Why EMA Isn't What You Think It IsMany new traders adopt the Exponential Moving Average (EMA) believing it's simply a "better Simple Moving Average (SMA)". This common misconception leads to fundamental misunderstandings about how EMA works and when to use it.
EMA and SMA differ at their core. SMA use a window of finite number of data points, giving equal weight to each data point in the calculation period. This makes SMA a Finite Impulse Response (FIR) filter in signal processing terms. Remember that FIR means that "all that we need is the 'period' number of data points" to calculate the filter value. Anything beyond the given period is not relevant to FIR filters – much like how a security camera with 14-day storage automatically overwrites older footage, making last month's activity completely invisible regardless of how important it might have been.
EMA, however, is an Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) filter. It uses ALL historical data, with each past price having a diminishing - but never zero - influence on the calculated value. This creates an EMA response that extends infinitely into the past—not just for the last N periods. IIR filters cannot be precise if we give them only a 'period' number of data to work on - they will be off-target significantly due to lack of context, like trying to understand Game of Thrones by watching only the final season and wondering why everyone's so upset about that dragon lady going full pyromaniac.
If we only consider a number of data points equal to the EMA's period, we are capturing no more than 86.5% of the total weight of the EMA calculation. Relying on he period window alone (the warm-up period) will provide only 1 - (1 / e^2) weights, which is approximately 1−0.1353 = 0.8647 = 86.5%. That's like claiming you've read a book when you've skipped the first few chapters – technically, you got most of it, but you probably miss some crucial early context.
▶️ What is period in EMA used for?
What does a period parameter really mean for EMA? When we select a 15-period EMA, we're not selecting a window of 15 data points as with an SMA. Instead, we are using that number to calculate a decay factor (α) that determines how quickly older data loses influence in EMA result. Every trader knows EMA calculation: α = 1 / (1+period) – or at least every trader claims to know this while secretly checking the formula when they need it.
Thinking in terms of "period" seriously restricts EMA. The α parameter can be - should be! - any value between 0.0 and 1.0, offering infinite tuning possibilities of the indicator. When we limit ourselves to whole-number periods that we use in FIR indicators, we can only access a small subset of possible IIR calculations – it's like having access to the entire RGB color spectrum with 16.7 million possible colors but stubbornly sticking to the 8 basic crayons in a child's first art set because the coloring book only mentioned those by name.
For example:
Period 10 → alpha = 0.1818
Period 11 → alpha = 0.1667
What about wanting an alpha of 0.17, which might yield superior returns in your strategy that uses EMA? No whole-number period can provide this! Direct α parameterization offers more precision, much like how an analog tuner lets you find the perfect radio frequency while digital presets force you to choose only from predetermined stations, potentially missing the clearest signal sitting right between channels.
Sidenote: the choice of α = 1 / (1+period) is just a convention from 1970s, probably started by J. Welles Wilder, who popularized the use of the 14-day EMA. It was designed to create an approximate equivalence between EMA and SMA over the same number of periods, even thought SMA needs a period window (as it is FIR filter) and EMA doesn't. In reality, the decay factor α in EMA should be allowed any valye between 0.0 and 1.0, not just some discrete values derived from an integer-based period! Algorithmic systems should find the best α decay for EMA directly, allowing the system to fine-tune at will and not through conversion of integer period to float α decay – though this might put a few traditionalist traders into early retirement. Well, to prevent that, most traditionalist implementations of EMA only use period and no alpha at all. Heaven forbid we disturb people who print their charts on paper, draw trendlines with rulers, and insist the market "feels different" since computers do algotrading!
▶️ Calculating EMAs Efficiently
The standard textbook formula for EMA is:
EMA = CurrentPrice × alpha + PreviousEMA × (1 - alpha)
But did you know that a more efficient version exists, once you apply a tiny bit of high school algebra:
EMA = alpha × (CurrentPrice - PreviousEMA) + PreviousEMA
The first one requires three operations: 2 multiplications + 1 addition. The second one also requires three ops: 1 multiplication + 1 addition + 1 subtraction.
That's pathetic, you say? Not worth implementing? In most computational models, multiplications cost much more than additions/subtractions – much like how ordering dessert costs more than asking for a water refill at restaurants.
Relative CPU cost of float operations :
Addition/Subtraction: ~1 cycle
Multiplication: ~5 cycles (depending on precision and architecture)
Now you see the difference? 2 * 5 + 1 = 11 against 5 + 1 + 1 = 7. That is ≈ 36.36% efficiency gain just by swapping formulas around! And making your high school math teacher proud enough to finally put your test on the refrigerator.
▶️ The Warmup Problem: how to start the EMA sequence right
How do we calculate the first EMA value when there's no previous EMA available? Let's see some possible options used throughout the history:
Start with zero : EMA(0) = 0. This creates stupidly large distortion until enough bars pass for the horrible effect to diminish – like starting a trading account with zero balance but backdating a year of missed trades, then watching your balance struggle to climb out of a phantom debt for months.
Start with first price : EMA(0) = first price. This is better than starting with zero, but still causes initial distortion that will be extra-bad if the first price is an outlier – like forming your entire opinion of a stock based solely on its IPO day price, then wondering why your model is tanking for weeks afterward.
Use SMA for warmup : This is the tradition from the pencil-and-paper era of technical analysis – when calculators were luxury items and "algorithmic trading" meant your broker had neat handwriting. We first calculate an SMA over the initial period, then kickstart the EMA with this average value. It's widely used due to tradition, not merit, creating a mathematical Frankenstein that uses an FIR filter (SMA) during the initial period before abruptly switching to an IIR filter (EMA). This methodology is so aesthetically offensive (abrupt kink on the transition from SMA to EMA) that charting platforms hide these early values entirely, pretending EMA simply doesn't exist until the warmup period passes – the technical analysis equivalent of sweeping dust under the rug.
Use WMA for warmup : This one was never popular because it is harder to calculate with a pencil - compared to using simple SMA for warmup. Weighted Moving Average provides a much better approximation of a starting value as its linear descending profile is much closer to the EMA's decay profile.
These methods all share one problem: they produce inaccurate initial values that traders often hide or discard, much like how hedge funds conveniently report awesome performance "since strategy inception" only after their disastrous first quarter has been surgically removed from the track record.
▶️ A Better Way to start EMA: Decaying compensation
Think of it this way: An ideal EMA uses an infinite history of prices, but we only have data starting from a specific point. This creates a problem - our EMA starts with an incorrect assumption that all previous prices were all zero, all close, or all average – like trying to write someone's biography but only having information about their life since last Tuesday.
But there is a better way. It requires more than high school math comprehension and is more computationally intensive, but is mathematically correct and numerically stable. This approach involves compensating calculated EMA values for the "phantom data" that would have existed before our first price point.
Here's how phantom data compensation works:
We start our normal EMA calculation:
EMA_today = EMA_yesterday + α × (Price_today - EMA_yesterday)
But we add a correction factor that adjusts for the missing history:
Correction = 1 at the start
Correction = Correction × (1-α) after each calculation
We then apply this correction:
True_EMA = Raw_EMA / (1-Correction)
This correction factor starts at 1 (full compensation effect) and gets exponentially smaller with each new price bar. After enough data points, the correction becomes so small (i.e., below 0.0000000001) that we can stop applying it as it is no longer relevant.
Let's see how this works in practice:
For the first price bar:
Raw_EMA = 0
Correction = 1
True_EMA = Price (since 0 ÷ (1-1) is undefined, we use the first price)
For the second price bar:
Raw_EMA = α × (Price_2 - 0) + 0 = α × Price_2
Correction = 1 × (1-α) = (1-α)
True_EMA = α × Price_2 ÷ (1-(1-α)) = Price_2
For the third price bar:
Raw_EMA updates using the standard formula
Correction = (1-α) × (1-α) = (1-α)²
True_EMA = Raw_EMA ÷ (1-(1-α)²)
With each new price, the correction factor shrinks exponentially. After about -log₁₀(1e-10)/log₁₀(1-α) bars, the correction becomes negligible, and our EMA calculation matches what we would get if we had infinite historical data.
This approach provides accurate EMA values from the very first calculation. There's no need to use SMA for warmup or discard early values before output converges - EMA is mathematically correct from first value, ready to party without the awkward warmup phase.
Here is Pine Script 6 implementation of EMA that can take alpha parameter directly (or period if desired), returns valid values from the start, is resilient to dirty input values, uses decaying compensator instead of SMA, and uses the least amount of computational cycles possible.
// Enhanced EMA function with proper initialization and efficient calculation
ema(series float source, simple int period=0, simple float alpha=0)=>
// Input validation - one of alpha or period must be provided
if alpha<=0 and period<=0
runtime.error("Alpha or period must be provided")
// Calculate alpha from period if alpha not directly specified
float a = alpha > 0 ? alpha : 2.0 / math.max(period, 1)
// Initialize variables for EMA calculation
var float ema = na // Stores raw EMA value
var float result = na // Stores final corrected EMA
var float e = 1.0 // Decay compensation factor
var bool warmup = true // Flag for warmup phase
if not na(source)
if na(ema)
// First value case - initialize EMA to zero
// (we'll correct this immediately with the compensation)
ema := 0
result := source
else
// Standard EMA calculation (optimized formula)
ema := a * (source - ema) + ema
if warmup
// During warmup phase, apply decay compensation
e *= (1-a) // Update decay factor
float c = 1.0 / (1.0 - e) // Calculate correction multiplier
result := c * ema // Apply correction
// Stop warmup phase when correction becomes negligible
if e <= 1e-10
warmup := false
else
// After warmup, EMA operates without correction
result := ema
result // Return the properly compensated EMA value
▶️ CONCLUSION
EMA isn't just a "better SMA"—it is a fundamentally different tool, like how a submarine differs from a sailboat – both float, but the similarities end there. EMA responds to inputs differently, weighs historical data differently, and requires different initialization techniques.
By understanding these differences, traders can make more informed decisions about when and how to use EMA in trading strategies. And as EMA is embedded in so many other complex and compound indicators and strategies, if system uses tainted and inferior EMA calculatiomn, it is doing a disservice to all derivative indicators too – like building a skyscraper on a foundation of Jell-O.
The next time you add an EMA to your chart, remember: you're not just looking at a "faster moving average." You're using an INFINITE IMPULSE RESPONSE filter that carries the echo of all previous price actions, properly weighted to help make better trading decisions.
EMA done right might significantly improve the quality of all signals, strategies, and trades that rely on EMA somewhere deep in its algorithmic bowels – proving once again that math skills are indeed useful after high school, no matter what your guidance counselor told you.
Üstel Hareketli Ortalama (EMA)
Consecutive Candles Above/Below EMADescription:
This indicator identifies and highlights periods where the price remains consistently above or below an Exponential Moving Average (EMA) for a user-defined number of consecutive candles. It visually marks these sustained trends with background colors and labels, helping traders spot strong bullish or bearish market conditions. Ideal for trend-following strategies or identifying potential trend exhaustion points, this tool provides clear visual cues for price behavior relative to the EMA.
How It Works:
EMA Calculation: The indicator calculates an EMA based on the user-specified period (default: 100). The EMA is plotted as a blue line on the chart for reference.
Consecutive Candle Tracking: It counts how many consecutive candles close above or below the EMA:
If a candle closes below the EMA, the "below" counter increments; any candle closing above resets it to zero.
If a candle closes above the EMA, the "above" counter increments; any candle closing below resets it to zero.
Highlighting Trends: When the number of consecutive candles above or below the EMA meets or exceeds the user-defined threshold (default: 200 candles):
A translucent red background highlights periods where the price has been below the EMA.
A translucent green background highlights periods where the price has been above the EMA.
Labeling: When the required number of consecutive candles is first reached:
A red downward arrow label with the text "↓ Below" appears for below-EMA streaks.
A green upward arrow label with the text "↑ Above" appears for above-EMA streaks.
Usage:
Trend Confirmation: Use the highlights and labels to confirm strong trends. For example, 200 candles above the EMA may indicate a robust uptrend.
Reversal Signals: Prolonged streaks (e.g., 200+ candles) might suggest overextension, potentially signaling reversals.
Customization: Adjust the EMA period to make it faster or slower, and modify the candle count to make the indicator more or less sensitive to trends.
Settings:
EMA Length: Set the period for the EMA calculation (default: 100).
Candles Count: Define the minimum number of consecutive candles required to trigger highlights and labels (default: 200).
Visuals:
Blue EMA line for tracking the moving average.
Red background for sustained below-EMA periods.
Green background for sustained above-EMA periods.
Labeled arrows to mark when the streak threshold is met.
This indicator is a powerful tool for traders looking to visualize and capitalize on persistent price trends relative to the EMA, with clear, customizable signals for market analysis.
Explain EMA calculation
Other trend indicators
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ADX EMA's DistanceIt is well known to technical analysts that the price of the most volatile and traded assets do not tend to stay in the same place for long. A notable observation is the recurring pattern of moving averages that tend to move closer together prior to a strong move in some direction to initiate the trend, it is precisely that distance that is measured by the blue ADX EMA's Distance lines on the chart, normalized and each line being the distance between 2, 3 or all 4 moving averages, with the zero line being the point where the distance between them is zero, but it is also necessary to know the direction of the movement, and that is where the modified ADX will be useful.
This is the well known Directional Movement Indicator (DMI), where the +DI and -DI lines of the ADX will serve to determine the direction of the trend.
Simple Volatility ConeThe Simple Volatility Cone indicator projects the potential future price range of a stock based on recent volatility. It calculates rolling standard deviation from log returns over a defined window, then uses a confidence interval to estimate the upper and lower bounds the price could reach over a future time horizon. These bounds are plotted directly on the chart, offset into the future, allowing traders to visualize expected price dispersion under a geometric Brownian motion assumption. This tool is useful for risk management, trade planning, and visualizing the potential impact of volatility.
Adaptive Dual MA Trend FilterAdaptive Dual MA Trend Filter is a versatile Pine Script™ indicator that delivers clear, reliable trend signals using customizable moving averages:
Dual‑Stage Filtering – Apply any traditional MA (SMA, EMA, VWMA, HMA, RMA, TEMA, DEMA, FRAMA, TRIMA) or advanced smoothing (ALMA, T3) as your “main” and “filter” MAs. The filter MA is double‑smoothed for noise suppression, then converted into a robust “double‑filtered” baseline.
Flexible Inputs – Select lengths, sources (close, high, low, hl2), offsets, sigma, and volume factors to tailor the responsiveness and smoothness to your favorite timeframe or asset class.
Intuitive Signals – The script detects confirmed bullish (green) and bearish (red) trend shifts as:
Circle marker on the MA line
Triangle arrows below/above bars
Full candles and MA line colored by current trend
Clean Overlay – Works directly on your price chart, with optional semi‑transparent fills for extra visual clarity.
Theme Support – Choose from Vibrant, Pastel, Neon, Classic, Monochrome, Solarized, or Material palettes for seamless chart styling.
Ideal for swing traders and intraday scalpers alike, Multi‑Source Double‑Filter Trend offers both “set‑and‑forget” simplicity and deep customization for power users.
Usage
Add to chart → Inputs → tweak MA types/lengths
Watch for color changes and markers
Combine with volume or momentum filters for entry confirmation
Enjoy clearer trend identification and smoother trade signals!
Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Use at your own risk.
EMA Break & Retest + Trend TableThis script is designed to identify potential buy and sell trading opportunities based on 21 EMA (Exponential Moving Average) break and retest patterns, with confirmation from multi-timeframe trend analysis. It combines actionable signal generation with a clean, real-time trend overview table.
✅ 1. EMA Break & Retest Logic
Detects when the price crosses above or below the 21 EMA and then closes in the direction of the breakout.
Generates buy signals on upward break/retest, and sell signals on downward break/retest.
✅ 2. Multi-Timeframe Confirmation
Filters signals using higher timeframe trends to avoid false entries.
Buy signals are shown only if the 1H or 4H trend is bullish.
Sell signals are shown only if the 1H or 4H trend is bearish.
✅ 3. Visual Signal Plotting
Displays green "BUY" labels below bars and red "SELL" labels above bars.
Users can toggle buy/sell signals on or off with checkboxes.
✅ 4. Alerts
Built-in alertcondition() functions allow traders to set real-time alerts when buy or sell signals are triggered.
✅ 5. Multi-Timeframe Trend Table
A dynamic table appears in the top-right corner showing trend status across:
Daily (D)
4 Hour (4H)
1 Hour (1H)
15 Minute (15M)
5 Minute (5M)
Each timeframe is marked as Bullish (green) or Bearish (red) depending on the current price vs. 21 EMA.
The latest signal (“BUY” / “SELL” / “—”) is displayed at the bottom of the table.
weighted support or resistance linesQ: Why should users choose this script?
A: I found that in all the publicly available scripts about support and resistance lines, there is basically no weight identification for these lines. In other words, users do not know which support or resistance lines are the most important. So I specifically wrote this script.
1. By adjusting the weights, only the most effective support or resistance lines are displayed. (Length threshold of trend price (Bar))
2. By selecting the number of K-lines, only the latest number of support or resistance lines generated will be displayed. (Maximum number of reserved S/R lines)
3. By selecting whether to automatically remove lines, only support or resistance lines that have not been penetrated by the k-line will be displayed. If this function is checked, the weight can be adjusted lower, as high-weight SR may have already been penetrated, and the newly generated SR may have a lower weight. (Automatically remove lines penetrated by closing price confirmation)
4. Notes: The default parameters work well in 15-minute candlestick charts. For candlestick charts with other time periods, the parameters can be adjusted appropriately. It is suitable for sideways trading but not for strong trends.
5. I'm quite satisfied with the performance of the script, as I specifically optimized it, lol
Institutional Support/Resistance Locator🏛️ Institutional Support/Resistance Locator
Overview
The Institutional Support/Resistance Locator identifies high-probability demand and supply zones based on strong price rejection, large candle bodies, and elevated volume . These zones are commonly targeted or defended by institutional participants, helping traders anticipate potential reversal or continuation areas.
⸻
How It Works
The indicator uses a confluence of conditions to detect zones:
• Large Body Candles: Body size must exceed the moving average body size multiplied by a user-defined factor.
• High Volume: Volume must exceed the moving average volume by a configurable multiplier.
• Wick Rejection: Candles must show strong upper or lower wicks indicating aggressive rejection.
• If all criteria are met:
• Bullish candles form a Demand Zone.
• Bearish candles form a Supply Zone.
Each zone is plotted for a customizable number of future bars, representing areas where institutions may re-engage with the market.
⸻
Key Features
• ✅ Highlights institutional demand and supply areas dynamically
• ✅ Customizable sensitivity: body, volume, wick, padding, and zone extension
• ✅ Zones plotted as translucent regions with auto-expiry
• ✅ Works across all timeframes and markets
⸻
How to Use
• Trend Traders: Use demand zones for potential bounce entries in uptrends, and supply zones for pullback short entries in downtrends.
• Range Traders: Use zones as potential reversal points inside sideways market structures.
• Scalpers & Intraday Traders: Combine with volume or price action near zones for refined entries.
Always validate zone reactions with supporting indicators or price behavior.
⸻
Why This Combination?
The combination of wick rejection, volume confirmation, and large candle structure is designed to reflect footprints of smart money. Rather than relying on fixed pivots or subjective zones, this logic adapts to the current market context with statistically grounded conditions.
⸻
Why It’s Worth Using
This tool offers traders a structured way to interpret institutional activity on charts without relying on guesswork. By plotting potential high-impact areas, it helps improve reaction time.
⸻
Note :
• This script is open-source and non-commercial.
• No performance guarantees or unrealistic claims are made.
• It is intended for educational and analytical purposes only.
RSI-EMA-Crossing with Donchian-Stop-LossThe Donchian RSI Indicator is a visual tool that combines momentum and trend analysis to identify high-quality long opportunities based on RSI crossovers, price action, and Donchian channel dynamics.
How It Works
Momentum Signal: A bullish RSI crossover is detected when the RSI crosses above its moving average.
Trend Filter: A signal is only valid if the crossover occurs while the price is above its moving average – filtering out entries against the prevailing trend.
Signal Candle: The high of the crossover candle is stored.
Entry Trigger: A valid signal occurs when a later candle closes above that signal high.
Stop-Loss (Visual Only)
The lower band of the Donchian Channel acts as a visual reference for a dynamic stop-loss level.
Features
Customizable RSI, Donchian Channel, and moving average lengths
Selectable MA types: SMA, EMA, WMA, VWMA, HMA
Signal candle highlighted (yellow background)
Entry points labeled on the chart
Price MA and Donchian Channel plotted
Trend filter improves signal quality by confirming upward bias
Use Case
Designed for swing and position traders
Optimized for use on daily or 4H charts
Z-Score Trend Monitor [EdgeTerminal]The Z-Score Trend Monitor measures how far the short-term moving average deviates from the long-term moving average using the spread difference of the two — in standardized units. It’s designed to detect overextension, momentum exhaustion, and potential mean-reversion points by converting the spread between two moving averages into a normalized Z-score and tracking its change and direction over time.
The idea behind this is to catch the changes in the direction of a trend earlier than the usual and lagging moving average lines, allowing you to react faster.
The math behind the indicator itself is very simple. We take the simple moving average of the spread between a long term and short term moving average, and divide it by the difference between the spread and spread mean.
This results in a relatively accurate and early acting trend detector that can easily identify overbought and oversold levels in any timeframe. From our own testing, we recommend using this indicator as a trend confirmation tool.
How to Use It:
Keep an eye on the Z-Score or the blue line. When it goes over 2, it indicates an overbought or near top level, and when it goes below -2, it indicates an oversold or near bottom.
When Z-Score returns to zero or grey line, it suggests mean reversion is in progress.
You can also change the Z-Score criteria from 2 and -2 in the settings to any number you’d like for tighter or wider levels.
For scalping and fast trading setups, we recommend shorter SMAs, such as 5 and 20, and for longer trading setups such as swing trades, we recommend 20 and 100.
Settings:
Short SMA: Lookback period of short term simple moving average for the lower side of the SMA spread.
Short Term Weight: Additional weight or multiplier to suppress the short term SMA calculation. This is used to refine the SMA calculation for more granular and edge cases when needed, usually left at 1, meaning it will take the entire given value in the short SMA field.
Long SMA: Lookback period of long term simple moving average for the upper side of the SMA spread.
Long Term Weight: Additional weight or multiplier to suppress the long term SMA calculation. This is used to refine the long SMA calculation for more granular and edge cases when needed, usually left at 1, meaning it will take the entire given value in the long SMA field.
Z-Score Threshold: The threshold for upper (oversold) and lower (overbought) levels. This can also be set individually from the style page.
Z-Score Lookback Window: The lookback period to calculate spread mean and spread standard deviation
C&B Auto MK5C&B Auto MK5.2ema BullBear
Overview
The C&B Auto MK5.2ema BullBear is a versatile Pine Script indicator designed to help traders identify bullish and bearish market conditions across various timeframes. It combines Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), Relative Strength Index (RSI), Average True Range (ATR), and customizable time filters to generate actionable signals. The indicator overlays on the price chart, displaying EMAs, a dynamic cloud, scaled RSI levels, bull/bear signals, and market condition labels, making it suitable for swing trading, day trading, or scalping in trending or volatile markets.
What It Does
This indicator generates bull and bear signals based on the interaction of two EMAs, filtered by RSI thresholds, ATR-based volatility, a 50/200 EMA trend filter, and user-defined time windows. It adapts to market volatility by adjusting EMA lengths and RSI thresholds. A dynamic cloud highlights trend direction or neutral zones, with candlestick coloring in neutral conditions. Market condition labels (current and historical) provide real-time trend and volatility context, displayed above the chart.
How It Works
The indicator uses the following components:
EMAs: Two EMAs (short and long) are calculated on a user-selected timeframe (1, 5, 15, 30, or 60 minutes). Their crossover or crossunder triggers potential bull/bear signals. EMA lengths adjust based on volatility (e.g., 10/20 for volatile markets, 5/10 for non-volatile).
Dynamic Cloud: The area between the EMAs forms a cloud, colored green for bullish trends, red for bearish trends, or a user-defined color (default yellow) for neutral zones (when EMAs are close, determined by an ATR-based threshold). Users can widen the cloud for visibility.
RSI Filter: RSI is scaled to price levels and plotted on the chart (optional). Signals are filtered to ensure RSI is within volatility-adjusted bull/bear thresholds and not in overbought/oversold zones.
ATR Volatility Filter: An optional filter ensures signals occur during sufficient volatility (ATR(14) > SMA(ATR, 20)).
50/200 EMA Trend Filter: An optional filter restricts bull signals to bullish trends (50 EMA > 200 EMA) and bear signals to bearish trends (50 EMA < 200 EMA).
Time Filter: Signals are restricted to a user-defined UTC time window (default 9:00–15:00), aligning with active trading sessions.
Market Condition Labels: Labels above the chart display the current trend (Bullish, Bearish, Neutral) and optionally volatility (e.g., “Bullish Volatile”). Up to two historical labels persist for a user-defined number of bars (default 5) to show recent trend changes.
Visual Aids: Bull signals appear as green triangles/labels below the bar, bear signals as red triangles/labels above. Candlesticks in neutral zones are colored (default yellow).
The indicator ensures compatibility with standard chart types (e.g., candlestick or bar charts) to produce realistic signals, avoiding non-standard types like Heikin Ashi or Renko.
How to Use It
Add to Chart: Apply the indicator to a candlestick or bar chart on TradingView.
Configure Settings:
Timeframe: Choose a timeframe (1, 5, 15, 30, or 60 minutes) to match your trading style.
Filters:
Enable/disable the ATR volatility filter to focus on high-volatility periods.
Enable/disable the 50/200 EMA trend filter to align signals with the broader trend.
Enable the time filter and set custom UTC hours/minutes (default 9:00–15:00).
Cloud Settings: Adjust the cloud width, neutral zone threshold, color, and transparency.
EMA Colors: Use default trend-based colors or set custom colors for short/long EMAs.
RSI Display: Toggle the scaled RSI and its thresholds, with customizable colors.
Signal Settings: Toggle bull/bear labels and set signal colors.
Market Condition Labels: Toggle current/historical labels, include/exclude volatility, and adjust decay period.
Interpret Signals:
Bull Signal: A green triangle or “Bull” label below the bar indicates potential bullish momentum (EMA crossover, RSI above bull threshold, within time window, passing filters).
Bear Signal: A red triangle or “Bear” label above the bar indicates potential bearish momentum (EMA crossunder, RSI below bear threshold, within time window, passing filters).
Neutral Zone: Yellow candlesticks and cloud (if enabled) suggest a lack of clear trend; consider range-bound strategies or avoid trading.
Market Condition Labels: Check labels above the chart for real-time trend (Bullish, Bearish, Neutral) and volatility status to confirm market context.
Monitor Context: Use the cloud, RSI, and labels to assess trend strength and volatility before acting on signals.
Unique Features
Volatility-Adaptive EMAs: Automatically adjusts EMA lengths based on ATR to suit volatile or non-volatile markets, reducing manual configuration.
Neutral Zone Detection: Uses an ATR-based threshold to identify low-trend periods, helping traders avoid choppy markets.
Scaled RSI Visualization: Plots RSI and thresholds directly on the price chart, simplifying momentum analysis relative to price.
Flexible Time Filtering: Supports precise UTC-based trading windows, ideal for day traders targeting specific sessions.
Historical Market Labels: Displays recent trend changes (up to two) with a decay period, providing context for market shifts.
50/200 EMA Trend Filter: Aligns signals with the broader market trend, enhancing signal reliability.
Notes
Use on standard candlestick or bar charts to ensure accurate signals.
Test the indicator on a demo account to optimize settings for your market and timeframe.
Combine with other analysis (e.g., support/resistance, volume) for better decision-making.
The indicator is not a standalone system; use it as part of a broader trading strategy.
Limitations
Signals may lag in fast-moving markets due to EMA-based calculations.
Neutral zone detection may vary in extremely volatile or illiquid markets.
Time filters are UTC-based; ensure your platform’s timezone settings align.
This indicator is designed for traders seeking a customizable, trend-following tool that adapts to volatility and provides clear visual cues with robust filtering for bullish and bearish market conditions.
6 Dynamic EMAs by Koenigsegg🚀 6 Dynamic EMAs by Koenigsegg
Take control of your chart with ultimate flexibility. This tool gives you 6 customizable EMAs across any timeframe, helping you read the market like a pro — whether you're scalping seconds or swinging days. Built for precision, designed for dominance.
The combinations? Endless. Mix and match any EMA lengths and timeframes for tailored confluence — exactly how elite traders operate.
🔑 Key Features
✅ 6 Fully Customizable EMAs
⏳ Multi-Timeframe Support (from seconds to months)
🎨 Custom Colors & Thickness for each EMA
🚨 Built-in Cross Alerts for instant trade signals
🧠 Clean, efficient logic using request.security()
🔁 Dynamically toggle EMAs on/off
⚙️ Lightweight for smooth chart performance
🧩 Endless combo potential — confluence on your terms
📈 What Is an EMA?
The EMA is a type of moving average that adjusts more quickly to recent price changes than a Simple Moving Average (SMA). It does this by giving exponentially more weight to the most recent candles.
⚙️ How Does It Function?
Smoothing Price Data:
It takes the average of closing prices over a chosen period (like 20 or 50 candles), but gives more influence to the latest prices.
Reacts Quickly to Price Shifts:
Since recent data is weighted more heavily, the EMA adjusts faster to sudden price changes — helping you spot trend reversals or momentum shifts earlier.
Dynamic Support & Resistance:
Traders often use EMAs as moving support/resistance levels. Price often "respects" EMAs in trending markets — bouncing off them during pullbacks.
Trend Confirmation:
- If price is above the EMA, the market is likely in an uptrend.
- If price is below the EMA, the market is likely in a downtrend.
- Multiple EMAs (like 12/21 or 50/200) crossing each other are used for entry/exit signals.
💡 Example:
If you use a 21 EMA on a chart, it shows you the average price of the last 21 candles, but the most recent ones weigh heavier. This makes the EMA more responsive than an SMA, and better for short-term or active trading.
📊 Why EMAs Matter — and How Multi-Timeframe EMAs Give You the Edge
Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) are essential tools for identifying trend direction, momentum shifts, and dynamic support/resistance. Because they weight recent price data more heavily, EMAs adapt quickly to changing market conditions, giving traders early insight into reversals or continuations.
Where this script shines is in its multi-timeframe (MTF) capability. For example, plotting a daily EMA on a 4H chart gives you high-level directional guidance while still allowing precision entries. This enables confluence between LTF (low timeframe) signals and HTF (high timeframe) momentum — a crucial edge used by institutional-level traders.
You can configure the tool to run classic combos like the 12/21 crossover on your current chart, while layering in a 50 or 200 EMA from a higher timeframe for macro confirmation. The 6th EMA, colored light blue by default, is perfect for adding one final level of structure insight — often used as a long-term anchor or trend bias marker.
Whether you're riding the wave or catching the reversal, these EMAs serve as your adaptable compass in every environment.
🎯 Purpose
This indicator was built to give traders a clear, responsive, and multi-timeframe edge using dynamic Exponential Moving Averages. Whether you're trend-following, identifying momentum shifts, or building a confluence system — these 6 EMAs are here to align with your strategy and style.
💡 Pro Tip
Instead of cluttering your chart with multiple EMA indicators, this script consolidates all into one sleek tool. You can toggle off bands you don't currently need, like running only the 12/21 EMAs on your active chart timeframe, while adding the 12/21 EMAs from a higher timeframe to guide trade decisions.
With this setup, you're not just reacting — you're orchestrating your trades with intention.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research and trade responsibly. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Multi-Timeframe EMAs with Cross Alerts (Up & Down)📌 Indicator Name:
Multi-Timeframe EMAs with Cross Alerts (Up & Down)
🛠️ Core Features:
✅ 1. Multi-Timeframe EMA Display
The script calculates and displays 6 different Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs).
Each EMA has:
Custom length input (e.g., 9, 21, etc.).
Custom timeframe selection (e.g., 1H, 4H, 1D).
Custom color for easy identification on the chart.
✅ 2. EMA Visualization
Each of the six EMAs is plotted on the chart using the selected color and thickness.
They respond dynamically to different timeframes (current or higher/lower).
✅ 3. Cross Detection Logic
The script can detect crossover and crossunder between EMA pairs:
EMA 1 and EMA 2
EMA 3 and EMA 4
EMA 5 and EMA 6
(Optional: can be extended to other combinations.)
✅ 4. Alert Toggles
Users can enable or disable alerts for each pair independently:
Alert: EMA 1 crosses EMA 2
Alert: EMA 3 crosses EMA 4
Alert: EMA 5 crosses EMA 6
(You added an additional option for EMA 4 vs EMA 6 later.)
✅ 5. Visual Alert Markers
The script uses alert() function to send alert messages when:
An EMA crosses above another (crossover)
An EMA crosses below another (crossunder)
Alerts include clear icons like 🔼 and 🔽 in the messages.
🔔 Use Case Scenarios
Swing traders: Identify longer-term cross signals on higher timeframes.
Scalpers: Use lower-timeframe EMAs with fast alert reactions.
Multi-timeframe analysis: Spot alignment between trend-following EMAs across different periods.
✅ Bonus
Fully customizable — great for adapting to your own strategy, whether it's trend confirmation, re-entry signals, or early reversals
📌 اسم المؤشر:
المتوسطات المتحركة الأسية (EMA) متعددة الفريمات مع تنبيهات تقاطع صاعدة وهابطة
🛠️ الميزات الأساسية:
✅ 1. دعم متعدد للفريمات الزمنية
يقوم السكربت بحساب وعرض 6 متوسطات متحركة أسية (EMA) مختلفة.
يمكن تخصيص كل EMA من حيث:
الطول (مثل: 9، 21...).
الفريم الزمني (مثل: الساعة، الأربع ساعات، اليومي...).
اللون، لتسهيل التمييز بين الخطوط على الشارت.
✅ 2. عرض المتوسطات على الرسم البياني
يتم رسم كل من المتوسطات الستة باستخدام اللون والتنسيق الذي تختاره.
المتوسطات تتفاعل تلقائيًا مع التغييرات في الفريم الزمني.
✅ 3. كشف التقاطعات
يمكن للسكربت كشف تقاطعات (صعودًا أو هبوطًا) بين أزواج المتوسطات التالية:
EMA 1 و EMA 2
EMA 3 و EMA 4
EMA 5 و EMA 6
(ويمكنك إضافة المزيد مثل EMA 4 مع EMA 6 حسب الحاجة)
✅ 4. التحكم في التنبيهات
يمكن للمستخدم تفعيل أو تعطيل التنبيهات لكل زوج من المتوسطات على حدة:
تنبيه عند تقاطع EMA 1 و EMA 2
تنبيه عند تقاطع EMA 3 و EMA 4
تنبيه عند تقاطع EMA 5 و EMA 6
(وأي أزواج إضافية يتم إضافتها لاحقًا)
✅ 5. تنبيهات مرئية برسائل واضحة
السكربت يرسل تنبيهات عبر وظيفة alert() عند حدوث:
تقاطع صاعد (EMA يتقاطع من الأسفل إلى الأعلى).
تقاطع هابط (EMA يتقاطع من الأعلى إلى الأسفل).
التنبيه يحتوي على رموز توضيحية مثل 🔼 و 🔽 ليسهل قراءته.
🎯 مناسب لـ:
المتداولين المتأرجحين (Swing Traders): لاكتشاف تقاطعات على الفريمات الكبرى.
المضاربين (Scalpers): باستخدام EMA سريعة على فريمات صغيرة مع تنبيهات فورية.
محللي الفريمات المتعددة: لتأكيد الاتجاه أو الانعكاس بناءً على تقاطع متوسطات من فريمات مختلفة.
✅ مزايا إضافية:
قابل للتخصيص بشكل كامل حسب استراتيجيتك.
مناسب لعدة أساليب: تأكيد الترند، إعادة الدخول، أو إشارات الانعكاس المبكر.
Trend Channel SwiftEdgeTrend Channel SwiftEdge
The Trend Channel SwiftEdge is a powerful, visually striking tool designed to help traders identify trends and potential trade setups across multiple timeframes with a futuristic, tech-inspired design. This indicator combines a dynamic trend channel with a multi-timeframe trend dashboard and intelligent signal filtering to provide clear, actionable insights for both novice and experienced traders. Its unique neon-lit, holographic visuals give it a modern, cutting-edge feel, making your chart analysis both functional and visually engaging.
What It Does
This indicator identifies trends on your chart using a dynamic price channel and provides buy and sell signals based on trend alignments across multiple timeframes. It also features a dashboard that displays the trend direction (Up, Down, or Neutral) for six timeframes: 1-minute, 5-minute, 15-minute, 1-hour, 4-hour, and 1-day. The signals are filtered using a user-selected higher timeframe to ensure they align with broader market trends, reducing noise and improving trade reliability.
How It Works
The Trend Channel SwiftEdge operates in three key steps:
Dynamic Trend Channel:
A moving average (MA) is calculated based on your chosen type (SMA, EMA, or WMA) and length (default is 14 periods). This MA forms the backbone of the trend channel.
The channel’s upper and lower bounds are created by calculating the highest and lowest values of the MA over a period (default is 2x the MA length). These bounds help identify the trend: if the price is above the upper channel, the trend is Up; if below the lower channel, the trend is Down; otherwise, it’s Neutral.
The MA and channel lines are plotted with neon colors (green for Up, red for Down, blue for the channel bounds) to create a holographic effect, with a glowing background fill between the channels to highlight the trend direction.
Multi-Timeframe Trend Dashboard:
The indicator analyzes trends across six timeframes (1M, 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, D1) using the same trend channel logic.
A dashboard in the top-right corner displays each timeframe’s trend direction with a futuristic design: neon green for Up, neon red for Down, and gray for Neutral, all set against a dark background with neon blue accents.
Signal Generation with Higher Timeframe Filter:
Buy and Sell signals are generated when the trend on the chart’s timeframe (e.g., 1M) aligns with a user-selected higher timeframe (e.g., 15M).
A Buy signal ("🚀 SwiftEdge BUY") appears when the price crosses above the upper channel (indicating an Up trend) and the selected higher timeframe’s trend also turns Up. If the higher timeframe is Neutral, the indicator checks even higher timeframes (e.g., 1H and 4H for a 15M filter) to confirm the trend direction.
A Sell signal ("🛑 SwiftEdge SELL") appears when the price crosses below the lower channel (indicating a Down trend) and the selected higher timeframe’s trend turns Down, with the same higher timeframe check for Neutral cases.
Signals are displayed as neon-colored labels with emojis for a futuristic touch, making them easy to spot.
Why This Combination?
The combination of a dynamic trend channel, multi-timeframe analysis, and signal filtering in Trend Channel SwiftEdge is designed to provide a comprehensive view of market trends while reducing false signals. The trend channel identifies the primary trend on your chart, while the multi-timeframe dashboard ensures you’re aware of the broader market context. The signal filter leverages higher timeframes to confirm that your trades align with larger trends, which is particularly useful in volatile markets where smaller timeframes can be noisy. This synergy creates a balanced approach, blending short-term precision with long-term trend confirmation, all wrapped in a visually engaging tech-inspired design.
How to Use It
Add the Indicator: Apply Trend Channel SwiftEdge to your TradingView chart.
Customize Settings:
SwiftEdge Moving Average Type: Choose between SMA, EMA, or WMA (default is EMA) to adjust the trend channel’s sensitivity.
SwiftEdge MA Length: Set the period for the moving average (default is 14).
SwiftEdge Signal Filter Timeframe: Select a higher timeframe (1M, 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, D1) to filter signals (default is 15M). For example, on a 1M chart, selecting 15M ensures signals align with the 15-minute trend.
Show SwiftEdge Ribbon: Toggle the visibility of the trend channel’s moving average (default is true).
Show SwiftEdge Background Glow: Toggle the glowing background fill between the channel bounds (default is true).
Start/End Year: Set a time range for the indicator’s signals (default is 1900–2100).
Interpret the Dashboard: Check the top-right dashboard to see the trend direction across all timeframes. Use this to understand the broader market context.
Trade with Signals:
Look for "🚀 SwiftEdge BUY" labels (neon green) below candles to enter long positions when the trend aligns across timeframes.
Look for "🛑 SwiftEdge SELL" labels (neon red) above candles to enter short positions or exit longs.
Ensure the signal aligns with your trading strategy and risk management.
What Makes It Original?
Trend Channel SwiftEdge stands out with its futuristic, tech-inspired design and multi-timeframe synergy. Unlike traditional trend indicators, it combines a visually striking neon aesthetic with practical functionality, making trend analysis both intuitive and engaging. The signal filtering mechanism, which checks higher timeframes dynamically, ensures trades are backed by broader market trends, reducing the risk of false signals. The dashboard provides a quick, at-a-glance view of trends across multiple timeframes, empowering traders to make informed decisions without needing to switch charts. This blend of advanced trend analysis, intelligent signal filtering, and a high-tech visual theme makes it a unique tool for modern traders.
Notes
Best used on trending markets; in choppy conditions, consider using higher timeframes for signal filtering to reduce noise.
Adjust the MA length and signal timeframe based on your trading style (shorter for scalping, longer for swing trading).
Why This Description Complies with TradingView House Rules
What It Does:
Clearly explains that the script identifies trends using a dynamic channel, provides buy/sell signals, and displays a multi-timeframe dashboard.
How It Does It:
Breaks down the process into three steps: trend channel calculation, multi-timeframe analysis, and signal generation with higher timeframe filtering.
Explains the logic (e.g., price crossing the channel, trend alignment across timeframes) in simple terms.
How to Use It:
Provides step-by-step instructions on adding the indicator, customizing settings, interpreting the dashboard, and trading with signals.
What Makes It Original:
Highlights the unique tech-inspired design, the combination of trend channel and multi-timeframe filtering, and the dynamic higher timeframe check.
Justifies the Combination:
Explains why the trend channel, multi-timeframe dashboard, and signal filtering are used together: to balance short-term precision with long-term trend confirmation, reducing false signals.
Self-Contained:
All concepts (trend channel, multi-timeframe analysis, signal filtering) are explained within the description without requiring external research.
Avoids technical jargon that would confuse non-Pine readers, focusing on user-friendly language.
This updated description with the new name "Trend Channel SwiftEdge" should fully comply with TradingView’s House Rules. If you need further adjustments, let me know!
Momentum Table - Felipe📊 Momentum Table – By Felipe
This multi-timeframe momentum dashboard displays a clean and color-coded overview of key trend and momentum indicators across 6 major timeframes (5m to 1W), directly on your chart. It’s ideal for quickly identifying market strength, trend alignment, and potential reversals at a glance.
🔍 Features:
EMA Trend Check (EMA 9, 20, 100, 200):
Compares the current close against each EMA.
✅ Green check = price is above the EMA (bullish bias).
🔻 Red arrow = price is below the EMA (bearish bias).
Visual trend alignment helps you spot strong directional setups.
RSI (Relative Strength Index):
Displays current RSI (14) value per timeframe.
Background color highlights momentum conditions:
🔴 Red = Overbought (>70)
🟢 Green = Oversold (<30)
⚪ Gray = Neutral
Stochastic RSI:
Uses Stoch RSI applied to RSI (14) for sensitivity.
Background color follows the same logic as RSI for quick visual cues.
Compact Visual Table:
Located in the bottom-right corner.
Clean design with headers and rows labeled by timeframe.
Helps traders monitor trend and momentum confluence across multiple timeframes in real time.
This tool supports momentum-based strategies, EMA stacking confirmation, and multi-timeframe alignment, making it ideal for scalpers, swing traders, and trend followers alike.
EMA Oscillating Trend📈 EMA Oscillating Trend by AI-123
The EMA Oscillating Trend indicator is a dynamic trend visualizer that enhances traditional EMA behavior by offsetting the line based on trend direction, providing a more intuitive and visually distinct representation of market momentum.
🔍 Key Features:
🔵 Bullish Color Customization – Define your preferred color for bullish trends
🔴 Bearish Color Customization – Set a different tone for bearish phases
🪄 Adjustable Line Thickness – Tailor the EMA's appearance to your chart style
📐 Offset Multiplier Input – Automatically pushes the EMA above price in a downtrend and below price in an uptrend for enhanced clarity
⚙️ User-Friendly Inputs – No coding knowledge required; full customization in the settings panel
🧠 How It Works:
Calculates a primary EMA line (OV) and a sub-component to compare against (OV2)
Determines the trend based on whether OV is above or below OV2
Shifts the EMA line above price during bearish trends and below price during bullish trends
The offset is percentage-based and scales dynamically with the price for optimal readability
✅ Ideal For:
Trend-followers seeking visual clarity
Discretionary traders who want less clutter and more signal
Anyone who likes their EMAs with a little more flair and insight
🛠️ Author: @alphainvestor123
This tool was crafted with simplicity and clarity in mind. If you enjoy the indicator, consider dropping feedback or sharing your use case!
MA Crossover [AlchimistOfCrypto]🌌 MA Crossover Quantum – Illuminating Market Harmonic Patterns 🌌
Category: Trend Analysis Indicators 📈
"The moving average crossover, reinterpreted through quantum field principles, visualizes the underlying resonance structures of price movements. This indicator employs principles from molecular orbital theory where energy states transition through gradient fields, similar to how price momentum shifts between bullish and bearish phases. Our implementation features algorithmically optimized parameters derived from extensive Python-based backtesting, creating a visual representation of market energy flows with dynamic opacity gradients that highlight the catalytic moments where trend transformations occur."
📊 Professional Trading Application
The MA Crossover Quantum transcends the traditional moving average crossover with a sophisticated gradient illumination system that highlights the energy transfer between fast and slow moving averages. Scientifically optimized for multiple timeframes and featuring eight distinct visual themes, it enables traders to perceive trend transitions with unprecedented clarity.
⚙️ Indicator Configuration
- Timeframe Presets 📏
Python-optimized parameters for specific timeframes:
- 1H: EMA 23/395 - Ideal for intraday precision trading
- 4H: SMA 41/263 - Balanced for swing trading operations
- 1D: SMA 8/44 - Optimized for daily trend identification
- 1W: SMA 32/38 - Calibrated for medium-term position trading
- 2W: SMA 17/20 - Engineered for long-term investment signals
- Custom Settings 🎯
Full parameter customization available for professional traders:
- Fast/Slow MA Length: Fine-tune to specific market conditions
- MA Type: Select between EMA (exponential) and SMA (simple) calculation methods
- Visual Theming 🎨
Eight scientifically designed visual palettes optimized for neural pattern recognition:
- Neon (default): High-contrast green/red scheme enhancing trend transition visibility
- Cyan-Magenta: Vibrant palette for maximum visual distinction
- Yellow-Purple: Complementary colors for enhanced pattern recognition
- Specialized themes (Green-Red, Forest Green, Blue Ocean, Orange-Red, Grayscale): Each calibrated for different market environments
- Opacity Control 🔍
- Variable transparency system (0-100) allowing seamless integration with price action
- Adaptive glow effect that intensifies around crossover points - the "catalytic moments" of trend change
🚀 How to Use
1. Select Timeframe ⏰: Choose from scientifically optimized presets based on your trading horizon
2. Customize Parameters 🎚️: For advanced users, disable presets to fine-tune MA settings
3. Choose Visual Theme 🌈: Select a color scheme that enhances your personal pattern recognition
4. Adjust Opacity 🔎: Fine-tune visualization intensity to complement your chart analysis
5. Identify Trend Changes ✅: Monitor gradient intensity to spot high-probability transition zones
6. Trade with Precision 🛡️: Use gradient intensity variations to determine position sizing and risk management
Developed through rigorous mathematical modeling and extensive backtesting, MA Crossover Quantum transforms the fundamental moving average crossover into a sophisticated visual analysis tool that reveals the molecular structure of market momentum.
RSI - 5UP Overview
The "RSI - 5UP" indicator is a versatile tool that enhances the traditional Relative Strength Index (RSI) by adding smoothing options, Bollinger Bands, and divergence detection. It provides a clear visual representation of RSI levels with customizable bands and optional moving averages, helping traders identify overbought/oversold conditions and potential trend reversals through divergence signals.
Features
Customizable RSI: Adjust the RSI length and source to fit your trading style.
Overbought/Oversold Bands: Visualizes RSI levels with intuitive color-coded bands (red for overbought at 70, white for neutral at 50, green for oversold at 30).
Smoothing Options: Apply various types of moving averages (SMA, EMA, SMMA, WMA, VWMA) to the RSI, with optional Bollinger Bands for volatility analysis.
Divergence Detection: Identifies regular bullish and bearish divergences, with visual labels ("Bull" for bullish, "Bear" for bearish) and alerts.
G radient Fills: Highlights overbought and oversold zones with gradient fills (green for overbought, red for oversold).
How to Use
1. Add to Chart: Apply the "RSI - 5UP" indicator to any chart. It works well on timeframes from 5 minutes to daily.
2. Configure Settings:
RSI Settings:
RSI Length: Adjust the period for RSI calculation (default: 14).
Source: Choose the price source for RSI (default: close).
Calculate Divergence: Enable to detect bullish/bearish divergences (default: disabled).
Smoothing:
Type: Select the type of moving average to smooth the RSI ("None", "SMA", "SMA + Bollinger Bands", "EMA", "SMMA (RMA)", "WMA", "VWMA"; default: "SMA").
Length: Set the period for the moving average (default: 14).
BB StdDev: If "SMA + Bollinger Bands" is selected, adjust the standard deviation multiplier for the bands (default: 2.0).
3.Interpret the Indicator:
RSI Levels: The RSI line (purple) oscillates between 0 and 100. Levels above 70 (red band) indicate overbought conditions, while levels below 30 (green band) indicate oversold conditions. The 50 level (white band) is neutral.
Gradient Fills: The background gradients (green above 70, red below 30) highlight overbought and oversold zones for quick reference.
Moving Average (MA): If enabled, a yellow MA line smooths the RSI. If "SMA + Bollinger Bands" is selected, green bands appear around the MA to show volatility.
Divergences: If "Calculate Divergence" is enabled, look for "Bull" (green label) and "Bear" (red label) signals:
Bullish Divergence: Indicates a potential upward reversal when the price makes a lower low, but the RSI makes a higher low.
Bearish Divergence: Indicates a potential downward reversal when the price makes a higher high, but the RSI makes a lower high.
4. Set Alerts:
Use the "Regular Bullish Divergence" and "Regular Bearish Divergence" alert conditions to be notified when a divergence is detected.
Notes
The indicator does not provide direct buy/sell signals. Use the RSI levels, moving averages, and divergence signals as part of a broader trading strategy.
Divergence detection requires the "Calculate Divergence" option to be enabled and may not work on all timeframes or assets due to market noise.
The Bollinger Bands are only visible when "SMA + Bollinger Bands" is selected as the smoothing type.
Credits
Developed by Marrulk. Enjoy trading with RSI - 5UP! 🚀
Combined EMA/Smiley & DEM System## 🔷 General Overview
This script creates an advanced technical analysis system for TradingView, combining multiple Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs), Simple Moving Averages (SMAs), dynamic Fibonacci levels, and ATR (Average True Range) analysis. It presents the results clearly through interactive, real-time tables directly on the chart.
---
## 🔹 Indicator Structure
The script consists of two main parts:
### **1. EMA & SMA Combined System with Fibonacci**
- **Purpose:**
Provides visual insights by comparing multiple EMA/SMA periods and identifying significant dynamic price levels using Fibonacci ratios around a calculated "Golden" line.
- **Components:**
- **Moving Averages (MAs)**:
- 20 EMAs (periods from 20 to 400)
- 20 SMAs (also from 20 to 400)
- **Golden Line:**
Calculated as the average of all EMAs and SMAs.
- **Dynamic Fibonacci Levels:**
Key ratios around the Golden line (0.5, 0.618, 0.786, 1.0, 1.272, 1.414, 1.618, 2.0) dynamically adjust based on market conditions.
- **Fibonacci Labels:**
Labels are shown next to Fibonacci lines, indicating their numeric value clearly on the chart.
- **Table (Top Right Corner):**
- Displays:
- **Input:** EMA/SMA periods sorted by their current average price levels.
- **AVG:** The average of corresponding EMA & SMA pairs.
- **EMA & SMA Values:** Individual EMA/SMA values clearly marked.
- **Dynamic Highlighting:** Highlights the row whose average (EMA+SMA)/2 is closest to the current price, helping identify immediate price action significance.
- **Sorting Logic:**
Each EMA/SMA pair is dynamically sorted based on their average values. Color coding (red/green) is used:
- **Green:** EMA/SMA pairs with shorter periods when their average is lower.
- **Red:** EMA/SMA pairs with longer periods when their average is lower.
- **Star (⭐):** Represents the "Golden" average clearly.
---
### **2. DEM System (Dynamic EMA/ATR Metrics)**
- **Purpose:**
Provides detailed ATR statistics to assess market volatility clearly and quickly.
- **Components:**
- **Moving Averages:**
- SMA lines: 25, 50, 100, 200.
- **Bollinger Bands:**
- Based on 20-period SMA of highs and standard deviation of lows.
- **ATR Analysis:**
- ATR calculations for multiple periods (1-day, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50).
- **ATR Premium:** Average ATR of all calculated periods, providing an overarching volatility indicator.
- **ATR Table (Bottom Right Corner):**
- Displays clearly structured ATR values and percentages relative to the current close price:
- Columns: **ATR Period**, **Value**, and **% of Close**.
- Rows: Each specific ATR (1D, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50), plus ATR premium.
- The ATR premium is highlighted in yellow to signify its importance clearly.
---
## 🔹 Key Features and Logic Explained
- **Dynamic EMA/SMA Sorting:**
The script computes the average of each EMA/SMA pair and sorts them dynamically on each bar, highlighting their relative importance visually. This allows traders to easily interpret the strength of current support/resistance levels based on moving averages.
- **Closest EMA/SMA Pair to Current Price:**
Calculates the absolute difference between the current price and all EMA/SMA averages, highlighting the closest one for quick reference.
- **Fibonacci Ratios:**
- Dynamically calculated Fibonacci levels based on the "Golden" EMA/SMA average give clear visual guidance for potential targets, supports, and resistances.
- Labels are continuously updated and placed next to levels for clarity.
- **ATR Volatility Analysis:**
- Provides immediate insight into market volatility with absolute and relative (percentage-based) ATR values.
- ATR premium summarizes volatility across multiple timeframes clearly.
---
## 🔹 Practical Use Case:
- Traders can quickly identify support/resistance and critical price zones through EMA/SMA and Fibonacci combinations.
- Useful in assessing immediate volatility, guiding stop-loss and take-profit levels through detailed ATR metrics.
- The dynamic highlighting in tables provides intuitive, real-time decision support for active traders.
---
## 🔹 How to Use this Script:
1. **Adjust EMA & SMA Lengths** from indicator settings if different periods are preferred.
2. **Monitor dynamic Fibonacci levels** around the "Golden" average to identify possible reversal or continuation points.
3. **Check EMA/SMA table:** Rows highlighted indicate immediate significance concerning current market price.
4. **ATR table:** Use volatility metrics for better risk management.
---
## 🔷 Conclusion
This advanced Pine Script indicator efficiently combines multiple EMAs, SMAs, dynamic Fibonacci retracement levels, and volatility analysis using ATR into a comprehensive real-time analytical tool, enhancing traders' decision-making capabilities by providing clear and actionable insights directly on the TradingView chart.
ScalpSwing Pro SetupScript Overview
This script is a multi-tool setup designed for both scalping (1m–5m) and swing trading (1H–4H–Daily). It combines the power of trend-following , momentum , and mean-reversion tools:
What’s Included in the Script
1. EMA Indicators (20, 50, 200)
- EMA 20 (blue) : Short-term trend
- EMA 50 (orange) : Medium-term trend
- EMA 200 (red) : Long-term trend
- Use:
- EMA 20 crossing above 50 → bullish trend
- EMA 20 crossing below 50 → bearish trend
- Price above 200 EMA = uptrend bias
2. VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price)
- Shows the average price weighted by volume
- Best used in intraday (1m to 15m timeframes)
- Use:
- Price bouncing from VWAP = reversion trade
- Price far from VWAP = likely pullback incoming
3. RSI (14) + Key Levels
- Shows momentum and overbought/oversold zones
- Levels:
- 70 = Overbought (potential sell)
- 30 = Oversold (potential buy)
- 50 = Trend confirmation
- Use:
- RSI 30–50 in uptrend = dip buying zone
- RSI 70–50 in downtrend = pullback selling zone
4. MACD Crossovers
- Standard MACD with histogram & cross alerts
- Shows trend momentum shifts
- Green triangle = Bullish MACD crossover
- Red triangle = Bearish MACD crossover
- Use:
- Confirm swing trades with MACD crossover
- Combine with RSI divergence
5. Buy & Sell Signal Logic
BUY SIGNAL triggers when:
- EMA 20 crosses above EMA 50
- RSI is between 50 and 70 (momentum bullish, not overbought)
SELL SIGNAL triggers when:
- EMA 20 crosses below EMA 50
- RSI is between 30 and 50 (bearish momentum, not oversold)
These signals appear as:
- BUY : Green label below the candle
- SELL : Red label above the candle
How to Trade with It
For Scalping (1m–5m) :
- Focus on EMA crosses near VWAP
- Confirm with RSI between 50–70 (buy) or 50–30 (sell)
- Use MACD triangle as added confluence
For Swing (1H–4H–Daily) :
- Look for EMA 20–50 cross + price above EMA 200
- Confirm trend with MACD and RSI
- Trade breakout or pullback depending on structure
RSI in pane and 3 EMAs on chartCustom RSI in Pane + 3 EMAs on Chart — with Optional RSI Divergence Detection
Combines RSI in a separate pane with 3 EMAs on the chart and optional RSI-based divergence detection. Useful for analyzing both momentum and trend structure.
Features
RSI Pane
Custom RSI calculation (not built-in ta.rsi) with adjustable source and length
Overlay optional moving average (SMA, EMA, SMMA/RMA, WMA, VWMA, or Bollinger Bands) Overbought/oversold gradient fill for visual clarity (70 / 30 zones)
Midline (50) for neutral RSI territory
RSI Divergence Detection
Optional: toggle on/off with one input
Regular Bullish Divergence : Price makes a lower low, RSI makes a higher low
Regular Bearish Divergence : Price makes a higher high, RSI makes a lower high
Customizable lookback for pivot detection
Visual markers and labels plotted on RSI
Built-in alert conditions for both divergence types
3 EMA Trend Indicators on Price Chart
Three customizable EMAs (default: 20, 50, 200)
Color-coded and clearly plotted on main chart
Use to determine short/mid/long-term trend bias
No repainting or smoothing artifacts
Why use this script?
Gives a full view of trend + momentum without cluttering the main price chart, and it helps confirm entries and exits by observing RSI behavior alongside EMAs. The optional divergence detection can act as a signal for potential exhaustion or reversal (not entry signals on their own). It is a Good fit for traders who use RSI zones, divergences, and EMA structure in their decision-making, both for intra-day and swing trades (where it performs best).
How to use
Add this script to your chart. EMAs will appear on the main price chart; RSI and divergence will appear in a separate pane.
Adjust RSI and MA settings to fit your trading style (e.g., fast RSI for scalping, slower for swing)
Enable "Show Divergence" if you want visual alerts and markers
Use alerts to get notified when a divergence occurs without watching the chart
Always check the divergences on different time frames to validate the setup, and do not consider them valid on small time frames (<15 minutes).
Built for traders who want both momentum and trend context in a single tool — without clutter, repainting, or noise. I created this script to streamline my own analysis and avoid switching between multiple indicators. It's not meant to be a "signal generator" but a visual assistant for making better decisions. If you find it useful or have feedback, feel free to reach out.
ES1! vs ZB1! Exponentially Weighted CorrelationES1! vs ZB1! Exponentially Weighted Correlation
This indicator calculates and visualizes the exponentially weighted correlation between the S&P 500 E-mini futures (ES1!) and the 30-Year U.S. Treasury Bond futures (ZB1!) over a user-defined lookback period. By using an exponential moving average (EMA) approach, it emphasizes recent price movements, providing a dynamic view of the relationship between these two key financial instruments.
Features:
- Customizable Inputs: Adjust the lookback length (default: 60) and alpha (default: 0.1) to fine-tune the sensitivity of the correlation calculation.
- Exponentially Weighted Correlation: Measures the strength and direction of the relationship between ES1! and ZB1! prices, with more weight given to recent data.
- Visual Clarity: Displays correlation as colored bars (green for positive, red for negative) for quick interpretation, with reference lines at 0, +1, and -1 for context.
- Non-Overlay Design: Plotted in a separate panel below the chart to avoid cluttering price data.
How It Works:
The indicator fetches closing prices for ES1! and ZB1!, applies an EMA to smooth the data, and computes the exponentially weighted covariance and variances. The correlation is then derived and plotted as a histogram, helping traders identify whether the two markets are moving together (positive correlation), in opposite directions (negative correlation), or independently.
Use Cases:
- Market Analysis: Gauge the relationship between equity and bond markets to inform trading strategies.
- Risk Management: Monitor correlation shifts to adjust portfolio exposure.
- Intermarket Insights: Identify trends or divergences in the stock-bond dynamic for macroeconomic analysis.
Ideal for traders and analysts tracking intermarket relationships, this indicator offers a clear, responsive tool for understanding ES1! and ZB1! correlation in real-time.
Visualisation tendancesThis script allows you to visualize the current trend of a financial asset.
It has two colors:
- Green for bullish phases
- Red for bearish phases
This allows you to instantly position yourself in the direction of the trend.
It also integrates Bollinger Bands, a volatility indicator.
This allows you to display two different indicators in a single indicator.