Lunar Cycle Tracker - (Moon + 3 Mercury Retrogrades)This script overlays the lunar and Mercury retrograde cycles directly onto your chart, helping traders visualize natural timing intervals that may influence market behavior.
Key Features:
🌑 New Moon & Full Moon Markers:
Vertical lines and labels indicate new and full moon events each month. You can fully customize their colors.
🌗 Last Quarter Moon Fill:
A soft pink background highlights the last quarter moon phase (from 7.4 days after the full moon to the next new moon).
🪐 Three Mercury Retrograde Zones:
Highlight up to three retrograde periods per year with customizable date inputs and background color. Great for spotting potential reversal or volatility windows.
Customization:
Moon event dates and colors
Manual input for Mercury retrograde periods (year, month, day)
Full compatibility with all timeframes (1H, 4H, daily, etc.)
Great for astro-cycle traders, Gann-based analysts, or anyone who respects time symmetry in the markets.
Fully customizable & works across all timeframes.
This tool was created by AngelArt as part of a larger astro-market model using lunar timing and planetary retrogrades for cycle-based market analysis.
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Rolling Beta against SPY📈 Pine Script Showcase: Rolling Beta Against SPY
Understanding how your favorite stock or ETF moves in relation to a benchmark like the S&P 500 can offer powerful insights into risk and exposure. This script calculates and visualizes the rolling beta of any asset versus the SPY ETF (which tracks the S&P 500).
🧠 What Is Beta?
Beta measures the sensitivity of an asset's returns to movements in the broader market. A beta of:
- 1.0 means the asset moves in lockstep with SPY,
- >1.0 indicates higher volatility than the market,
- <1.0 implies lower volatility or possible defensive behavior,
- <0 suggests inverse correlation (e.g., hedging instruments).
🧮 How It Works
This script computes rolling beta over a user-defined window (default = 60 periods) using classic linear regression math:
- Calculates daily returns for both the asset and SPY.
- Computes covariance between the two return streams.
- Divides by the variance of SPY returns to get beta.
⚙️ Customization
You can adjust the window size to control the smoothing:
- Shorter windows capture recent volatility changes,
- Longer windows give more stable, long-term estimates.
📊 Visual Output
The script plots the beta series dynamically, allowing you to observe how your asset’s correlation to SPY evolves over time. This is especially useful in regime-change environments or during major macroeconomic shifts.
💡 Use Cases
- Portfolio construction: Understand how your assets co-move with the market.
- Risk management: Detect when beta spikes—potentially signaling higher market sensitivity.
- Market timing: Use beta shifts to infer changing investor sentiment or market structure.
📌 Pro Tip: Combine this rolling beta with volatility, Sharpe ratio, or correlation tracking for a more robust factor-based analysis.
Ready to add a layer of quantitative insight to your chart? Add the script to your watchlist and start analyzing your favorite tickers against SPY today!
TRAMA - Trend Regularity Adaptive Moving AverageThe TRAMA Line is an advanced, adaptive moving average that adjusts its speed based on market volatility. It’s designed to react quickly to price momentum shifts while filtering out noise — making it perfect for scalping, intraday, and swing trading.
What Makes It Special:
📊 Adaptive Sensitivity: Speeds up during high momentum, slows down during consolidation.
🎯 More responsive than traditional EMAs or SMAs, giving early signals without excessive false alarms.
🔄 Works great as a dynamic trend filter — price staying above = uptrend, below = downtrend.
🧠 Based on price movement regularity, which helps detect clean pullbacks and trend continuations.
In Your Indicator:
TRAMA acts as the main trend line to detect:
Trend direction
Pullbacks
Reversals
Combined with MACD, RSI, and ATR, it helps determine whether a move is likely to continue or reverse.
HMA Breakdown [NLR]Hull Moving Average (HMA) is a great trend-following tool — it's smooth, fast, and more responsive than traditional MAs like EMA or SMA. But the problem?
Sometimes it gives signals that look sharp but are misleading — especially in noisy markets or when the price is chopping around.
This script breaks down the inner mechanics of the HMA to give you more context:
Are the inputs to HMA actually diverging?
Is there momentum behind the move?
Is this trend about to reverse or just a pullback?
By plotting the components of HMA — and layering signal bands, color logic, and optional trend overlays — it gives you a visual breakdown of what's really going on under the hood.
What this indicator shows
HMA Trend (Main Line)
The Hull Moving Average (HMA) is plotted in bold, colored red or green based on internal conditions (not just price slope).
WMA Components (Fast & Slow)
Shows the two WMAs used inside the HMA calculation:
WMA Half (faster) — reacts quickly to price
WMA Full (slower) — smoother, less reactive
Their difference and crossover gives you clues on whether momentum is building or fading.
Signal & Band Structure
A calculated upper band and lower band are used to track when HMA is leading or lagging momentum.
When the HMA is below the band, trend may be weakening - this helps you filter false signals.
TMA Candle (Optional Visual)
A synthetic candle shows whether the smoothed average is rising or falling compared to a few candles back.
This is a simple visual cue to spot inflection points in the trend.
EMA Trend Overlay (Optional)
A pair of short-term EMAs built on a smoothed source helps you catch micro-trends or align your entries with the bigger trend.
Can act as an early heads-up or a trend confirmation layer.
What problem it solves
Noisy Signals: Helps filter out weak or fake trend signals often seen in HMA-only systems.
Visual Breakdown: Lets you see how each component of the HMA is behaving — so you’re not flying blind.
Momentum Confirmation: Adds layered confirmation using fast-vs-slow WMA cross, signal bands, and mini trend overlays.
Best Used For:
Trend-following traders who use HMA or WMA strategies
Filtering entries/exits in momentum-based systems
Visually confirming when a trend is real vs fake
Prior sessions High/Low/MidThis indicator highlights the High, Low, and Midpoint of the most recently completed trading sessions. It helps traders visualize key price levels from the previous session that often act as support, resistance, or reaction zones.
It draws horizontal lines for the high and low of the last completed session, as well as the midpoint, which is calculated as the average of the high and low. These lines extend to the right side of the chart, remaining visible as reference levels throughout the day.
You can independently enable or disable the Tokyo, London, and New York sessions depending on your preferences. Each session has adjustable start and end times, as well as time zone settings, so you can align them accurately with your trading strategy.
This indicator is particularly useful for intraday and swing traders who use session-based levels to define market structure, bias, or areas of interest. Session highs and lows often align with institutional activity and can be key turning points in price action.
Please note that this script is designed to be used only on intraday timeframes such as 1-minute to 4-hour charts. It will not function on daily or higher timeframes.
Vietnamese Stocks: Multi-Ticker Fibonacci AlertThis Pine Script™ indicator is designed specifically for traders monitoring the Vietnamese stock market (HOSE, HNX). Its primary goal is to automate the tracking of Fibonacci retracement levels across a large list of stocks, alerting you when prices breach key support zones.
Core Functionality:
The script calculates Fibonacci retracement levels (23.6%, 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, 78.6%) for up to 40 tickers simultaneously. The calculation is based on the highest high and lowest low identified since a user-defined Start Time. This allows you to anchor the Fibonacci analysis to a specific market event, trend start, or time period relevant to your strategy.
What it Does For You:
Automated Watchlist Scanning: Instead of drawing Fib levels on dozens of charts, select one of the two pre-configured watchlists (up to 40 symbols each, customizable in settings) populated with popular Vietnamese stocks.
Time-Based Fibonacci: Define a Start Time in the settings. The script uses this date to find the subsequent highest high and lowest low for each symbol in your chosen watchlist, forming the basis for the Fib calculation.
Intelligent Alerts: Get notified via TradingView's alerts when the candle closing price of any stock in your active watchlist falls below the critical 38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, or 78.6% levels relative to its own high/low range since the start time. Alerts are consolidated for efficiency.
Visual Aids:
- Plots the same time-based Fibonacci levels directly on your current chart symbol for quick reference.
- Includes an optional on-chart table showing which monitored stocks are currently below key Fib levels (enable "Show Debug Info").
- Features experimental background coloring to highlight potential bullish signals on the current chart.
Configuration:
Start Time: Crucial input – sets the anchor point for Fib calculations.
WatchList Selection: Choose between WatchList #1 (Bluechip/Midcap focus) or WatchList #2 (Defensive/Other focus) using the boolean toggles.
Symbol Customization: Easily replace the default symbols with your preferred Vietnamese stocks directly in the indicator settings.
Notification Prefix: Add custom text to the beginning of your alert messages.
Alert Setup: Remember to create an alert in TradingView, selecting this indicator and the alert() condition, usually with "Once Per Bar Close" frequency.
This tool is open-source under the MPL 2.0 license. Feel free to use, modify, and learn from it.
Ultimate Moving Average Crossover Indicator by SAMQUANT📈 Ultimate Moving Average Crossover Indicator | All-in-One MA Strategy
Unlock the power of multiple moving averages in one versatile indicator designed to give you clear, actionable signals in any market condition.
📌 Key Features:
- Supports **all major moving averages**:
- **SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA, RMA, DEMA, TEMA**, and more.
- Each MA is **fully customizable** with different lengths and types for ultimate flexibility.
- **Binary Long/Short signals** based on crossover logic—perfect for alerts, strategies, or discretionary trading.
- **Dynamic background coloring**:
- **Green** for bullish trends
- **Red** for bearish trends
Quickly gauge market direction at a glance.
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🚀 Why Use This Indicator?
✅ Combines the strength of all major MA types
✅ Customizable to fit any trading style—scalping, swing, or trend following
✅ Built-in alerts ready for your next trade
✅ Visually intuitive with built-in signal clarity
✅ Excellent tool for **confluence-based** strategies
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Great trades start with great tools. Clarity, precision, and flexibility—this indicator brings it all to your charts. Trade smarter, not harder.
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> ⚠️ **Disclaimer:**
This script is intended for **educational and informational purposes only**. It does not constitute financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always practice sound risk management and test strategies thoroughly before using real capital.
Best Fit Linear Regression with StdDev BandsBest Fit Linear Regression with Standard Deviation Bands
The Best Fit Linear Regression with StdDev Bands is a custom TradingView indicator designed to analyze price trends and volatility over a specified number of bars. It plots a linear regression line representing the best fit for the selected price data, accompanied by optional standard deviation bands to visualize price dispersion.
📈 Key Features
Linear Regression Line: Calculates the best-fit line over a user-defined number of bars, providing a clear visualization of the prevailing price trend.
TradingView
Standard Deviation Bands: Optional upper and lower bands set at a multiple of the standard deviation from the regression line, indicating potential support and resistance levels.
Price Source Selection: Choose between using the closing price or the midpoint (average of high and low) for calculations.
Weighting Options: Apply True Range weighting to emphasize periods of higher volatility in the regression calculation.
Trend Strength Indicator: Displays a normalized strength value between -1 and 1, indicating the direction and magnitude of the trend.
Customizable Appearance: Adjust line color, width, label position, and background color to suit your preferences.
Extendable Lines: Option to extend the regression and standard deviation lines beyond the visible bars for projection purposes.
⚙️ Input Parameters
Bars to Analyze: Number of bars to include in the regression calculation (default: 100).
Price Value: Select "Close" or "Midpoint" as the data source for calculations.
Weighting Method: Choose between "None" or "True Range" weighting.
Line Color & Width: Customize the color and thickness of the regression line.
Label Position: Place the informational label at the start, center, or end of the regression line.
Label Background Color: Set the background color for the informational label.
Extend Line Beyond Visible Bars: Option to project the regression line into future bars.
Show Standard Deviation Bands: Toggle the visibility of the standard deviation bands.
Standard Deviation Multiplier: Set the multiplier for the standard deviation bands (default: 1.0).
StdDev Bands Color: Customize the color and transparency of the standard deviation bands.
🧮 How It Works
Data Collection: Gathers price data based on the selected source (Close or Midpoint) over the specified number of bars.
Weighting (Optional): Applies True Range weighting if selected, giving more importance to bars with higher volatility.
Regression Calculation: Computes the slope and intercept of the best-fit line using the least squares method.
Standard Deviation: Calculates the standard deviation of the price data from the regression line to determine the dispersion.
Plotting: Draws the regression line and, if enabled, the upper and lower standard deviation bands.
Labeling: Displays a label indicating the trend direction (Bullish, Bearish, or Neutral), strength percentage, and standard deviation value.
📊 Interpretation
Trend Direction: The slope of the regression line indicates the trend direction.
Trend Strength: The normalized strength value provides insight into the magnitude of the trend.
Price Position: Prices near or beyond the standard deviation bands may indicate overbought or oversold conditions.
TradingView
🛠️ Use Cases
Trend Analysis: Identify and confirm the direction and strength of market trends.
Volatility Assessment: Gauge market volatility through the width of the standard deviation bands.
Support and Resistance: Use the standard deviation bands to identify potential support and resistance levels.
Trade Timing: Assist in determining optimal entry and exit points based on price interaction with the regression line and bands.
This indicator is particularly useful for traders seeking a statistical approach to trend analysis, offering customizable options to tailor the tool to various trading strategies and preferences.
MACD Liquidity Tracker SystemMACD Liquidity Tracker System
🔹 Enhanced MACD with candle coloring, entry markers, and customizable signal logic.
🧠 Features:
This tool combines a color-coded MACD histogram with signal-based candle colors and small shape markers (🔼🔽) for clear market momentum and entry visualization.
📊 Visuals:
MACD Histogram (Sub-panel):
4 dynamic colors to show momentum direction:
🔹 Bright Blue = MACD > 0 & rising (strong bullish)
🔹 Dark Blue = MACD > 0 & falling (weakening bullish)
🔹 Bright Magenta = MACD < 0 & falling (strong bearish)
🔹 Dark Magenta = MACD < 0 & rising (weakening bearish)
Price Candles (Main Chart):
🔹 Bright Blue = Active Long signal
🔹 Bright Magenta = Active Short signal
Entry Markers:
🔼 Blue triangle (below candle) = Start of Long
🔽 Magenta triangle (above candle) = Start of Short
⚙️ System Types (select in settings):
Normal:
🔹 Long = MACD > 0
🔹 Short = MACD < 0
Fast: (Based on histogram color)
🔹 Long = Bright Blue OR Dark Magenta
🔹 Short = Dark Blue OR Bright Magenta
Safe:
🔹 Long = Only Bright Blue
🔹 Short = All other colors
🔔 Alerts:
Alerts trigger only on the first bar of a new Long/Short signal.
Easy to set up using TradingView’s alert system.
📌 How to Use:
Add the indicator to your chart
Open settings and select a System Type
Adjust MACD parameters if needed
Use histogram color + candle color for momentum and signal confirmation
Set alerts for clean entries if desired
💡 Ideal for traders seeking visual clarity and flexible MACD-based strategies.
Aviad SMC Flow🔹 Aviad SMC Flow – Smart Structure & Zones Indicator
A professional SMC-based indicator for identifying:
✅ BoS – Break of Structure
✅ CHoCH – Change of Character
✅ MSS – Market Structure Shift
✅ Automated Support & Resistance Zones
✅ Liquidity Grab and Reversal Points
✅ Market Structure with historical display
Optimized for 1H and lower timeframes.
Designed for real Smart Money Concepts (SMC) trading.
Perfect for intraday traders, swing traders, and scalpers.
Wick Anomaly DetectorWick Anomaly Detector
This script helps identify candles with unusually large wicks compared to their body size — a common sign of price anomalies, false prints, or low-liquidity moves.
🔍 What it does:
Flags candles with upper or lower wicks that exceed a user-defined ratio (default: 3x the body size)
Helps traders spot suspicious spikes or “bad ticks,” especially in pre-market or illiquid stocks
📈 Use it to:
Avoid fake breakouts
Confirm real price action
Clean up your technical analysis
Customize the wick-to-body threshold as needed. Add volume filters or time filters for more precision.
Created for educational purposes — use with proper risk management!
Auto Support Resistance Channels [TradingFinder] Top/Down Signal🔵 Introduction
In technical analysis, a price channel is one of the most widely used tools for identifying and tracking price trends. A price channel consists of two parallel trendlines, typically drawn from swing highs (resistance) and swing lows (support). These lines define dynamic support and resistance zones and provide a clear framework for interpreting price fluctuations.
Drawing a channel on a price chart allows the analyst to more precisely identify entry points, exit levels, take-profit zones, and stop-loss areas based on how the price behaves within the boundaries of the channel.
Price channels in technical analysis are generally categorized into three types: upward channels with a positive slope, downward channels with a negative slope, and horizontal (range-bound) channels with near-zero slope. Each type offers unique insights into market behavior depending on the price structure and prevailing trend.
Structurally, channels can be formed using either minor or major pivot points. A major channel typically reflects a stronger, more reliable structure that appears on higher timeframes, whereas a minor channel often captures short-term fluctuations or corrective movements within a larger trend.
For instance, a major downward channel may indicate sustained selling pressure across the market, while a minor upward channel could represent a temporary pullback within a broader bearish trend.
The validity of a price channel depends on several factors, including the number of price touches on the channel lines, the symmetry and parallelism of the trendlines, the duration of price movement within the channel, and price behavior around the median line.
When a price channel is broken, it is generally expected that the price will move in the breakout direction by at least the width of the channel. This makes price channels especially useful in breakout analysis.
In the following sections, we will explore the different types of price channels, how to draw them accurately, the structural differences between minor and major channels, and key trade interpretations when price interacts with channel boundaries.
Up Channel :
Down Channel :
🔵 How to Use
A price channel is a practical tool in technical analysis for identifying areas of support, resistance, trend direction, and potential breakout zones. The structure consists of two parallel trendlines within which price fluctuates.
Traders use the relative position of price within the channel to make informed trading decisions. The two primary strategies include range-based trades (buying low, selling high) and breakout trades (entering when price exits the channel).
🟣 Up Channel
In an upward channel, price moves within a positively sloped range. The lower trendline acts as dynamic support, while the upper trendline serves as dynamic resistance. A common strategy involves buying near the lower support and taking profit or selling near the upper resistance.
If price breaks below the lower trendline with strong volume or a decisive candle, it can signal a potential trend reversal. Channels constructed from major pivots generally reflect dominant uptrends, while those based on minor pivots are often corrective structures within a broader bearish movement.
🟣 Down Channel
In a downward channel, price moves between two negatively sloped lines. The upper trendline functions as resistance, and the lower trendline as support. Ideal entry for short trades occurs near the upper boundary, especially when confirmed by bearish price action or a resistance level.
Exit targets are typically located near the lower support. If the upper boundary is broken to the upside, it may be an early sign of a bullish trend reversal. Like upward channels, a major down channel represents broader selling pressure, while a minor one may indicate a brief retracement in a bullish move.
🟣 Range Channel
A horizontal or range-bound channel is characterized by price oscillating between two nearly flat lines. This type of channel typically appears during sideways markets or periods of consolidation.
Traders often buy near the lower boundary and sell near the upper boundary to take advantage of contained volatility. However, fake breakouts are more frequent in range-bound structures, so it is important to wait for confirmation through candlestick signals and volume. A confirmed breakout beyond the channel boundaries can justify entering a trade in the direction of the breakout.
🔵 Settings
Pivot Period :This parameter defines how sensitive the channel detection is. A higher value causes the algorithm to identify major pivot points, resulting in broader and longer-term channels. Lower values focus on minor pivots and create tighter, short-term channels.
🔔 Alerts
Alert Configuration :
Enable or disable the full alert system
Set a custom alert name
Choose the alert frequency: every time, once per bar, or on bar close
Define the time zone for alert timestamps (e.g., UTC)
Channel Alert Types :
Each channel type (Major/Minor, Internal/External, Up/Down) supports two alert types :
Break Alert : Triggered when price breaks above or below the channel boundaries
React Alert : Triggered when price touches and reacts (bounces) off the channel boundary
🎨 Display Settings
For each of the eight channel types, you can customize:
Visibility : show or hide the channel
Auto-delete previous channels when new ones are drawn
Style : line color, thickness, type (solid, dashed, dotted), extension (right only, both sides)
🔵 Conclusion
The price channel is a foundational structure in technical analysis that enables traders to analyze price movement, identify dynamic support and resistance zones, and locate potential entry and exit points with greater precision.
When constructed properly using minor or major pivots, a price channel offers a consistent and intuitive framework for interpreting market behavior—often simpler and more visually clear than many other technical tools.
Understanding the differences between upward, downward, and range-bound channels—as well as recognizing the distinctions between minor and major structures—is critical for selecting the right trading strategy. Upward channels tend to generate buying opportunities, downward channels prioritize short setups, and horizontal channels provide setups for both mean-reversion and breakout trades.
Ultimately, the reliability of a price channel depends on various factors such as the number of touchpoints, the duration of the channel, the parallelism of the lines, and how the price reacts to the median line.
By taking these factors into account, an experienced analyst can effectively use price channels as a powerful tool for trend forecasting and precise trade execution. Although conceptually simple, successful application of price channels requires practice, pattern recognition, and the ability to filter out market noise.
Stock metrics and valueThis indicator shows:
- the valuation metrics for a stock on a table on top right: PE, EPS, dividend, ROIC, ROE, ROA, EPS growth, FCF growth, Equity growth, revenue Growth
- the fair value and the value with 50% margin of safety as chart lines
The lines will be red when they are above the current price and red when they are below the current price.
The colors on the table will be red when the values are below 10% and green when they are above, that means when everything is green the metrics for the stock are good.
Money Flow Pulse💸 In markets where volatility is cheap and structure is noisy, what matters most isn’t just the move — it’s the effort behind it. Money Flow Pulse (MFP) offers a compact, color-coded readout of real-time conviction by scoring volume-weighted price action on a five-tier scale. It doesn’t try to predict reversals or validate trends. Instead, it reveals the quality of the move in progress: is it fading , driving , exhausting , or hollow ?
🎨 MFP draws from the traditional Money Flow Index (MFI), a volume-enhanced momentum oscillator, but transforms it into a modular “pressure readout” that fits seamlessly into any structural overlay. Rather than oscillating between extremes with little interpretive guidance, MFP discretizes the flow into clean, color-coded regimes ranging from strong inflow (+2) to strong outflow (–2). The result is a responsive diagnostic layer that complements, rather than competes with, tools like ATR and/or On-Balance Volume.
5️⃣ MFP uses a normalized MFI value smoothed over 13 periods and classified into a 5-tier readout of Volume-Driven Conviction :
🍆 Exhaustion Inflow — usually a top or blowoff; not strength, but overdrive (+2)
🥝 Active Inflow — supportive of trend continuation (+1)
🍋 Neutral — chop, coil, or fakeouts (0)
🍑 Selling Intent — weakening structure, possible fade setups (-1)
🍆 Exhaustion Outflow — often signals forced selling or accumulation traps (-2)
🎭 These tiers are not arbitrary. Each one is tuned to reflect real capital behavior across timeframes. For instance, while +1 may support continuation, +2 often precedes exhaustion — especially on the lower timeframes. Similarly, a –1 reading during a pullback suggests sell-side pressure is building, but a shift to –2 may mean capitulation is already underway. The difference between the two can define whether a move is tradable continuation or strategic exhaustion .
🌊 The MFI ROC (Rate of Change) feature can be toggled to become a volatility-aware pulse monitor beneath the derived MFI tier. Instead of scoring direction or structure, ROC reveals how fast conviction is changing — not just where it’s headed, but how hard it's accelerating or decaying. It measures the raw Δ between the current and previous MFI values, exposing bursts of energy, fading pressure, or transitional churn .
🎢 Visually, ROC appears as a low-opacity area fill, anchored to a shared lemon-yellow zero line. When the green swell rises, buying pressure is accelerating; when the red drops, flow is actively deteriorating. A subtle bump may signal early interest — while a steep wave hints at an emotional overreaction. The ROC value itself provides numeric insight alongside the raw MFI score. A reading of +3.50 implies strong upside momentum in the flow — often supporting trend ignition. A score of –6.00 suggests rapid deceleration or full exhaustion — often preceding reversals or failed breakouts.
・ MFI shows you where the flow is
・ ROC tells you how it’s behaving
😎 This blend reveals not just structure or intent — but also urgency . And in flow-based trading, urgency often precedes outcome.
🧩 Divergence isn’t delay — it’s disagreement . One of the most revealing features of MFP is how it exposes momentum dissonance — situations where price and flow part ways. These divergences often front-run pivots , traps , or velocity stalls . Unlike RSI-style divergence, which whispers of exhaustion, MFI divergence signals a breakdown in conviction. The structure may extend — but the effort isn’t there.
・ Price ▲ MFI ▼ → Effortless Markup : Often signals distribution or a grind into liquidity. Without rising MFI, the rally lacks true flow participation — a warning of fragility.
・ Price ▼ MFI ▲ → Absorption or Early Accumulation : Price breaks down, but money keeps flowing in — a hidden bid. Watch for MFI tier shifts or ROC bursts to confirm a reversal.
🏄♂️ These moments don’t require signal overlays or setup hunting. MFP narrates the imbalance. When price breaks structure but flow does not — or vice versa — you’re not seeing trend, you’re seeing disagreement, and that's where edge begins.
💤 MFP is especially effective on intraday charts where volume dislocations matter most. On the 1H or 15m chart, it helps distinguish between breakouts with conviction versus those lacking flow. On higher timeframes, its resolution softens — it becomes more of a drift indicator than a trigger device. That’s by design: MFP prioritizes pulse, not position. It’s not the fire, it’s the heat.
📎 Use MFP in confluence with structural overlays to validate price behavior. A ribbon expansion with rising MFP is real. A compression breakout without +1 flow is "fishy". Watch how MFP behaves near key zones like anchored VWAP, MAs or accumulation pivots. When MFP rises into a +2 and fails to sustain, the reversal isn’t just technical — it’s flow-based.
🪟 MFP doesn’t speak loudly, but it never whispers without reason. It’s the pulse check before action — the breath of the move before the breakout. While it stays visually minimal on the chart, the true power is in the often overlooked Data Window, where traders can read and interpret the score in real time. Once internalized, these values give structure-aware traders a framework for conviction, continuation, or caution.
🛜 MFP doesn’t chase momentum — it confirms conviction. And in markets defined by noise, that signal isn’t just helpful — it’s foundational.
RSI+Stoch Band Oscillator📈 RSI + Stochastic Band Oscillator
Overview:
The RSI + Stochastic Band Oscillator is a technical indicator that combines the strengths of both the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and the Stochastic Oscillator. Instead of using static thresholds, this indicator dynamically constructs upper and lower bands based on the RSI and Stochastic overbought/oversold zones. It then measures the relative position of the current price within this adaptive range, effectively producing a normalized oscillator.
Key Components:
RSI-Based Dynamic Bands:
Using RSI values and exponential moving averages of price changes, upper and lower dynamic bands are constructed.
These bands adjust based on overbought and oversold levels, offering a more responsive framework than fixed RSI thresholds.
Stochastic-Based Dynamic Bands:
Similarly, Stochastic %K and %D values are used to construct dynamic bands.
These adapt to overbought and oversold levels by recalculating potential high/low values within the lookback window.
Oscillator Calculation:
The oscillator (osc) is computed as the relative position of the current close within the combined upper and lower bands of both RSI and Stochastic.
This value is normalized between 0 and 100, allowing clear identification of extreme conditions.
Visual Features:
The oscillator is plotted as a line between 0 and 100.
Color-filled areas highlight when the oscillator enters extreme zones:
Above 100 with falling momentum: Red zone (potential reversal).
Below 0 with rising momentum: Green zone (potential reversal).
Additional trend conditions (falling/rising RSI, %K, and %D) are used to strengthen reversal signals by confirming momentum shifts.
FVG + Swings + ConfigurableOverview
This Pine Script v5 indicator highlights Fair Value Gaps (FVGs), plots swing‑high and swing‑low pivots, and marks single breakouts above the last swing‑high or below the last swing‑low by recoloring the breakout candle. Every aspect—gap size, count limits, colors, and feature toggles—is exposed as an input so you can tailor it to your own workflow.
Key Features
Fair Value Gaps
Detects bullish gaps when the high of bar i-2 is below the low of the current bar.
Detects bearish gaps when the low of bar i-2 is above the high of the current bar.
Draws a semi‑transparent rectangle spanning from bar i-2 to bar i + extension.
Automatically deletes oldest boxes when exceeding the user’s “Max FVG Boxes” limit.
Swing‑High / Swing‑Low Pivots
Identifies a swing‑high when the middle candle of a three‑bar sequence has the highest high.
Identifies a swing‑low when the middle candle has the lowest low.
Marks each pivot with a tiny dot above (high) or below (low) the bar.
Single Breakouts
Tracks the most recent swing‑high and swing‑low levels.
On the first close above the last swing‑high (or below the last swing‑low), recolors that single candle.
Prevents repeated coloring until a new swing pivot forms.
Full Customization
Show/Hide toggles for FVGs, swing pivots, breakouts.
Numeric inputs for FVG extension length and maximum retained boxes.
Color pickers for bullish/bearish gaps, swing pivots, and breakout candles.
Wavelet Smoothed Moving Average (TechnoBlooms)Wavelet Smoothed Moving Average (WSMA) is a part of the Quantum Price Theory (QPT) Series of indicators.
Overview:
The Wavelet Smoothed Moving Average (WSMA) is a trend-following indicator inspired by multi-level Haar Wavelet decomposition. Rather than using traditional wavelet basis functions, it emulates the core wavelet concept of multi-resolution analysis using nested simple moving averages (SMA).
How It Works:
WSMA applies three levels of smoothing:
• Level 1: SMA on price (base smoothing)
• Level 2: SMA on Level 1 output (further denoising)
• Level 3: SMA on Level 2 output (final approximation)
Why Use WSMA:
• Multi-Level Smoothing: Captures price structure across multiple time scales, unlike single-length MAs.
• Noise Reduction: Filters out short-term volatility and focuses on the underlying trend.
• Low Lag, High Clarity: Unlike traditional moving averages that react slowly or miss subtle shifts, WSMA’s layered smoothing delivers cleaner and more adaptive trend detection.
Unique Value:
• Wavelet-Inspired Design: Mimics core wavelet decomposition logic without the complexity of downsampling or basis functions.
• Perfect for Trend Confirmation: The final line (a3) can act as a trend filter, while the detail levels can help identify momentum shifts and volatility bursts.
• Fits Into Quantum Price Theory: As part of the QPT framework, WSMA bridges scientific theory with trading application, giving traders a deeper understanding of market structure and signal compression.
HTF FibonacciThis indicator displays Fibonacci lines for the selected previous HTF candle.
You can set its Fibs levels and colors.
HTF options: 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, 4 hours and 1 day
Bijnor Pivot ExtendedOverview: The Bijnor Pivot Extended (BP+) indicator is a powerful visual tool designed to help traders identify key price levels using Fibonacci-based pivots. It dynamically plots Support and Resistance levels based on your chosen timeframe (Daily, Weekly, or Monthly) and displays them only for the current session, reducing chart clutter and improving focus.
🔧 Features:
📆 Pivot Timeframe Selection: Choose between Daily, Weekly, or Monthly pivots.
🎯 Fibonacci Pivot Levels:
Central Pivot (P)
Resistance: R1, R2, R3, R4 (Extended)
Support: S1, S2, S3, S4 (Extended)
🎨 Full Customization:
Toggle labels and prices on/off
Position labels to the left or right
Change line width and individual colors for pivot, support, and resistance lines
🧠 Smart Line Plotting:
Lines are drawn only during the selected session, keeping your chart clean
🕹️ Max Performance: Optimized to stay lightweight with max_lines_count and max_labels_count set to 500
🧭 How to Use It:
Use this indicator to:
Plan entries and exits around key Fibonacci pivot zones
Identify overbought/oversold zones at R3/R4 and S3/S4
Enhance your intraday, swing, or positional trading setups
Combine with price action, candlestick patterns, or volume for maximum edge.
✅ Bonus:
This script is ideal for traders looking for a minimalist yet powerful pivot framework, with extended levels for breakout or reversal scenarios.
Multi Timeframe Altered Money Flow Index by CoffeeShopCryptoMoney Flow Index is a long used tool in trading markets, understanding to where money is moving and most importantly when its going there.
One of the biggest challenges was the when part. Because seeing it on your current trading chart timeframe is easy but it gets difficult if youre attempting a top-down-analysis of market structure vs price performance.
The new formula presented by @CoffeeshopCrypto is a key solution to this timeframe analysis issue. Seems like I may have solved the "glitch-In-The-Matrix".
The issue was always setting a secondary MFI on your chart and telling the system you wanted to watch the 1 hour MFI from a 5 minute chart.
To do this you need to wait for 12 candles to close on your 5 minute chart before you can get a 1hour MFI value. The move may have already happend and you may be too late. If there was only a better faster way to see the changing values of the High Timeframe Money Flow Index in real time without changing chart times and losing place......oh wait.....there is one now!
This tool allows you to tell it what timeframe you are looking at,
and what you want to compare it to.
It runs the calculation in the background automatically to give you the real time values of your High Timeframe chart setting on the chart you are looking at.
How to trade Long
When both the LFT and HTF Money flow cross above ZERO, they are both in uptrend
How to trade Short
When both the LFT and HTF Money flow cross below ZERO, they are both in downtrend
What happens when Low timeframe is inside the high timeframe:
If High timeframe MFI is below zero but the LFT MFI is above it and still below zero, you have lost your short term downtrend. The opposite is true when the high timeframe MFI is above zero.
A strong constant comparative trend is when your low timeframe MFI is leading your High timeframe MFI.
Personal Settings:
In my usage, i find it best to multiply my trading chart timeframe by 3 and use that number as my high timeframe MFI setting
This works on ANY chart time you want. For example you are not locked to the standard built TradingView chart times.
If you trade on a 7 minute timeframe, you can set your HTF to 21.
7 * 3 = 21
Heiken Ashi with RSI Colors📜 Description:
This indicator blends Heiken Ashi candlesticks with RSI-based color filters to help traders quickly assess both trend structure and momentum extremes in a single glance.
✅ Heiken Ashi Mode: Smooths out price action to highlight clearer trends and suppress noise
✅ RSI Coloring: Applies candle color changes based on whether RSI is overbought, oversold, or neutral
It allows traders to visually spot potential exhaustion zones, continuation trends, or early reversal areas with enhanced clarity.
🔧 Settings:
Use Heiken Ashi Candles: Toggle between standard candles and Heiken Ashi smoothed values
RSI Length: Controls the lookback for RSI calculation (default 14)
Overbought/Oversold Levels: Customize your thresholds for extreme conditions (default: 70/30)
🎨 Candle Color Logic:
Green (Lime): RSI is overbought → price may be overextended upward
Red: RSI is oversold → price may be overextended downward
Gray: RSI is between extremes → neutral momentum
💡 Use Cases:
Confirm trend momentum with Heiken Ashi structure
Spot potential reversal points using RSI extremes
Enhance entry/exit decisions by combining price action and momentum in a single visual
cd_full_poi_CxOverview
This indicator tracks the price in 16 different time frames (optional) in order to answer the question of where the current price has reacted or will react.
It appears on the chart and in the report table when the price approaches or touches the fvg or mitigations (order block / supply-demand), the rules of which will be explained below.
In summary, it follows the fvg and mitigations in the higher timeframe than the lower timeframe.
Many traders see fvg or mitigates as an point of interest and see the high, low swept in those zones as a trading opportunity. Key levels, Session high/lows and Equal high and lows also point of interest.
If we summarise the description of the point of interest ;
1- Fair value gaps (FVG) (16 time frames)
2- Mitigation zones (16 time frames)
3- Previous week, day, H4, H1 high and low levels
4- Sessions zones (Asia, London and New York)
5- Equal high and low levels are in indicator display.
Details:
1- Fair Value Gaps : It is simply described as a price gap and consists of a series of 3 candles. The reaction of the price to the gap between the 1st and 3rd candle wicks is observed.
The indicator offers 3 options for marking. These are :
1-1- ‘Colours are unimportant’: candle colours are not considered for marking. Fvg formation is sufficient.(Classical)
1-2- ‘First candle opposite colour’ : when a price gap occurs, the first candle of a series of 3 candles must be opposite.
For bullish fvg : bearish - bullish - free
For Bearish fvg : bullish - bearish - free
1-3- ‘All same colour’ : all candles in a series of 3 candles must be the same direction.
For bullish fvg: bullish - bullish - bullish
For bearish fvg : bearish - bearish – bearish
Examples:
2- Mitigation zones: Opposite candles with a fvg in front of them or candles higher/lower than the previous and next candle and with the same colour as the fvg series are marked.
Examples :
3- Previous week, day, H4, H1 high and low levels
4- Sessions regions (Asia, London and New York)
5- Equal high and low levels:
Annotation: Many traders want to see a liquidity grab on the poi, then try to enter the trade with the appropriate method.
Among the indicators, there is also the indication of grabs/swepts that occur at swing points. It is also indicated when the area previously marked as equal high/low is violated (grab).
At the end, sample setups will be shown to give an idea about the use of the indicator.
Settings:
- The options to be displayed from the menu are selected by ticking.
- 1m, 2m, 3m, 5m, 5m, 10m, 15m, 30m, h1, h4, h4, h6, h8, h12, daily, weekly, monthly and quarterly, 16 time zones in total can be displayed.
- The ‘Collapse when the price touches mitigate’ tab controls whether to collapse the box as the price moves into the inner region of the mitigate. If not selected, the size of the mitigate does not change.
- ‘Approach limit =(ATR / n)’ tab controls how close the price is to the fvg or mitigate. Instant ATR(10) value is calculated by dividing by the entered ‘n’ value.
- All boxes and lines are automatically removed from the screen when the beyond is closed.
- Colour selections, table, text features are controlled from the menu.
- Sessions hours are set as standard hours, the user can select special time zones. Timezone is set to GMT-4.
- On the candle when the price touches fvg or mitigate, the timeframe information of the POI is shown in the report table together with the graphical representation.
The benefits and differences :
1- We can evaluate the factors we use for setup together.
2- We are aware of what awaits us in the high time frame in the following candles.
3- It offers the user the opportunity to be selective with different candle selection options in fvg selection.
4- Mitige areas are actually unmitige areas because they have a price gap in front of them. The market likes to retest these areas.
5- Equal high/low zones are the levels that the price creates to accumulate liquidity or fails to go beyond (especially during high volume hours). Failure or crossing of the level may give a reversal or continuation prediction.
Sample setup 1:
Sample setup 2:
Sample setup 3:
Cheerful trades…
Enjoy…
Crosby Ratio | QuantumResearch ⚖️ Crosby Ratio | QuantumResearch
A Heikin-Ashi Smoothed Momentum Oscillator for Trend Strength & Market Rotation
Inspired by the Original Work of Bitcoin Magazine Pro
🔗 www.bitcoinmagazinepro.com
📘 Overview
The Crosby Ratio, as originally conceptualized by Bitcoin Magazine Pro, is a powerful tool used to evaluate the momentum and directional strength of price movement by analyzing the slope of market trends in degrees.
This enhanced implementation by QuantumResearch builds on the original concept with a Pine Script version tailored for trading charts, integrating Heikin-Ashi smoothing, ATR scaling, and customizable visual modes to fit traders' unique styles.
🧠 What Is the Crosby Ratio?
At its core, the Crosby Ratio uses angular measurement to quantify price movement — translating price trend strength into degrees. This approach allows traders to:
📈 Identify when the market is exhibiting strong upward or downward pressure
🚨 Spot overextended or overheated trend conditions
⚖ Filter out short-term noise and focus on macro momentum
🔍 1. Key Innovations by QuantumResearch
✅ Heikin-Ashi Smoothing: Reduces noise and stabilizes price action before computing momentum angles
✅ Custom atan2() Angular Function: Measures the directional angle between smoothed price changes and ATR-based scaling
✅ Dynamic Threshold Bands: Color-coded zones highlight overbought/oversold momentum regions
✅ Fully Customizable Palette: Choose from 8 visual themes with automatic color adaptation
📊 2. Interpretation Guide
Crosby Value Interpretation
> +18° 🚀 Strong bullish trend acceleration
+13° to +18° 📈 Moderate upward momentum
-9° to +13° ⚖ Neutral/transition phase
-15° to -9° 📉 Moderate bearish pressure
< -15° 🛑 Strong bearish acceleration
The indicator also features background shading when values exceed key thresholds, improving visual clarity during trend inflection points.
📌 Ideal Use Cases
🔄 Rotational Momentum Strategies: Spot the strongest assets during rapid shifts
⚡ Breakout Filtering: Confirm whether breakouts have directional strength
🧘 Noise Reduction: Heikin-Ashi smoothing filters chaotic wicks, especially in crypto
📉 Bearish Exhaustion Detection: Quickly identify when bearish momentum might be overdone
🔗 Original Inspiration & Acknowledgment
This indicator draws its core idea and naming convention from the original Crosby Ratio developed and introduced by Bitcoin Magazine Pro in their excellent write-up:
🔗 The Crosby Ratio – Bitcoin Magazine Pro
Their work on quantifying market sentiment via angle-based momentum inspired this script adaptation for TradingView with added visual features, smoothing techniques, and alerts.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is a momentum oscillator and should be used in conjunction with other confirmation tools. Market dynamics can vary, and no single metric ensures profitable trades. Always apply proper risk management.