MACD + RSI + Volume + Support + CCIertyewrterwytewryteert
reewrt
erwtrew
trewt
rewtre
trewt
ewrt
wert
wert
ewrt
ewrt
wert
ewrt
rwertwertewrtewrtewtrewrtewrte
ertwertwertewqr
ewrtwertetr
Dönemler
🗓️ Day Separator🗓️ Day Separator – Visual Day Markers for Your Chart
This script adds automatic vertical lines to visually separate each trading day on your chart. It helps you quickly identify where each day starts and ends — especially useful for intraday and scalping strategies.
✅ Features:
Distinct colored lines for each weekday (Monday to Friday)
Optional day-of-week labels (toggle on/off)
Custom label position (top or bottom of the chart)
Works on any timeframe
Whether you're tracking market sessions or reviewing daily price action, this tool gives you a clean structure to navigate your charts with more clarity.
No Nonsense Forex Moving Averages ATR Bands[T1][T69]🔍 Overview
This indicator implements a No Nonsense Forex-style Baseline combined with ATR Bands, built using the moving_averages_library by Teyo69. It plots a configurable moving average and dynamically adjusts upper/lower ATR bands for trade zone detection and baseline confirmation.
✨ Features
30+ Moving Average types
ATR bands to define dynamic trade zones
Visual background highlighting for trade signals
Supports both "Within Range" and "Baseline Bias" display modes
Clean, minimal overlay with effective zone coloring
⚙️ How to Use
Choose MA Type: Select the baseline logic (SMA, EMA, HMA, etc.)
Configure ATR Bands: Adjust the ATR length and multiplier
Select Background Mode:
Within Range: Yellow = price inside band, Gray = outside
Long/Short Baseline Signal: Green = price above baseline, Red = below
Trade Setup:
Use the baseline for trend direction
Wait for confirmation or avoidance when price is outside the band
🛠 Configuration
Source: Price source for MA
MA Type: Any supported MA from the library
MA Length: Number of bars for smoothing
ATR Length: Period for Average True Range
ATR Multiplier: Width of the bands
Background Signal Mode: Choose visual signal type
⚠️ Limitations
Works with one MA at a time
Requires the moving_averages_library imported
Does not include confirmation or exit logic — use with full NNFX stack
💡 Tips
Combine with Volume or Confirmation indicators for NNFX strategy
Use adaptive MAs like KAMA, JMA, or VIDYA for dynamic baselines
Adjust ATR settings based on asset volatility
📘 Credits
Library: Teyo69/moving_averages_library/1
Inspired by: No Nonsense Forex (VP) Baseline + ATR Band methodology & MigthyZinger
signBTC Day&Session BoxesThis indicator visually segments the trading week on your chart, drawing each day from 17:00 to 17:00 New York time (corresponding to the typical forex daily rollover). For enhanced session structure, every day is further divided into three major trading sessions:
Asian Session
London Session
New York Session
Additionally, the indicator automatically marks the opening time of each new day at 17:00 (New York time) directly on the chart, helping traders quickly identify daily cycles and session transitions.
Customization Features
Adjustable Session Times: Users can modify the start and end times for each session (Asian, London, New York) to match personal or institutional trading hours.
Flexible Day Boundaries: The time marking the start and end of each day (default: 17:00 NY) can also be adjusted according to preference or asset specifics.
Opening Time Marker: The feature for drawing the daily opening time can be enabled or disabled in the settings.
This tool is ideal for traders needing clear visual cues for session boundaries and daily market resets, especially those operating across multiple time zones or managing strategies dependent on session-specific behavior. All settings are conveniently accessible and fully customizable within the indicator’s parameter panel.
QT Separator by BailaSimple and Clean QT indicator.
Helps to spot SSMT
Based on: Daye Quarterly Theory by toodegrees
These Quarters represent:
A - Accumulation (required for a cycle to occur)
M - Manipulation
D - Distribution
X - Reversal/Continuation
The Visualized Trader (Fractal Timeframe)The **The Visualized Trader (Fractal Timeframe)** indicator for TradingView is a tool designed to help traders identify strong bullish or bearish trends by analyzing multiple technical indicators across two timeframes: the current chart timeframe and a user-selected higher timeframe. It visually displays trend alignment through arrows on the chart and a condition table in the top-right corner, making it easy to see when conditions align for potential trade opportunities.
### Key Features
1. **Multi-Indicator Analysis**: Combines five technical conditions to confirm trend direction:
- **Trend**: Based on the slope of the 50-period Simple Moving Average (SMA). Upward slope indicates bullish, downward indicates bearish.
- **Stochastic (Stoch)**: Uses Stochastic Oscillator (5, 3, 2) to measure momentum. Rising values suggest bullish momentum, falling values suggest bearish.
- **Momentum (Mom)**: Derived from the MACD fast line (5, 20, 30). Rising MACD line indicates bullish momentum, falling indicates bearish.
- **Dad**: Uses the MACD signal line. Rising signal line is bullish, falling is bearish.
- **Price Change (PC)**: Compares the current close to the previous close. Higher close is bullish, lower is bearish.
2. **Dual Timeframe Comparison**:
- Calculates the same five conditions on both the current timeframe and a user-selected higher timeframe (e.g., daily).
- Helps traders see if the trend on the higher timeframe aligns with the current chart, providing context for stronger trade decisions.
3. **Visual Signals**:
- **Arrows on Chart**:
- **Current Timeframe**: Blue upward arrows below bars for bullish alignment, red downward arrows above bars for bearish alignment.
- **Higher Timeframe**: Green upward triangles below bars for bullish alignment, orange downward triangles above bars for bearish alignment.
- Arrows appear only when all five conditions align (all bullish or all bearish), indicating strong trend potential.
4. **Condition Table**:
- Displays a table in the top-right corner with two rows:
- **Top Row**: Current timeframe conditions (Trend, Stoch, Mom, Dad, PC).
- **Bottom Row**: Higher timeframe conditions (labeled with "HTF").
- Each cell is color-coded: green for bullish, red for bearish.
- The table can be toggled on/off via input settings.
5. **User Input**:
- **Show Condition Boxes**: Toggle the table display (default: on).
- **Comparison Timeframe**: Choose the higher timeframe (e.g., "D" for daily, default setting).
### How It Works
- The indicator evaluates the five conditions on both timeframes.
- When all conditions are bullish (or bearish) on a given timeframe, it plots an arrow/triangle to signal a strong trend.
- The condition table provides a quick visual summary, allowing traders to compare the current and higher timeframe trends at a glance.
### Use Case
- **Purpose**: Helps traders confirm strong trend entries by ensuring multiple indicators align across two timeframes.
- **Example**: If you're trading on a 1-hour chart and see blue arrows with all green cells in the current timeframe row, plus green cells in the higher timeframe (e.g., daily) row, it suggests a strong bullish trend supported by both timeframes.
- **Benefit**: Reduces noise by focusing on aligned signals, helping traders avoid weak or conflicting setups.
### Settings
- Access the indicator settings in TradingView to:
- Enable/disable the condition table.
- Select a higher timeframe (e.g., 4H, D, W) for comparison.
### Notes
- Best used in trending markets; may produce fewer signals in choppy conditions.
- Combine with other analysis (e.g., support/resistance) for better decision-making.
- The higher timeframe signals (triangles) provide context, so prioritize trades where both timeframes align.
This indicator simplifies complex trend analysis into clear visual cues, making it ideal for traders seeking confirmation of strong momentum moves.
QTR Sector Fund Performance vs SPY - by LMAnalyzes various market sectors and compares the last several quarters to the performance of the SPY. The goal is to seek out the sectors that have underperformed for several quarters in the hopes that they would overperform in the next quarter.
Digital Clock with Candle Alert📊 Digital Clock with Candle Alert
A sleek, customizable digital clock for your trading charts that displays real-time with seconds and provides visual alerts before new candles form. Never miss a candle entry again!
✨ Key Features:
- Real-time Digital Clock - Shows hours, minutes, and seconds in your chosen timezone
- Visual Candle Alerts - Blinking notification before new candles form
- Multi-Timeframe Alerts - Get alerts for any timeframe regardless of your chart period
- Fully Customizable - Colors, size, position, and alert timing all configurable
- Half-Second Blinking - Eye-catching 2Hz blink rate for maximum visibility
- 6 Timezone Options - Exchange, UTC, New York, London, Tokyo, Sydney
🎯 Use Cases:
- Scalping - Know exactly when the next candle will form
- Entry Timing - Perfect for strategies that enter on new candles
- Multi-Timeframe Trading - Monitor higher timeframe candles while on lower timeframes
- General Awareness - Always know the current time in your trading timezone
⚙️ Settings:
Time Settings:
- Timezone selection (Exchange default or specific zones)
Display Options:
- Text and background colors for normal operation
- Alert colors for blinking state
- Text size (tiny to huge)
- Position (9 locations on chart)
Alert Configuration:
- Enable/disable blinking alerts
- Select timeframe to monitor
- Alert lead time (5 seconds to 1 hour)
📝 Important Notes:
- Clock updates depend on incoming price ticks
- During low-volume periods, updates may be less frequent
- Works best on liquid instruments during active market hours
- Alert timeframe is independent of your chart timeframe
💡 Tips:
- Use contrasting alert colors for maximum visibility
- Set lead time based on your reaction needs
- Position clock where it won't obstruct price action
- Try red background with white text for urgent alerts
🔄 Version 1.0 - Initial release
SENTIMENTSENTIMENT Indicator – User Guide
Summary
The SENTIMENT indicator provides a quick visual reference for current and recent market sentiment. It compares the closing price to a custom sentiment value, which is the average of the 100-period (default) simple moving averages (SMA) of the high and low prices. The indicator displays this information in a color-coded table and plots the difference between price and sentiment as a line on your chart.
How to Use
1. Table Overview
The table appears on your chart in your chosen position.
It displays four rows: the current bar (“Now”) and the previous three bars (“Bar -1”, “Bar -2”, “Bar -3”).
Each row shows:
The bar label (The current bar is live and active, constantly changing)
The closing price for that bar
The difference between the closing price and the sentiment value for that bar
The sentiment difference is color-coded:
Green: Price is above sentiment (bullish)
Red: Price is below sentiment (bearish)
2. Chart Plot
The indicator plots a line showing the difference between the current price and the sentiment value.
When the line is above zero: price is above sentiment (bullish).
When the line is below zero: price is below sentiment (bearish).
3. Settings
Number of Lookback Bars: Adjusts the SMA period for sentiment calculation (default is 100).
Table Position: Choose where to display the table on your chart (e.g., Top Left, Bottom Right).
How to Interpret
Green values in the table or a plot above zero suggest bullish sentiment.
Red values in the table or a plot below zero suggest bearish sentiment.
Use this indicator to quickly assess if the market is trading above or below its recent average sentiment level.
Tips
You can combine the SENTIMENT indicator with other tools or signals for more robust trading decisions.
Adjust the lookback period to suit your trading timeframe and style.
Risk On/Off Index [SwissAlgo]Risk On/Off Index - Sector Rotation Analysis
----------------------------------------------------
What it does:
This indicator estimates market risk appetite by comparing the weighted performance of growth/cyclical sectors (Risk-On) against defensive sectors (Risk-Off).
It provides a normalized oscillator that ranges from -1 (extreme risk-off) to +1 (extreme risk-on), which may help traders identify potential shifts in market sentiment and sector rotation patterns.
The analysis examines whether institutional money flows favor aggressive growth assets or seek safety in defensive positions, potentially offering insights into the underlying risk tolerance that drives market movements. When properly interpreted alongside other analyses, this information could assist in understanding broader market cycles and sentiment transitions.
----------------------------------------------------
How it works:
The indicator analyzes 11 major sector ETFs weighted by their actual market capitalization representation:
Risk-On sectors (70% weight) : Technology (28%), Financials (11%), Consumer Discretionary (10%), Communication (9%), Industrials (8%), Energy (4%), Materials (2.5%), Real Estate (2%)
Risk-Off sectors (30% weight) : Healthcare (13%), Consumer Staples (6%), Utilities (2.5%)
The algorithm calculates the weighted performance difference over your selected timeframe (7 days to 12 months) and normalizes it using three methods: Simple Difference, Tanh Normalized, or Historical Range. A 7-period EMA smooths the signal, while a longer signal line (default 50) provides trend context.
----------------------------------------------------
Visual Features:
Main curve (Risk Appetite Delta) : The primary line shows the smoothed (7-period EMA) risk appetite reading. When above zero, growth sectors are outperforming defensive sectors (risk-on sentiment). When below zero, defensive sectors are outperforming growth sectors (risk-off sentiment).
Signal line : A longer EMA (default 50-period) of the risk appetite data that represents the underlying trend. Crossovers between the main curve and signal line may indicate potential momentum shifts in market sentiment (potential long signal when the crossover happens in extreme risk-off zones, and potential short signal when the crossunder occurs in extreme risk-on zones)
Dynamic color coding : The main curve color reflects both position and momentum:
Red : Risk-on territory (>0) with strengthening momentum (above signal line)
Green : Risk-on territory (>0) but weakening momentum (below signal line) - potential reversal warning
Maroon : Risk-off territory (<0) but strengthening momentum (above signal line) - potential reversal warning
Lime : Risk-off territory (<0) with strengthening momentum (below signal line)
Gradient background zones : Subtle fills indicate risk appetite intensity levels from moderate (0 to ±0.25) through strong (±0.25 to ±0.5) to extreme (±0.5 to ±1.0)
Sector breakdown table : Shows individual sector performance with clear Risk-On/Risk-Off categorization
Reference levels : Horizontal lines mark neutral (0), strong (±0.5), and extreme (±1) risk appetite zones
This color system allows traders to quickly assess not just current sentiment (above/below zero) but also whether that sentiment is strengthening or potentially reversing based on the relationship with the signal line.
----------------------------------------------------
Who may benefit:
Portfolio managers rotating between growth and defensive allocations
Swing traders timing sector rotation plays
Risk managers monitoring overall market sentiment
Asset allocators adjusting exposure based on risk appetite cycles
----------------------------------------------------
Key applications:
Identify when markets transition from growth-seeking to risk-averse behavior
Time entries into cyclical sectors during risk-on phases
Rotate to defensive sectors when risk appetite weakens
Spot divergences between individual stocks and broader market sentiment
----------------------------------------------------
Limitations:
This indicator reflects US equity sector dynamics and may not capture risk sentiment in other asset classes or geographic regions. ETF-based analysis introduces slight tracking differences from underlying sector performance. Past performance patterns do not guarantee future results.
----------------------------------------------------
Disclaimer:
This indicator is for educational and analytical purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice or trading recommendations. Users should conduct their own analysis and risk assessment before making investment decisions. SwissAlgo assumes no responsibility for trading losses or investment outcomes based on this indicator's signals.
JXMJXRS - Macro Flow CompassThe Macro Flow Compass is designed to give a high-level view of market behaviour by tracking how capital is moving across the crypto ecosystem. It’s not an entry or exit tool. Instead, it helps identify when the overall environment is shifting, whether capital is favouring majors like BTC and ETH, rotating into altcoins, or moving into stables.
The goal is to keep you aligned with broader market cycles, so trades are taken with macro context in mind.
The script works by analyzing four key metrics:
Total crypto market cap (CRYPTOCAP:TOTAL)
Bitcoin dominance (CRYPTOCAP:BTC.D)
Ethereum dominance (CRYPTOCAP:ETH.D)
Combined stable coin dominance from USDT and USDC (CRYPTOCAP:USDT.D + USDC.D)
These are smoothed using a basic EMA (Exponential Moving Average) to reduce noise. The script then checks for changes in dominance and market cap slope to detect when capital is likely flowing into or out of specific sectors.
When certain conditions align, the script will shade the background with one of the following colours:
Green Panel – Risk-on behaviour in majors. Usually appears when total market cap is trending up and BTC dominance is dropping, or stable coin dominance is falling. It suggests BTC and ETH are likely receiving capital inflow, not necessarily pumping but positioned better for upside.
Orange Panel – Altcoin rotation. Happens when ETH dominance is rising or stables are pulling back, while the market cap is also rising. These tend to precede altcoin outperformance phases.
Blue Panel – Stable coin build-up. Signals increasing stable coin dominance. Often a defensive move, either after a drop or in anticipation of volatility. This can mean risk-off conditions.
The indicator uses three main settings:
Smoothing Length – Controls how reactive the EMAs are. Lower values react quicker to short-term changes; higher values will slow things down and highlight more persistent trends.
Dominance Flip Threshold (%) – Sets how much a dominance value must change in one bar to trigger a condition. It’s there to avoid reacting to tiny shifts that don’t really matter.
Macro Cap Slope Length – Determines how the macro market cap trend is calculated. It looks at the slope of a long-term regression to decide if we’re in an uptrend or downtrend.
This tool works on higher timeframes like the weekly or monthly, and it’s especially useful when combined with your own technical analysis.
Slope Based Divergences of Wavelet - (Multi-Length, Dual Price)
1. Summary
This is not a typical divergence indicator. Instead of comparing simple peaks and troughs in price and an oscillator, the Slope-Based Divergence Engine performs a far more rigorous analysis by measuring the rate of change (slope) itself.
It identifies high-probability divergence opportunities by detecting moments when price is accelerating strongly in one direction while the underlying momentum, measured by a sophisticated Scientific Wavelet Oscillator, is accelerating in the opposite direction. By requiring confirmation from two different price sources (high and low) and across multiple timeframes, it aims to filter out noise and pinpoint only the most potent moments of market exhaustion.
2. The Core Innovation: Why Slope?
Traditional divergence indicators look at levels (e.g., price made a higher high, RSI made a lower high). This script looks at momentum's momentum.
Traditional Method: "Price went up, but momentum went down."
This Script's Method: "Price is accelerating upwards faster than ever, but momentum is decelerating faster than ever."
By focusing on the slope, the indicator identifies points of maximum stress and disagreement in the market, which often precede sharp reversals.
3. Key Components & Logic
The script's power comes from its multi-layered filtering system:
Scientific Wavelet Oscillator: The indicator's engine is a custom oscillator built using a Haar Wavelet Transform. Unlike standard oscillators (like RSI or Stochastics) that use a single period, this one analyzes the price across multiple different time scales (or "octaves") simultaneously. It then fuses this information into a single, robust momentum reading that is normalized using a statistical Z-score.
Multi-Length Average Slope: The script doesn't just calculate a single slope. It calculates the slope across a range of lookback periods (e.g., from 1 to 30 bars) and then averages them. This creates a much smoother and more reliable measure of the trend's current velocity, filtering out the noise from any single period.
Dual Price Confirmation: To qualify a price trend, the script requires that the slope of two separate price sources (by default, high and low) are both in agreement. For a bearish divergence, the slopes of both the session high and low must be accelerating upwards aggressively. This ensures the entire price bar is participating in the move and avoids false signals from wicks or narrow ranges.
Multi-Timeframe Percent Rank: The script uses percentrank to normalize the calculated slopes, putting them on a scale of 0 to 100. This allows it to identify statistically extreme readings. A divergence is only confirmed if it meets the criteria on both a Long-Term (LL) and Short-Term (LS) lookback. This ensures the signal is not just a momentary fluke but is a valid point of exhaustion in both the immediate and broader context.
4. How to Interpret the Signals
The indicator plots simple labels on the chart when all conditions are met:
Green "Bull" Label (Bullish Divergence): Appears when:
The slopes of both high and low are accelerating downwards (in the bottom 8% of their historical readings for both long and short lookbacks).
Simultaneously, the slope of the wavelet oscillator is accelerating upwards (in the top 92% of its historical readings).
Meaning: Price is in a state of free-fall, but the underlying momentum is aggressively turning up. This signals that selling pressure is likely exhausted.
Red "Bear" Label (Bearish Divergence): Appears when:
The slopes of both high and low are accelerating upwards (in the top 92% of their historical readings).
Simultaneously, the slope of the wavelet oscillator is accelerating downwards (in the bottom 8% of its historical readings).
Meaning: Price is in a state of extreme ascent (a "blow-off top"), but the underlying momentum is collapsing. This signals that buying pressure is likely exhausted.
5. How to Use in Trading
Reversal Signals: The labels should be treated as high-probability signals that a trend is exhausted and a reversal or significant pullback is imminent.
Confirmation Tool: Do not use the labels as standalone entry signals. Always seek confirmation from other forms of analysis, such as a break of a trendline, a key support/resistance level holding, or a classic candlestick reversal pattern.
Exit Signals: A bearish divergence label can serve as a powerful signal to take profit on long positions, and a bullish label can be a signal to cover shorts.
Dudix 1-2-3 TABELKA lot (EMA238)This indicator is designed to detect 1-2-3 reversal patterns within a clearly defined trend, using a triple EMA filter (EMA 20, EMA 50, and EMA 238).
By requiring that the EMAs be aligned (e.g., EMA 20 > EMA 50 > EMA 238 for an uptrend), the script effectively avoids false signals during sideways/consolidation phases, focusing only on entries in the direction of the dominant trend.
It highlights both Bullish 1-2-3 and Bearish 1-2-3 formations based on price structure and EMA positioning.
Additionally, the indicator includes a customizable point-distance calculator that shows how far the current candle’s close is from the EMA 50, helping traders gauge momentum or entry timing. The point size can be adjusted (e.g., 0.00001 for GBPUSD or 0.01 for JPY pairs) directly from the settings panel.
✅ Ideal for scalpers and intraday traders who want to:
Trade with the trend
Avoid chop and consolidation
Enter on price confirmation patterns
Seasonality Seasonality chart showing accurate monthly average % gains and win rate over a user defined time period.
The chart displays the possible pattern of price moves over the year and aligns with the start of the current year, projecting into the future.
Works on both calendar day and trading day charts. Not suitable for other timeframes.
Momentum Candle ProjectionThis indicator projects future price momentum by calculating a directional vector from recent price movements. It uses a custom implementation of the atan2 function to create a vector average of the last N candles and visualizes this projection as a synthetic future candle.
🔍 What It Does:
✅ Tracks recent momentum using geometric vectors from price change.
✅ Projects a synthetic "momentum candle" one bar ahead, showing anticipated direction and magnitude.
✅ Optionally plots a secondary "future candle" based on a smoothed estimate of projected price vs. real current close.
⚙️ Settings:
Vector Lookback (bars): Controls how many bars are used to calculate the momentum vector.
Projection Length Multiplier: Adjusts how far forward the vector is projected based on its strength.
🟢 How To Use:
Use the lime/red projection candle to anticipate short-term directional bias.
Use the orange/maroon future candle to compare projected continuation vs. current closing price.
Spot early reversals, continuation zones, and momentum decay in real-time.
Gold vs DXYThe 30-day rolling correlation between Gold (XAU/USD) and the US Dollar Index (DXY) shows how closely the two move together — or more often, in opposite directions — over the last 30 trading days. In most market environments, the relationship is pretty straightforward: when the dollar goes up, gold tends to go down, and vice versa. That’s because gold is priced in dollars, so a stronger dollar makes it more expensive for international buyers, which usually softens demand.
But it’s not always that simple. There are times when this inverse correlation breaks down. For example, if real yields (like the US 10-year yield minus inflation expectations) are rising, that can pressure gold even if the dollar is falling — because higher real returns elsewhere make gold less attractive. Another case is when other currencies, like the euro or yen, rally strongly on their own central bank decisions. This can pull DXY lower without necessarily signaling weakness in the U.S. economy — meaning gold might not benefit much.
There are also “risk-on” moments where investors rotate into equities or crypto, selling off both gold and the dollar in favor of yield or momentum. And during periods of crisis or uncertainty, both gold and the dollar can rise together as safe-haven assets, breaking the usual pattern entirely.
That’s why tracking the rolling correlation is helpful. It shows whether the historical relationship between gold and the dollar is still holding — or if we’re entering a different market regime. It’s not about predicting exact price moves, but about understanding the current backdrop. When gold and DXY are moving out of sync as expected, it can support your trade thesis. But when the correlation flattens or flips, it’s often a sign to dig deeper — macro forces may be shifting.
Fib Swing Counter [A@J]Fib Swing Counter — Trade the Rhythm of the Market
This indicator automatically marks swing highs and lows with Fibonacci numbers (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, …), helping you track market structure, count price legs, and identify hidden order behind price movement.
Core Features:
Auto-detects pivots and labels them with the Fibonacci sequence.
Alternates between highs and lows — no repeats, no noise.
Custom reset time — start your count at the New York session open, a major news event, or your own strategic point.
Clean and simple visual display, adaptable to your chart style.
How Traders Use It:
Liquidity cycles: Spot when price is expanding or contracting in Fibonacci-driven waves.
Entry timing: Wait for setups to align with a key Fib count.
Confluence with other tools: Combine with ICT concepts, SMT divergence, supply/demand blocks, or Fibonacci retracements.
Session-based analysis: Restart the sequence everyMarket Open, Midnight, New York or London open to study price behavior from a fresh anchor point.
Whether you're into smart money concepts, price action, or algorithmic patterns, this tool adds a rhythmic layer to your analysis — because markets move with sequence, not randomness.
zSph x Larry Waves Wave Degree TimingElliott Waves are fractal structures governed by time. The categorization of time in relation to Elliott Wave is named ‘Wave Degree’.
All waves are characterized by relative size called degree. The degree of a wave is determined by its size and position relative to lesser waves (smaller time and size), corresponding waves (similar time and size) and encompassing waves (greater time and size).
Elliott named 9 degrees (Supercycle – Subminuette).
Elliott also stated the Subminuette degree is discernable on the HOURLY chart.
# Concept
BINANCE:BTCUSDT
Degree is governed by Time yet it is not based upon time lengths (or price lengths), rather it is based on form and structure – a function of both price and time.
The precise degree may not be identified in real time, yet the objective is to be within +/- 1 standard deviation of the expected degree to be aware of the overall market progression.
Understanding degree helps in the identification of when an impulse or a correction is nearing completion and to be aware of the major pivot in price action to occur as a result of the completion of a major expansion or major retracement and be aware of when major pivots in price relating to major expansions and major retracements by managing expectations from a time perspective.
*Important to understand* : If price is currently in a Wave Degree Extension or a Very Complex Correction, the wave degree timings will be distorted (extended in time).
Example: A Cycle typically lasts a few years - yet can last a decade(s) in an Extension.
It’s best to keep the analysis on the Minute/Minuette timeframe to manage timing expectations yet always refer back to the Higher Time Frame Structure.***
# Correct Usage
BEFORE PLACING THE ANCHOR TO DISPLAY ZONES:
Completion of prior wave structure should be completed and there needs to be confirmation the next wave structure is in progression, such as a change in market structure.
Anchor :
Best to anchor on the higher time frame to ensure you always have the anchor point defined when you scale down/move down in the timeframes.
Ensure the anchor point is placed at the termination of a structure/beginning of a new structure (Generally they will be price extremes – extreme highs and lows)
Zones :
Minimum Zones : The minimum amount of time of completion for a single wave structure to complete for a degree.
Average Zones : The average amount of time of completion for a single wave structure to complete for a degree.
Maximum Zones : The general maximum amount of time of completion for a single wave structure to complete for a degree.
Wave Degree Timeframe Analysis :
Higher-Level Degrees (Primary, Intermediate, Minor) - Utilize on H4+ timeframe
Lower-Level Degrees (Minute, Minuette, Subminuette) – Utilize on 15M to H4 timeframe
Micro-Level Degrees (Micro and Submicro) – Utilize on timeframes less than 15M
(There is a chart in the settings you can toggle on/off that reiterates this as well.)
# Settings
Y-Axis Offset :
It is a scale relative to the asset being viewed. Example:
- If using on Bitcoin, Bitcoin moves on average $1,000 of dollars up or down (on the Y-Axis), therefore it would be relevant to use values with 4 nominal values to offset it correctly to view easier on the chart as needed.
- If using on SP500, SP500 moves on average $50-100 of dollars up or down (on the Y-Axis), therefore it would be relevant to use values with 2 or 3 nominal values to offset it correctly to view easier on the chart as needed.
Extend :
This option allows to extend lines for the borders of the zones towards price action.
Horizontal Grid from Base PriceSupport & Resistance Indicator function
This inductor is designed to analyze the "resistance line" according to the principle of mother fish technique, with the main purpose of:
• Measure the price swing cycle (Price Swing Cycle)
• analyze the standings of a candle to catch the tempo of the trade
• Used as a decision sponsor in conjunction with Price Action and key zones.
⸻
🛠️ Main features
1. Create Automatic Resistance Boundary
• Based on the open price level of the Day (Initial Session Open) bar.
• It's the main reference point for building a price framework.
2. Set the distance around the resistance line.
• like 100 dots/200 dots/custom
• Provides systematic price tracking (Cycle).
3. Number of lines can be set.
• For example, show 3 lines or more of the top-bottom lines as needed.
4. Customize the color and style of the line.
• The line color can be changed, the line will be in dotted line format according to the user's style.
• Day/night support (Dark/Light Theme)
5. Support for use in conjunction with mother fish techniques.
• Use the line as a base to observe whether the "candle stand above or below the line".
• It is used to help see the behavior of "standing", "loosing", or "flow" of prices on the defensive/resistance line.
6. The default is available immediately.
• The default is based on the current Day bar opening price.
• Round distance, e.g. 200 points, top and bottom, with 3 levels of performance
Timeframe Quadrants | InvrsROBINHOODTimeframe Quadrant Visualizer
Summary
This indicator is a powerful visualization tool designed to help traders analyze price action by dividing various timeframes into four distinct, color-coded quadrants. By breaking down periods from a full year to a single minute, it offers a unique perspective on market cycles and intraday patterns. The script includes fully customizable colors and display styles, allowing you to tailor the visual output to your specific charting needs.
Key Features
Multiple Timeframe Divisions: Choose to divide a Year, Month, Week, Day, Hour, or Minute into four parts.
Customizable Quadrant Logic:
Year: Divided into calendar quarters (Jan-Mar, Apr-Jun, Jul-Sep, Oct-Dec).
Month: Divided into four approximate weeks (Days 1-7, 8-14, 15-21, 22-end).
Week: Divided into four 42-hour blocks, starting from Sunday at 00:00.
Day: Divided into four 6-hour blocks.
Hour: Divided into four 15-minute blocks.
Minute: Divided into four 15-second blocks.
Flexible Display Options: Visualize the quadrants as either a full Background Color overlay or a Bar Overlay that colors the price bars directly.
Timeframe Separators: A vertical line is automatically drawn at the beginning of each selected timeframe (e.g., at the start of each new day when "Day" is selected), making it easy to see where each period begins.
Full Color Customization: All four quadrant colors are user-definable, along with a global transparency setting to ensure the indicator complements your chart without obscuring price action.
Timezone-Aware: All calculations are performed based on a user-selected timezone from a dropdown menu, ensuring accuracy and consistency across different markets and trading sessions. As an added option, there is a manual input if the timezone is not available.
How to Use
Add to Chart: Add the "Timeframe Quadrants" indicator to your chart.
Open Settings: Hover over the indicator's name on your chart and click the Settings (gear) icon.
Configure the Indicator:
Timeframe: Select the primary time period you want to divide (e.g., "Day", "Week", "Hour").
Display Method: Choose whether you want the quadrants to appear as a Background Color or a Bar Overlay.
Timezone: Select the desired timezone from the dropdown menu. This is crucial for aligning the quadrants with specific market sessions (e.g., "America/New_York" for the NYSE session).
Quadrant Colors: Customize the color for each of the four quadrants.
Transparency %: Adjust the transparency of the colors to your preference.
Underlying Concepts
This script operates by using Pine Script's built-in time and date variables. It identifies the current bar's position within the user-selected timeframe (timeframe_choice) and assigns it to one of four quadrants based on pre-defined logic. For example, when "Day" is selected, it uses the hour() function to determine which 6-hour block the current bar falls into. The vertical separator lines are generated by detecting a change in the relevant time unit (e.g., ta.change(dayofmonth)), which marks the first bar of a new period.
Disclaimer: This tool is intended for visual analysis and pattern recognition. It does not generate buy or sell signals and should be used in conjunction with your own trading strategy and risk management. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Black ArrowExpected Move Levels - Closer Prices
This script calculates and displays the expected move based on Implied Volatility (IV) and Days to Expiration (DTE). It helps traders visualize potential price movement ranges over a defined period using historical close price.
🔹 Key Features:
Customizable IV and DTE inputs
Displays 2 green levels above price and 2 red levels below, representing half and full expected move
Mid-lines between base price and first green/red level
Each level is labeled with its price value
Lines are drawn short and don't extend through the full chart for clarity
📘 Formula:
Expected Move = Price × IV × √(DTE / 365)
Use this tool to estimate market volatility zones and potential price targets without relying on traditional indicators.