Session Candle Hunter 🎯🎯 Session Candle Hunter — Precision Session Mapping for Smart Traders
Session Candle Hunter 🎯 is a powerful tool designed to help traders identify and track the most important session candle of the trading day—commonly used for liquidity grabs, range mapping, volatility zones, and breakout anticipation.
Whether you trade NY session, London session, or custom time windows, this indicator automatically detects the candle at your chosen New York Time, extracts its high and low, and visually projects these levels into the current session.
🔍 What This Indicator Does
1️⃣ Detects the Key Session Candle
You select:
Hour of the candle (NY Time)
Candle timeframe (1H, 4H, 15m, etc.)
The script automatically:
Identifies the candle when it forms
Stores its High/Low
Prepares levels for visual projection
🎨 2️⃣ Highlights the Candle Zone
Optionally displays a colored zone (box) between the candle’s high and low:
Helps visualize the liquidity pocket
Useful for session traps, expansion moves, and fair value interpretation
You can choose:
Zone color
Whether to show it or not
Whether it should update only for the latest candle
📈 3️⃣ Draws High/Low Lines With Extensions
High and Low of the detected candle can be plotted as:
Standard lines
Or infinitely extended to the right
Great for identifying:
Breakouts
Retests
Range boundaries
Session expansion models
Optional labels display exact price levels.
🕐 4️⃣ Delayed Display Logic
The indicator only shows levels after a user-defined NY time.
For example:
Show lines only after 8:30 NY — perfect for traders who want pre-session levels hidden until relevant.
🔄 5️⃣ “Show Only Last” Mode
A clean, uncluttered mode that removes all historical drawings and only displays:
The latest zone
The latest high/low lines
Latest labels
Perfect for minimal-chart traders.
⚠️ 6️⃣ Alert System
Receive alerts the moment the targeted session candle forms:
“New Candle Detected”
🧾 7️⃣ Info Panel (Top-Left Corner)
Displays:
Target session hour
Display start time
Candle timeframe
Stored High/Low
Indicator name
Always visible and automatically updates.
⭐ Why Traders Love This Tool
✔ Helps visualize major liquidity zones
✔ Works on all markets & timeframes
✔ Perfect for ICT-style session concepts
✔ Helps anticipate session expansion
✔ Automates manual level drawing
✔ Clean visuals with optional minimal mode
Pine yardımcı programları
One Point Global Net Liquidity The "Fuel" Behind the MarketMost traders look at price action, but price is often just a reflection of the money supply available in the system. This indicator tracks Global Net Liquidity—the actual amount of fiat currency available to flow into risk assets like Crypto and Equities.
Unlike standard "Money Supply" (M2) charts, this indicator focuses on Central Bank Balance Sheets, which is a more direct proxy for "Quantitative Easing" (QE) and "Quantitative Tightening" (QT).
How It Works (The Formula)
This script aggregates the balance sheets of the "Big 4" Central Banks, which represent ~90% of global liquidity. It automatically converts all values to USD Trillions for a standardized view.
{Global Liquidity} = {US Net Liquidity} + {ECB} + {PBoC} + {BoJ}
1. US Net Liquidity (The "Trader's" Formula) We do not just use the Fed's Total Assets. We subtract the money that is "stuck" outside the private economy:
(+) Fed Balance Sheet: Total Assets.
(-) TGA (Treasury General Account): The government's checking account. When this goes up, liquidity is drained from markets.
(-) RRP (Reverse Repo): Money parked by banks at the Fed overnight. When this goes up, liquidity is removed from the system.
2. Global Additions
ECB (Eurozone): Converted to USD.
PBoC (China): Converted to USD.
BoJ (Japan): Converted to USD.
How to Use This Indicator This indicator is designed as an Overlay on the main chart (using the Left Scale).
Correlation: Generally, when the Orange Line (Liquidity) trends up, Bitcoin and the S&P 500 trend up. When Central Banks tighten (line down), risk assets struggle.
The "Divergence" Signal (Alpha):
Bullish: If Price makes a Lower Low but Liquidity makes a Higher Low, it often signals seller exhaustion and a potential bottom.
Bearish: If Price makes a New High but Liquidity fails to follow (or drops), the rally may be unsupported and prone to a reversal.
Settings
Scale: This indicator is pinned to the Scale Left to allow it to overlay price action without distortion.
Data: Uses daily data from ECONOMICS and FRED feeds.
XΩ — Trade Commander (Global)1. What is XΩ — Trade Commander?
XΩ — Trade Commander (Global) is a post‑entry position management system.
It does not tell you where to enter. Instead, it helps you manage a trade after you are already in:
Dynamic Trailing Stop based on volatility (ATR)
Visual Safe Zone under price
R‑Multiple targets (1R, 2R, 3R) for profit‑taking
A live Position Dashboard with PnL and suggested actions
Exit alert when price breaks the Trailing Stop
Plus a ZERO GENESIS brand signature on the chart
Think of it as a trade commander / position guardian that enforces your risk and trailing rules.
2. Basic setup (Inputs)
In the Active Position Settings group:
Position Active?
Turn ON when you have a live position you want to manage.
Turn OFF when flat (no position), to effectively disable the management logic.
Avg Entry Price
Enter your average entry price (if you scaled in, use your weighted average).
This is the reference for all PnL and R calculations.
Initial Stop Loss
Your original invalidation price (hard stop) when you planned the trade.
Used to define:
The size of 1R (initial risk unit)
The locations of 1R, 2R, 3R targets.
Position Size (Units)
Size of your current position (number of shares/coins/contracts, etc.).
Used to convert PnL into currency value.
In the Trailing Stop Engine group:
Trailing Width (xATR)
Controls how tight/loose the trailing stop is:
Smaller value → tighter, closer to price (protects faster, more likely to get stopped out early)
Larger value → looser, farther from price (lets winners run, accepts more swing)
Source
Price source for the trailing engine:
AVA → smoothed price (reduces noise and “random” stop‑outs)
Close → closing price
High/Low → mid of high & low
In the Take Profit Targets (R-Multiples) group:
Show R-Levels
Turn ON to draw 1R, 2R, 3R reference lines on the chart.
Turn OFF if you prefer a cleaner chart.
3. How to read the indicator on the chart
Once Position Active? is ON and you’ve filled Avg Entry Price / Initial Stop Loss / Position Size, you’ll see:
3.1. Trailing Stop line (“The Shield”)
A blue/gray line below price (for long trades):
It only moves up, never down (ratchet‑style trailing).
When price rises → the trailing stop is adjusted upward.
When price falls → the trailing stop stays in place, not lowered.
Color:
Blue → price is still above the trailing stop (protected, trade is “alive”).
Gray → price is below the trailing stop (trailing has been violated).
Visually, this line is your dynamic protective shield.
3.2. Safe Zone (blue fill)
Light blue fill between price (chosen source) and the Trailing Stop line.
Represents your current buffer:
Thick Safe Zone → good distance to the stop → room for normal volatility.
Thin Safe Zone → close to stop → trade is at risk of being closed.
3.3. Entry & Hard Stop lines
Horizontal lines:
Entry Price → gray dotted line
Initial Stop Loss → solid red line
Helps you always see:
Where the trade started
Where the original invalidation was (your planned “I’m wrong here” level)
3.4. R‑Multiple Targets (1R, 2R, 3R)
When Show R-Levels is ON and Initial Stop Loss is set:
1R: dashed green line, labeled 1R
2R: dashed green line, labeled 2R
3R: dashed green line, labeled 3R (Target)
Use these for:
Planning partial take‑profits
Knowing when it’s reasonable to move your stop (e.g., to breakeven at 1R)
Evaluating your trade in terms of reward vs initial risk
3.5. “POSITION GUARDIAN” Dashboard label
Near the current price, you’ll see a label like:
Title: 🛡️ POSITION GUARDIAN
Inside:
Size: your position size and entry price
PnL: current profit/loss percentage and value (auto‑formatted, e.g. 1.23M, 45K, etc.)
R-Multiple: your current R (e.g., 0.7R, 1.5R, 3.2R)
TRAILING STOP: the current trailing stop price
ACTION: a suggested action string, for example:
🚫 TRAILING HIT -> EXIT NOW!
🚀 RUNNING PROFIT (x.xR) -> Hold or Trim
✅ IN PROFIT (x.xR) -> Move SL to BE
⚠️ DRAWDOWN -> Watch Trailing Stop
🟢 BREAKEVEN -> Holding
The text color changes (red, green, yellow, orange, etc.) to match the situation, so you can read your trade status at a glance.
4. How to use it in practice
Step 1 – Right after entering a trade
Open a position using your own entry strategy (Commander does not give entries).
On the TradingView chart:
Set Position Active? = true
Fill:
Avg Entry Price = your actual entry
Initial Stop Loss = your planned hard stop
Position Size = the size of your position
Adjust:
Trailing Width (xATR):
Lower for tight, short‑term trades (scalp/intraday).
Higher for swing/position trades to avoid premature exits.
Turn Show R-Levels ON if you trade in terms of R.
Now the script will start drawing the Trailing Stop, Safe Zone, R levels, and Dashboard.
Step 2 – While the trade is running
When price moves in your favor:
Track:
Your current R-Multiple
How much Safe Zone you have
Typical logic:
Once you reach ≥ 1R, consider moving your hard stop to breakeven (BE).
Around 2R–3R, consider:
Taking partial profits
Tightening the trailing
Letting the remainder run with the Shield.
When price pulls back:
If price breaks below the Trailing Stop:
Dashboard shows the red warning: TRAILING HIT -> EXIT NOW!
The alert (if enabled) will also fire.
→ This is your disciplined exit condition according to Commander.
When price hovers near entry:
Dashboard shows BREAKEVEN or DRAWDOWN.
You can:
Give the setup more time
Or decide to scratch the trade if it no longer fits your plan
(The key is: you’re deciding based on a clear snapshot, not pure emotion.)
5. Alerts
The script contains one key alert:
XΩ EXIT SIGNAL
Triggers when price crosses under the Trailing Stop.
Message: "Price breached Trailing Stop. Exit position immediately!"
Use this alert to automate your exit discipline: you don’t need to stare at the chart to know when your trailing stop is hit.
FVG — Major Gaps OnlyA gap is an area on the price chart where no trading occurred, so the candle jumps from one level to another without filling the intermediate prices.
In traditional markets (stocks, indices), gaps often occur due to overnight trading halts.
JRien Position Sizer (Real-Time) — ATR / LOD / Manual % $ RiskReal time position sizing based on real time potential entry price and calculations based on max risk. Usable on multi timeframes. You can also input manually your entry and stop based on your own discretion. I usually use a spreadsheet to calculate these things but wanted a way to see this in real time without needing to type out Entry, ATR, Stops, etc - TradingView has all this information already so why not just have it automatically update!
4 Stop Types:
ATR Based Stop
Based on the stocks ATR (mainly used on daily charts but options if you use other timeframe ATR) and uses a multiple of that ATR to base the plot. Many traders use less than 0.6ATR to base your stop as a rule and max entry 60% from LOD as another rule.
Manual Percent Stop
You're able to input your desired % stop and this will dynamically move with the current entry (last) price.
Manual Price Stop
You're able to input your desired price $ stop and this will dynamically move with the current entry (last) price.
Low of Day (LOD) Stop
Calculates your position based on if you were to have your stop at LOD and also calculates % of ATR away from LOD. Many swing traders use LOD for their stop so this moving dynamically with the current LOD and automatically calculating this is useful.
Calculates:
Entry (Last)
ATR (14 | D)
ATR Stop Price
Manual Stop Percent
Manual Stop Price
Final Stop
Risk per Share ($)
Shares by Risk
Shares by Stake
Final Shares
Final Position Cost
Potential Stop Loss
LOD Price
Loss at LOD
LOD Risk % of Account
LOD dist as % of ATR
Customizable table - can hide items, change color and size.
Also an option to hide historical data - so plots start at market open!
Let me know if any calculations are incorrect, good luck!
- JRien
Risk Management Console Pro by ShogunRisk Management Console Pro - Professional Trading Analytics
⚠️ CRITICAL LIQUIDATION DISCLAIMER ⚠️
The liquidation price calculated by this indicator is an approximation based on MEXC perpetual futures methodology and serves as a guide only. This level represents a catastrophic threshold and should never be approached in live trading. Actual liquidation prices vary by exchange, position size, market conditions, and fee structures. It is the trader's sole responsibility to diligently monitor risk exposure, maintain adequate margin buffers, and manage positions appropriately. This tool does not replace proper risk management protocols or real-time exchange data.
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Overview
The Risk Management Console Pro is institutional-grade risk architecture I've built for futures traders who need precision capital deployment and surgical risk management. After a decade working across institutional finance and fintech, I developed this tool to bridge the gap between professional trading desks and retail execution.
Core Functionality
When you load the indicator, it prompts you to set three critical price anchors using a simple drag-and-drop interface: Entry Price, Stop Loss, and Take Profit. The system calculates an approximate liquidation threshold using MEXC perpetual futures methodology, so you can visualize your catastrophic risk boundary. All levels appear as horizontal reference lines with visual labels - a much cleaner approach than standard long/short tools.
The console automatically detects whether you're going long or short based on where your entry sits relative to your take profit. No manual configuration needed. The liquidation calculations adapt correctly for both directions.
Capital Allocation Framework
You configure two key parameters:
- Maintenance Margin (default $1,000 USD) - the collateral required to open and maintain your leveraged position
- Leverage (default 50x) - your position multiplier that determines capital efficiency and risk exposure
These inputs drive all the real-time calculations, letting you model position sizing with institutional precision before you commit capital.
Dashboard Analytics
The on-chart console displays comprehensive trade metrics in a clean, modern interface built for quick decision-making:
- Position Architecture: Margin, Leverage, Position Size, Quantity
- Risk/Reward Ratio: Real-time R:R calculation showing your trade asymmetry
- Price Levels: Entry, Stop Loss, Take Profit, Liquidation (color-coded as blue/red/green/orange)
- Live Performance: Unrealized P/L updating tick-by-tick with percentage of margin exposure (green for profit, red for loss)
- Projected Outcomes: Maximum loss and profit potential with margin-relative percentages
Display Customization
You have full control over visual elements through Display Settings:
- Toggle horizontal price lines
- Show/hide price level labels
- Toggle dashboard visibility
- Adjust table position (6 locations available)
- Modify color scheme (title, data, text, accent colors)
Professional Design
I went with an institutional dark theme using a slate/charcoal palette. The interface delivers Wall Street-caliber aesthetics with functional clarity. Every element is built for traders operating in high-stakes environments where milliseconds and basis points matter. The dashboard footer carries the Kaizen Systems signature, representing our commitment to continuous improvement in trading methodology.
Key Features Summary
- Automatic long/short detection
- MEXC-based liquidation calculation
- Real-time unrealized P/L tracking
- Draggable price level inputs
- Color-coded risk visualization
- Institutional-grade interface
- Fully customizable display options
- Position size optimization
- R:R ratio analysis
Risk Management Philosophy
This tool embodies a principle I've learned over the years: professional traders quantify risk before entering positions. By visualizing entry, exit, and catastrophic thresholds simultaneously, the Risk Management Console Pro enforces disciplined capital allocation and eliminates emotional decision-making during live market conditions.
Intended Use
I designed this for futures traders using leverage on perpetual contracts, particularly those trading on MEXC or similar platforms. It's ideal for intraday scalpers, swing traders, and position traders who need precise risk calculations across varying timeframes. The console transforms abstract concepts like "position sizing" and "risk/reward" into tangible, actionable data.
About Me
I'm Shogun, and I've spent the last decade deep in quantitative analysis, algorithmic strategy development, and institutional trading operations. As Founding Director of Kaizen Systems - a fintech platform I built to democratize institutional-grade tools for retail traders - I've created multiple proprietary indicators including the Katana strategy series. My focus is translating complex quantitative frameworks into accessible, actionable tools that empower traders at every level to execute with professional discipline.
The Risk Management Console Pro represents my commitment to elevating retail trading standards by providing the same caliber of risk analytics used by professional trading desks. Through continuous refinement and trader feedback, Kaizen Systems delivers tools that merge technical sophistication with practical usability.
Technical Notes
- Compatible with all timeframes and instruments
- Lightweight execution with minimal CPU overhead
- Updates in real-time on every tick
- No repainting or future data leakage
- Pure Pine Script v5 implementation
Support and Updates
For questions, feature requests, or trading strategy consultation, connect with me through TradingView messaging or visit Kaizen Systems for comprehensive trading resources and community support.
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© 2025 Shogun for Kaizen Systems | All Rights Reserved
Trade responsibly. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Leverage amplifies both gains and losses.
BOT MAN STRATEGYthis indicator is made and updated by SPXHERO
the daily updates is to add new levels in SPX500 that are aligned with our new innovative strategy to read market movements and define useful Support and resistant
Simulated Liquidation Heatmap [QuantAlgo]🟢 Overview
This indicator visualizes where clusters of stop-loss orders and liquidation levels are likely located, displayed as a 'heatmap'. It's based on the concept of market structure liquidity: large groups of stop orders tend to gather around obvious technical levels (like swing highs and lows), and these pools of orders often attract price movement from institutional traders. The indicator uses a fractal-based algorithm to identify these high-probability liquidation zones and displays them as dynamic, color-coded boxes.
The key feature is the thermal color gradient, which indicates the freshness (age) and therefore the relative relevance of the liquidity zone. Hot colors (e.g., Red/Yellow) represent fresh clusters that have just formed, suggesting strong and immediate liquidity interest. Cold colors (e.g., Blue/Purple) represent aged or decaying clusters that are becoming less relevant over time. This visualization allows traders to anticipate potential liquidity sweeps (stop hunts) and understand areas of significant retail and institutional positioning.
🟢 Key Features
1. Liquidity Zone Heatmap
The core function is the identification of swing high and swing low price points using a user-defined Lookback period. These points are where retail traders are statistically most likely to place their stop-loss orders. The indicator simulates the clustering of these orders by drawing a zone (box) around the detected swing point, with the vertical size controlled by the Stop/Liquidation Zone Width (%) setting.
▶ Cluster Lookback: Defines the sensitivity of swing point detection. Lower values detect frequent, minor zones (scalping/intraday); higher values detect major, stronger swing points (swing trading).
▶ Zone Width (%): Sets the percentage range above and below the swing point where stops are simulated to cluster, accounting for slippage and typical stop placement spread.
▶ Liquidity Decay: Zones gradually fade in color intensity and are eventually removed after the user-defined Liquidity Decay Period (Bars), ensuring the heatmap only displays relevant, current liquidity areas.
▶ Round Number Filter: An optional filter that limits the display to liquidity zones occurring only at psychologically significant round numbers (e.g., $100, $1,500.00), which typically attract higher concentrations of orders.
2. Thermal Color Gradient
The heatmap's color is a direct function of the zone's age, providing a visual proxy for immediate relevance.
▶ Freshness: Newly created zones are displayed in the Hot Color (high relevance).
▶ Decay: As bars pass, the zone color transitions along the gradient toward the Cold Color and increased transparency (lower relevance), until it is removed entirely.
▶ Color Schemes: Multiple pre-configured and custom color schemes are available to optimize the visualization for different chart themes and color preferences.
3. Liquidity Heat Thermometer
An optional visual thermometer is displayed on the chart to provide an instant, overall assessment of the current liquidation heat level in the immediate vicinity of the price.
▶ Calculation: The thermometer calculates an aggregate heat score based on the age and proximity of all liquidity zones within a user-defined Zone Detection Range (%) of the current price.
▶ Visual Feedback: A marker (triangle) points to the corresponding level on the thermometer's color gradient (Hot to Cold). A high reading indicates price is close to fresh, dense stop clusters, suggesting high volatility or an imminent liquidity sweep is probable. A low reading indicates price is in a low-density or aged liquidity area.
▶ Customization: The thermometer's resolution, position, and text size are fully customizable for optimal chart placement and readability.
🟢 Practical Applications
▶ Anticipate Sweeps: Prioritize trading in the direction of Hot (fresh) liquidity zones. For example, a hot low-side zone suggests strong sell-side liquidity (stop-losses) is available for large buyers to sweep.
▶ Filter Noise: Use the Round Number Filter to focus only on the highest probability liquidation zones, which are often at clean, psychological price levels.
▶ Validate Entries: Combine the Heat Thermometer with price action analysis. A rising heat level indicates increasing proximity to a major stop cluster, signaling a potential turn or an aggressive market move to sweep those stops.
▶ Risk Management: Understand that price often acts dynamically around these zones. High heat levels imply high risk/reward setups; stops should be placed strategically beyond the defined Liquidation Zone Width.
▶ Multi-Timeframe Context: Higher timeframes (e.g., Daily, 4-Hour) often reveal more significant, major liquidity zones. Use this indicator on lower timeframes (e.g., 5-min, 15-min) for execution, but prioritize zones that align with higher-timeframe structures.
Watermark | Bar Time | Average Daily RangeMulti Info Panel & Watermark
Multi Info Panel & Watermark is a utility indicator that displays several pieces of chart information in a single, customizable panel. It is designed to support intraday and swing analysis by making key data—such as symbol details, date, and average daily range—easy to see at a glance, as well as providing simple tools for notes and backtesting.
Features
Watermark / Custom Note
Optional text overlay that can be used as a watermark or personal note.
Can display a strategy name, reminder, or any other user-defined label on the chart.
Ticker Info
Shows information about the currently active symbol on the chart (for example, symbol name and other basic details depending on the inputs).
Helps keep track of which market or pair is being analyzed, especially when using multiple charts.
Current Date
Displays the current date directly on the chart.
Useful for screenshots, journaling, and documenting analysis.
Average Daily Range (ADR)
Calculates the average daily range of the active symbol over a user-defined number of recent days.
Helps visualize how much price typically moves in a day, which can support position sizing, target setting, or volatility awareness within your own trading approach.
Open Bar Time Marker
Marks the open time of a selected bar (for example, a session open or a specific reference bar).
Primarily intended as a visual aid for manual backtesting and reviewing historical price action.
Usage
Use the watermark and ticker info to keep your charts labeled and organized.
Refer to the ADR readout to understand typical daily volatility of the instrument you are studying.
Use the date and open bar time marker when creating screenshots, trade journals, or when replaying historical sessions for review.
This script does not generate trading signals and does not guarantee any performance or results. It is provided solely as an informational and visualization tool. Always combine it with your own analysis, risk management, and decision-making. Nothing in this indicator or description should be considered financial advice.
GexView📈 OVERVIEW
GexView indicator plots the Historical Gamma Exposure (GEX) profile, directly on the chart. It enables traders and analysts to observe how GEX profile evolve across multiple days/sessions.
🧲 CONCEPT
Today everybody uses Gamma Exposure. Gamma is the ROC (Rate of Change) for an option’s delta. GEX is crucial for all traders, not just intraday traders, because it helps assess market stability and potential volatility shifts driven by options positioning.
High positive GEX generally implies a mean-reverting market, where big price swings are dampened, while negative GEX signals increased volatility and potential large moves.
Understanding GEX allows traders to anticipate liquidity-driven price action, identify key support and resistance levels, and adjust strategies accordingly. In today’s market, where options flow heavily influences underlying assets, ignoring GEX can mean missing critical market dynamics that impact both short-term and long-term positions.
💡 UNIQUENESS
This indicator is a unique tool and offers a groundbreaking way to visualize market dynamics by plotting Historical Gamma Exposure (GEX), like a Volume Profile across multiple days or sessions. For the first time, traders can clearly see how GEX levels evolve over time, revealing how certain price zones gain or lose importance as market conditions change. This multi-session GEX profile allows users to identify persistent areas of dealer positioning and potential support or resistance that develop and shift over days. Unlike traditional GEX tools designed primarily for intraday use, this indicator provides valuable insight for both short-term traders and medium-term investors seeking to understand how option market flows influence price behaviour over extended periods.
⚙️ FEATURES
• Historical Gamma Exposure
The GexView indicator by default plots the last 6 days of the GEX profile, providing a framework for understanding the bigger picture.
• GEX profile
Displays the 10 largest GEX levels across all expirations (thick lines), as well as the 10 largest GEX levels for the next expiration (thin lines, 0DTE or upcoming).
• Update
Daily, after market close, based on new open interest. No more manual level imports.
Just one-click update.
• Settings
Option to plot total sum GEX for all expirations, or only net GEX for next expiration.
• Watchlist
SPX, NDX, DIA, SPY, QQQ, VIX, VXX, IBIT
(Additional tickers coming soon)
• Mapping
The indicator automatically detects and maps the underlying ticker on your chart, or lets you plot any symbol from the available watchlist.
🔍 HOW TO USE
• Identify intraday support and resistance levels shaped by option market dynamics
• Quickly spot significant GEX levels and compare how they relate to other key levels.
• Compare current vs. past GEX distributions for contextual trend analysis
• Observe structural GEX shifts that may align with volatility or mean-reversion setups
• Easily understanding if an asset trading on positive gamma (around green lines), or negative gamma (around red lines)
Examples:
1. DIA ETF
2. QQQ and VIX
📚 NOTES
• Calculation
GEX for All Expirations: This is the total sum (Call+Put) of gamma exposure of all expirations.
GEX for Nearest Expirations: This is the net sum (Call-Put) of gamma exposure of next expirations (0DTE if available).
• Trading Session - RTH & ETH
The indicator can include the extended trading hours when activated on the chart.
✅ VISUALIZATION
• Vertical implementation of gamma exposure profile.
• Thick lines represent the total gamma exposure across all expiration contracts.
• Thin lines represent the gamma exposure of next expiration only.
• All Expirations: Green colour if Calls > Puts, Red colour if Calls < Puts
• Next Expiration: Lime colour if Calls > Puts, Maroon colour if Calls < Puts
⚠️ DISCLAIMER
This indicator is provided for informational and educational purposes only.
It does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument.
Historical Gamma patterns and analytical interpretations do not guarantee future performance.
All analysis should be combined with independent research and risk management.
MTF Dashboard Table - Sachin ThakareOne Dashboard, Complete Market View!
By - Sachin Thakare (India, Mumbai)
MTF HUD Indicator - All-in-One Market Dashboard
📊 Basic Information
Indicator Name: MTF HUD Table - Bias Column
Created By: Sachin Thakare
Version: Pine Script v5
Type: Multi-Timeframe Heads-Up Display (HUD)
Category: Strategy/Utility Tool
🎯 What This Indicator Does
This is a comprehensive Multi-Timeframe Market Dashboard that displays key technical indicators across 8 different timeframes (3min to Monthly) in a single, easy-to-read table format. It helps traders quickly assess market bias and make informed decisions.
✨ Key Features
📈 Multi-Timeframe Analysis
8 Timeframes: 3m, 5m, 15m, 1H, 4H, Daily, Weekly, Monthly
Real-time Updates: All timeframes update simultaneously
Color-coded Signals: Instant visual feedback
🔢 Technical Indicators Included
Price Change & % Change - Immediate price movement
VWAP - Volume Weighted Average Price
EMA 9/21 - Exponential Moving Average crossover
200 MA - Long-term trend indicator
SuperTrend 10/3 - Trend-following indicator
RSI 9 - Momentum oscillator
MACD 8/21/5 - Moving Average Convergence Divergence
ADX 7/7 - Average Directional Index
Alligator - Bill Williams' trend indicator
Stochastic 5/3/3 - Overbought/Oversold levels
ATR 10 - Average True Range (volatility)
PH/PL - Previous Day High/Low position
🎨 Visual Design
Color Psychology:
🟢 Green: Strong Bullish
🟩 Light Green: Bullish
🔴 Red: Strong Bearish
🟥 Light Red: Bearish
⚪ Gray: Neutral
Customizable Position: Top/Bottom, Left/Right, Center
Clean Table Format: Professional HUD-style display
⚙️ Smart Features
Bias Column: Automatic market bias calculation
Score-based System: 11 indicators contribute to bias score
Customizable Thresholds: Adjust bull/bear levels
Multi-timeframe Security: Accurate timeframe calculations
🚀 How to Use
For Beginners:
Install the indicator on any chart
Look at the BIAS column for overall market direction
Check consistency across timeframes
Stronger signals when multiple timeframes agree
For Advanced Traders:
Identify confluence - When multiple indicators align
Timeframe alignment - Look for agreements across timeframes
Divergence spotting - When timeframes show conflicting signals
Entry/Exit points - Use with price action confirmation
Trading Strategies:
Trend Following: Follow the dominant bias across higher timeframes
Mean Reversion: Look for extreme readings in oscillator columns
Breakout Trading: Use PH/PL and ATR columns
Swing Trading: Focus on 4H and Daily timeframes
⚙️ Customization Settings
Position Settings:
Choose from 5 display positions
Adjust to your preferred chart layout
Indicator Parameters:
Adjust all indicator lengths and periods
Modify OB/OS levels for RSI and Stochastic
Change MA types (SMA/EMA) for 200 MA
Bias Thresholds:
Strong Bull Threshold: 8 (default)
Bull Threshold: 3 (default)
Bear Threshold: -3 (default)
Strong Bear Threshold: -8 (default)
💡 Pro Tips
Start with Higher Timeframes - Daily and Weekly first
Look for Alignment - Best trades when 3+ timeframes agree
Watch the BIAS Column - Quick market sentiment check
Combine with Price Action - Use support/resistance with signals
Risk Management - Never trade on indicator alone
⚠️ Important Notes
Not a Standalone System: Use with other analysis methods
Lagging Indicators: Most components are trend-following
Market Conditions: Works best in trending markets
Customize for Your Style: Adjust parameters for your trading style
🔄 Updates & Support
The indicator is regularly updated based on user feedback and market changes. For suggestions or issues, please leave a comment on the TradingView script page.
Perfect For: Day Traders, Swing Traders, Position Traders, Market Analysts, and anyone needing quick multi-timeframe analysis.
Best Results: When combined with fundamental analysis, risk management, and proper trading psychology.
Grid Percentage Optimizer (V6)Optimizer for an infinity grid. Allows you to determine the optimal percentage for an infinity grid over a specific time range.
PoC Migration Map [BackQuant]PoC Migration Map
A volume structure tool that builds a side volume profile, extracts rolling Points of Control (PoCs), and maps how those PoCs migrate through time so you can see where value is moving, how volume clusters shift, and how that aligns with trend regime.
What this is
This indicator combines a classic volume profile with a segmented PoC trail. It looks back over a configurable window, splits that window into bins by price, and shows you where volume has concentrated. On top of that, it slices the lookback into fixed bar segments, finds the local PoC in each segment, and plots those PoCs as a chain of nodes across the chart.
The result is a "migration map" of value:
A side volume profile that shows how volume is distributed over the recent price range.
A sequence of PoC nodes that show where local value has been accepted over time.
Lines that connect those PoCs to reveal the path of value migration.
Optional trend coloring based on EMA 12 and EMA 21, so each PoC also encodes trend regime.
Used together, this gives you a structural read on where the market has actually traded size, how "value" is moving, and whether that movement is aligned or fighting the current trend.
Core components
Lookback volume profile - a side histogram built from all closes and volumes in the chosen lookback window.
Segmented PoC trail - rolling PoCs computed over fixed bar segments, plotted as nodes in time.
Trend heatmap - optional color mapping of PoC nodes using EMA 12 versus EMA 21.
PoC labels - optional labels on every Nth PoC for easier reading and referencing.
How it works
1) Global lookback and binning
You choose:
Lookback Bars - how far back to collect data.
Number of Bins - how finely to split the price range.
The script:
Finds the highest high and lowest low in the lookback.
Computes the total price range and divides it into equal binCount slices.
Assigns each bar's close and volume into the appropriate price bin.
This creates a discretized volume distribution across the entire lookback.
2) Side volume profile
If "Show Side Profile" is enabled, a right-hand volume profile is drawn:
Each bin becomes a horizontal bar anchored at a configurable "Right Offset" from the current bar.
The horizontal width of each bar is proportional to that bin's volume relative to the maximum volume bin.
Optionally, volume values and percentages are printed inside the profile bars.
Color and transparency are controlled by:
Base Profile Color and its transparency.
A gradient that uses relative volume to modulate opacity between lower volume and higher volume bins.
Profile Width (%) - how wide the maximum bin can extend in bars.
This gives you an at-a-glance view of the volume landscape for the chosen lookback window.
3) Segmenting for PoC migration
To build the PoC trail, the lookback is divided into segments:
Bars per Segment - bars in each local cluster.
Number of Segments - how many segments you want to see back in time.
For each segment:
The script uses the same price bins and accumulates volume only from bars in that segment.
It finds the bin with the highest volume in that segment, which is the local PoC for that segment.
It sets the PoC price to the center of that bin.
It finds the "mid bar" of the segment and places the PoC node at that time on the chart.
This is repeated for each segment from older to newer, so you get a chain of PoCs that shows how local value has migrated over time.
4) Trend regime and color coding
The indicator precomputes:
EMA 12 (Fast).
EMA 21 (Slow).
For each PoC:
It samples EMA 12 and EMA 21 at the mid bar of that segment.
It computes a simple trend score as fast EMA minus slow EMA.
If trend heatmap is enabled, PoC nodes (and the lines between them) are colored by:
Trend Up Color if EMA 12 is above EMA 21.
Trend Down Color if EMA 12 is below EMA 21.
Trend Flat Color if they are roughly equal.
If the trend heatmap is disabled, PoC color is instead based on PoC migration:
If the current PoC is above the previous PoC, use the Up PoC Color.
If the current PoC is below the previous PoC, use the Down PoC Color.
If unchanged, use the Flat PoC Color.
5) Connecting PoCs and labels
Once PoC prices and times are known:
Each PoC is connected to the previous one with a dotted line, using the PoC's color.
Optional labels are placed next to every Nth PoC:
Label text uses a simple "PoC N" scheme.
Label background uses a configurable label background color.
Label border is colored by the PoC's own color for visual consistency.
This turns the PoCs into a visual path that can be read like a "value trajectory" across the chart.
What it plots
When fully enabled, you will see:
A right-sided volume profile for the chosen lookback window, built from volume by price.
Colored horizontal bars representing each price bin's relative volume.
Optional volume text showing each bin's volume and its percentage of the profile maximum.
A series of PoC nodes spaced across the chart at the mid point of each segment.
Dotted lines connecting those PoCs to show the migration path of value.
Optional PoC labels at each Nth node for easier reference.
Color-coding of PoCs and lines either by EMA 12 / 21 trend regime or by up/down PoC drift.
Reading PoC migration and market pressure
Side profile as a pressure map
The side profile shows where trading has been most active:
Thick, opaque bars represent high volume zones and possible high interest or acceptance areas.
Thin, faint bars represent low volume zones, potential rejection or transition areas.
When price trades near a high volume bin, the market is sitting on an area of prior acceptance and size.
When price moves quickly through low volume bins, it often does so with less friction.
This gives you a static map of where the market has been willing to do business within your lookback.
PoC trail as a value migration map
The PoC chain represents "where value has lived" over time:
An upward sloping PoC trail indicates value migrating higher. Buyers have been willing to transact at increasingly higher prices.
A downward sloping trail indicates value migrating lower and sellers pushing the center of mass down.
A flat or oscillating trail indicates balance or rotational behaviour, with no clear directional acceptance.
Taken together, you can interpret:
Side profile as "where the volume mass sits", a static pressure field.
PoC trail as "how that mass has moved", the dynamic path of value.
Trend heatmap as a regime overlay
When PoCs are colored by the EMA 12 / 21 spread:
Green PoCs mark segments where the faster EMA is above the slower EMA, that is, a local uptrend regime.
Red PoCs mark segments where the faster EMA is below the slower EMA, that is, a local downtrend regime.
Gray PoCs mark flat or ambiguous trend segments.
This lets you answer questions like:
"Is value migrating higher while the trend regime is also up?" (trend confirming value).
"Is value migrating higher but most PoCs are red?" (value against the prevailing trend).
"Has value started to roll over just as PoCs flip from green to red?" (early regime transition).
Key settings
General Settings
Lookback Bars - how many bars back to use for both the global volume profile and segment profiles.
Number of Bins - how many price bins to split the high to low range into.
Profile Settings
Show Side Profile - toggle the right-hand volume profile on or off.
Profile Width (%) - how wide the largest volume bar is allowed to be in terms of bars.
Base Profile Color - the starting color for profile bars, with transparency.
Show Volume Values - if enabled, print volume and percent for each non-zero bin.
Profile Text Color - color for volume text inside the profile.
PoC Migration Settings
Show PoC Migration - toggle the PoC trail plotting.
Bars per Segment - the number of bars contained in each segment.
Number of Segments - how many segments to build backwards from the current bar.
Horizontal Spacing (bars) - spacing between PoC nodes when drawn. (Used to separate PoCs horizontally.)
Label Every Nth PoC - draw labels at every Nth PoC (0 or 1 to suppress labels).
Right Offset (bars) - horizontal offset to anchor the side profile on the right.
Up PoC Color - color used when a PoC is higher than the previous one, if trend heatmap is off.
Down PoC Color - color used when a PoC is lower than the previous one, if trend heatmap is off.
Flat PoC Color - color used when the PoC is unchanged, if trend heatmap is off.
PoC Label Background - background color for PoC labels.
Trend Heatmap Settings
Color PoCs By Trend (EMA 12 / 21) - when enabled, overrides simple up/down coloring and uses EMA-based trend colors.
Fast EMA - length for the fast EMA.
Slow EMA - length for the slow EMA.
Trend Up Color - color for PoCs in a bullish EMA regime.
Trend Down Color - color for PoCs in a bearish EMA regime.
Trend Flat Color - color for neutral or flat EMA regimes.
Trading applications
1) Value migration and trend confirmation
Use the PoC path to see if value is following price or lagging it:
In a healthy uptrend, price, PoCs, and trend regime should all lean higher.
In a weakening trend, price may still move up, but PoCs flatten or start drifting lower, suggesting fewer participants are accepting the new highs.
In a downtrend, persistent downward PoC migration confirms that sellers are winning the value battle.
2) Identifying acceptance and rejection zones
Combine the side profile with PoC locations:
High volume bins near clustered PoCs mark strong acceptance zones, good areas to watch for re-tests and decision points.
PoCs that quickly jump across low volume areas can indicate rejection and fast repricing between value zones.
High volume zones with mixed PoC colors may signal balance or prolonged negotiation.
3) Structuring entries and exits
Use the map to refine trade location:
Fade trades against value migration are higher risk unless you see clear signs of exhaustion or regime change.
Pullbacks into prior PoC zones in the direction of the current PoC slope can offer higher quality entries.
Stops placed beyond major accepted zones (clusters of PoCs and high volume bins) are less likely to be hit by random noise.
4) Regime transitions
Watch how PoCs behave as the EMA regime changes:
A flip in EMA 12 versus EMA 21, coupled with a turn in PoC slope, is a strong signal that value is beginning to move with the new trend.
If EMAs flip but PoC migration does not follow, the trend signal may be early or false.
A weakening PoC path (lower highs in PoCs) while trend colors are still green can warn of a late-stage trend.
Best practices
Start with a moderate lookback such as 200 to 300 bars and a moderate bin count such as 20 to 40. Too many bins can make the profile overly granular and sparse.
Align "Bars per Segment" with your trading horizon. For example, 5 to 10 bars for intraday, 10 to 20 bars for swing.
Use the profile and PoC trail as structural context rather than as a direct buy or sell signal. Combine with your existing setups for timing.
Pay attention to clusters of PoCs at similar prices. Those are areas where the market has repeatedly accepted value, and they often matter on future tests.
Notes
This is a structural volume tool, not a complete trading system. It does not manage execution, position sizing or risk management. Use it to understand:
Where the bulk of trading has occurred in your chosen window.
How the center of volume has migrated over time.
Whether that migration is aligned with or fighting the current trend regime.
By turning PoC evolution into a visible path and adding a trend-aware heatmap, the PoC Migration Map makes it easier to see how value has been moving, where the market is likely to feel "heavy" or "light", and how that structure fits into your trading decisions.
ONLY FOR EUR/USD : EMA9/EMA20 + RSI + MACD + Fibonacci (v6) FOR PAIRS WHICH HAS A MOMENTUM , trade only using manually not algo , use proper RR.
good luck
Indicador de divergencias RSI (confirmación EMA12)RSI divergence indicator on the 5-period timescale for BTC. It includes a filter for the first RSI peak in extreme zones (overbought for long positions, overbought for short positions). It also features optional confirmation of a 12-period EMA breakout after the divergence.
Dynamic Pip Value CalculatorPIP Value (Account Currency + Pips) is a lightweight risk-management tool that helps you instantly see how much each pip is worth in your own account currency – and how much money a given move in pips represents for your position size.
What this indicator does
Automatically reads the current symbol (Forex, Gold, Silver, Crypto, indices…).
Calculates pip value per 1 pip based on: Symbol type (Forex / XAUUSD / XAGUSD / BTC / ETH…), Tick size, Standard lot size, Your position size (Lots input)
Converts pip value from the quote currency of the pair (e.g. USD in EURUSD) into your Account Currency using real-time FX rates.
Multiplies by the number of Pips you input to show the total money you would gain or lose if price moves that distance.
📥 Inputs
1. Account Currency
Choose your account’s currency (USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, AUD, CAD, CHF, NZD, THB).
AUTO option will use the quote currency of the current symbol.
2. Pips: Number of pips you want to measure (for example: your SL or TP distance).
3. Lots: Position size in lots (0.01, 0.1, 1.0, 2.5, …).
4. Font Color / Background Color: Customize the appearance of the info box to match your chart style.
📊 Output
A small info panel in the bottom-right corner shows:
Symbol & lots: EURUSD | 1.00 lot(s)
Pip value per 1 pip (converted to your Account Currency): Pip value: 9.62 USD per 1 pip
Money value for the number of pips you entered: 50 pips = 481.00 USD
This lets you quickly answer questions like:
“If my stop loss is 35 pips, how much money will I lose with 0.2 lots?”
“How much is 1 pip on XAUUSD with 1 lot in an EUR account?”
📌 Notes
Works on most Forex pairs, XAUUSD, XAGUSD, BTCUSD, ETHUSD and many other symbols.
Pip definitions for Gold, Silver and Crypto are aligned with common trading conventions.
This indicator is for position sizing and risk awareness only – it does not generate trading signals.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading Forex, CFDs, metals and cryptocurrencies involves a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Always do your own research and never risk money you cannot afford to lose.
GOD MODE HUNT v2.0 — SCREENER ULTIME 2025test screener pour détecter les crypto basée sur des règles strict
MCX GOLD1! SpotHelps convert MCX gold rolling contract symbol to spot price.
Note: It cant accurately infer the contract role date, so it makes some assumptions, use the rolldays to adjust where needed
Multi-Factor Trend Confluence Indicator (PTP V4)Disclaimer: This is a technical analysis tool for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, financial solicitation, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or instrument. Trading involves significant risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Use at your own risk.
KEY Features and Strategic Methodology
This is a comprehensive trend and confluence indicator built on multiple factors to identify potential pullbacks within an established trend.
• Core Trend Filter: Uses a long-term EMA to confirm the overall market bias.
• Fibonacci Pullback Logic: Identifies potential low-risk entry zones by calculating a 61.8% Fibonacci Retracement over a user-defined lookback period.
• Multi-Factor Confluence: A signal is generated only when the price touches the Fib zone AND the following factors align (You can edit the script to adjust the confluence conditions.):
o RSI is above 50.
o Positive DI is above Negative DI (DMI Bullish Crossover).
o Price is above the fast EMA.
• Consecutive Signal Counter: Includes a unique counter that highlights bars where the confluence conditions have been met for a minimum number of consecutive candles (4 by default), aiding in the validation of strong momentum entries.
• Moving Average Visualization: Plots and color-fills 10 WMA, 21 EMA, 42 EMA, and 200 EMA to provide a full market context and visualize momentum shifts.
1. Short-Term Momentum (WMA10 vs. EMA42 Fill)
This fill area highlights immediate price acceleration and momentum shifts:
• Green Fill (Bullish Momentum): WMA10 > EMA42.
• Red Fill (Bearish Momentum): WMA10 < EMA42.
2. Long-Term Market Context (EMA200 vs. EMA42 Fill)
This fill area defines the dominant backdrop of the market, essential for strategic positioning:
• Green Fill (Bullish Context): EMA200 < EMA42.
• Red Fill (Bearish Context): EMA200 > EMA42.
EMA200 Line Coloration
The EMA200 line color itself also provides a visual cue for the long-term context:
• Red Line: When EMA200 > EMA42 (Bearish Context).
• Green Line: When EMA200 < EMA42 (Bullish Context).
Customization
The indicator is highly customizable via the settings menu, allowing users to adjust lengths for EMA, RSI, DMI, Pivot Points, and the specific parameters for the Fibonacci Retracement Strategy (tolerance and candle limits).






















