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Fat Tony's Composite Momentum Histogram (v01)Fat Tony's Composite Momentum Histogram (v01)
Overview
Fat Tony's Composite Momentum Histogram (v01) is a sophisticated momentum oscillator that combines four powerful technical analysis components into a single, unified signal. Unlike traditional single-indicator approaches, this tool synthesizes Williams %R, Stochastic, MACD Histogram, and Rate of Change to provide a comprehensive view of momentum across multiple timeframes and calculation methods.
The indicator displays as a histogram that oscillates between -150 and +150, with overbought/oversold zones clearly marked at +100/-100. When momentum crosses above the oversold level with sufficient volume, a green triangle appears below the histogram signaling a potential long entry. Conversely, when momentum crosses below the overbought level, a red triangle appears above signaling a potential short entry.
What Makes This Different
Multi-Component Synthesis: Rather than relying on a single momentum calculation, this indicator averages four complementary momentum measures, each capturing different aspects of price action:
Williams %R captures overbought/oversold conditions
Stochastic tracks momentum relative to recent price range
MACD Histogram shows trend strength and potential reversals
Rate of Change measures velocity of price movement, normalized by volatility
Intelligent Volume Weighting: The indicator amplifies signals when volume confirms the move. Recent volume is compared to a 20-bar average using a logarithmic scale, preventing extreme spikes from distorting the signal while still rewarding genuine volume-backed momentum.
Adaptive Normalization: The MACD component uses a 200-bar standard deviation to adaptively scale itself, ensuring the indicator remains responsive across different market conditions and volatility regimes.
Volume Filtering: Optional minimum volume threshold (5-bar average) prevents false signals during low-liquidity periods when price moves may not be meaningful.
Key Features
Composite Signal: Combines four momentum indicators into one cohesive oscillator
Volume Confirmation: Optional volume weighting amplifies signals backed by strong participation
Trend Filter: Optional EMA-200 filter to trade only with the dominant trend
Visual Clarity: Color-coded histogram (blue for positive, orange for negative, red/green at extremes)
Automatic Alerts: Built-in alerts for entry and exit signals
Customizable Thresholds: Adjust overbought/oversold levels to match your trading style
ROC Toggle: Enable/disable the Rate of Change component based on your preference
Debug Mode: View individual component plots for fine-tuning and validation
Settings & Customization
Momentum Settings
Length (default: 14): Primary calculation period for Williams %R and Stochastic
MACD Fast (default: 12): Fast EMA period for MACD calculation
MACD Slow (default: 26): Slow EMA period for MACD calculation
MACD Signal (default: 9): Signal line period for MACD
ROC Length (default: 10): Lookback period for Rate of Change calculation
MACD StDev Length (default: 200): Period for adaptive MACD normalization
Levels
Overbought Level (default: 100): Threshold for short signals
Oversold Level (default: -100): Threshold for long signals
Volume Settings
Enable Volume Weighting (default: ON): Amplifies signals when volume confirms
Volume Sensitivity (default: 1.5): Controls strength of volume impact (0.5-3.0)
Min Avg Volume (default: 50,000): Minimum 5-bar average volume to trigger signals
Components
Include ROC Component (default: ON): Adds Rate of Change to the composite
Enable Trend Filter (default: OFF): Only signals aligned with EMA-200 trend
Show Component Plots (default: OFF): Display individual components for analysis
How to Use
Basic Signal Interpretation:
Green triangle below histogram = Long signal (momentum crossing up through oversold)
Red triangle above histogram = Short signal (momentum crossing down through overbought)
Histogram color indicates momentum direction and strength
Background shading highlights extreme overbought/oversold zones
Entry Strategy:
Wait for the histogram to enter oversold territory (below -100) for longs, or overbought (above +100) for shorts
Look for the entry signal (triangle) when momentum crosses back through the threshold
Confirm the signal occurs with adequate volume (if volume filter is enabled)
Consider the trend filter if trading with the dominant direction only
Exit Strategy:
Optional exit signals appear when momentum crosses the zero line against your position
Consider taking profits at extreme opposite readings (e.g., long exit when reaching +100)
Use price action, support/resistance, or your own risk management for final exits
Fine-Tuning:
Shorter Length settings (8-10): More responsive, more signals, potentially more noise
Longer Length settings (18-21): Smoother signals, fewer false positives, slower response
Higher Volume Sensitivity: Requires stronger volume confirmation
Lower Overbought/Oversold Levels (±80): More frequent signals
Enable Trend Filter: Reduces signals but improves win rate by trading with trend
Best Practices
Combine with Price Action: Use this indicator to confirm what you're seeing on the price chart, not as a standalone system
Respect the Volume Filter: Low-volume signals are often false moves; the volume confirmation is there for a reason
Don't Chase: Wait for signals at extreme levels; entries in the middle zone tend to whipsaw
Use Multiple Timeframes: Check that momentum aligns across your trading timeframe and a higher timeframe
Backtest Your Settings: Default parameters work well on many instruments, but optimization for your specific market and timeframe can improve results
Technical Details
The indicator normalizes each component to a -50 to +50 range before averaging, ensuring equal weighting regardless of the raw scale differences between Williams %R, Stochastic, MACD, and ROC. The MACD component uses a hyperbolic tangent function for smooth, bounded normalization. Volume weighting applies a logarithmic scale to prevent extreme outliers from dominating the calculation while still capturing genuine volume surges.
Pivot Points High Low Multi Time Frame + AlertsThis script is a modified version of “Pivot Points High Low Multi Time Frame” for TradingView, enhanced with price alerts when the market reaches or crosses recent pivot levels.
What it does:
Detects Pivot Highs and Pivot Lows based on your chosen timeframe and bar settings.
Draws visual lines and labels at each pivot level for clear identification.
Keeps track of the latest pivot high and low values.
Triggers an alert condition when the price crosses either of those pivots.
Alert conditions included:
🔔 Price Crossed Pivot High — notifies when the price touches or moves above the last pivot high.
🔔 Price Crossed Pivot Low — notifies when the price touches or moves below the last pivot low.
How to use:
Add the script to your chart in TradingView.
Click the Alarm (🔔) icon → choose Add Alert.
Under Condition, select this indicator and pick one of the two alert types.
Choose your preferred alert frequency (Once per bar, Every time, etc.).
Tip: You can also visually see when alerts are triggered — small green and red triangles will appear above or below the bars where the price crosses a pivot.
Bull Bear Indicator# Bull Bear Indicator - TradingView Script Description
## Overview
The Bull Bear Indicator is a powerful visual tool that instantly identifies market sentiment by coloring all candlesticks based on their position relative to a moving average. This indicator helps traders quickly identify bullish and bearish market conditions at a glance.
## Key Features
### 🎨 Visual Bull/Bear Identification
- **Green Candles**: Price is at or above the moving average (Bullish condition)
- **Red Candles**: Price is below the moving average (Bearish condition)
- Complete candle coloring including body, wicks, and borders for maximum clarity
### 📊 Flexible Moving Average Options
- **MA Type**: Choose between Simple Moving Average (MA) or Exponential Moving Average (EMA)
- **Timeframe**: Select Weekly or Daily timeframe for the moving average calculation
- **Customizable Period**: Adjust the MA/EMA period (default: 50)
### 📈 Smooth Moving Average Line
- Displays a smooth blue moving average line on the chart
- Automatically adapts to your selected timeframe and MA type
- Provides clear visual reference for trend identification
## How It Works
The indicator calculates a moving average (MA or EMA) based on your selected timeframe (Weekly or Daily). It then compares the current price to this moving average:
- **Bull Market**: When price ≥ Moving Average → Candles turn **GREEN**
- **Bear Market**: When price < Moving Average → Candles turn **RED**
## Configuration Options
1. **MA Type**: Choose "MA" for Simple Moving Average or "EMA" for Exponential Moving Average
2. **Timeframe**: Select "Weekly" for weekly-based MA or "Daily" for daily-based MA
3. **MA Period**: Set the number of periods for the moving average calculation (default: 50)
## Use Cases
- **Trend Identification**: Quickly identify overall market trend direction
- **Entry/Exit Signals**: Use color changes as potential entry or exit signals
- **Multi-Timeframe Analysis**: Combine with different chart timeframes for comprehensive analysis
- **Visual Clarity**: Reduce chart clutter while maintaining essential trend information
## Best Practices
- Use Weekly MA for longer-term trend identification
- Use Daily MA for shorter-term trend analysis
- Combine with other technical indicators for confirmation
- Adjust the MA period based on your trading style and timeframe
## Technical Details
- Built with Pine Script v6
- Overlay indicator (displays on main chart)
- Optimized for performance
- Compatible with all TradingView chart types
---
**Note**: This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. Always conduct your own analysis and risk management before making trading decisions.
Multi MA SystemMulti-timeframe moving average indicator with 6 customizable MAs.
Each MA supports 7 types (SMA/EMA/WMA/DEMA/TEMA/HMA/ZLEMA), custom periods, timeframes, colors, and line styles.
Perfect for multi-timeframe analysis and trend identification.
ATR Trend Table with DI both waysThis indicator is used confirm entry point whether it has met ATR and DI direction criterias
Info de Vela 1m1-Minute Candle Info Dashboard (Real-Time)
Overview
This is a lightweight, real-time dashboard designed specifically for 1-minute (1m) scalping. It provides critical, non-lagging data about the current 1-minute candle, helping you make split-second decisions on stop-loss placement and risk assessment.The table updates on every tick without flickering or repainting.
Key Features (Real-Time Table)
The dashboard displays three key metrics about the current 1m candle:Time Remaining: A simple countdown timer showing the exact seconds remaining until the current candle closes (e.g., "00:34").Dist. to Extreme (Ticks): This is the core function for scalping. It calculates the distance (in ticks) from the current price to the furthest extreme of the candle (i.e., max(high - close, close - low)). This is ideal for traders who base their stop-loss on the current candle's range.Total Candle Range (Ticks): Displays the full high-to-low range of the current candle in ticks, giving you an instant read on volatility.
How to Use
This tool is designed to solve one problem: speed.Instead of manually measuring the distance for your stop-loss on every candle, you can instantly read the exact tick value from the table. This allows you to calculate your position size (lotage) much faster, which is essential in a fast-moving 1m environment.
REQUIREMENT:This indicator is designed to work ONLY on the 1-minute (1m) timeframe. It will display an error and show no data on any other chart.
VSA No Supply by MashrabNo Supply Signal created by Mashrab
Hi everyone! This indicator helps you find low-risk entry points during an existing uptrend.
Its main job is to spot "quiet" pauses in a stock's advance, right before it's ready to continue its upward move.
What's the Big Idea?
Think of a stock in an uptrend like someone climbing a staircase. They can't sprint to the top all at once! Eventually, they need to pause, catch their breath, and then continue climbing.
This indicator helps you find that "catch your breath" moment. It looks for a specific signal that shows all the sellers are gone (what we call "No Supply"). When there's no one left to sell, the stock is much more likely to go up.
How It Works (The Signals)
The indicator gives you two simple signals on your chart:
1. The "Get Ready" Signal (Grey Dot)
The indicator is always checking to make sure the stock is in a general uptrend. When it spots a Grey Dot, it's telling you: "Hey, the stock just had a quiet pullback day. Pay attention!"
This dot only appears if the bar meets four conditions:
It's a "down" bar (closed lower than it opened).
It has low volume (this is key! It shows sellers aren't interested).
It has a narrow range (it was a quiet, low-volatility bar).
It closed in the top half of its range (buyers easily stepped in).
When you see a Grey Dot, you don't buy yet. You just add the stock to your watchlist.
2. The "Go" Signal (Blue Triangle)
This is your entry trigger! A Blue Triangle appears on the next bar only if it confirms the upward move. This bar must be:
An "up" bar (closed higher than it opened).
It has high volume (showing that buyers and "big money" are now back and pushing the price up with conviction).
How to Use This Indicator
Grey Dot: See this? The setup looks good. Time to watch this stock.
Blue Triangle: See this? This is your entry confirmation. The move is now "on."
Red Line: This is your safety net. The indicator automatically draws your Stop-Loss at the low of the "Grey Dot" bar. This helps you define your risk on the trade right from the start.
Settings
Uptrend MA Period: (Default: 50) This is just the moving average used to make sure the stock is in an uptrend.
Volume/Range Lookback: (Default: 20) This is how many bars the indicator looks back at to decide what "average" volume or "average" range is.
That's it! I hope this tool helps you find great setups. As always, this isn't a magic crystal ball. It's a tool to help you react to the market. Test it out, and happy trading!
Pivots 15m en 1mThis script is designed for scalpers and day traders who base their entries on low timeframes (like 1m) but reference liquidity levels from higher timeframes (HTF), in this case, 15m.Key Features:HTF Pivots on LTF: It calculates swing highs and swing lows (pivots) from the 15m chart and projects them as horizontal rays onto your 1m chart.Real-Time Mitigation: The rays (representing pending liquidity) are automatically deleted on the 1m candle as soon as the price mitigates (touches or breaks) that level. This allows you to clearly see which levels have already been tested and which have not.Configurable Pivot Strength: Includes an input to define the "Pivot Strength," allowing you to adjust how many candles on each side are needed to confirm a swing point (e.g., a value of 1 creates 3-bar pivots, a value of 2 creates 5-bar pivots, etc.).Info Table: Displays a real-time table with vital information from the current 1m candle:Time remaining until the candle closes.Total range of the candle in ticks.How to Use:This indicator must be loaded exclusively on a 1-minute (1m) chart.Adjust the "Pivot Strength" in the settings according to your strategy (a value of 1 or 2 is recommended).
[AA] - Market Valuation (Mean Based) - Market Valuation (Mean Based)
What it does
This indicator estimates whether price is overvalued, undervalued, or fairly valued relative to its structural mean across multiple lookback windows. It builds a single normalized oscillator from short-, mid-, and long-term ranges so traders can quickly see when price is stretched away from equilibrium.
This is not a mashup of existing tools. It’s a custom mean-deviation model that aggregates multi-window range positioning into one score.
How it works (concepts)
For each lookback length (13, 25, 30, 50, 100, 200):
Range & midpoint:
Highest high H and lowest low L.
Structural midpoint Mid = (H + L)/2.
Normalized deviation:
Dev = (Close − Mid) / (H − L) → location of price within its own range.
Aggregation:
The oscillator z_struct is the average of the deviations from the five windows.
Result: a smoothed, dimensionless value (roughly −1 to +1 in typical markets) showing multi-horizon displacement from the mean.
Plots & levels
Oscillator (area): z_struct
Reference lines: +0.40 (OB), 0.00 (equilibrium), −0.30 (OS)
Coloring:
Red when z_struct > OB (extended above mean)
Blue when z_struct < OS (extended below mean)
White in between
Suggested use
Mean reversion context: Fade extremes in range-bound conditions; take profits into OB/OS.
Trend awareness: In strong trends, extremes can persist—use levels as exhaustion context rather than standalone entry.
Filter/confirm: Combine with your trend filter or structure tools to time pullbacks and avoid chasing extended moves.
Inputs
Lookbacks: 13, 25, 30, 50, 100, 200
Thresholds: OB = 0.40, OS = −0.30
Notes & limitations
Works on the current symbol/timeframe only; no security() calls and no repainting beyond normal bar completion.
In very tight or flat ranges (H ≈ L), normalized deviations can become sensitive; consider longer windows or higher timeframes.
This is an indicator, not a strategy. No signals are generated; use with risk management.
Originality statement
This script implements an original, multi-window mean-deviation aggregation. It does not replicate a built-in or a public indicator; its purpose is to quantify cross-horizon valuation in a single, normalized measure.
EMA 20/50/100/200 Trader IkkaEMA 20/50/100/200 📊 + Crossover Alerts 🔔 Trader Ikka
This indicator plots four key Exponential Moving Averages (EMA 20, 50, 100, and 200) to help identify trends.
It also detects and marks bullish 🟢 and bearish 🔴 crossovers between the EMA 20 and EMA 50, signaling potential trend reversals or continuations.
✨ Features:
📊 Plots EMA 20, 50, 100, and 200 with color-coded lines
🟢🔴 Highlights bullish and bearish crossovers between EMA 20 & EMA 50
🔔 Built-in alert conditions for automated notifications
⚡ Useful for identifying momentum shifts and entry/exit zones
Ravio This indicator identifies false breakouts and confirmed breakouts on any timeframe. It automatically analyzes price action around key levels (such as recent highs and lows) to detect when the price temporarily breaks above or below a level but then quickly returns — signaling a false breakout.
When a breakout is confirmed (price holds beyond the level with strong volume or momentum), the indicator highlights it with a different color.
RaviossaThis indicator identifies false breakouts and confirmed breakouts on any timeframe. It automatically analyzes price action around key levels (such as recent highs and lows) to detect when the price temporarily breaks above or below a level but then quickly returns — signaling a false breakout.
When a breakout is confirmed (price holds beyond the level with strong volume or momentum), the indicator highlights it with a different color.
ROC + dROC + d2ROC (with z-scores & percentiles)This indicator measures how price momentum is changing — not just whether it’s rising or falling, but how quickly that change itself is accelerating or slowing. It starts with the Rate of Change (ROC), which shows how much price has moved over a set period. The first derivative (ΔROC) tracks how ROC is changing from bar to bar, and the second derivative (Δ²ROC) shows whether that change is speeding up or fading — essentially the “acceleration” of momentum. Positive Δ²ROC means momentum is strengthening; negative means it’s weakening. The script also quantifies how extreme those shifts are using z-scores and percentiles, helping spot Druckenmiller-style turning points where trends often begin or end.
Momentum Swing 1–3 Weeks
✅ Entry (LONG) Conditions
Price above EMA9 and SMA20
SMA20 > SMA50 (trend confirmation)
MACD above the signal line
RSI between 50–65 (healthy momentum)
Volume at least 20% above the 20-day average
When all conditions align, a LONG signal is generated.
✅ Exit (SELL) Conditions
Price closes below EMA9
MACD gives a bearish crossover
Or TP/SL levels are hit
Position is closed.
✅ Multi-Stage Take Profit
TP1: ATR × 1.5 → closes 50% of the position
TP2: ATR × 3.0 → closes remaining 50%
✅ Stop Loss
ATR × 1.5 dynamic SL
✅ What This Strategy Aims For
Catching early trend continuation signals
Filtering weak / low-volume breakouts
Exiting when momentum fades
Eliminating emotional decision-making through rules
📌 Note
Backtest performance may vary by symbol and volatility. Proper risk management is strongly recommended.
Realtime Squeeze Box [CHE] Realtime Squeeze Box — Detects lowvolatility consolidation periods and draws trimmed price range boxes in realtime to highlight potential breakout setups without clutter from outliers.
Summary
This indicator identifies "squeeze" phases where recent price volatility falls below a dynamic baseline threshold, signaling potential energy buildup for directional moves. By requiring a minimum number of consecutive bars in squeeze, it reduces noise from fleeting dips, making signals more reliable than simple threshold crosses. The core innovation is realtime box visualization: during active squeezes, it builds and updates a box capturing the price range while ignoring extreme values via quantile trimming, providing a cleaner view of consolidation bounds. This differs from static volatility bands by focusing on trimmed ranges and suppressing overlapping boxes, which helps traders spot genuine setups amid choppy markets. Overall, it aids in anticipating breakouts by combining volatility filtering with visual containment of price action.
Motivation: Why this design?
Traders often face whipsaws during brief volatility lulls that mimic true consolidations, leading to premature entries, or miss setups because standard volatility measures lag in adapting to changing market regimes. This design addresses that by using a hold requirement on consecutive lowvolatility bars to denoise signals, ensuring only sustained squeezes trigger visuals. The core idea—comparing rolling standard deviation to a smoothed baseline—creates a responsive yet stable filter for lowenergy periods, while the trimmed box approach isolates the core price cluster, making it easier to gauge breakout potential without distortion from spikes.
What’s different vs. standard approaches?
Reference baseline: Traditional squeeze indicators like the Bollinger Band Squeeze or TTM Squeeze rely on fixed multiples of bands or momentum oscillators crossing zero, which can fire on isolated bars or ignore range compression nuances.
Architecture differences:
Realtime box construction that updates barbybar during squeezes, using arrays to track and trim price values.
Quantilebased outlier rejection to define box bounds, focusing on the bulk of prices rather than full range.
Overlap suppression logic that skips redundant boxes if the new range intersects heavily with the prior one.
Hold counter for consecutive bar validation, adding persistence before signaling.
Practical effect: Charts show fewer, more defined orange boxes encapsulating tight price action, with a horizontal line extension marking the midpoint postsqueeze—visibly reducing clutter in sideways markets and highlighting "coiled" ranges that standard plots might blur with full highs/lows. This matters for quicker visual scanning of multitimeframe setups, as boxes selflimit to recent history and avoid piling up.
How it works (technical)
The indicator starts by computing a rolling average and standard deviation over a userdefined length on the chosen source price series. This deviation measure is then smoothed into a baseline using either a simple or exponential average over a longer window, serving as a reference for normal volatility. A squeeze triggers when the current deviation dips below this baseline scaled by a multiplier less than one, but only after a minimum number of consecutive bars confirm it, which resets the counter on breaks.
Upon squeeze start, it clears a buffer and begins collecting source prices barbybar, limited to the first few bars to keep computation light. For visualization, if enabled, it sorts the buffer and finds a quantile threshold, then identifies the minimum value at or below that threshold to set upper and lower box bounds—effectively clamping the range to exclude tails above the quantile. The box draws from the start bar to the current one, updating its right edge and levels dynamically; if the new bounds overlap significantly with the last completed box, it suppresses drawing to avoid redundancy.
Once the hold limit or squeeze ends, the box freezes: its final bounds become the last reference, a midpoint line extends rightward from the end, and a tiny circle label marks the point. Buffers and states reset on new squeezes, with historical boxes and lines capped to prevent overload. All logic runs on every bar but uses confirmed historical data for calculations, with realtime updates only affecting the active box's position—no future peeking occurs. Initialization seeds with null values, building states progressively from the first bars.
Parameter Guide
Source: Selects the price series (e.g., close, hl2) for deviation and box building; influences sensitivity to wicks or bodies. Default: close. Tradeoffs/Tips: Use hl2 for balanced range view in volatile assets; stick to close for pure directional focus—test on your timeframe to avoid oversmoothing trends.
Length (Mean/SD): Sets window for average and deviation calculation; shorter values make detection quicker but noisier. Default: 20. Tradeoffs/Tips: Increase to 30+ for stability in higher timeframes, reducing false starts; below 10 risks overreacting to singlebar noise.
Baseline Length: Defines smoothing window for the deviation baseline; longer periods create a steadier reference, filtering regime shifts. Default: 50. Tradeoffs/Tips: Pair with Length at 1:2 ratio for calm markets; shorten to 30 if baselines lag during fast volatility drops, but watch for added whips.
Squeeze Multiplier (<1.0): Scales the baseline downward to set the squeeze threshold; lower values tighten criteria for rarer, stronger signals. Default: 0.8. Tradeoffs/Tips: Tighten to 0.6 for highvol assets like crypto to cut noise; loosen to 0.9 in forex for more frequent but shallower setups—balances hit rate vs. depth.
Baseline via EMA (instead of SMA): Switches baseline smoothing to exponential for faster adaptation to recent changes vs. equalweighted simple average. Default: false. Tradeoffs/Tips: Enable in trending markets for quicker baseline drops; disable for uniform history weighting in rangebound conditions to avoid overreacting.
SD: Sample (len1) instead of Population (len): Adjusts deviation formula to divide by length minus one for smallsample bias correction, slightly inflating values. Default: false. Tradeoffs/Tips: Use sample in short windows (<20) for more conservative thresholds; population suits long looks where bias is negligible, keeping signals tighter.
Min. Hold Bars in Squeeze: Requires this many consecutive squeeze bars before confirming; higher denoise but may clip early setups. Default: 1. Tradeoffs/Tips: Bump to 35 for intraday to filter ticks; keep at 1 for swings where quick consolidations matter—trades off timeliness for reliability.
Debug: Plot SD & Threshold: Toggles lines showing raw deviation and threshold for visual backtesting of squeeze logic. Default: false. Tradeoffs/Tips: Enable during tuning to eyeball crossovers; disable live to declutter—great for verifying multiplier impact without alerts.
Tint Bars when Squeeze Active: Overlays semitransparent color on bars during open box phases for quick squeeze spotting. Default: false. Tradeoffs/Tips: Pair with low opacity for subtlety; turn off if using boxes alone, as tint can obscure candlesticks in dense charts.
Tint Opacity (0..100): Controls background tint strength during active squeezes; higher values darken for emphasis. Default: 85. Tradeoffs/Tips: Dial to 60 for light touch; max at 100 risks hiding price action—adjust per chart theme for visibility.
Stored Price (during Squeeze): Price series captured in the buffer for box bounds; defaults to source but allows customization. Default: close. Tradeoffs/Tips: Switch to high/low for wider boxes in gappy markets; keep close for midline focus—impacts trim effectiveness on outliers.
Quantile q (0..1): Fraction of sorted prices below which tails are cut; higher q keeps more data but risks including spikes. Default: 0.718. Tradeoffs/Tips: Lower to 0.5 for aggressive trim in noisy assets; raise to 0.8 for fuller ranges—tune via debug to match your consolidation depth.
Box Fill Color: Sets interior shade of squeeze boxes; semitransparent for layering. Default: orange (80% trans.). Tradeoffs/Tips: Soften with more transparency in multiindicator setups; bold for standalone use—ensures boxes pop without overwhelming.
Box Border Color: Defines outline hue and solidity for box edges. Default: orange (0% trans.). Tradeoffs/Tips: Match fill for cohesion or contrast for edges; thin width keeps it clean—helps delineate bounds in zoomed views.
Keep Last N Boxes: Limits historical boxes/lines/labels to this count, deleting oldest for performance. Default: 10. Tradeoffs/Tips: Increase to 50 for weekly reviews; set to 0 for unlimited (risks lag)—balances history vs. speed on long charts.
Draw Box in Realtime (build/update): Enables live extension of boxes during squeezes vs. waiting for end. Default: true. Tradeoffs/Tips: Disable for confirmedonly views to mimic backtests; enable for proactive trading—adds minor repaint on live bars.
Box: Max First N Bars: Caps buffer collection to initial squeeze bars, freezing after for efficiency. Default: 15. Tradeoffs/Tips: Shorten to 510 for fast intraday; extend to 20 in dailies—prevents bloated arrays but may truncate long squeezes.
Reading & Interpretation
Squeeze phases appear as orange boxes encapsulating the trimmed price cluster during lowvolatility holds—narrow boxes signal tight consolidations, while wider ones indicate looser ranges within the threshold. The box's top and bottom represent the quantilecapped high and low of collected prices, with the interior fill shading the containment zone; ignore extremes outside for "true" bounds. Postsqueeze, a solid horizontal line extends right from the box's midpoint, acting as a reference level for potential breakout tests—drifting prices toward or away from it can hint at building momentum. Tiny orange circles at the line's start mark completion points for easy scanning. Debug lines (if on) show deviation hugging or crossing the threshold, confirming hold logic; a persistent hug below suggests prolonged calm, while spikes above reset counters.
Practical Workflows & Combinations
Trend following: Enter long on squeezeend close above the box top (or midpoint line) confirmed by higher high in structure; filter with rising 50period average to avoid countertrend traps. Use boxes as support/resistance proxies—short below bottom in downtrends.
Exits/Stops: Trail stops to the box midpoint during postsqueeze runs for conservative holds; go aggressive by exiting on retest of opposite box side. If debug shows repeated threshold grazes, tighten stops to curb drawdowns in ranging followups.
Multiasset/MultiTF: Defaults work across stocks, forex, and crypto on 15min+ frames; scale Length proportionally (e.g., x2 on hourly). Layer with highertimeframe boxes for confluence—e.g., daily squeeze + 1H box for entry timing. (Unknown/Optional: Specific multiTF scaling recipes beyond proportional adjustment.)
Behavior, Constraints & Performance
Repaint/confirmation: Core calculations use historical closes, confirming on bar close; active boxes repaint their right edge and levels live during squeezes if enabled, but freeze irrevocably on hold limit or end—mitigates via barbybar buffer adds without future leaks. No lookahead indexes.
security()/HTF: None used, so no external timeframe repaints; all native to chart resolution.
Resources: Caps at 300 boxes/lines/labels total; small arrays (up to 20 elements) and short loops in sorting/minfinding keep it light—suitable for 10k+ bar charts without throttling. Persistent variables track state across bars efficiently.
Known limits: May lag on ultrasharp volatility spikes due to baseline smoothing; gaps or thin markets can skew trims if buffer hits cap early; overlaps suppress visuals but might hide chained squeezes—(Unknown/Optional: Edge cases in nonstandard sessions).
Sensible Defaults & Quick Tuning
Start with defaults for most liquid assets on 1Hdaily: Length 20, Multiplier 0.8, Hold 1, Quantile 0.718—yields balanced detection without excess noise. For too many false starts (choppy charts), increase Hold to 3 and Baseline Length to 70 for stricter confirmation, reducing signals by 3050%. If squeezes feel sluggish or miss quick coils, shorten Length to 14 and enable EMA baseline for snappier adaptation, but monitor for added flips. In highvol environments like options, tighten Multiplier to 0.6 and Quantile to 0.6 to focus on core ranges; reverse for calm pairs by loosening to 0.95. Always backtest tweaks on your asset's history.
What this indicator is—and isn’t
This is a volatilityfiltered visualization tool for spotting and bounding consolidation phases, best as a signal layer atop price action and trend filters—not a standalone predictor of direction or strength. It highlights setups but ignores volume, momentum, or news context, so pair with discreteness rules like higher highs/lows. Never use it alone for entries; always layer risk management, such as 12% stops beyond box extremes, and position sizing based on account drawdown tolerance.
Disclaimer
The content provided, including all code and materials, is strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument, or an offer of any financial product or service. All strategies, tools, and examples discussed are provided for illustrative purposes to demonstrate coding techniques and the functionality of Pine Script within a trading context.
Any results from strategies or tools provided are hypothetical, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading and investing involve high risk, including the potential loss of principal, and may not be suitable for all individuals. Before making any trading decisions, please consult with a qualified financial professional to understand the risks involved.
By using this script, you acknowledge and agree that any trading decisions are made solely at your discretion and risk.
Do not use this indicator on HeikinAshi, Renko, Kagi, PointandFigure, or Range charts, as these chart types can produce unrealistic results for signal markers and alerts.
Best regards and happy trading
Chervolino
Big 4 EMA Trend DashboardQuickly see the trend direction of your top four stocks using a customizable EMA. Each stock shows as a colored tile: green if price is above the EMA, red if below. A summary label shows whether all four stocks are trending up, down, or mixed.
Key Features:
Track 4 user-defined symbols at a glance
Custom EMA length and optional timeframe override
Compact dashboard ideal for scalping and day trading
Trendy Bands + Reversal SignalsTrendy Bands + Reversal Signals
This is a versatile and powerful TradingView indicator that combines a dual Bollinger Bands system with momentum-based reversal signals. It's designed to help traders identify the prevailing trend, potential volatility expansions/contractions, and key reversal points in the market.
Core Concept: The indicator uses two sets of Bollinger Bands with different standard deviation settings to create a "band within a band" structure. This visual setup makes it easier to gauge trend strength and spot potential breakouts or breakdowns. Additionally, it calculates a custom momentum oscillator to generate early warnings for potential trend reversals.
EMAs 4/8/15 + Classic Pivots (clean v5)Here is a clean code for people to use, hope it works well for you. 4/8/15 are key indicators. You first got to be on the right side or upside of the 15 and then you need to see a detachment from the 4/8. You will see that is when upward movement happens. for shorting, you need to be below the 4/8 and usually on the under of 15.
RBD Market ProfileA Market Profile visually shows how much time (or how many bars) price spent at each price level within a session — helping identify areas of “fair value” (where price spent most time) and extremes (where price barely traded).
It divides each trading session (for example, a day, week, or month depending on input) into price segments, counts how many bars closed within each segment, and then identifies:
POC (Point of Control): price level with the highest frequency (most traded or visited).
VAH (Value Area High): upper boundary of the zone that contains 70% (or user-defined percentage) of all activity around the POC.
VAL (Value Area Low): lower boundary of that same 70% activity zone.
Finally, it plots lines for:
VAH (green line)
VAL (red line)
POC Upper & Lower (white lines)
Session Open (blue dashed line)
How to use this Market Profile:
Determine Key Areas of Support/Resistance by the VAH and VAL
VAH: Responsive Sellers and Initiative Buyers
VAL: Responsive Buyers and Initiative Sellers
POC: Can be used as Fair Value
[Asian Range + Sweeps]Main Features
Asian Range (S2) — fully configurable session band (start/end, hour:minute) with automatic detection and visual high/low markers.
HOD/LOD (S1) — adaptive cutoff logic for Forex vs Indices, with optional manual override.
Gap Correction — optional true HOD/LOD detection using a 1-minute base with overnight gap adjustment.
Sweep Detection — real-time alerts for S1 and S2 sweeps, with independent cooldown control to avoid duplicate signals.
Visual Controls — customizable colors, line thickness, and transparency.
KeepDays Setting — allows you to manage how many past session drawings are preserved on the chart
Dashboard — Vol & PriceDashboard for traders
Indicator Description
1. Prev Day High
What it shows: the previous trading day's high.
Why it shows: a resistance level. Many traders watch to see if the price will hold above or below this level. A breakout can signal buying strength.
2. Prev Day Low
What it shows: the previous day's low.
Why it shows: a support level. If the price breaks downwards, it signals weakness and a possible continuation of the decline.
3. Today
What it shows:
The difference between the current price and yesterday's close (in absolute values and as a percentage).
Color: green for an increase, red for a decrease.
Why it shows: immediately shows how strong a gap or movement is today relative to yesterday. This is an indicator of current momentum.
4. ADR, % (Average Daily Range)
What it shows: Average daily range (High – Low), expressed as a percentage of the closing price, for the selected period (default 7 days).
Why it's useful: To understand the "normal" volatility of an instrument. For example, if the ADR is 3%, then a 1% move is small, while a 6% move is very large.
5. ATR (Average True Range)
What it shows: Average fluctuation range (including gaps), in absolute points, for the specified period (default 7 days).
Why it's useful: A classic volatility indicator. Useful for setting stops, calculating position sizes, and identifying "noise" movements.
6. ATR (Today), %
What it shows: How much the current movement today (from yesterday's close to the current price) represents in % of the average ATR.
Why it shows: Shows whether the instrument has "played out" its average range. If the value is already >100%, there is a high probability that the movement will begin to slow.
7. Vol (Today)
What it shows:
Current trading volume for the day (in millions/billions).
Comparison with yesterday as a percentage (for example: 77.32M (-52.78%)).
Color: green if the volume is higher than yesterday; red if lower.
Why it shows:Quickly shows whether the market is active today. Volume = fuel for price movement.
8. Avg Vol (20d)
What it shows: Average daily volume over the last 20 trading days.
Why it's useful:"normal" activity level. It's a convenient backdrop for assessing today's turnover.
9. Rel. Vol (Today), % (Relative Volume)
What it shows: Deviation of the current volume from the average (20 days).
Formula: `(today / average - 1)` * 100`.
+30% = volume 30% above average, -40% = 40% below average.
Color: green for +, red for –.
Why it's useful:A key indicator for a trader. If RelVol > 100% (green), the market is "charged," and the movement is more significant. If low, activity is weak and movements are less reliable.
10. Normalized RS (Relative Strength)
What it shows: the relative strength of a stock to a selected benchmark (e.g., SPY), normalized by the period (default 7 days).
100 = same result as the market.
> 100 = the stock is stronger than the index.
<100 = weaker than the index.
Why it's needed: filtering ideas. Strong stocks rise faster when the market rises, weak stocks fall more sharply. This helps trade in the direction of the trend and select the best candidates.
In summary:
Prev High / Low — key support and resistance levels.
Today — an instant understanding of the current momentum.
ADR and ATR — volatility and potential movement.
ATR (Today) — how much the instrument has already "run."
Vol + Rel.Vol — activity and confirmation of the movement's strength.
RS — selecting strong/weak leaders against the market.






















