pivot Length: controls swing detection sensitivity and OB display delay (default 10).
- Include Wicks in OB: enabled (default) – OB includes wicks; disabled – OB uses bodies only.
- Size Filter: adjust Candle Size Period and OB/FVG Size Multiplier to filter out small zones.
- Colors & Styles: set colors, styles, and transparency for each zone type.
- Signal Type: choose which signals to display (Break, Exit, or Both).
Signal interpretation:
- OB Break Up: price closes above Bearish OB → zone disappears → potential bullish continuation.
- OB Break Down: price closes below Bullish OB → zone disappears → potential bearish continuation.
- Exit Signals: price leaves the zone temporarily without breakout — often signals impending reversal or pullback.
Tips:
- Use OB signals alongside other indicators like RSI, MACD, SMI, or trend filters.
- Order Blocks from higher timeframes (e.g., 4H, 1D) carry greater significance and reaction strength.
- Remember: FVG are detected immediately, OB with delay — a complementary approach!
█ APPLICATIONS
- Smart Money Concepts (SMC): use OB zones as dynamic support and resistance levels. In an uptrend, look for buy opportunities in bullish OBs, which price often retests before further gains. Combining with RSI, MACD, or Fibonacci levels enhances zone significance, confirming institutional demand.
- Breakout Trading: trade based on OB breakout signals. A buy signal after breaking a bearish OB may indicate a strong upward impulse, especially if supported by rising MACD or RSI above 50. Similarly for sell signals after Break Down.
- Reversal Zones: Exit signals may indicate the end of a move or correction. Safest to use in alignment with higher-timeframe trend and confirmed by another indicator (e.g., RSI divergence, Fibonacci levels).
- Confluence Analysis: combine OB and FVG for deeper market structure and equilibrium insight. When an Order Block overlaps or borders an FVG, we get confluence of two institutional phenomena — OB (smart money entry) + FVG (imbalance) — making these areas particularly strong price magnets, increasing retest and reaction probability.
█ NOTES
- FVG can be fully disabled for a cleaner chart view.
- In consolidation periods, signals may appear more frequently — always confirm with additional trend filters.
- Works on all markets and timeframes (crypto, forex, indices, stocks).
Serenity Model VIPI — by yuu_iuHere’s a concise, practical English guide for Serenity Model VIPI (Author: yuu_iu). It covers what it is, how to set it up for daily trading, how to tune it, and how we guarantee non-repainting.
Serenity Model VIPI — User Guide (Daily Close, Non‑Repainting)
Credits
- Author: yuu_iu
- Producer: yuu_iu
- Platform: TradingView (Pine Script v5)
1) What it is
Serenity Model VIPI is a multi‑module, context‑aware trading model that fuses signals from:
- Entry modules: VCP, Flow, Momentum, Mean Reversion, Breakout
- Exit/risk modules: Contrarian, Breakout Sell, Volume Delta Sell, Peak Detector, Overbought Exit, Profit‑Take
- Context/memory: Learns per Ticker/Sector/Market Regime and adjusts weights/aggression
- Learning engine: Runs short “fake trades” to learn safely before scaling real trades
It produces a weighted, context‑adjusted score and a final decision: BUY, SELL, TAKE_PROFIT, or WAIT.
2) How it works (high level)
- Each module computes a score per bar.
- A fusion layer combines module scores using accuracy and base weights, then adjusts by:
- Market regime (Bull/Bear/Sideways) and optional higher‑timeframe (HTF) bias
- Risk control neuron
- Context memory (ticker/sector/regime)
- Optional LLM mode can override marginal cases if context supports it.
- Final decision is taken at bar close only (no intrabar repaint).
3) Non‑repainting guarantee (Daily)
- Close‑only execution: All key actions use barstate.isconfirmed, so signals/entries/exits only finalize after the daily candle closes.
- No lookahead on HTF data: request.security() reads prior‑bar values (series ) for HTF close/EMA/RSI.
- Alerts at bar close: Alerts are fired once per bar close to prevent mid‑bar changes.
What this means: Once the daily bar closes, the decision and alert won’t be repainted.
4) Setup (TradingView)
- Paste the Pine v5 code into Pine Editor, click Add to chart.
- Timeframe: 1D (Daily).
- Optional: enable a date window for training/backtest
- Enable Custom Date Filter: ON
- Set Start Date / End Date
- Create alert (non‑repainting)
- Condition: AI TRADE Signal
- Options: Once Per Bar Close
- Webhook (optional): Paste your URL into “System Webhook URL (for AI events)”
- Watch the UI
- On‑chart markers: AI BUY / AI SELL / AI TAKE PROFIT
- Right‑side table: Trades, Win Rate, Avg Profit, module accuracies, memory source, HTF trend, etc.
- “AI Thoughts” label: brief reasoning and debug lines.
5) Daily trading workflow
- The model evaluates at daily close and may:
- Enter long (BUY) when buy votes + total score exceed thresholds, after context/risk checks
- Exit via trailing stop, hard stop, TAKE_PROFIT, or SELL decision
- Learning mode:
- Triggers short “fake trades” every N bars (default 3) and measures outcome after 5 bars
- Improves module accuracies and adjusts aggression once stable (min fake win% threshold)
- Memory application:
- When you change tickers, the model tries to apply Ticker or Sector memory for the current market regime to pre‑bias module weights/aggression.
6) Tuning (what to adjust and why)
Core controls
- Base Aggression Level (default 1.0): Higher = more trades and stronger decisions; start conservative on Daily (1.0–1.2).
- Learning Speed Multiplier (default 3): Faster adaptation after fake/real trades; too high can overreact.
- Min Fake Win Rate to Exit Learning (%) (default 10–20%): Raises the bar before trusting more real trades.
- Fake Trade Every N Bars (default 3): Frequency of learning attempts.
- Learning Threshold Win Rate (default 0.4): Governs when the learner should keep learning.
- Hard Stop Loss (%) (default 5–8%): Global emergency stop.
Multi‑Timeframe (MTF)
- Enable Multi‑Timeframe Confirmation: ON (recommended for Daily)
- HTF Trend Source: HOSE:VNINDEX for VN equities (or CURRENT_SYMBOL if you prefer)
- HTF Timeframe: D or 240 (for a strong bias)
- MTF Weight Adjustment: 0.2–0.4 (0.3 default is balanced)
Module toggles and base weights
- In strong uptrends: increase VCP, Momentum, Breakout (0.2–0.3 typical)
- In sideways low‑vol regimes: raise MeanRev (0.2–0.3)
- For exits/defense: Contrarian, Peak, Overbought Exit, Profit‑Take (0.1–0.2 each)
- Keep Flow on as a volume‑quality filter (≈0.2)
Memory and control
- Enable Shared Memory Across Tickers: ON to share learning
- Enable Sector‑Based Knowledge Transfer: ON to inherit sector tendencies
- Manual Reset Learning: Use sparingly to reset module accuracies if regime changes drastically
Risk management
- Hard Stop Loss (%): 5–8% typical on Daily
- Trailing Stop: ATR‑ and volatility‑adaptive; tightens faster in Bear/High‑Vol regimes
- Max hold bars: Shorter in Bear or Sideways High‑Vol to cut risk
Alerts and webhook
- Use AI TRADE Signal with Once Per Bar Close
- Webhook payload is JSON, including event type, symbol, time, win rates, equity, aggression, etc.
7) Recommended Daily preset (VN equities)
- MTF: Enable, Source: HOSE:VNINDEX, TF: D, Weight Adj: 0.3
- Aggression: 1.1
- Learning Speed: 3
- Min Fake Win Rate to Exit Learning: 15%
- Hard SL: 6%
- Base Weights:
- VCP 0.25, Momentum 0.25, Breakout 0.15, Flow 0.20
- MeanRev 0.20 (raise in sideways)
- Contrarian/Peak/Overbought/Profit‑Take: 0.10–0.20
- Leave other defaults as is, then fine‑tune by symbol/sector.
8) Reading the UI
- Table highlights: Real Trades, Win Rate, Avg Profit, Fake Actions/Win%, VCP Acc, Aggression, Equity, Score, Status (LEARNING/TRADING/REFLECTION), Last Real, Consec Loss, Best/Worst Trade, Pattern Score, Memory Source, Current Sector, AI Health, HTF Trend, Scheduler, Memory Loaded, Fake Active.
- Shapes: AI BUY (below bar), AI SELL/TAKE PROFIT (above bar)
- “AI Thoughts”: module contributions, context notes, debug lines
9) Troubleshooting
- No trades?
- Ensure timeframe is 1D and the date filter covers the chart range
- Check Scheduler Cooldown (3 bars default) and that barstate.isconfirmed (only at close)
- If MTF is ON and HTF is bearish, buy bias is reduced; relax MTF Weight Adjustment or module weights
- Too many/too few trades?
- Lower/raise Base Aggression Level
- Adjust base weights on key modules (raise entry modules to be more active; raise exit/defense modules to be more selective)
- Learning doesn’t end?
- Increase Min Fake Win Rate to Exit Learning only after it’s consistently stable; otherwise lower it or reduce Fake Trade Every N Bars
10) Important notes
- The strategy is non‑repainting at bar close by design (confirmed bars + HTF series + close‑only alerts).
- Backtest fills may differ from live fills due to slippage and broker rules; this is normal for all TradingView strategies.
- Always validate settings across multiple symbols and regimes before going live.
If you want, I can bundle this guide into a README section in your Pine code and add a small on‑chart signature (Author/Producer: yuu_iu) in the top‑right corner.
8x Heikin Ashi Streak (1m) by Bitcoin Benito🧭 Indicator Description: “8x Heikin Ashi Streak (1m) by Bitcoin Benito”
**Purpose:**
The *8x Heikin Ashi Streak* indicator helps traders quickly identify strong short-term momentum on the **1-minute timeframe**. It automatically tracks Heikin Ashi candles and alerts you whenever **8 consecutive bullish or bearish candles** appear — a visual cue that a strong intraday trend or exhaustion point might be forming.
---
🔍 **How It Works**
* The indicator continuously counts Heikin Ashi candles in real-time.
* When it detects **8 bullish (green)** or **8 bearish (red)** candles in a row:
* A green ▲ marker appears **below** the 8th candle for bullish streaks.
* A red ▼ marker appears **above** the 8th candle for bearish streaks.
* You can set alerts to automatically notify you when these streaks occur.
This makes it ideal for **momentum traders**, **scalpers**, and **trend-reversal spotters** who want to:
* Catch strong intraday moves early.
* Identify potential overextension zones before pullbacks.
* Automate alert signals for short-term trading setups.
IMPORTANT: Only trade when most of the 8 candles are below/above the EMA 8 Line respectively. Add an EMA 8 indicator to see if this is the case
---
⚙️ **How to Use**
1. **Apply to a 1-minute chart** (this script is optimized for 1m timeframes).
2. When the indicator plots a green or red triangle:
* **Green triangle (8 bullish candles):** Trend momentum is strong upward.
* **Red triangle (8 bearish candles):** Downward momentum is dominant.
3. Optionally, combine with volume or EMA filters to confirm breakouts or exhaustion.
---
🔔 **Setting Up Alerts**
* Click the **Alert (🔔)** icon on TradingView.
* Under *Condition*, select:
* “8x Heikin Ashi Streak (1m)” → “8 Bullish Heikin Ashi (1m)”
* OR “8x Heikin Ashi Streak (1m)” → “8 Bearish Heikin Ashi (1m)”
* Choose **Once per bar close** to trigger the alert when the 8th candle completes.
* Add your custom message, e.g.
> “🚀 8 bullish Heikin Ashi candles in a row on 1-minute chart!”
> “🔻 8 bearish Heikin Ashi candles in a row on 1-minute chart!”
---
📊 **Best Practices**
* Works best on **liquid assets** (major forex pairs, indices, BTC/USD, etc.).
* Pair with **RSI**, **EMA**, or **Volume** indicators for stronger confirmation.
* Not a standalone buy/sell signal — treat it as a **momentum or exhaustion alert**.
* Can be adapted to other timeframes by changing chart resolution.
---
⚠️ **Disclaimer**
This indicator is for **educational and analytical purposes only**.
Trading carries risk — always test on demo accounts and use proper risk management.
No indicator guarantees profit; this is a tool for insight and timing, not financial advice.
PriceAction & Economic StrategyThis indicator combines price-action logic with macroeconomic data to generate trading signals.
Features:
- Price-action signals: A bullish signal occurs when a candle closes above its open; a bearish signal occurs when a candle closes below its open.
- Signal gap: The indicator includes an input called "Signal Gap (bars)" that defines the minimum number of bars between signals. By default the gap is set to 3, but you can adjust this between 1 and 10 to control signal frequency.
- Alerts: The script defines alert conditions for long and short signals, allowing you to create TradingView alerts that notify you when a new signal occurs.
- Economic data: The script uses TradingView's built-in `request.economic()` function to request U.S. GDP data. The GDP series is plotted in the Data Window for additional macroeconomic context.
How to use:
1. Add the indicator to a chart.
2. Open the indicator's settings and adjust the "Signal Gap (bars)" input to set the minimum bar gap between signals.
3. Look for green triangles plotted below the bars (bullish signals) and red triangles plotted above the bars (bearish signals). These appear only when the gap criterion is met.
4. If you want alerts, click the Alert button in TradingView, select this indicator, and choose either the Long or Short alert conditions.
5. To view the GDP data, open the Data Window; the GDP value will be shown alongside other series for each bar.
6. Use these signals in combination with your own analysis; this indicator is for educational purposes and does not constitute financial advice.
Auto Fibonacci LevelsAuto Fibonacci Momentum Zones with Visible Range Table
Overview and Originality
The Auto Fibonacci Momentum Zones indicator offers a streamlined, static overlay of Fibonacci retracement levels inspired by extreme RSI momentum thresholds, enhanced with a dynamic table displaying the high and low of the currently visible chart range. This isn't a repackaged RSI oscillator or basic Fib drawer—common in TradingView's library—but a purposeful fusion of geometric harmony (Fibonacci ratios) with momentum psychology (RSI extremes at 35/85), projected as fixed horizontal reference lines on the price chart. The addition of the visible range table, powered by PineCoders' VisibleChart library, provides real-time context for the chart's current view, enabling traders to quickly assess range compression or expansion relative to these zones.
This script's originality stems from its "static momentum mapping": by hardcoding Fib levels on a dynamic chart, it creates universal psychological support/resistance lines that transcend specific assets or timeframes.
Unlike dynamic Fib tools that auto-adjust to price swings (risking noise in ranging markets) or standalone RSI plots (confined to panes), this delivers clean, bias-adjustable overlays for confluence analysis. The visible range table justifies the library integration—it's not a gratuitous add-on but a complementary tool that quantifies the "screen real estate" of price action, helping users correlate Fib touches with actual volatility. Drawn from original code (no auto-generation or public templates), it builds TradingView's body of knowledge by simplifying multi-tool workflows into one indicator, ideal for discretionary traders who value visual efficiency over algorithmic complexity.
How It Works: Underlying Concepts
Fibonacci retracements, derived from the Fibonacci sequence and the golden ratio (≈0.618), identify potential reversal points based on the idea that markets retrace prior moves in predictable proportions: shallow (23.6%, 38.2%), mid (50%), and deep (61.8%, 78.6%).
Adjustable Outputs
1. The "Invert Fibs" toggle (default: true) for bearish/topping bias, can be flipped aligning with trend context.
2. Fibonacci Levels: Seven semi-transparent horizontal lines are drawn using `hline()`:
- 0.0 at high (gray).
- 0.236: high - (range × 0.236) (light cyan, shallow pullback).
- 0.382: high - (range × 0.382) (teal, common retracement).
- 0.5: midpoint average (green, equilibrium).
- 0.618: high - (range × 0.618) (amber, golden pocket for reversals).
- 0.786: high - (range × 0.786) (orange, deep support).
- 1.0 at low (gray).
Colors progress from cool (shallow) to warm (deep) for intuitive scanning.
3. Optional Fib Labels: Right-edge text labels (e.g., "0.618") appear only if enabled, positioned at the last bar + offset for non-cluttering visibility.
4. Visible Range Table: Leveraging the VisibleChart library's `visible.high()` and `visible.low()` functions, a compact 2x2 table (top-right corner) updates on the last bar to show the extrema of bars currently in view. This mashup enhances utility: Fib zones provide fixed anchors, while the table's dynamic values reveal if price is "pinned" to a zone (e.g., visible high hugging 0.382 signals resistance). The library is invoked sparingly for performance, adding value by bridging static geometry with viewport-aware data—unavailable in built-ins without custom code.
How to Use It
1. Setup:
Add to any chart (e.g., 15M for scalps, Daily for swings). As an overlay, lines appear directly on price candles—adjust chart scaling if needed.
2. Input Tweaks:
Invert Fibs: Enable for downtrends (85 top), disable for uptrends (35 bottom).
Show Fibs: Toggle labels for ratio callouts (off for clean charts).
Show Table: Display/hide the visible high/low summary (red for high, green for low, formatted to 2 decimals).
3. Trading Application:
Zone Confluence: Seek price reactions at each fibonacci level—e.g., a doji at 0.618 + rising volume suggests entry; use 0.0/1.0 as invalidation.
Range Context: Check the table: If visible high/low spans <20% of the Fib arc (e.g., both near 0.5), anticipate breakout; wider spans signal consolidation.
Multi-Timeframe: Overlay on higher TF for bias, lower for precision—e.g., Daily Fibs guide 1H entries.
Enhancements: Pair with volume or candlesticks; set alerts on line crosses via TradingView's built-in tools. Backtest on your symbols to validate (e.g., equities favor 0.382, forex the 0.786).
This indicator automates advanced Fibonacci synthesis dynamically, eliminating manual measurement and calculations.
published by ozzy_livin
TI65**TI65 (Trend Intensity 65)** is a technical indicator designed to measure the strength and momentum of a trend over two distinct periods. It compares a short-term 7-period simple moving average (SMA) with a long-term 65-period SMA, producing a ratio that helps traders identify shifts in market momentum and trend direction.
- When the **TI65 value is greater than 1**, it indicates that the short-term moving average is above the long-term average, suggesting increasing momentum and a potentially bullish trend.
- When the **TI65 value drops below 1**, it signals weakening short-term momentum relative to the longer-term trend, often interpreted as a bearish or consolidating phase.
This indicator can be applied to both price and volume data, making it useful for identifying periods of strong volume surges or price movements. By observing changes in the TI65 ratio, traders can pinpoint low-risk entry points for trend-following strategies and quickly recognize periods of market transition.
TI65 is commonly used by momentum and breakout traders for screening strong candidates and confirming the sustainability of ongoing trends. It is simple, effective, and easily implemented via custom scripts on popular platforms like TradingView.
Volume TI65**TI65 (Trend Intensity 65)** is a technical indicator designed to measure the strength and momentum of a trend over two distinct periods. It compares a short-term 7-period simple moving average (SMA) with a long-term 65-period SMA, producing a ratio that helps traders identify shifts in market momentum and trend direction.
- When the **TI65 value is greater than 1**, it indicates that the short-term moving average is above the long-term average, suggesting increasing momentum and a potentially bullish trend.
- When the **TI65 value drops below 1**, it signals weakening short-term momentum relative to the longer-term trend, often interpreted as a bearish or consolidating phase.
This indicator can be applied to both price and volume data, making it useful for identifying periods of strong volume surges or price movements. By observing changes in the TI65 ratio, traders can pinpoint low-risk entry points for trend-following strategies and quickly recognize periods of market transition.
TI65 is commonly used by momentum and breakout traders for screening strong candidates and confirming the sustainability of ongoing trends. It is simple, effective, and easily implemented via custom scripts on popular platforms like TradingView.
Bobs Gold and Red LinesThis indicator plots a normal 9 EMA corresponding to the current time frame, ie Bob's 1 min 9 ema Gold Line.
It also plots a 5 min 21 SMA (Bob's Red Line) on the 1 min chart. It actually plots the 5 min redline on timeframes other than the 1 min chart as well.
In other words, this will plot the actual 5 min 21 SMA whether you are on the 1 min, 5 min, or other time frames. I created this instead of having to use the workaround of a 105 SMA on the 1 min chart or having a separate 5 min chart open when trading Bob's 1 min strategies.
On the 1 min chart you will notice the red line typically makes a stairstep effect, that is because it is a 5 min SMA being plotted on the 1 min chart. The right hand end point should still perfectly match the current 5 min SMA price. I have been testing / using this script for several months.
I have noticed that the ema and sma on my tradovate charts do not perfectly match my tradingview charts, even just using the normal tradingview moving averages, however from what I can see on Bob's charts Tradingview seems to be close to the same as on Bob's Ninja charts. I have not started using Ninja yet, but plan to soon then I can compare apples to apples.
I made a few changes in names, etc before I published this script today, so hopefully I didn't inadvertently break anything. So let me know if you find anything off or not working as expected.
JOPA Channel (Dual-Volumed) v1 [JopAlgo]JOPA Channel (Dual-Volumed) v1
Short title: JOPAV1 • License: MPL-2.0 • Provider: JopAlgo
We have developed our own, first channel-based trading indicator and we’re making it available to all traders. The goal was a channel that breathes with the tape—built on a volume-weighted backbone—so the outcome stays lively instead of static. That led to the JOPA Channel.
All important features (at a glance)
In one line: A Rolling-VWAP channel whose width adapts with two volumes (RVOL + dollar-flow), adds order-flow asymmetry (OBV tilt) and regime awareness (Efficiency Ratio), and frames risk with outer containment bands from residual extremes—so you see fair value, momentum, and exhaustion in one view.
Feature list
Rolling VWAP centerline: Tracks where volume traded (fair value).
Dual-volume width: Bands expand/contract with relative volume and value traded (price×volume).
OBV tilt: Upper/lower widths skew toward the side actually pushing.
Regime adapter (ER): Tighter in trend, wider in chop—automatically.
Outer containment rails: Residual-extreme ceilings/floors, smoothed + margin.
20% / 80% guides: 20% light blue (discount), 80% light red (premium).
Squeeze dots (optional): Orange circles below candles during compression.
Non-repainting: Uses rolling sums and past-only math; no lookahead.
Default visual in this release
Containment rails + fill: ON (stepline, medium).
Inner Value rails + fill: Rails OFF (stepline, thin), fill ON (drawn only if rails are shown).
20% & 80% guides: ON (dashed, thin; 20% light blue, 80% light red).
Squeeze dots: OFF by default (orange circles when enabled).
What you see on the chart
RVWAP (centerline): Your compass for fair value.
Inner Value Bands (optional): Tight rails for breakouts and pullback timing.
Outer Containment Bands (default ON): High-confidence ceilings/floors for targets and fades.
20% / 80% guides: Quick read of “where in the channel” price is sitting.
Squeeze dots (optional): Volatility compression heads-up (no text labels).
Non-repainting note: The indicator does not revise closed bars. Forecast-Lock uses linear regression to extrapolate 1–3 bars ahead without using future data.
How to use it
Core reads (works on any timeframe)
Bias: Above a rising RVWAP → long bias; below a falling RVWAP → short bias.
Breakouts (momentum): Close beyond an Inner Value rail with RVOL ≥ threshold (alert provided).
Reversions (fades): Tag Outer Containment, stall, then close back inside → expect mean reversion toward RVWAP.
20/80 timing:
At/above 80% (light red) → premium/exhaustion risk; trim longs or consider fades if RVOL cools.
At/below 20% (light blue) → discount/exhaustion risk; trim shorts or consider longs if RVOL cools.
Squeeze clusters: When dots bunch up, expect a range break; use the Breakout alert as confirmation.
Playbooks by trading style
Day Trading (1–5m)
Setup: Keep the chart clean (Containment ON, Value rails OFF). Toggle Inner Value ON when hunting a breakout or timing a pullback.
Pullback Long: Dip to RVWAP / Lower Value with sub-threshold RVOL, then a close back above RVWAP → long.
Stop: Just beyond Lower Containment or the pullback swing.
Targets (1:1:1): ⅓ at RVWAP, ⅓ at Upper Value, ⅓ trail toward Upper Containment.
Breakout Long: After a squeeze cluster, take the Breakout Long alert (close > Upper Value, RVOL ≥ min). If no retest, demand the next bar holds outside.
Range Fade: Only when RVWAP is flat and dots cluster; short Upper Containment → RVWAP (mirror for longs at the lower rail).
Intraday (15m–1H)
HTF compass: Take bias from 4H.
Pullback Long: “Touch & reclaim” of RVWAP while RVOL cools; enter on the reclaim close or break of that candle’s high.
Breakout: Run Inner Value ON; act on Breakout alerts (RVOL gate ≈ 1.10–1.15 typical).
Avoid low-probability fades against the 4H slope unless RVWAP is flat.
Swing (4H–1D)
Continuation: In uptrends, buy pullbacks to RVWAP / Lower Value with sub-threshold RVOL; scale at Upper Containment.
Adds: Post-squeeze Breakout Long adds; trail on RVWAP or Lower Value.
Fades: Prefer when RVWAP flattens and price oscillates between containments.
Position (1D+)
Framework: Daily RVWAP slope + position within containment.
Add rule: Each reclaim of RVWAP after a dip is an add; trim into Upper Containment or near 80% light red.
Sizing: Containment distance is larger—size down and trail on RVWAP.
Inputs & Settings (complete)
Core
Source: Price input for RVWAP.
Rolling VWAP Length: Window of the centerline (higher = smoother).
Volume Baseline (RVOL): SMA window for relative volume.
Inner Value Bands (volatility-based width)
k·StdDev(residuals), k·ATR, k·MAD(residuals): Blend three measures into base width.
StdDev / ATR / MAD Lengths: Lookbacks for each.
Two-Volume Fusion
RVOL Exponent: How aggressively width responds to relative volume.
Dollar-Flow Gain: Adds push from price×volume (value traded).
Dollar-Flow Z-Window: Standardization window for dollar-flow.
Asymmetry (Order-Flow Tilt)
Enable Tilt (OBV): Lets flow skew upper/lower widths.
Tilt Strength (0..1): Gain applied to OBV slope z-score.
OBV Slope Z-Window: Window to standardize OBV slope.
Regime Adapter
Efficiency Ratio Lookback: Measures trend vs chop.
ER Width Min/Max: Maps ER into a width factor (tighter in trend, wider in chop).
Band Tracking (inner value rails)
Tracking Mode:
Base: Pure base rails.
Parallel-Lock: Smooth RVWAP & width; track in parallel.
Slope-Lock: Adds a fraction of recent slope (momentum-friendly).
Forecast-Lock: 1–3 bar extrapolation via linreg (non-repainting on closed bars).
Attach Strength (0..1): Blend tracked rails vs base rails.
Tracking Smooth Length: EMA smoothing of RVWAP and width.
Slope Influence / Forecast Lead Bars: Gains for the chosen mode.
Outer Containment Bands
Show Containment Bands: Master toggle (default ON).
Residual Extremes Lookback: Highest/lowest residual window.
Extreme Smoothing (EMA): Stability on extreme lines.
Margin vs inner width: Extra padding relative to smoothed inner width.
Squeeze & Alerts
Squeeze Window / Threshold: Width vs average; at/under threshold = dot (when enabled).
Min RVOL for Breakout: Required RVOL for breakout alerts.
Style (defaults in this release)
Inner Value rails: OFF (stepline, thin).
Inner & Containment fills: ON.
Containment rails: ON (stepline, medium).
20% / 80% guides: ON — 20% light blue, 80% light red, dashed, thin.
Squeeze dots: OFF by default (orange circles below candles when enabled).
Practical templates (copy/paste into a plan)
Momentum Breakout
Context: Squeeze cluster near RVWAP; Inner Value ON.
Trigger: Breakout Long (close > Upper Value & RVOL ≥ min).
Stop: Below Lower Value (tight) or below RVWAP (safer).
Targets (1:1:1): ⅓ Value → ⅓ Containment → ⅓ trail on RVWAP.
Pullback Continuation
Context: Uptrend; dip to RVWAP / Lower Value with cooling RVOL.
Trigger: Close back above RVWAP or break of reclaim candle’s high.
Stop: Just outside Lower Containment or pullback swing.
Targets: RVWAP → Upper Value → Upper Containment.
Containment Reversion (range)
Context: RVWAP flat; repeated containment tags.
Trigger: Stall at containment, then close back inside.
Stop: A step beyond that containment.
Target: RVWAP; runner only if RVOL stays muted.
Alerts included
DVWAP Breakout Long / Short (Value Bands)
Top Zone / Bottom Zone (20% / 80% guides)
Tip: On lower TFs, act on Breakout alerts with higher-TF bias (e.g., trade 5–15m in the direction of 1H/4H RVWAP slope/position).
Best practices
Let RVWAP be the compass; if unsure, wait until price picks a side.
Respect RVOL; low-RVOL breaks are prone to fail.
Use guides for timing, not certainty. Pair 20/80 zones with flow context.
Start with defaults; change one knob at a time.
Common pitfalls
Fading every containment touch → only fade when RVWAP is flat or RVOL cools.
Over-tuning inputs → the defaults are robust; small tweaks go a long way.
Fighting the higher timeframe on low TFs → expensive habit.
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