Trendly
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About the script:
This script is an easy-to-use trend indicator, which is based on another popular indicator called "Supertrend" . The basic idea is very simple, i.e. to compute Average True Range(ATR) and use that as the basis for trend detection. The key difference lies in a custom trend detection method, that computes trends across different timeframes and projects them in a table view. The script also tries to improve the behaviour of the existing indicator by highlighting flat regions on the chart, indicating sideways market or potential trend reversals.
How to use it:
You can use it just like any other indicator, add it to your chart and start analysing market trends. Results can be interpreted as follows.
Indicator output is currently made up of two main components:
>> Trend Table:
Appears at the bottom right of your screen
Contains trend indicator for 9 different timeframes
Timeframes can be adjusted using indicator settings panel
Green Up Arrow --> Up Trend
Red Down Arrow --> Down Trend
>> Enhanced Supertrend:
Shows up as a line plot on the chart
Green line indicates up trend
Red line indicates down trend
White regions indicates slow moving markets or a potential trend reversal
Indicator can be used on any timeframe, it provides a view of current and historical market trend
Can be used as an indicator for entering/exiting trades
Can be used to build custom trading strategies
Komut dosyalarını "Table" için ara
Centered Moving AverageThe Centered moving averages tries to resolve the problem that simple moving average are still not able to handle significant trends when forecasting.
When computing a running moving average in a centered way, placing the average in the middle time period makes sense.
If we average an even number of terms, we need to smooth the smoothed values.
Try to describe it with an example:
The following table shows the results using a centered moving average of 4.
nterim Steps
Period Value SMA Centered
1 9
1.5
2 8
2.5 9.5
3 9 9.5
3.5 9.5
4 12 10.0
4.5 10.5
5 9 10.750
5.5 11.0
6 12
6.5
7 11
This is the final table:
Period Value Centered MA
1 9
2 8
3 9 9.5
4 12 10.0
5 9 10.75
6 12
7 11
With this script we are able to process and display the centered moving average as described above.
In addition to this, however, the script is also able to estimate the potential projection of future data based on the available data by replicating where necessary the data of the last bar until the number of data necessary for the calculation of the required centered moving average is reached.
If for example I have 20 daily closings and I look for the moving average centered at 10, I receive the first data on the fifth day and the last data on the fourteenth day, so I have 5 days left uncovered, to remedy this I have to give the last value to the uncovered data the closing price of the last day.
The deviations work like the bollinger bands but must refer to the centered moving average.
Bearish Market Indicator V2Definition
Have you ever wonder whether if the stock/index/market is "bearish" ? A Bearish Market Indicator (B.M.I) is not a new concept, the definition is simply 20% lower from the recent (term: short-term, recent: usually within a year, a.k.a 1 year) highs (closing price with in the recent period or within in a year or simply a 52-Week High). It is called “bearish” by definition when the closing price is below 20% from the highest price within the year (52-Week high: Green Line). To visualize the “20%” below the recent highs, there is a plot (line: light yellow color in the middle) called a Bearish Market By Definition Value. For example, the SPX 500 has been in a bearish market which is why there is a purple color highlight over the 52-Week High (green line) since September 21, 2022 because the closing price is below the Bearish Market By Definition Value (light yellow color) or “20% below the recent highs”. Finally, there is a red line under in the graph and it is the lowest price within a year. So when you hear, “this ticker is at a 52-Week Low”, you know what it means.
Line Summary:
Green Color Line = 52-Week High
Yellow Color Line = 20% away from the 52-Week High or Bearish Market By Definition Value
Red Color Line = 52-Week Low
Color Summary:
Red Color = Bad
Saturated Red Color = Very Bad
Purple Color = Bearish (It may look pink: red + purple)
White Color = Less Bad (That’s because there is no certainty only probability)
Green Color = Not too Bad (That’s because there is no certainty only probability)
Now to more complicated Metrics
>> If you do not like the technical indicators, go to the indicator settings, uncheck the tables. Otherwise, please continue reading. <<
Pre-requisites
+ Understand that the indicators are lagging indicators.
+ Using it under “D” or “Day” interval
+ Already Understand: Moving Averages, Stochastic-RSI, RSI, Super Trend and MACD.
+ Please be aware that this might not be compatible with traders!
Indicators
This B.M.I is fused (comprised, combined) with multiple indicators:
- Moving Averages
I would not rely just on the Moving Averages (MA) since it is a lagging indicator. The values are derived by finding the differences with respect to the MAs (between the closing price and with the respect MA).
- Stochastic-RSI
Stochastic and RSI combo with RSI-Color coating. The first value is the rsi-stochastic-k followed by the rsi-stochastic-d both are compartmentalized with “|”.
Parameter:
Numbers > 80 Not Good
Numbers < 20 Is it time? (You can manually verify the lines (k, d) or the values from them)
- Relative Strength Index (RSI)
The first value is the rsi followed by the rsi-ma both are compartmentalized with “|”. It is also coated with RSI-color.
Parameter:
Numbers > 70 Overbought | Color Red
If the RSI > RSI’s MA = Green
If the RSI < RSI’s MA = Red
Numbers < 30 Oversold | Color Red
- Moving Averages Convergence Divergence (MACD)
The first value is the MACD-line followed by the signal-line both are compartmentalized with “|”.
Macd-line > signal line = green
Macd-line < signal line = red
- Supertrend (please look up from the documentation; i can not embed the link)
Think of this way, you’re riding a wave. If the wave is climbing, expect the price to follow.
Direction < 0 = Green
Direction > 0 = Red
- Other Trend similar to supertrend
This is similar to the Super Trend according the some. Imagine you’re drawing a trend line manually within 6 months.
Within the period, the line gets smoothed over and over til the n=9.
> If the closing is less than the 9th value, it implies the trend is slowing down.
Usage
Adjustments
+ Since there are different holidays from different countries, you can change the BMI-Period from the indicator settings “BMI-4khansolo”.
+ You can hide Technical Indicator Tables, it is also under the settings (see above).
> This will show red over the 52-Week high if it tests for positive .
Purpose
Do you like eating the same food over and over? No! I love different food! I also love a variety of indicators. Especially, I love having MULTIPLE indicators presented in one canvas at the same time (personalized).
After spending a lot of time, I want to share my “FOOD” which is made of different ingredients (indicators) with someone who appreciates food! This Makes me a chef isn't it? Yes! Chef!
Questions?
If you have questions or spotted errors, please comment them below so that I can improve.
Sources
All the materials (i.e., functions like ta.rsi, etc...) used in here are available in the platform.
All the references or sources materials are commented with the code since the I am not allowed to put them here.
R:R Trading System FrameworkFirst off, huge thanks to @fikira! He was able to adapt what I built to work much more efficiently, allowing for more strategies to be used simultaneously. Simply put, I could not have gotten to this point without you. Thanks for what you do for the TV community. Second, I am fairly new to pinescript writing, so I welcome criticism, thoughtful input and improvement suggestions. I would love to grow this concept into something even better, if possible. So please let me know if you have any ideas for improvement. However I do juggle a lot of different things outside of TV, so implementations may be delayed.
I have decided, at this time, not to add alerts. First, because I feel most people looking to adapt this framework can add their own pretty easily. Also, given how customized the framework is currently, while also attempting to account for all the possible ways in which people may want alerts to function after they customize it, it seems best to leave them out as it doesn't exactly fit the idea of a framework.
For best viewing, I recommend hovering over the script's name > ... > Visual order > Bring to front. Also I found hollow candles with mono-toned colors (like pictured) are more visually appealing for me personally. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND USING WITH BAR REPLAY TO BETTER UNDERSTAND THE FRAMEWORK'S FUNCTIONALITY.
▶️ WHAT THIS FRAMEWORK IS
- A huge collection of concepts and capabilities for those trying to better understand, learn, or teach pinescript.
- A system designed to showcase Risk:Reward concepts more holistically by providing all of the most popular components of retail trading to include backtesting, trade visual plotting, position tracking, market condition shifts, and useful info while positioned to help highlight changes in your risk:reward based decision-making processes.
- A system that can showcase individual strategies regardless of trade direction, allowing you to develop hedging strategies without having multiple indicators that do not correlate with each other.
- Designed around the idea that you trade less numbers of assets but manage your positions and risk based on multiple concurrently running strategies to manage your risk exposure and reward potential.
- An attempt to combine all the things you need to execute with an active trading management style.
- A framework that uses backtested results (in this case the number of averaged bars it takes to hit key levels) in real-time to inform your risk:reward decision-making while in-trade (in this case in your Trade Tracking Table using dynamic color to show how you might be early, on-time, or late compared to the average amount of backtested time it normally takes to hit that specific key level).
▶️ WHAT THIS FRAMEWORK IS NOT
- A complete trading product. DO NOT USE as-is. It is a FRAMEWORK for you to generate ideas of your own and fairly easily implement your own triggering conditions in the appropriate sections of the script.
▶️ USE CASES
- If you decide you like the Stop, Target, Trailing Stop, and Risk:Reward components as-is, then just understanding how to plug in your Entry and Bullish / Bearish conditions (Triangles) and adjust the input texts to match your custom naming will be all you need to make it your own!
- If you want to adapt certain components, then this system gives you a great starting point to adapt your different concepts and ideas from.
▶️ SYSTEM COMPONENTS
- Each of the system's components are described via tooltips both in the input menu and in the tables' cells.
- Each label on the chart displays the corresponding price at those triggered conditions on hover with tooltips.
- The Trailing Stop only becomes active once it is above the Entry Price for that trade, and brightens to show it is active. The STOP line (right of price) moves once it takes over for the Entry Stop representing the level of the Trailing Stop at that time for that trade.
- The Lines / Labels to the right of price will brighten once price is above for Longs or below for Shorts. The Trade Tracking Table cells will add ☑️ once price is above for Longs or below for Shorts.
- The brighter boxes on the chart show the trades that occurred based on your criteria and are color coded for all components of each trade type to ensure your references are consistent. (Defaults are TV built-in strategies)
- The lighter boxes on the chart show the highest and lowest price levels reached during those trades, to highlight areas where improvements can be made or additional considerations can be accounted for by either adjusting Entry triggers or Bullish / Bearish triggers.
- Default Green and Red Triangles (Bullish / Bearish) default to having the same triggering condition as the Entry it corresponds to. This is to highlight either a pyramiding concept, early exit, or you can change to account for other things occurring during your trades which could help you with Stop and Target management/considerations.
TradingView and many of its community members have done a lot for me, so this is my attempt to give back.
Crypto Terminal [Kioseff Trading]Hello!
Introducing Crypto Terminal (:
The indicator makes use of cryptocurrency data provided by vendor INTOTHEBLOCK.
NOTE: The cryptocurrency on your chart must be paired with USD or USDT. Data won't load otherwise - possibly transient. For instance, BTCUSD or BTCUSDT, ETHUSD or ETHUSDT.
Provided datasets:
Twitter Sentiment Data
Telegram Sentiment Data
Whale Data (i.e. % of Asset Belonging to Whales)
$100,000+ Transactions
Bulls/Bears (Bulls Buying | Bears Selling)
Current Position PnL (Currently Open Positions for the Coin are Retrieved and Plotted. Data is Split into Currently Profitable Positions, Losing Positions, and B/E Positions)
Average Balance
Holders/Traders Percentage (Addresses are Retrieved and Classified as Holding Accounts or Trader Accounts)
Correlation
Futures OI
Perpetual OI
Zero Balance Addresses
Flow (Money Inflow & Outflow)
Active Addresses
Average Transaction Time
Realized PnL (Addresses with Realized Profits, Realized Losses, and B/E)
Cruisers
A few more data points are provided.
Additionally, you can plot the values of any dataset in a pane below price.
Below are images of plottable data; different cryptocurrencies will be shown for each example (:
Twitter sentiment data.
Assess this data lightly; difficult to confirm accuracy.
Telegram sentiment data.
Assess this data lightly; difficult to confirm accuracy.
Percentage of asset belonging to whales.
$100,000+ transactions (volume oriented)
Bulls buying; bears selling.
Current positions at profit; current positions at loss; current positions at breakeven.
Average balance.
Percentage of asset belonging to traders; percentage of asset belonging to holders.
Asset's 30-interval correlation to BTC.
Perpetual open interest.
Zero-balance addresses.
Flows.
Active addresses.
Average transaction time.
Addresses at realized profit; addresses at realized loss; addresses at breakeven.
Cruiser data.
Futures open interest.
Naturally, this data isn't provided for every cryptocurrency; NaN values are returned in some instances.
Table 1
I provided three data tables, which load independently, so you don't have to change plotted data to access values.
Table 2
Lastly, you can create a 10-asset crypto index and run calculations against it.
The image shows an example.
I'll update this script with additional calculations/data in the near future. If you've any suggestions - please let me know!
Enjoy (:
rv_iv_vrpThis script provides realized volatility (rv), implied volatility (iv), and volatility risk premium (vrp) information for each of CBOE's volatility indices. The individual outputs are:
- Blue/red line: the realized volatility. This is an annualized, 20-period moving average estimate of realized volatility--in other words, the variability in the instrument's actual returns. The line is blue when realized volatility is below implied volatility, red otherwise.
- Fuchsia line (opaque): the median of realized volatility. The median is based on all data between the "start" and "end" dates.
- Gray line (transparent): the implied volatility (iv). According to CBOE's volatility methodology, this is similar to a weighted average of out-of-the-money ivs for options with approximately 30 calendar days to expiration. Notice that we compare rv20 to iv30 because there are about twenty trading periods in thirty calendar days.
- Fuchsia line (transparent): the median of implied volatility.
- Lightly shaded gray background: the background between "start" and "end" is shaded a very light gray.
- Table: the table shows the current, percentile, and median values for iv, rv, and vrp. Percentile means the value is greater than "N" percent of all values for that measure.
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Volatility risk premium (vrp) is simply the difference between implied and realized volatility. Along with implied and realized volatility, traders interpret this measure in various ways. Some prefer to be buying options when there volatility, implied or realized, reaches absolute levels, or low risk premium, whereas others have the opposite opinion. However, all volatility traders like to look at these measures in relation to their past values, which this script assists with.
By the way, this script is similar to my "vol premia," which provides the vrp data for all of these instruments on one page. However, this script loads faster and lets you see historical data. I recommend viewing the indicator and the corresponding instrument at the same time, to see how volatility reacts to changes in the underlying price.
Currency Strength Meter [HeWhoMustNotBeNamed]⬜ Note: This is not the strength of currency pairs. But, in this script we are trying to derive strength of individual currencies by matching against single base currency.
⬜ Process
This is based on similar concept as that of Magic Numbers for stocks. Idea is simple.
▶ Calculate strength of each currency against USD. Derive the strength for both price movement and volume movement.
▶ Similarly calculate momentum of price and volume change.
▶ If USD is base currency, inverse momentum and strength index for the given symbol.
▶ Once these calculations are done, rank each currencies based on individual score on given things.
▶ Add up all the ranks to derive combined rank
▶ sort the currencies in the ascending order of overall rank.
⬜ USAGE
▶ Identify a base currency. In our case, we have used USD as base currency as it is easy to get pairs of all currencies with USD.
▶ Identify most used combos for all other currencies which are paired with USD. Fx pair can either have USD as base currency or quote currency. It is desirable to use the pair which is most traded. For example, USDJPY is more traded pair than JPYUSD - hence it is advisable to use USDJPY instead of JPYUSD. Similarly AUDUSD is more traded than USDAUD - hence choosing AUDUSD for the purpose of this exercise is better approach. Notice that USDJPY has USD as base currency whereas AUDUSD has USD as quote currency. These calculations are handled internally to derive the right outcome irrespective of position of USD in the pair.
▶ Identify the forex broker which has all the selected forex tickers. All comparison is done against a single broker. Hence, choosing broker which does not wide range of forex pairs will show NAN for many rows.
▶ Once we set these, we get tabular output containing strength and oscillator based trend indexes for both price and volume indicator. Currencies are ordered in descending order of strength. Hence, top of the list can be considered as currency having highest strength and bottom of the table can be considered as currency having lowest strength. Please note that the calculation is valid only for selected timeframe and users can set other parameters such as moving average type, oscillator type, length etc which can alter the outcome.
▶ Use multiple timeframes to find out stronger and weaker currencies. Use directional indicators to understand where they are heading. Combine all these info to come up with currency pair you would like to trade :)
⬜ Settings
▶ Main settings and Currencies
Base Currency : This is set to USD by default as rest of the tickers used are paired with USD. Whatever the base currency is selected, rest of the tickers should follow the same combination.
Timeframe : Timeframe for which rankings need to be calculated.
Currencies : These should be the currency pair which involve base currency defined in the setting on either side.
▶ Display
Table : Allows users to set table location and size of the table. By default this is set to middle center and default size is normal. If user want to use multiple timeframes side by side, they can do so by changing these display settings.
Stat Type : To show either comparative ranking or actual indicator values
vx_termsUSAGE
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This script helps train your intuition for changes in the VX term structure. I recommend using it on the VIX chart, so you can compare changes in the terms to changes in VIX. It's also nice for calendar spread traders who want to get a feel for the same changes.
1. Select a day, month, and year using the inputs
2. Observe the data table.
3. Open the input again and increment or decrement the day (and month, year as necessary).
4. Click "Ok".
5. Click to deselect the indicator, which allows the chart to load new data.
6. The data table will be reloaded with the next/previous day's data.
The data table has the following columns:
- contract: the VX contracts, in sequence. refer to the CBOE for month codes (F for January, etc.)
- close: the closing price of the contract.
- ma:mb: the spread (difference) between this row and the next row.
- ma:mb chg: the spread's change from prior close.
For example, given the following values for the first two columns:
VXQ2021, 16.5, -3.1, -0.2
VXU2021, 19.6, ..., ...
The front month (Q = august) closed at 16.5, $3.1 below the s\September contract. The negative spread enlarged by $0.20 from $2.90 on the previous trading day.
BUGS, ODDITIES, AND LIMITATIONS:
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- The first column will be greyed out after expiration day, which is the 3rd Tuesday of that month. Unfortunately, I can't load the next month's contract due to some limitations with TV.
- The active date is highlighted with a yellow background. When a non-trading date is selected, the highlight will disappear. However, the data table will sometimes fill with the nearest trading date, prematurely. No worries, just know that the data is probably for the previous Friday.
- The script is clunky and slow, but this is the best I can do with TV. Hopefully they add more continuous contracts or allow true dynamic symbol loading.
SPECIAL THANKS:
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Thanks to HeWhoMustNotBeNamed for helping me get through some messiness. Very helpful guy.
www.tradingview.com
BankNifty Multi-TimeFrames Price Panel [MaestroTrader]█ OVERVIEW
Price Panel provides Nifty /BankNifty Index comprehensive Price Insights on different time intervals. It helps to determine the trend of Index using top Index Heavy Weights along with Dow, India VIX & Index Spot Prices. It helps to determine the price behavior of the underlying Index/stock to make informed decisions while trading.
█ FEATURES
a) Displays Price in Multi Time Frames for Multi time frame analysis
b) Displays Weighted Securities price for Weighted INDEX price analysis.
c) Displays INDIA VIX and DOW for Combined INDIX VOLATALITY Analysis
█ MUTLI TIME FRAME ANALYSIS
How to use Multiple time frame analysis?
Multiple time frame analysis follows a top-down approach when trading and allows traders to gauge the longer-term trend while spotting ideal entries on a smaller time frame. Traders can then conduct technical analysis using multiple time frames to confirm or reject their trading bias.
Multiple time frame analysis, is the process of viewing the same symbols under different time frames. Usually, the larger time frame is used to establish a longer-term trend, while a shorter time frame is used to spot ideal entries into the market.
Let’s Say 75 & 15 TF’s Trend is up, then shorter time 5M is used to spot ideal entries on long side.
█ WEIGHTED INDEXS PRICE ANALYSIS
How to use Weighted Index Price Movement in Multi timeframes?
The index future trading price is based on the trading prices of the individual securities (stocks) that comprise the index basket. In other words, the stocks with higher weights will have more impact on the movement of the index. Price Panel provides the insights of these heavy weight stock price movement in different time frames, that can help you confirm or reject your trading bias.
HDFC Bank (28% Weight) will have more impact on the BankNifty Movement. By looking the top 4 bank's price movement in different timeframes, you can derive the BankNifty price trend.
█ VOLATALITY ANALYSIS
India VIX is a short form for India Volatility Index. It is the volatility index that measures the market’s expectation of volatility over the near term.
A lower VIX level usually implies that the market is confident about the movement and is expecting lower volatility and a stable range.
A higher VIX level usually signals high volatility and lower trader confidence about the current range of the market. A major directional move can be expected in the market and a quick broadening of range can be expected.
█ SETTINGS
• Time Frame Settings: Configure Time Frames 5 Min, 15 Min, 75 Min
• Table Settings: Configure Table Styles- Position- Font Color
• Symbol Settings: Configure Securities. Toggle (on/Off) Securities display.
• Index Settings: Display Bank Nifty or Nifty Heavy Weights.
█ PANEL DISPLAY VARIATIONS
BANK NIFTY VIEW
NIFTY VIEW
WITHOUT STOCKS - ONLY INDEX, VIX, DOW
█ THANKS
Thanks to Pine Team for this new great feature tables & Thanks to PineCoders for the `f_strRightOf` function.
█ DISCLIAMER
Indicator is built for educational purposes. Test it before use.
Hope - These features help you get quick insights of the price movement to take informed trades.
You are free to use the code, please share the credit for reuse.
Happy Trading !!
PineGIF - Display Gifs & Images In Tradingview [LuxAlgo]Pinescript is not designed to create or display images, let alone gifs, but it's very fun to try, and that's what this script does. This script allows the user to display three different gifs. In this post, we explain how we managed to display images/gif's using pinescript tables.
1. Image Pre-Processing
Due to pinescript limitations, we can't possibly display images with an excessively high resolution. As such we targeted pixel art as a primary image source. We used a pixel art gif of the magnificent Octocat (the mascot for the source-code hosting service GitHub) for our first try.
We first extract each frame from the gif and resize them to a 50x50 resolution which returns frames made of 2500 pixels. This process was done using python.
Getting Individual Pixels RGBA Values
Python can easily return a matrix containing each pixel's rgba value. For convenience, we converted the rgba values to hex.
We then create a simple code allowing us to return a pinescript array containing the 2500 pixel hex colors. We do this process for each frame.
2. Defining Table Cell Color
In the code, each frame is its own array. We create a new table with dimensions equal to len(frame1)^2 (we assume height = width).
The color of a cell is defined by the color of the image pixel at the same exact location. When a new bar is created, we do this exact process using a different frame which ultimately allows a new frame to be displayed.
3. Playing The GIFs
By default, the script will play the gif of the Tradingview cloud logo raining. In order to play the gif, simply use the replay mode. The replay speed allows the user to determine the frame rate (0.1 for the raining cloud and Nyan cat works best, 0.5 for Octocat).
We included the frames of the Octocat and Nyan cat gifs in the script.
4. Some Other Cool Images
Displaying static images is possible and involves the same process described above.
An original idea of the lizard, implemented by the wizard.
Prometheus Black-Scholes Option PricesThe Black-Scholes Model is an option pricing model developed my Fischer Black and Myron Scholes in 1973 at MIT. This is regarded as the most accurate pricing model and is still used today all over the world. This script is a simulated Black-Scholes model pricing model, I will get into why I say simulated.
What is an option?
An option is the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell 100 shares of a certain stock, for calls or puts respective, at a certain price, on a certain date (assuming European style options, American options can be exercised early). The reason these agreements, these contracts exist is to provide traders with leverage. Buying 1 contract to represent 100 shares of the underlying, more often than not, at a cheaper price. That is why the price of the option, the premium , is a small number. If an option costs $1.00 we pay $100.00 for it because 100 shares * 1 dollar per share = 100 dollars for all the shares. When a trader purchases a call on stock XYZ with a strike of $105 while XYZ stock is trading at $100, if XYZ stock moves up to $110 dollars before expiration the option has $5 of intrinsic value. You have the right to buy something at $105 when it is trading at $110. That agreement is way more valuable now, as a result the options premium would increase. That is a quick overview about how options are traded, let's get into calculating them.
Inputs for the Black-Scholes model
To calculate the price of an option we need to know 5 things:
Current Price of the asset
Strike Price of the option
Time Till Expiration
Risk-Free Interest rate
Volatility
The price of a European call option 𝐶 is given by:
𝐶 = 𝑆0 * Φ(𝑑1) − 𝐾 * 𝑒^(−𝑟 * 𝑇) * Φ(𝑑2)
where:
𝑆0 is the current price of the underlying asset.
𝐾 is the strike price of the option.
𝑟 is the risk-free interest rate.
𝑇 is the time to expiration.
Φ is the cumulative distribution function of the standard normal distribution.
𝑑1 and 𝑑2 are calculated as:
𝑑1 = (ln(𝑆0 / 𝐾) + (𝑟 + (𝜎^2 / 2)) * 𝑇) / (𝜎 * sqrt(𝑇))
𝑑2= 𝑑1 - (𝜎 * sqrt(𝑇))
𝜎 is the volatility of the underlying asset.
The price of a European put option 𝑃 is given by:
𝑃 = 𝐾 * 𝑒^(−𝑟 * 𝑇) * Φ(−𝑑2) − 𝑆0 * Φ(−𝑑1)
where 𝑑1 and 𝑑2 are as defined above.
Key Assumptions of the Black-Scholes Model
The price of the underlying asset follows a lognormal distribution.
There are no transaction costs or taxes.
The risk-free interest rate and volatility of the underlying asset are constant.
The underlying asset does not pay dividends during the life of the option.
The markets are efficient, meaning that all known information is already reflected in the prices.
Options can only be exercised at expiration (European-style options).
Understanding the Script
Here I have arrows pointing to specific spots on the table. They point to Historical Volatility and Inputted DTE . Inputted DTE is a value the user may input to calculate premium for options that expire in that many days. Historical Volatility , is the value calculated by this code.
length = 252 // One year of trading days
hv = ta.stdev(math.log(close / close ), length) * math.sqrt(365)
And then made daily like the Black-Scholes model needs from this step in the code.
hv_daily = request.security(syminfo.tickerid, "1D", hv)
The user has the option to input their own volatility to the Script. I will get into why that may be advantageous in a moment. If the user chooses to do so the Script will change which value it is using as so.
hv_in_use = which_sig == false ? hv_daily : sig
There is a lot going on in this image but bare with me, it will all make sense by the end. The column to the far left of both the green and maroon colored columns represent the strike price of the contract, if the numbers are white that means the contract is out of the money, gray means in the money. If you remember from the calculation this represents the price to buy or sell shares at, for calls or puts respective. The column second from the left shows a value for Simulated Market Price . This is a necessary part of this script so we can show changes in implied volatility. See, when we go to our brokerages and look at options prices, sure the price was calculated by a pricing model, but that is rarely the true price of the model. Market participant sentiment affects this value as their estimates for future volatility, Implied Volatility changes.
For example, if a call option is supposed to be worth $1.00 from the pricing model, however everyone is bullish on the stock and wants to buy calls, the premium may go to $1.20 from $1.00 because participants juice up the Implied Volatility . Higher Implied Volatility generally means higher premium, given enough time to expiration. Buying an option at $0.80 when it should be worth $1.00 due to changes in sentiment is a big part of the Quant Trading industry.
Of course I don't have access to an actual exchange so get prices, so I modeled participant decisions by adding or subtracting a small random value on the "perfect premium" from the Black-Scholes model, and solving for implied volatility using the Newton-Raphson method.
It is like when we have speed = distance / time if we know speed and time , we can solve for distance .
This is what models the changing Implied Volatility in the table. The other column in the table, 3rd from the left, is the Black-Scholes model price without the changes of a random number. Finally, the 4th column from the left is that Implied Volatility value we calculated with the modified option price.
More on Implied Volatility
Implied Volatility represents the future expected volatility of an asset. As it is the value in the future it is not know like Historical Volatility, only projected. We provide the user with the option to enter their own Implied Volatility to start with for better modeling of options close to expiration. If you want to model options 1 day from expiration you will probably have to enter a higher Implied Volatility so that way the prices will be higher. Since the underlying is so close to expiration they are traded so much and traders manipulate their Implied Volatility , increasing their value. Be safe while trading these!
Thank you all for clicking on my indicator and reading this description! Happy coding, Happy trading, Be safe!
Good reference: www.investopedia.com
Shooting Star ORB🧠 Indicator Name: "First Candle Shooting Star + ORB"
📌 Purpose
This indicator detects when the first candle of the day forms a Shooting Star pattern and then monitors for a breakout beyond its range. It visually marks the pattern and the breakout with boxes and provides real-time alerts and a status table.
🔍 What It Does Step-by-Step
1. 📅 Detects the Start of a New Trading Day
Uses ta.change(time("D")) to identify a new trading day.
When a new day starts, it checks if the very first candle of the session is a Shooting Star.
2. 🕯️ Identifies a Shooting Star Pattern
A candle is labeled a Shooting Star if:
It has a small body compared to the full candle range.
It has a long upper shadow at least 2× the body.
It has a short or tiny lower shadow.
All these criteria are adjustable through inputs.
3. 📦 Draws a Box for the First Candle Range
If a Shooting Star is found in the first candle of the day:
It draws a red shaded box covering the high and low of that candle.
The box visually marks the potential Opening Range.
4. 💥 Detects Breakout from Shooting Star Candle
After the first candle:
If price moves above or below the range by a specified % (like 1%), it flags a breakout.
A blue shaded box is drawn at the breakout candle for visual confirmation.
5. 🔔 Alerts
🔴 Shooting Star Detected: Alerts when the first candle is a shooting star.
🔵 Breakout Detected: Alerts when the price breaks out of the first candle’s range.
6. 📊 Displays Real-Time Info Table
A small table is shown on the chart:
🕯️ Pattern: “Shooting Star” or blank
💥 Breakout: “Yes” or “No”
⏱️ The timeframe being analyzed (e.g., “5” for 5-minute)
NSE/BSE Derivative - Next Expiry Date With HolidaysNSE & BSE Expiry Tracker with Holiday Adjustments
This Pine Script is a TradingView indicator that helps traders monitor upcoming expiry dates for major Indian derivative contracts. It dynamically adjusts these expiry dates based on weekends and holidays, and highlights any expiry that falls on the current day.
⸻
Key Features
1. Tracks Expiry Dates for Major Contracts
The script calculates and displays the next expiry dates for the following instruments:
• NIFTY (weekly expiry every Thursday)
• BANKNIFTY, FINNIFTY, MIDCPNIFTY, NIFTYNXT50 (monthly expiry on the last Thursday of the month)
• SENSEX (weekly expiry every Tuesday)
• BANKEX and SENSEX 50 (monthly expiry on the last Tuesday of the month)
• Stocks in the F&O segment (monthly expiry on the last Thursday)
2. Holiday Awareness
Users can input a list of holiday dates in the format YYYY-MM-DD,YYYY-MM-DD,.... If any calculated expiry falls on one of these holidays or a weekend, the script automatically adjusts the expiry to the previous working day (Monday to Friday).
3. Customization Options
The user can:
• Choose the position of the expiry table on the chart (e.g. top right, bottom left).
• Select the font size for the expiry table.
• Enable or disable the table entirely (if implemented as an input toggle).
4. Visual Expiry Highlighting
If today is an expiry day for any instrument, the script highlights that instrument in the display. This makes it easy to spot significant expiry days, which are often associated with increased volatility and trading volume.
⸻
How It Works
• The script calculates the next expiry for each index using built-in date/time functions.
• For weekly expiries, it finds the next occurrence of the designated weekday.
• For monthly expiries, it finds the last Thursday or Tuesday of the month.
• Each expiry date is passed through a check to adjust for holidays or weekends.
• If today matches the adjusted expiry date, that row is visually emphasized.
⸻
Use Case
This script is ideal for traders who want a quick glance at which instruments are expiring soon — especially those managing options, futures, or expiry-based strategies.
AsturRiskPanelIndicator Summary
ATR Engine
Length & Smoothing: Choose how many bars to use (default 14) and the smoothing method (RMA/SMA/EMA/WMA).
Median ATR: Computes a rolling median of ATR over a user-defined look-back (default 14) to derive a “scalp” target.
Scalp Target
Automatically set at ½ × median ATR, snapped to the nearest tick.
Optional rounding to whole points for simplicity.
Stop Calculation
ATR Multiplier: Scales current ATR by a user input (default 1.5) to produce your stop distance in points (and ticks when appropriate).
Distortion Handling: Switches between point-only and point + tick displays based on contract specifications.
Risk & Sizing
Risk % of account per trade (default 2 %).
Calculates dollar risk per contract and optimal contract count.
Displays all metrics (scalp, stop, risk/contract, max contracts, max risk, account size) in a customizable on-chart table.
ATR-Based Stop Placement Guidelines
Trade Context ATR Multiplier Notes
Tight Range Entry 1.0 × ATR High-conviction, precise entries. Expect more shake-outs.
Standard Trend Entry 1.5 × ATR Balanced for H2/L2, MTR, DT/DB entries.
Breakouts/Microchannels 2.0 × ATR Wide stops through chop—Brooks-style breathing room.
How to Use
Select ATR Settings
Pick an ATR length (e.g. 14) and smoothing (RMA for stability).
Adjust the median length if you want a faster/slower scalp line.
Align Multiplier with Your Setup
For tight-range entries, set ATR Multiplier ≈ 1.0.
For standard trend trades, leave at 1.5.
For breakout/pullback setups, increase to 2.0 or more.
Customize Risk Parameters
Enter your account size and desired risk % per trade (e.g. 2 %).
The table auto-calculates how many contracts you can take.
Read the On-Chart Table
Scalp shows your intraday target.
Stop gives Brooks-style stop distance in points (and ticks).
Risk/Contract is the dollar risk per contract.
Max Contracts tells you maximum position size.
Max Risk confirms total dollar exposure.
Visual Confirmation
Place your entry, then eyeball the scalp and stop levels against chart structure (e.g. swing highs/lows).
Adjust the ATR multiplier if market context shifts (e.g. volatility spikes).
By blending this sizing panel with contextual ATR multipliers, you’ll consistently give your trades the right amount of “breathing room” while keeping risk in check.
MÈGAS ALGO : CNA (Cognitio Analysis) [INDICATOR]Overview
The CNA (Cognitio Analysis) is a comprehensive financial analysis tool designed to evaluate the overall health and potential of a market or company based on fundamental metrics. It aggregates data across five key metric groups—**Growth**, **Profitability**, **Cash Flow**, **Income**, and **Valuation**—to provide a final interpretation of market conditions. The indicator dynamically adapts to the selected fiscal period (Quarter, Year, or Trailing Twelve Months) and delivers insights into dominant trends and conflicting signals.
Key Features
1. Customizable Fiscal Period:
- Users can select between "Quarter", "Year", or "Trailing Twelve Months" (TTM) to analyze data for their desired timeframe.
2. Dynamic Table Visualization:
- Displays raw metric values, aggregated scores, and the final interpretation in an intuitive
table.
- Highlights the final interpretation with dynamic background colors (`color.teal` for bullish,
`color.red` for bearish, etc.).
3. Comprehensive Data Integration:
- Pulls financial data using TradingView's `request.financial()` function for metrics like
revenue, earnings, margins, and valuation ratios.
4. Normalization and Scoring:
- Normalizes data to create a consistent scoring system, ensuring accurate comparisons across
metrics.
How It Works
1. Metric Group Analysis
- Growth Metrics: Measures revenue growth, earnings per share (EPS) growth, and tax
efficiency.
- Profitability Metrics: Analyzes net profit margin, return on equity (ROE), and EBITDA margin.
- Cash Metrics: Assesses operating cash flow margin, free cash flow to operating cash flow
ratio, and cash flow coverage.
- Income Metrics: Examines gross profit margin, operating profit margin, and EBIT margin.
- Valuation Metrics: Evaluates price-to-earnings (P/E), price-to-sales (P/S), and enterprise
value-to-EBITDA (EV/EBITDA).
2. Dynamic Scoring System
- Metrics are normalized to ensure consistency across different scales.
- A geometric mean is used to calculate scores for each metric group, ensuring that all metrics
within a group contribute equally to the final score.
3. Dominant Trend Identification
- Scores from all five metric groups are aggregated to determine the **dominant trend** of the
market.
- The dominant trend is categorized as:
- Bullish: Strong fundamentals across most metrics.
- Bearish: Weak fundamentals across most metrics.
- Neutral: Balanced conditions with no clear direction.
- Unclear: Mixed signals dominate, requiring further monitoring.
4. Conflicting Signals Interpretation
- The indicator identifies scenarios where metrics conflict (e.g., high growth but low valuation).
- These conflicting signals provide nuanced insights into market conditions, highlighting rare opportunities or potential risks.
How to Use the Indicator
1. Select Fiscal Period:
- Choose between "FQ", "FY", or "TTM" to analyze data for the desired timeframe.
2. Review Metric Scores:
- Examine the scores for each metric group (Growth, Profitability, Cash, Income, Valuation) to
understand the underlying performance.
3. Interpret Final Output:
- The final interpretation provides a summary of the dominant trend and conflicting signals,
helping users make informed decisions.
4. Dynamic Coloring:
- Use the dynamic background colors in the table to quickly identify market sentiment
(bullish, bearish, neutral, or mixed).
Applications
- Identifying Opportunities:
- Look for bullish dominant trends combined with undervalued growth opportunities for
potential long positions.
- Avoiding Risks:
- Watch out for bearish dominant trends with overvaluation alerts to avoid potential losses.
- Monitoring Neutral Markets:
- Use the indicator to identify neutral markets and wait for clearer signals before making
decisions.
Conclusion
The CNA (Cognitio Analysis) is a powerful tool for traders and investors seeking to make informed decisions based on fundamental analysis. By combining detailed metric evaluations, dynamic scoring, and sentiment-based interpretations, this indicator provides a comprehensive view of market conditions. Whether you're identifying undervalued opportunities, avoiding overvalued risks, or monitoring neutral markets, this indicator equips you with the insights needed to navigate complex financial landscapes.
Please Note:
This indicator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not financial advice, and it should not be considered a recommendation to buy, sell, or trade any financial instrument. Trading involves significant risks, including the potential loss of your entire investment. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any trading decisions.
The results and images provided are based on algorithms and historical/paid real-time market data but do not guarantee future results or accuracy. Use this tool at your own risk, and understand that past performance is not indicative of future outc
FSH ATR MTF MonitorThe FSH ATR MTF Monitor tracks the Average True Range (ATR) and current range across six customizable timeframes, displaying the results in a table. When a timeframe’s range exceeds its ATR, the range value turns yellow, signaling heightened volatility. This multi-timeframe tool helps traders assess market conditions and plan entries or exits.
Key Features:
- Monitors ATR and range for up to six timeframes simultaneously.
- Customizable ATR length and timeframe inputs.
- Highlights ranges exceeding ATR in yellow for quick identification.
- Table display with toggle option for flexibility.
How to Use:
1. Add the indicator to your chart.
2. Adjust the ATR length and timeframes in the inputs as needed.
3. Watch for yellow range values to spot volatility spikes across timeframes.
4. Toggle the table off if not needed.
Ideal for scalpers, swing traders, or anyone analyzing volatility across multiple timeframes.
Multi-Time Frame DMI with Gradient Bar ColoringDisplays a table showing the Directional Movement Index (DMI) sentiment for multiple time frames based on the Average Directional Index (ADX) value for each time frame.
Table Position and Text Size are configurable, with two styles (vertical or horizontal) available.
Time frame labels can be toggled off for color-only table.
Bars are colored based on the ADX value using a color gradient between the bullish and bearish color inputs. The neutral color is independent of the gradient for contrast.
Nasdaq Risk Calculator - DTFXNasdaq Risk Calculator
This Pine Script (v5) indicator provides a dashboard-style tool for calculating trading risk based on manually input tick measurements for Nasdaq futures contracts (NQ and MNQ). Designed as an overlay on the main chart, it displays key risk metrics in a fixed-position table, allowing traders to assess contract type, lot size, risk ticks, and actual risk in dollars relative to a user-defined risk amount.
Features:
Manual Tick Input: Enter the number of ticks (e.g., from a ruler measurement) to define the price range for risk calculation.
Risk Calculation: Computes the optimal contract (NQ or MNQ), number of lots, risk ticks (half the input range), and actual risk in dollars, targeting the specified risk amount (default: $100).
Customizable Dashboard: Displays results in a single-cell table with a semi-transparent white background and gray border, positioned in one of four chart corners (Top Left, Top Right, Bottom Left, Bottom Right) via user selection.
Reset Option: Includes a toggle to clear the dashboard and start anew.
How to Use:
Add the indicator to your chart (best suited for NQ or MNQ futures).
In the settings, input your "Risk Amount ($)" and "Ticks" (e.g., 400 for a 100-point range on NQ).
Select the "Dashboard Corner" to position the table.
View the calculated risk details in the chosen corner.
Adjust inputs or reset as needed.
Notes:
NQ tick value is $5.00 (NQ_MULTIPLIER = 5.0), and MNQ tick value is $0.50 (MNQ_MULTIPLIER = 0.5).
Ideal for traders planning risk based on measured price ranges, such as support/resistance zones.
ST -Dashboard Volume MTF , [Sese04]User Guide: ST - Dashboard Volume MTF
Introduction
This script displays a multi-timeframe (MTF) volume dashboard, tracking buy and sell volumes and the moving averages of volume. It is designed for traders using ICT (Inner Circle Trader) and SMC (Smart Money Concepts) to quickly visualize market dynamics across multiple timeframes.
Settings and Features
📌 User Inputs
Customizable settings allow traders to adjust the dashboard display and volume moving averages.
Volume Display per Timeframe
show_vol_1m: Show volume for 1-minute chart.
show_vol_5m: Show volume for 5-minute chart.
show_vol_15m: Show volume for 15-minute chart.
show_vol_1h: Show volume for 1-hour chart.
show_vol_4h: Show volume for 4-hour chart.
show_vol_1d: Show volume for 1-day chart.
Volume Moving Average Settings
ma_length_short: Length of the short-term moving average (default 5 periods).
ma_length_long: Length of the long-term moving average (default 14 periods).
Dashboard Customization
dashboard_position: Dashboard position (Bottom Right, Bottom Left, Top Right, Top Left).
text_color: Text color for the dashboard.
text_size: Text size (small, normal, large).
How the Script Works
🔹 1. Calculating Buy and Sell Volume
The calculate_buy_sell function separates buy and sell volume based on the candle's open and close price:
If the closing price is higher than the opening price → Buy volume 📈.
If the closing price is lower or equal to the opening price → Sell volume 📉.
🔹 2. Retrieving Volume Data Across Multiple Timeframes
The function get_volumes collects buy and sell volume data for different timeframes using request.security().
The available timeframes are: 1m, 5m, 15m, 1h, 4h, and 1d.
🔹 3. Calculating Volume Moving Averages
The script uses ta.sma() to compute moving averages for volume trends:
ma_vol_short: Short-term moving average (e.g., 5 periods).
ma_vol_long: Long-term moving average (e.g., 14 periods).
🔹 4. Creating and Displaying the Dashboard
A table (table.new()) is generated at the last bar (barstate.islast) to display the volume data:
A title “📊 Volume Dashboard (Buy vs Sell)” in purple.
Column headers:
TIMEFRAME (e.g., 1M, 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, 1D).
BUY VOLUME (dark blue).
SELL VOLUME (dark red).
Buy and Sell Volume values are displayed in their respective cells for easy reading.
How to Use This Script on TradingView?
Adding the Script
Open TradingView.
Go to Pine Editor and paste the script.
Click "Add to Chart".
Configuring the Settings
Open the indicator settings.
Enable/disable the desired timeframes.
Adjust the moving average lengths if necessary.
Interpreting the Data
Increasing buy volume across timeframes may indicate bullish momentum.
Rising sell volume suggests a bearish reversal.
Crossovers of volume moving averages can help detect market shifts.
Conclusion
This script is a powerful tool for analyzing volume dynamics across multiple timeframes. It provides a quick overview of the balance between buyers and sellers, essential for ICT scalping and liquidity-based trading.
🚀 Pro Tip: Combine this dashboard with other SMC indicators (engulfing candles, pivot points) to refine your trading decisions.
Market Trend Scanner [Afnan]This Market Strength Scanner indicator is designed to provide traders with a clear and concise overview of market trends using a single table. It helps you quickly determine which sectors and indices are strong, weak, or choppy, allowing you to make informed trading decisions with ease.
How This Indicator Helps You:
✅ Identify Strong Sectors & Indices
🔹By analyzing this table, you can instantly see which sectors and indices are performing well.
🔹Focus on stocks within strong sectors to find high-probability buying opportunities.
✅ Avoid Weak or Choppy Markets
🔹The indicator highlights bearish or consolidating sectors, helping you avoid poor trading conditions.
🔹Stay away from sectors that are weak or moving sideways to reduce unnecessary risks.
✅ Understand Market Sentiment in Seconds
🔹If most sectors are bullish, the market is in an uptrend—giving you confidence to take long positions.
🔹If the majority are bearish, the market is weak, signaling caution.
🔹A mix of bullish and bearish sectors indicates a choppy market, warning you to avoid trading or adjust your strategy.
✅ Powered by 4 Customizable EMAs
🔹The indicator uses 4 Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) to determine trends for each sector and index.
🔹These EMAs are fully modifiable, allowing you to adjust them based on your preferred strategy.
✅ Covers 25 Major Indices (Fully Customizable)
🔹By default, the indicator tracks 25 key indices, giving you a broad market perspective.
🔹You can customize the list to focus on the indices that matter most to you.
Why Use This Indicator?
🔹 Saves Time – No need to analyze multiple charts manually. The table gives you everything at a glance.
🔹 Improves Trade Selection – Focus only on strong sectors for better trade accuracy.
🔹 Works in All Market Conditions – Whether the market is trending or consolidating, this tool keeps you informed.
🔹 Fully Customizable – Adjust the EMAs and indices according to your trading preferences.
With just this one powerful indicator, you get a complete market overview, helping you align your trades with the current trend effortlessly! 🚀
Micha Stocks Custom WatermarkThis Pine Script v5 indicator adds a customizable watermark to TradingView charts, displaying key stock information while allowing for flexible positioning and formatting.
📌 Features & Functionality:
✅ Custom Positioning:
• Fixed to the top-left corner.
• Adjustable spacing ensures the text is properly aligned.
✅ Displayed Information (Configurable):
• Company Name & Market Cap (Optional: Shows dynamically calculated market cap)
• Stock Ticker & Timeframe
• Industry & Sector
✅ Customization Options:
• Font Size: Huge, Large, Normal, Small
• Text Color & Transparency: Adjustable
• Proper Left Alignment for a clean, structured display
• Vertical Offset Tweaks to move text down for better visibility
✅ Optimized Table Layout:
• Uses table.new() for persistent placement.
• Added an empty row to fine-tune positioning, ensuring the watermark doesn’t overlap key chart areas.
🔧 Use Case:
Designed for traders who want a clear, customizable stock watermark to enhance their charting experience without obstructing price action.
STRX - Correlation DominationThis indicator displays the correlation among three selected assets (for example, Gold, Dollar Index, and Nasdaq) on a custom timeframe. A table positioned at the top-right corner of the chart lets you quickly see the correlation between:
Asset 1 vs Asset 2
Asset 1 vs Asset 3
Asset 2 vs Asset 3
Correlations are calculated using the Pearson correlation function (ta.correlation). If the correlation is greater than or equal to 0.4, the value appears in green (strong positive correlation). If it is less than or equal to -0.4, it appears in red (strong negative correlation). Otherwise, it is displayed in yellow (weak correlation).
Multi-asset and multi-timeframe: Compare up to three instruments at once on your chosen timeframe.
Customizable period: Use the “Correlation Period” setting to adjust the correlation calculation window.
Clear table format: The results are immediately visible in an easy-to-read table.
Disclaimer: This script is provided solely for educational and informational purposes. It does not constitute a recommendation or an invitation to invest. Use it as an additional resource and always conduct thorough market analysis before opening any trading positions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Visual Range Position Size CalculatorVisual Range Position Size Calculator
The "VR Position Size Calculator" helps traders determine the appropriate position size based on their risk tolerance and the current market conditions. Below is a detailed description of the script, its functionality, and how to use it effectively.
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Key Features
1. Risk Calculation: The script allows users to input their desired risk in monetary terms (in the currency of the ticker). It then calculates the position sizes for both long and short trades based on this risk.
2. Dynamic High and Low Tracking: The script dynamically tracks the highest and lowest prices within the visible range of the chart, allowing for more accurate position sizing.
3. Formatted Output: The calculated values are displayed in a user-friendly table format with thousands separators for better readability.
4. Visual Indicators: Dashed lines are drawn on the chart at the high and low points of the visible range, providing a clear visual reference for traders.
5. If the risk in security price is 1% or less, the background of the cells displaying position sizes will be green for long positions and red for short positions. If the risk is between 1% and 5%, the background changes to gray, indicating that the risk may be too high for an effective trade. If the risk exceeds 5% of the price, the text also turns gray, rendering it invisible, which signifies that there is no justification for such a trade.
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Code Explanation
The script identifies the start and end times of the visible range on the chart, ensuring calculations are based only on the data currently in view. It updates and stores the highest (hh) and lowest (ll) prices within this visible range. At the end of the range, dashed lines are drawn at the high and low prices, providing a visual cue for traders.
Users can input their risk amount, which is then used to calculate potential position sizes for both long and short trades based on the current price relative to the tracked high and low. The calculated risk values and position sizes are displayed in a table on the right side of the chart, with color coding to indicate whether the calculated position size meets specific criteria.
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Usage Instructions
1. Add the Indicator: To use this script, copy and paste it into Pine Script editor, then add it to your chart.
2. Input Your Risk: Adjust the 'Risk in money' input to reflect your desired risk amount for trading.
3. Analyze Position Sizes: Observe the calculated position sizes for both long and short trades displayed in the table. Use this information to guide your trading decisions.
4. Visual Cues: Utilize the dashed lines on the chart to understand recent price extremes within your visible range.