Portfolio Tracker ARJO (V-01)Portfolio Tracker ARJO (V-01)
This indicator is a user-friendly portfolio tracking tool designed for TradingView charts. It overlays a customizable table on your chart to monitor up to 15 stocks or symbols in your portfolio. It calculates real-time metrics like current market price (CMP), gains/losses, and stoploss breaches, helping you stay on top of your investments without switching between multiple charts. The table uses color-coding for quick visual insights: green for profits, red for losses, and highlights breached stoplosses in red for alerts. It also shows portfolio-wide totals for overall performance.
Key Features
Supports up to 15 Symbols: Enter stock tickers (e.g., NSE:RELIANCE or BSE:TCS) with details like buy price, date, units, and stoploss.
Symbol: The stock ticker and description.
Buy Date: When you purchased it.
Units: Number of shares/units held.
Buy Price: Your entry price.
Stop Loss: Your set stoploss level (highlighted in red if breached by CMP).
CMP: Current market price (fetched from the chart's timeframe).
% Gain/Loss: Percentage change from buy price (color-coded: green for positive, red for negative).
Gain/Loss: Total monetary gain/loss based on units.
Optional Timeframe Columns: Toggle to show % change over 1 Week (1W), 1 Month (1M), 3 Months (3M), and 6 Months (6M) for historical performance.
Portfolio Summary: At the top of the table, see total % gain/loss and absolute gain/loss for your entire portfolio.
Visual Customizations: Adjust table position (e.g., Top Right), size, colors for positive/negative values, and intensity cutoff for gradients.
Benchmark Index-Based Header: The title row's background color reflects NIFTY's weekly trend (green if above 10-week SMA, red if below) for market context.
Benchmark Index-Based Header: The title row's background color reflects NIFTY's weekly trend (green if above 10-week SMA, red if below) for market context.
How to Use It: Step-by-Step Guide
Add the Indicator to Your Chart: Search for "Portfolio Tracker ARJO (V-01)" in TradingView's indicator library and add it to any chart (preferably Daily timeframe for accuracy).
Input Your Portfolio Symbols:
Open the indicator settings (gear icon).
In the "Symbol 1" to "Symbol 15" groups, fill in:
Symbol: Enter the ticker (e.g., NSE:INFY).
Year/Month/Day: Select your buy date (e.g., 2024-07-01).
Buy Price: Your purchase price per unit.
Stoploss: Your exit price if things go south.
Units: How many shares you own.
Only fill what you need—leave extras blank. The table auto-adjusts to show only entered symbols.
Customize the Table (Optional):
In "Table settings":
Choose position (e.g., Top Right) and size (% of chart).
Toggle "Show Timeframe Columns" to add 1W/1M/3M/6M performance.
In "Color settings":
Pick colors for positive (green) and negative (red) cells.
Set "Color intensity cutoff (%)" to control how strong the colors get (e.g., 10% means changes above 10% max out the color).
Interpret the Table on Your Chart:
The table appears overlaid—scan rows for each symbol's stats.
Look at colors: Greener = better gains; redder = bigger losses.
Check CMP cell: Red means stoploss breached—consider selling!
Portfolio Gain/Loss at the top gives a quick overall health check.
For Best Results:
Use on a Daily chart to avoid CMP errors (the script will warn if on Weekly/Monthly).
Refresh the chart or wait for a new bar if data doesn't update immediately.
For Indian stocks, prefix with NSE: or BSE: (e.g., BSE:RELIANCE).
This is for tracking only—not trading signals. Combine with your strategy.
If no symbols show, ensure inputs are valid (e.g., buy price > 0, valid date).
Finally, this tool makes it quite easy for beginners to track their portfolios, while also giving advanced traders powerful and customizable insights. I'd love to hear your feedback—happy trading!
"weekly" için komut dosyalarını ara
Linton Price Targets(R)Linton Price Targets
A groundbreaking new way of projecting price targets and when they will be met in the future.
Point and figure charts have largely fallen out of favour in recent decades with the birth of personal computing and electronic data services. Few software systems calculate them correctly, and the technique is seen as outdated and difficult for the newcomer to technical analysis to understand. Linton Price Targets takes the point and figure methodology for producing vertical count targets and applies them to time-based charts that are much more widely used for technical analysis.
To place Point and figure price targets on a time-based chart, we first need to relate the conditions that produce the vertical count targets. Vertical Targets are only generated with uninterrupted moves off a high or a low point in prices. A pullback of at least 3 boxes locks the thrust column and therefore the price target. A move of at least one box above (in the case of an upside target off a low) or one box below (downside off a high) ‘activates’ the price target. Here the buyers and sellers respectively are confirmed. Conversely a move below the base of an upside target column, or above the top of a downside column ‘negates’ the vertical target. In this case, the buyers and sellers have been superseded by subsequent events.
Projecting Price
The price projection following the point and figure 3-Box method is relatively straightforward. The standard projection used is twice the original move from the top of the initial thrust level. This derives from the 3-Box construction devised by Cohen, whereby the initial thrust count is a third of the overall price count projection. But there is no reason to limit the Target Price Factor to the value to 2. A value of 1 could be used in the case of consolidation patten where the move out of the pattern is roughly equivalent to the move into the pattern. A value of 1.618 could be used for Fibonacci Retracements or Extensions or a value of 2 x log, can be used to deal with increasing box (unit) sizes as price changes.
Projecting Time
Projecting a potential price target with is relatively straight forward. Determining a time in the future when such a price target will be met is more of a challenge. This has been seen as one of the major drawbacks of point and figure charts for decades. Because there is no time axis on a Point and figure chart, there is no saying when a count projection target will be met.
For the Time to Target, we need to consider potential methodologies such as:
1. Price to Time Ratio – t units of price for every x units of time – ie $1 every 2 days
2. Thrust Angle Factor – a factor x the initial trust angle for the target angle
3. Time to Activation Factor – time to target is x the time taken for a target to activate
4. Follow the Price – track prices as the progress to target and adjust time to target accordingly
5. Historical Average Slope – historical average price time average for last n targets
Considering the Price to Time Ratio method, Chart 1 below shows a chart of the price targets for the US stock Applied Materials with a Unit size of $1. The targets are projected Log Scale 2x the initial thrust. From this chart we see that the target prices are reached later than the projection predicted. This means that we need to consider a lesser slope. Chart 2 below shows the same chart with the slope now adjusted to $1 every three days. This chart shows that recent targets for Applied Materials have been approximately met with this slope. Therefore, this is a better slope to use in this instance.
Chart 1 - Applied Materials (unit size $1) - target projection slope $1 every 2 days
Chart 2 - Applied Materials (unit size $1) - target projection slope $1 every 3 days
Chart 3 - Applied Materials (unit size $1) - target projection slope 1/2 initial thrust slope
The second method of projecting price targets assumes the time that a price target will be reached is directly related to the speed of the initial thrust, which generates the target. Chart 3 shows the same security as in the previous examples but using this method with an angle of slope which is half the initial thrust angle. The factor can also be altered with this method to best fit the data. In the previous examples (Charts 1 & 2) we see the slope of each of the targets is constant. Using the Thrust Angle Factor method, different buying and selling thrust angles produces different target slopes.
A third possible projection method assumes that the longer a price target takes to activate, the longer it takes for a target to be reached. The argument goes that the pullback from the initial thrust is more of a consolidation phase rather than a sharp reaction and therefore, the potential overall move will take longer. Chart 4 shows this method. Again, we see that, due to the varying times of price targets to activate, the slopes of the targets are not uniform as in Method 1 which uses a consistent price to time slope.
Chart 4: Applied Materials (unit size $1) – target projection x times the time taken for target to activate.
Chart 5: Applied Materials (unit size $1) – target projection readjusts with new price information
A fourth method for predicting when in the future that a price target might be met adjusts the slope of the targets from the activation point as new price information arrives. With multiple targets activated at different points on the chart, this method also produces price targets of different slopes. Because targets are readjusted with every new price, it is best to set this method to ignore the last x bars in order to spot any divergence from the targets. Chart 5 shows this methodology.
Chart 6 shows a method where the average slope of price over time is taken for the previous n targets that are achieved and used as the slope for projecting targets into the future. While the slopes for upward and downward targets can be separately adjusted with the previous methods mentioned, this method automatically calculates the different slope speeds of upside and downside targets.
Chart 6: Applied Materials (unit size $1) – target projection based on the average slope of the last x targets.
Multiple Price Targets
As with Point and figure count targets, multiple price targets point to the same price or price level increases the likelihood of price targets being met. This is known as ‘clustering’. Now with the ability to project price targets to a future date on a chart, it is not only possible to see clustering of the price of multiple targets, but also clustering of times targets may be met. This can lead to a ‘cluster zone’, an area of price and time in the future that multiple targets may be met. Chart 7 shows an example of this.
Chart 7: Applied Materials (unit size $1) – target zone of future price and time of multiple targets
Achievement and Non-Achievement of Price Targets and Prevailing Trend
Point and figure targets are approximate and are more often than not, not met precisely. They are regularly not achieved or exceeded, but this provides valuable information in itself. Upside price targets that are achieved or exceeded shows bullish confirmation, whereas these targets not being achieved indicates a degree of bearishness. Conversely, downside price targets achieved or exceeded is bearish confirmation and such targets not achieved is an indication of inherent bullishness.
Unsurprisingly, price targets are normally achieved or exceeded in line with the prevailing trend. Upside price targets should be given more weight in uptrends, while downside ones may only serve as a temporary moment for caution, because they are counter-trend. Downside Targets will carry more weight in downtrends. It is also often the case that the last target in line with the prevailing trend is never met as the trend changes and a new set of targets in the opposite direction are generated with the new reversal of trend. Active price targets in both directions are often an early sign of this. This is particularly true with multiple targets in the new trend direction verses one lone target in the previous trend direction. This lone target is likely to be negated, clearly signalling the new trend direction is taking hold.
Activation and Negation of Price Targets
An upside price target is only activated when prices rise a further than a full price unit above the top of the initial uninterrupted buying thrust in prices from a low. A low is defined by a price level at least one full price unit below a previous recent low. The pullback downwards of at least three price units ‘locks’ the initial thrust that generates the upside price target. Here the bulls buying from the bottom have been confirmed.
A downside price target is only activated when prices fall further than a full price unit below the bottom of the initial uninterrupted selling thrust in prices from a high. A high is defined by a price level at least one full price unit above a previous recent high. The pullback upwards of at least three price units ‘locks’ the initial thrust that generates the downside price target. Here the bears selling from the top have been confirmed.
A target is valid once the column is locked with the pullback of at least three units, but it should not be considered as active until the price breaks through the activation level. An unactivated target serves as advance notice that a target is in place and will become active once the activation price level is broken.
An upside price target is negated if prices fall below the bottom of the initial uninterrupted buying thrust in prices. In this instance the bulls have been beaten by the bears. Conversely, a downside price target is negated if prices rise above the top of the initial uninterrupted Selling thrust in prices. Here the bears selling from the top have been beaten by the bulls.
It is important to note the difference between a target that is activated first and then negated and a target that was never activated and negated first. Research shows that normally more than half of all negated targets were never activated and wouldn’t have been taken. Taking the prevailing trend into account further reduces the number of negated targets that would have been taken at the activation point.
Evaluating a Target as Price Progress
Because Linton Price targets can be evaluated with subsequent new price information with the passage of time, it becomes possible to see more easily, than on a point and figure chart, when a target might be failing. The ideas of activation, negation, and achievement of price targets are understood in point and figure charting and apply similarly here to time-based charts. But the ability to now see prices diverging from the target path presents us with some potential new states of a target. In the case of an upside target, if prices fall away or wander sideways from a target path this alerts us to the fact that the prices on their way to the target may be ‘exhausting’. If we fall or wander back below the target activation level, this implies the previous resistance level off the thrust high has not managed to become a new support level for the price. Consequently, we may consider that the target has been ‘de-activated’. If we fall further below the low of the pullback low point, this previous support level also failed to hold and this is providing us with an early warning that the target is quite possibly ‘failing.’ If prices are moving towards the target as expected, we can say the target is ‘in train.’ This is particularly appropriate for multiple targets that run parallel using the first price/time slope prediction method where the targets look like ‘train tracks.’
Improbable Targets
Occasionally an improbable target a long way from the price will be generated. This is particularly true using a log scale projection. Beware of a target that points to a very large change in price. This is especially true of a lone target. It is also quite likely that the unit size has been set too small where a bigger unit size may not produce a target at all.
Longer term charts
Point and figure charts have always meant to be constructed with tick data. The point and figure methodology reduces this down to just the ticks that create a new box on the chart. Long tick data price histories are typically expensive and hard to come by. This can also be an overwhelming amount data to store and analyse, particularly in the case of very liquid instruments such as a major currency pair. For intraday charts, one minute data will normally suffice. But these histories may not be long enough either and it may be necessary to use a 60-minute chart.
It is also possible to construct point and figure charts using high/low data or even open-high-low-close data making some assumptions based on a rising or falling candle, on which came first, the high or the low. The targets will be impacted accordingly.
When it comes to longer term charts such as weekly or monthly charts it is unlikely that these time frames would be used for point and figure charts. The construction method already filters the data. But when it comes to long-term time based charts it becomes necessary to look at weekly or monthly data.
You will also see that long term price upside targets are generated that are not on the daily chart. This is because daily the movements will not provide the same uninterrupted buying thrusts as with the monthly data. The daily pullbacks are effectively ignored when using monthly data. The other advantage is the unit size is now months so we can say that the target slope equates to 1% of price every month for a 1 to 1 slope for example. Using weekly or monthly data to construct the price targets is a significant departure from the traditional point and figure charting method.
Time-Based Charts Are Easier to Understand Than Point and Figure Charts
In recent years, the vast majority of people carrying out technical analysis of charts do not use the point and figure charts. This is partly because very few software systems draw them correctly and do not calculate the price targets. Newcomers to technical analysis find point and figure charts hard to understand.
Combining With Other Techniques
Using point and figure charts has also often meant the need to switch between different chart types for the same instrument. Time-based charts allow for a vast set of technical analysis time-series based techniques to be married with Linton Price Targets. Having different sets of analysis on the same chart can increase the power of the analysis without having to swap between different chart types.
Linton Price Targets builds on the technical analysis body of knowledge developed over the past 100 years by bringing an old, largely lost, technique into the modern age.
The main advantages of Linton Price Targets are:
• The ability to have price targets on time-based charts.
• It is now possible to ascertain when in the future a price target may be met.
• With the passage of time, it becomes clearer if a target track is being followed.
• The targets can be applied to longer-term time-based charts.
• Time-series based analysis techniques can be used on the same chart as the targets.
• The targets are much easier to understand for the newcomer to technical analysis.
headmapOverview
Advanced Price-Action Zones is a comprehensive, professional-grade indicator designed to automatically map and visualize the most critical historical price levels on your chart. Moving beyond simple lines, it renders these levels as dynamic, semi-transparent zones, providing an intuitive 'heatmap' of significant support, resistance, and potential liquidity areas.
This tool is built for traders who demand a clean, data-rich chart that adapts in real-time to market movements, with a fully customizable interface for personal tuning.
Core Features
Automated Multi-Timeframe Analysis: Automatically plots the high and low of the previous Daily, Weekly, Monthly, and 12-Hour sessions, forming the backbone of your structural analysis.
Heatmap-Style Visualization: Levels are displayed as colored zones rather than simple lines. This allows you to instantly spot areas of confluence where multiple historical levels overlap, indicating stronger S/R.
Dynamic Daily Highlighting: The most recent previous day's high/low is shown in a primary color (default: yellow). As a new day begins, these zones automatically fade to a distinct historical color (default: grey), keeping your focus on the most relevant and recent price action.
Intraday Liquidity Targets: Temporary 12-hour zones are plotted with "L. Shorts" and "L. Longs" labels, highlighting potential short-term reversal areas or stop-run targets. These zones automatically expire to keep the chart clean.
Daily Range Context: A subtle background fill visualizes the entire range of the previous trading day, extending into the current session to provide immediate context for breakouts or range-bound behavior.
Toggleable Volume Data: Get deeper insights with floating labels showing the volume on the bar that created a key Daily, Weekly, or Monthly level. This feature can be turned on or off in the settings.
Full Customization: Every color for every zone type, background, and text element is fully adjustable via the indicator's input menu.
On-Chart Informative Legend: A clean legend in the top-right corner explains the color-coding and the implied importance of each timeframe.
How to Interpret the Visuals
High-Timeframe Levels (Monthly/Red, Weekly/Orange): Use these major zones to identify significant market turning points, high-probability reversal areas, and logical take-profit targets for swing trades.
Mid-Timeframe Levels (Daily): The yellow zones (most recent) represent the immediate battlefield. A decisive move beyond this area can set the tone for the session. The grey zones provide a historical map of prior daily structures.
Short-Timeframe Levels (12-Hour/Blue): Treat these as intraday targets. They often represent areas where stop-losses and liquidations might be clustered, making them magnets for price in the short term.
Disclaimer & Technical Notes
Disclaimer: This tool is for educational and analytical purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or trade signals. All trading involves significant risk.
Technical Note on lookahead: This indicator correctly uses lookahead = barmerge.lookahead_on when requesting higher-timeframe data. This is the standard, industry-accepted method to ensure that a completed historical value (e.g., the previous day's high) is plotted consistently and accurately across all chart timeframes. It does not "repaint" in the conventional sense of changing past signals, but rather ensures data stability.
This is a protected, closed-source script.
[JHF] SQZMOMPRO SQZMOMPRO is a sophisticated, momentum-based technical indicator designed for traders seeking to identify potential trend reversals, momentum shifts, and periods of market consolidation (squeezes) across multiple timeframes. By combining a momentum oscillator, Bollinger Bands, Keltner Channels, and a Percentage Volume Oscillator (PVO), it provides a comprehensive view of price momentum and volume dynamics.
Overview
The SQZMOMPRO indicator is a powerful tool that integrates momentum analysis, volatility-based squeeze detection, and volume confirmation to help traders identify high-probability trading opportunities. It combines:
A momentum oscillator based on price deviations from a linear regression and moving average.
Bollinger Bands and Keltner Channels to detect periods of low volatility (squeezes), signaling potential breakouts.
A Percentage Volume Oscillator (PVO) to confirm momentum signals with volume trends.
A Rate of Change (ROC) line to highlight the speed of momentum shifts.
Visual cues like reversal signals and confluence backgrounds for actionable insights.
This indicator is ideal for swing traders, day traders, and those analyzing trends across multiple timeframes (hourly, 4-hour, daily, weekly, monthly). It is plotted below the price chart (non-overlay) and includes customizable alerts for key conditions.
Key Features
Multi-Timeframe Support: Automatically adjusts parameters for hourly, 4-hour, daily, weekly, and monthly charts, ensuring optimal settings for each timeframe.
Squeeze Detection: Identifies periods of low volatility (squeezes) using Bollinger Bands and Keltner Channels, categorized as Wide, Normal, Narrow, or Very Narrow.
Momentum Oscillator: Tracks price momentum relative to a baseline, with a signal line to highlight trend reversals.
PVO Confluence: Optionally integrates the Percentage Volume Oscillator to confirm momentum signals with volume trends.
Rate of Change (ROC): Displays the smoothed rate of change of momentum for enhanced readability.
Visual Cues: Includes color-coded squeeze dots, momentum/signal lines, reversal markers, and optional confluence backgrounds.
Alerts: Configurable alerts for squeeze conditions, trend reversals, and volume-confirmed signals.
How It Works
1. Momentum Oscillator
The momentum oscillator is calculated as follows:
Source: Closing price.
Baseline: A combination of the midpoint of the highest high and lowest low over a specified period, adjusted by a simple moving average (SMA).
Momentum: Linear regression of the price deviation from this baseline over a timeframe-specific period (shorter for smaller timeframes to be more responsive).
Signal Line: A 5-period SMA of the momentum value, used to identify crossovers.
Interpretation:
Momentum > Signal: Bullish momentum (plotted in green by default).
Momentum < Signal: Bearish momentum (plotted in red by default).
Crossovers: Momentum crossing above the signal line suggests a bullish reversal; crossing below suggests a bearish reversal.
2. Squeeze Detection
Squeezes occur when volatility contracts, often preceding significant price moves. The indicator compares:
Bollinger Bands: Calculated using an SMA and 2 standard deviations of the closing price.
Keltner Channels: Calculated using an SMA and multiples of the Average True Range (ATR) for different squeeze thresholds (Wide, Normal, Narrow, Very Narrow). This method steers away from the likes of classical SQZPRO which only uses an approximation of the Average True Range and heavily affects the squeeze sensitivity due to the way they calculate their Keltner Channel (our Keltner Channel are true to the way they are supposed to be calculated).
Squeeze Conditions:
Wide Squeeze: Bollinger Bands are inside Keltner Channels with a high ATR multiplier.
Normal Squeeze: Bollinger Bands are inside Keltner Channels with a moderate ATR multiplier.
Narrow Squeeze: Bollinger Bands are inside Keltner Channels with a low ATR multiplier.
Very Narrow Squeeze: Bollinger Bands are inside Keltner Channels with a very low ATR.
No Squeeze: Bollinger Bands are outside Keltner Channels, indicating higher volatility.
Depending on the timeframe, each squeeze level has been manually tweaked to gain an edge, whether you're scalping, in swings or in Leaps.
Visuals: Squeeze conditions are plotted as colored dots on the zero line:
Green: No Squeeze
Black: Wide Squeeze
Red: Normal Squeeze
Yellow: Narrow Squeeze
Purple: Very Narrow Squeeze
3. Percentage Volume Oscillator (PVO)
The PVO measures volume momentum, similar to the MACD but applied to volume through a 14 and 28 ema with volume as the srouce.
Interpretation:
PVO > 0: Increasing volume momentum (bullish).
PVO < 0: Decreasing volume momentum (bearish).
When enabled (Show PVO Confluence), the indicator highlights periods where momentum and PVO align (e.g., bullish momentum with PVO > 0).
4. Rate of Change (ROC)
Formula: Smoothed difference between momentum and signal line, multiplied by a user-defined factor (ROC Multiplier).
Purpose: Enhances readability of momentum shifts, plotted as a blue (positive) or orange (negative) line when enabled.
5. Reversal Signals
Bullish Reversal: Momentum crosses above the signal line, optionally confirmed by PVO > 0. Marked with a green vertical line.
Bearish Reversal: Momentum crosses below the signal line, optionally confirmed by PVO < 0. Marked with a red vertical line.
6. Confluence Background
When Show PVO Confluence is enabled, the background is colored to highlight alignment:
Bullish Confluence: Momentum > Signal and PVO > 0 (green background, darker if ROC is positive).
Bearish Confluence: Momentum < Signal and PVO < 0 (red background, darker if ROC is negative).
Inputs
Basic Configuration:
Display Reversals: Show/hide reversal markers for momentum/signal crossovers (default: true).
Show PVO Confluence: Enable/disable background coloring for momentum and PVO alignment (default: false).
Rate of Change:
Show Rate of Change Line: Display the ROC line (default: false).
ROC Smoothing Length: Smoothing period for ROC (default: 1, min: 1).
ROC Multiplier: Scales ROC for readability (default: 1, min: 1).
Plotline Colors:
Bullish Momentum: Green (default: RGB(0, 255, 0)).
Bearish Momentum: Red (default: RGB(255, 0, 0)).
Signal Line: White (default: RGB(255, 255, 255)).
Squeeze Colors:
No Squeeze: Green.
Wide Squeeze: Black.
Normal Squeeze: Red.
Narrow Squeeze: Yellow.
Very Narrow Squeeze: Purple.
Timeframe-Specific Parameters
The indicator adapts to the chart’s timeframe, using predefined settings.
Hourly, 4-Hour, Daily, Weekly and Monthly (and everything in between) all have custom, tweaked momentum length, ATR length, and squeeze multiplier threshold to suit the sensitivity needed for the current timeframe.
Trading Applications
Squeeze Breakouts:
A transition from a Very Narrow or Narrow Squeeze to No Squeeze often signals a breakout. Combine with momentum crossovers for confirmation.
Example: Enter a long position when a Narrow Squeeze (yellow dots) turns to No Squeeze (green dots) and momentum crosses above the signal line.
Trend Reversals:
Bullish reversal (green line) with PVO > 0 confirms strong buying volume, increasing the likelihood of a sustained uptrend.
Bearish reversal (red line) with PVO < 0 suggests strong selling pressure.
Confluence Trading:
Use confluence backgrounds to trade only when momentum and volume align, reducing false signals.
Example: A bullish confluence (green background) with positive ROC indicates a high-probability long setup.
Divergences:
Look for divergences between price and momentum or PVO. For instance, a higher low in momentum/PVO with a lower low in price suggests a bullish reversal.
Trend Confirmation:
Use the momentum oscillator and ROC to confirm price trends. A rising momentum and positive ROC validate an uptrend.
Alerts
Squeeze Alerts:
🟢 No Squeeze: Volatility is expanding.
⚫ Low Squeeze: Wide squeeze detected.
🔴 Normal Squeeze: Moderate squeeze detected.
🟡 Tight Squeeze: Narrow squeeze detected.
🟣 Very Tight Squeeze: Very narrow squeeze detected.
Reversal Alerts:
🐂 Bullish Trend Reversal: Momentum crosses above signal.
🐻 Bearish Trend Reversal: Momentum crosses below signal.
🐂 Bullish Trend Reversal + 📊 PVO Confluence: Momentum crossover with PVO > 0.
🐻 Bearish Trend Reversal + 📊 PVO Confluence: Momentum crossover with PVO < 0.
Limitations
Lagging Nature: The momentum oscillator and PVO rely on moving averages, which may lag sudden price or volume spikes.
False Signals: Squeezes and crossovers can occur in choppy markets, leading to whipsaws. Confirm with price action or other indicators.
Timeframe Sensitivity: Results vary by timeframe; test settings for your trading style (e.g., shorter lengths for day trading).
How to Use
Add to Chart: Apply the indicator to any TradingView chart (non-overlay).
Customize Settings:
Enable Display Reversals for crossover markers.
Enable Show PVO Confluence for volume confirmation.
Adjust ROC Smoothing and ROC Multiplier for clearer ROC visuals.
Customize colors for better visibility.
Interpret Signals:
Monitor squeeze dots for volatility changes.
Watch for momentum/signal crossovers and confluence backgrounds.
Use ROC to gauge momentum strength.
Set Alerts: Configure alerts for squeezes, reversals, or confluence signals to stay informed.
Example Scenario
Setup: A stock in a Very Narrow Squeeze (purple dots) on the daily chart, with momentum below the signal line and PVO < 0.
Signal: Momentum crosses above the signal line, PVO turns positive, and the squeeze transitions to No Squeeze (green dots).
Action: Enter a long position, targeting the next resistance level, with a stop-loss below recent support. The green confluence background and positive ROC confirm the trade.
Conclusion
The SQZMOMPRO indicator is a versatile tool for traders seeking to capitalize on momentum, volatility, and volume trends. Its multi-timeframe adaptability, visual clarity, and robust alert system make it suitable for various trading strategies. Combine with price action, support/resistance, or other indicators for optimal results. For feedback or suggestions, feel free to leave a comment.
Super MTF Clouds (4x3 Pairs)Overview:
This script is based on Ripster's MTF clouds, which transcends the standard moving average cloud indicator by offering a powerful and deeply customizable Multi-Timeframe (MTF) analysis. Instead of being limited to the moving averages of your current charts from the current timeframe, this tool allows you to project and visualize the trend and key support/resistance zones from up to 4 different timeframes simultaneously. User can input up to 6 different EMA values which will form 3 pairs of EMA clouds, for each of the timeframes.
The primary purpose is to provide traders with immediate confluence. By observing how price interacts with moving average clouds from higher timeframes (e.g., Hourly, Daily, Weekly), you can make more informed decisions on your active trading timeframe (e.g., 10 Minute). It's designed as a complete MTF Cloud toolkit, allowing you to display all necessary MTFs in a single script to build a comprehensive view of the market structure without having to flick to different timeframe to look for cloud positions.
Key features:
Four Independent Multi-Timeframe Slots: Each slot can be assigned any timeframe available on TradingView (e.g., D, W, M, 4H).
Three MA Pairs Per Timeframe: For each timeframe, configure up to three separate MA clouds (e.g., a 9/12 EMA pair, a 20/50 EMA pair, and a 100/200 SMA pair).
Complete Customisation: For every single moving average (24 in total), you can independently control:
MA Type: Choose between EMA or SMA.
Length: Any period you require.
Line Color: Full colour selection.
Line Thickness: Adjust the visual weight of each line.
Cloud Control: For every pair (12 in total), you can set the fill colour and transparency.
How To Use This Script:
This tool is best used for confirmation and context. Here are some practical strategies that one can adopt:
Trend Confluence: Before taking a trade based on a signal on your current timeframe, glance at the higher timeframe clouds. If you see a buy signal on the 15-minute chart and the price is currently trading above a thick, bullish Daily cloud, the probability of that trade succeeding is significantly higher. Conversely, shorting into strong HTF support is a low-probability trade.
Dynamic Support & Resistance: The edges of the higher timeframe clouds often act as powerful, dynamic levels of support and resistance. A pullback to the 4-Hour 50 EMA on your 15-minute chart can be a prime area to look for entries in the direction of the larger trend.
Gauging Market Regimes: Use the toggles in the settings to quickly switch between different views. You can have a "risk-on" view with short-term clouds and a "macro" view with weekly and monthly clouds. This helps you adapt your trading style to the current market conditions.
Key Settings:
1. Global Setting
Source For All MAs: This determines the price data point used for every single moving average calculation.
Default: hl2 (an average of the High and Low of each bar). This gives a smooth midpoint price.
Options: You can change this to Close (the most common method), Open, High, Low, or ohlc4 (an average of the open, high, low, and close), among others.
Recommendation: For most standard trend analysis, the default hl2 is the common choice.
2. The Timeframe Group Structure
The rest of the settings are organized into four identical, collapsible groups: "Timeframe 1 Settings" through "Timeframe 4 Settings". Each group acts as a self-contained control panel for one multi-timeframe view.
Within each timeframe group, you have two master controls:
Enable Timeframe: This is the main power switch for the entire group. Uncheck this box to instantly hide all three clouds and lines associated with this timeframe. This is perfect for quickly decluttering your chart or focusing on a different set of analyses.
Timeframe: This dropdown menu is the heart of the MTF feature. Here, you select the higher timeframe you want to analyse (e.g., 1D for Daily, 1W for Weekly, 4H for 4-Hour). All calculations for the three pairs within this group will be based on the timeframe you select here.
3. Pair-Specific Controls
Inside each timeframe group, there are three sections for "Pair 1", "Pair 2", and "Pair 3". These control each individual moving average cloud.
Enable Pair: Just like the master switch for the timeframe, this checkbox turns a single cloud and its two MA lines on or off.
For each pair, the settings are further broken down:
Moving Average Lines (A and B): These two rows control the two moving averages that form the cloud. 'A' is typically used for the shorter-period MA and 'B' for the longer-period one.
Type (A/B): A dropdown menu to select either EMA (Exponential Moving Average) or SMA (Simple Moving Average). EMAs react more quickly to recent price changes, while SMAs are smoother and react more slowly.
Length (A/B): The lookback period for the moving average (e.g., 21, 50, 200).
Color (A/B): Sets the specific colour of the MA line itself on your chart.
Cloud Fill Settings
Fill Color: This controls the colour of the shaded area (the "cloud") between the two moving average lines. For a consistent look, you can set this to the same colour as your shorter MA line.
Transparency: Controls how see-through the cloud is, on a scale of 0 to 100. 0 is a solid, opaque colour, while 100 is completely invisible. The default of 85 provides a light, "cloud-like" appearance that doesn't obscure the price action.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
If anything is not clear please let me know!
Luma DCA Simulator (BTC only)Luma DCA Simulator – Guide
What is the Luma DCA Simulator?
The Luma DCA Tracker shows how regular Bitcoin investments (Dollar Cost Averaging) would have developed over a freely selectable period – directly in the chart, transparent and easy to follow.
Settings Overview
1. Investment amount per interval
Specifies how much capital is invested at each purchase (e.g. 100).
2. Start date
Defines the point in time from which the simulation begins – e.g. 01.01.2020.
3. Investment interval
Determines how frequently investments are made:
– Daily
– Weekly
– Every 14 days
– Monthly
4. Language
Switches the info box display between English and German.
5. Show investment data (optional)
If activated, the chart will display additional values such as total invested capital, BTC amount, current value, and profit/loss.
What the Chart Displays
Entry points: Each DCA purchase is marked as a point in the price chart.
Average entry price: An orange line visualizes the evolving DCA average.
Info box (bottom left) with a live summary of:
– Total invested capital
– Total BTC acquired
– Average entry price
– Current portfolio value
– Profit/loss in absolute terms and percentage
Note on Accuracy
This simulation is for illustrative purposes only.
Spreads, slippage, fees, and tax effects are not included.
Actual results may vary.
Technical Note
For daily or weekly intervals, the chart timeframe should be set to 1 day or lower to ensure all purchases are accurately included.
Larger timeframes (e.g. weekly or monthly charts) may result in missed investments.
Currency Handling
All calculations are based on the selected chart symbol (e.g. BTCUSD, BTCEUR, BTCUSDT).
The displayed currency is automatically determined by the chart used.
LiquidEdge Original1️⃣ Why Most Traders Miss Key Market Turning Points
Most traders (you) struggle to identify true market pivots THE REAL TOP and BOTTOMS where reversals begin.
❌ You enter too early or too late because price alone doesn’t give enough confirmation
❌ You follow price blindly, unaware of the volume pressure building underneath
❌ You get caught in sideways markets, not realizing they’re often accumulation or distribution zones
❌ You can’t tell if momentum is building or fading, which leads to low confidence and inconsistent results
👉 LiquidEdge helps solve this by tracking volume momentum through a modified MFI slope and scoring system. It highlights potential pivots with real context, so you can see where smart money might be entering or exiting before price makes it obvious.
2️⃣ What LiquidEdge Actually Does and How
LiquidEdge helps solve common trading problems by adding structure and clarity to volume analysis.
✅ It builds on the classic Money Flow Index (MFI), but instead of just showing overbought/oversold levels, it calculates the slope of MFI to track real-time changes in volume momentum
✅ Each setup is scored based on a combination of factors: divergence strength, trend alignment using EMA, and whether the signal occurs inside a liquidity zone
✅ Hidden accumulation or distribution is revealed when volume pressure increases or fades while price remains flat or moves slightly, a sign of smart money positioning
✅ Divergences are only flagged when they occur near pivot zones and align with overall trend conditions, helping reduce false signals
✅ Potential pivots are identified when multiple factors overlap such as a liquidity zone breach, volume slope shift, and valid divergence which often signals entry or exit points for institutional players
👉 The result is a structured interpretation of price and volume flow, helping traders read momentum shifts and potential reversals more clearly in both trending and ranging markets.
3️⃣ What Makes LiquidEdge Different
LiquidEdge is built on top of the classic Money Flow Index (MFI), but adds structure that transforms it from a basic momentum tool into a decision-support system.
Instead of simply showing highs and lows, it scores each potential setup based on:
✅ The steepness and direction of the MFI slope (used to measure volume pressure)
✅ Whether the setup aligns with the broader trend using an EMA filter (default: 200 EMA)
✅ Whether the signal appears inside predefined liquidity zones (MFI above 80 or below 20)
👉 This scoring system reduces noise and helps you focus only on high-probability setups.
👉 It also checks volume pressure across multiple timeframes using MFI slope on 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, and Daily charts. This reveals whether short-term moves are backed by longer-term volume momentum.
Color changes in the line and histogram are not decorative they reflect real shifts in volume pressure. Every visual cue is linked to live market logic.
What Makes It Stand Out
👉 Setup Scoring That Makes Sense
Each setup is scored by combining:
Signal strength (MFI slope intensity and stability)
Trend direction (via customizable EMA)
Liquidity zone relevance (MFI range filtering)
This structured scoring means you spend less time second-guessing and more time reading clean signals.
👉 Flow That Follows Real Momentum
The slope of the MFI tracks whether volume pressure is rising or falling:
🟢 Green = increasing inflow (buying pressure)
🔴 Red = increasing outflow (selling pressure)
👉 Multi-Timeframe Volume Context
LiquidEdge calculates flow direction independently on each major timeframe. You’ll know if short-term setups are confirmed by higher timeframe volume or going against it.
👉 Smart Divergence Filtering
Unlike simple divergence tools that compare price highs/lows directly, LiquidEdge filters divergences based on:
Local pivot zones (defined by lookback periods)
Trend confirmation (to eliminate countertrend noise)
4️⃣ How LiquidEdge Works (Under the Hood)
LiquidEdge tracks directional momentum using the slope of the Money Flow Index (MFI) giving you a real-time read on buying and selling pressure.
When the slope rises, it means buyers are stepping in and volume is supporting the move.
When it falls, sellers are taking control and volume outflow is increasing.
This slope acts like a pressure gauge for the market, helping you spot when a trend has strength or when it's starting to fade.
💡 Quick Comparison
RSI = momentum from price
MFI = momentum from price + volume
LiquidEdge takes it one step further by calculating the rate of change (slope) in MFI. That’s where the pressure signal comes from not just value, but directional flow.
Core Calculations (Simplified)
Typical Price = (High + Low + Close) ÷ 3
Raw Money Flow = Typical Price × Volume
MFI = 100 −
MFI ranges from 0 to 100.
High = strong buying volume
Low = growing selling pressure
LiquidEdge then calculates the slope of this MFI over time to track volume momentum dynamically.
Divergence Engine
LiquidEdge detects divergence by comparing price pivots with the direction of MFI slope.
❌ If price makes a higher high but MFI slope turns down, it’s a bearish divergence
✅ If price makes a lower low but MFI slope rises, it’s a bullish divergence
Divergences are only confirmed when they occur:
Near local pivot zones (defined by configurable lookback windows)
And, optionally, in alignment with the broader trend using an EMA filter
This filtering helps reduce false positives and keeps you focused on clean setups.
Structured Confidence Scoring
Each signal is visually scored based on:
➡️ Whether a valid divergence is detected
➡️ Whether the signal occurs inside a liquidity zone (MFI > 80 or < 20)
➡️ Whether the setup aligns with the overall trend direction (EMA filter)
More confluence = higher confidence
The scoring system helps prioritize setups that meet multiple criteria, not just one.
Liquidity Zones
Above 80: Signals possible buying exhaustion 👉 risk of reversal
Below 20: Indicates potential selling exhaustion 👉 watch for a bounce
Zones are shaded directly on the chart to highlight pressure extremes in real time.
Price + Volume Fusion
LiquidEdge blends price action with volume pressure using MFI slope and histogram behavior. It doesn’t just show you where price is moving. it shows whether the move is backed by real volume.
This lets you see:
Whether volume is confirming or fading behind a move
If a reversal is building even before price confirms it
Visual Feedback That Speaks Clearly
🟢 Green slope = increasing buying pressure
🔴 Red slope = increasing selling pressure
5️⃣ When Price Is Flat but LiquidEdge Moves: Volume Tells the Truth
One of the most useful things LiquidEdge can do is reveal pressure shifts when price looks neutral.
If price is moving sideways but the MFI slope or histogram rises, it may suggest that buying pressure is quietly increasing possibly pointing to early accumulation.
If price stays flat while the volume slope or histogram drops, this could indicate distribution, where sellers are exiting without moving the market noticeably.
These changes don’t guarantee a breakout or breakdown, but they often precede key moves especially when combined with other confluences like trend alignment or liquidity zones.
👉 LiquidEdge helps spot these setups by measuring volume momentum shifts beneath price action.
It doesn’t predict the future, but it gives you additional context to evaluate what may be developing before it’s visible on price alone.
6️⃣ Multi-Timeframe Flow Table
LiquidEdge includes a real-time table that tracks volume pressure across multiple timeframes including 5-minute, 15-minute, 1-hour, 4-hour, and daily charts.
Each row reflects the direction of the MFI slope on that timeframe, indicating whether volume pressure is increasing (inflow) or decreasing (outflow).
🟢 A rising slope suggests that buying momentum is building
🔴 A falling slope suggests selling pressure may be increasing
👉 This lets traders quickly assess whether short-term setups are aligned with higher timeframe volume trends a useful layer of confirmation for both intraday and swing strategies.
Rather than flipping between charts, the table gives you a snapshot of flow strength across the board, helping you stay focused on opportunities that align with broader market pressure.
7️⃣ Timeframes & Assets
Where LiquidEdge Works Best:
✅ Crypto: Supports major coins and high-volume altcoins (BTC, ETH, Top 100)
✅ Stocks: Effective on large-cap and mid-cap equities with consistent volume
✅ Futures: Tested on instruments like NQ, MNQ, ES, and MES
✅ Any liquid market where volume data is reliable and stable
For best results, use LiquidEdge on assets with consistent trading volume. It’s not recommended for ultra-low volume crypto pairs or micro-cap stocks, where irregular volume can distort signals.
Recommended Timeframes:
👉 Intraday trading: Works well on 3-minute, 5-minute, 15-minute, and 1-hour charts
👉 Swing trading: Performs reliably on 4-hour, daily, and weekly charts
👉 Ultra short-term (1-minute or less): Not recommended due to high noise and low reliability
LiquidEdge adapts to various trading styles from scalping short-term momentum shifts to analyzing broader volume trends across swing and positional setups. The key is choosing assets and timeframes with reliable volume flow for the tool to work effectively.
8️⃣ Common Mistakes to Avoid When Using LiquidEdge
❌ Using It in Isolation
LiquidEdge offers valuable context, but it’s not designed to function as a standalone trading system. Always combine it with key tools such as trendlines, support/resistance zones, chart structure, or fundamental data. The more supporting evidence you have, the stronger your analysis becomes.
❌ Relying on a Single Indicator
No indicator, including LiquidEdge, can account for every market condition. It’s important to use it alongside other forms of confirmation to avoid making decisions based on limited data.
❌ Misinterpreting Divergences as Reversals
A divergence between price and volume pressure doesn't always signal the end of a trend. If the broader direction remains strong (based on EMAs or higher timeframe volume flow), a divergence could reflect temporary consolidation rather than reversal.
❌ Ignoring Trend Alignment and Confidence Scoring
LiquidEdge includes confidence scoring to help validate signals. Disregarding this structure can lead to reacting to weak or out-of-context divergences, especially in choppy or low-volume environments.
❌ Using It on Second-Based or Tick Charts
Very low timeframes introduce too much noise, which can distort volume slope and divergence signals. For intraday analysis, start with 3-minute charts or higher. For swing trading, use 4H and up for clearer, more reliable structure.
9️⃣ LiquidEdge Settings Overview
A quick breakdown of what you can customize in the indicator and how each option affects what you see:
➡️ LiquidEdge Length
Controls how sensitive the indicator is to changes in volume pressure (via MFI slope).
Shorter values = faster response, more frequent signals
Longer values = smoother output, less noise
👉 Default: 14
➡️ EMA Trend Filter
Determines overall trend direction based on EMA slope. Used to filter out signals that go against the broader move.
Helps reduce countertrend entries
Adjustable to suit your strategy
👉 Recommended: 200 EMA
➡️ Pivot Lookback (Left & Right)
Defines how many bars the system looks back and forward to identify swing highs/lows for divergence detection.
Narrow: more responsive but can be noisy
Wide: slower but more stable pivot zones
👉 Default: 5 left / 5 right
➡️ Histogram Toggle
Enables a visual histogram showing how volume pressure deviates from its recent average.
Useful for spotting shifts in flow intensity
👉 Optional for added visual detail
➡️ Liquidity Zones
Highlights potential exhaustion zones based on MFI value:
Above 80 = potential distribution (buying pressure peaking)
Below 20 = possible accumulation (selling pressure fading)
👉 Zones are fully customizable (color, opacity, background)
➡️ Custom Threshold Zones
Set your own upper/lower boundaries for liquidity extremes helpful when adapting to different markets or asset classes.
👉 Especially useful outside of crypto/forex
➡️ Show LiquidEdge Line
Toggle the main MFI slope line. When turned off, liquidity zones and levels also disappear.
👉 Use if you prefer to focus only on histogram/divergences
➡️ Style Settings
Customize line colors, histogram appearance, and background shading
👉 Helps tailor visuals to your chart layout
➡️ Simplified Mode
Removes all colors and replaces visuals with a clean, grayscale output.
👉 Ideal for minimalist or distraction-free charting
➡️ Signal Score Label
Displays the confidence score of the current setup, based on:
Divergence presence
Liquidity zone positioning
Trend alignment (EMA)
👉 Tooltip explains how the score is calculated
➡️ Divergence Labels
Shows “Bullish” or “Bearish” labels at divergence points.
Optional Filters based on trend if EMA filter is active
➡️ Multi-Timeframe Flow Table
Shows directional flow (based on MFI slope) across: 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, 1D
Color-coded (faded green/red) for clarity
👉 Table position is customizable on your chart
➡️ Alerts
Get notified when any of these conditions are met:
✅ Bullish or bearish divergence detected
✅ Price enters high/low liquidity zones
✅ Signal score reaches a defined value
➡️ Visibility Settings
Control which timeframes display the LiquidEdge indicator
👉 Best used on 3-minute and above
⚠️ Not recommended on ultra-low or second-based charts due to noise
🔟 Q&A – What Traders Usually Ask
➡️ Can this help reduce bad trades?
To a degree, yes. LiquidEdge is built to highlight areas where price may react, based on volume pressure, liquidity zones, and divergence patterns. It can offer clarity in sideways or messy markets, helping traders avoid impulsive or poorly timed entries.
That said, it’s not predictive or guaranteed. It works best when used with broader context including structure, support/resistance, trend, and volume-based confluence.
👉 Reminder: LiquidEdge is not a signal tool. It’s a decision-support framework designed to help you assess potential shifts, not replace judgment or trading rules.
➡️ Is this just another flashy signal tool?
No. LiquidEdge doesn’t give buy/sell alerts. Instead, it visualizes volume shifts using MFI slope, divergence filtering, and trend-based scoring. It’s built to help you understand why price action may be changing not just react to a one-dimensional signal.
You’re seeing how volume pressure evolves across timeframes, which gives added context to what’s unfolding in the market.
➡️ How do I know this isn’t just another overhyped tool?
LiquidEdge is based on real trading logic: volume pressure (via MFI slope), price behavior, and divergence within trend and liquidity zones. It was developed and tested by traders, not packaged by marketers.
No performance is guaranteed. It’s designed to support your decisions not promise results.
➡️ Will this work with my trading style?
If you trade any market with volume crypto, stocks, or futures LiquidEdge can add value.
✔️ Scalpers: Best from 3-minute and up
✔️ Swing traders: Works well on 4H, Daily, Weekly
✔️ Investors: Weekly charts show pressure buildup over time
⚠️ Avoid ultra-low timeframes (under 1M) or illiquid markets, as noise and irregular data can reduce reliability.
➡️ Can I trust the signals?
These are not buy/sell signals. LiquidEdge offers confidence-weighted insights based on:
✔️ Valid divergence
✔️ Zone positioning (above 80 / below 20)
✔️ Optional trend alignment (via EMA)
Each setup is scored visually to reflect how much confluence exists. You can combine that information with structure, price action, or your existing tools to evaluate opportunities.
👉 Think of LiquidEdge as a decision filter not a trigger.
It’s meant to slow down impulsive trades and help you make more context-aware decisions.
1️⃣1️⃣ Limitations – Know When It’s Less Effective
LiquidEdge performs best in stable, high-volume markets where volume data is consistent and structure is visible.
It’s not recommended for:
❌ Low-volume tokens
❌ Micro-cap or penny stocks
❌ Newly listed assets with limited trading history
These types of markets often show inconsistent or erratic volume behavior, making it difficult for LiquidEdge to accurately assess pressure or identify reliable divergences.
⚠️ During major news events or sudden volatility spikes, volume and price behavior can become disconnected or extreme. This may distort MFI slope calculations and reduce the accuracy of divergence or confidence scoring.
LiquidEdge is built to read structured volume flow. When market conditions become highly erratic or unpredictable, it's best to:
Wait for structure to return
Use it alongside other filters for additional confirmation
This isn't a flaw it's simply the nature of tools that rely on consistency in price and volume data.
1️⃣2️⃣ Real Chart Examples – See It in Action
Now that you’ve seen how LiquidEdge works, here are real-world chart examples from various asset classes
including:
✅ Crypto
✅ Stocks
✅ Futures
✅ Commodities
These examples demonstrate how LiquidEdge behaves under different conditions, and how both the line (MFI slope) and histogram (volume deviation) can be used to interpret market flow.
In each walkthrough, you’ll see:
How the histogram can highlight potential momentum shifts
When the slope line provides stronger directional clarity
Examples of possible hidden accumulation or distribution (before price responds)
What to watch out for such as weak volume, false divergences, or conflicting flow signals
👉 These are real examples based on live market data not theoretical setups. They’re meant to help you recognize how LiquidEdge reacts across multiple styles and timeframes.
Let’s walk through each one and break down the logic step by step, so you can understand how to evaluate setups using structure, volume behavior, and context-driven confluence.
Example: Microsoft (MSFT) – Possible Hidden Accumulation
In this setup, price was moving lower within a short-term downtrend. However, LiquidEdge began showing signs of increasing inflow pressure a common characteristic of accumulation, where volume rises even as price declines.
This divergence suggested that buying interest may have been increasing behind the scenes, despite weak price action on the surface.
Step-by-step breakdown:
👉 Trend context – Price was clearly trending down at the time
👉 Volume divergence – Price made lower lows, but LiquidEdge slope was rising = possible bullish divergence
👉 Accumulation clue – The rising slope, despite falling price, pointed to volume inflow often seen during quiet accumulation
👉 Histogram support – Volume pressure (via the histogram) also increased, confirming the flow shift
👉 Anticipating reaction – When liquidity pressure rises ahead of price, it can signal potential reversal interest
In this case, price later moved sharply higher. While not guaranteed, setups like this illustrate how divergence + volume flow may help highlight early accumulation zones before price confirms the shift.
Same Setup – Focusing on the Histogram Alone
Here, we’re revisiting the Microsoft setup but this time focusing only on the histogram, without the MFI slope line.
Even without the directional slope, the histogram showed rising volume pressure while price continued to drift lower. This visual pattern may indicate that buying interest was quietly increasing, despite weak price movement.
This is where the histogram adds value: it helps visualize the intensity of volume flow over time. When volume pressure builds during a flat or declining price phase, it can be consistent with accumulation where larger participants begin positioning before the market responds.
This example highlights how the histogram alone can provide early insight into underlying volume dynamics even before price shifts noticeably.
Filtering with EMA and why It Matters
Here, we revisit the Microsoft example this time applying the 200 EMA filter, which helps define the broader trend.
Once enabled, LiquidEdge automatically removed any bullish or bearish divergence signals that were against the prevailing trend. This helped reduce noise and focus only on setups aligned with market structure.
✅ The EMA acts as a contextual filter.
For example, if a bullish divergence occurs during a confirmed downtrend, LiquidEdge suppresses that signal helping you avoid setups that may carry more risk.
This filtering mechanism is especially useful in fast or choppy markets, where not all divergences are meaningful.
Want More Flexibility? Adjust the Filter
If you're a more aggressive trader or prefer shorter-term signals, you can reduce the EMA length (e.g., to 150, 50, or even 25). This increases the number of setups shown but also raises the importance of additional context and confirmation.
⚠️ Keep in mind:
❌ More signals doesn’t always mean better outcomes
✅ Focused, context-aware signals tend to be more consistent with broader market pressure
If you’re using this in combination with strategies like options trading, this filter can help refine your entry zones especially when paired with other structure or volatility tools.
Distribution Example and Bitcoin Setup Before a Major Drop
In this example, Bitcoin was trading in a relatively tight range while price continued to push upward. However, LiquidEdge began to show signs of volume outflow, which can suggest potential distribution.
Here’s what was observed:
🔴 Price was moving up inside a horizontal range
🔴 LiquidEdge’s slope indicated declining volume pressure
🔴 Several bearish divergence signals appeared during this consolidation phase
🔴 The histogram also showed weakening flow, even before price broke down
These overlapping signals pointed to a possible distribution phase, where buying momentum was fading despite price still holding up.
🧭 Signs to Watch for in Potential Distribution:
1️⃣ Price holding flat or rising slightly within a tight range
2️⃣ Volume pressure (line or histogram) sloping downward
3️⃣ Repeated bearish divergences forming at the highs
4️⃣ Lack of follow-through on bullish setups signaling hesitation in demand
While LiquidEdge can’t predict market outcomes, this scenario demonstrates how a combination of divergence, outflow, and failure to break out may serve as early warnings that momentum is shifting beneath the surface.
Failed Auction Example – Volume Shift Before a Breakdown
In this example, price attempted to break out above a recent high, creating the appearance of a bullish continuation. However, LiquidEdge began to signal volume outflow, despite the upward price move a potential sign of a failed auction.
Here’s what was observed:
👉 Price made a new high, appearing to break resistance
👉 LiquidEdge slope and histogram both showed declining liquidity
👉 The indicator formed lower lows, even as price pushed higher
👉 This divergence suggested that volume wasn’t supporting the breakout
Shortly after, price reversed and returned back inside the range which is a common characteristic of failed auction behavior.
🧭 Spotting a Potential Failed Auction with LiquidEdge:
1️⃣ Price breaks above a recent high
2️⃣ Volume flow (line + histogram) shows outflow, not inflow
3️⃣ Indicator forms lower lows while price makes higher highs (bearish divergence)
4️⃣ Market reverts back into the previous range without follow-through
While no tool can predict outcomes, this setup demonstrated how volume pressure and divergence can help identify moments where a breakout may lack real support offering context before price action confirms the shift.
Reading the Histogram - Spotting Pressure Fades
In this example, price was still rising but the LiquidEdge histogram showed falling volume pressure. This type of divergence between price and volume can serve as a potential early signal that momentum may be fading.
🔻 Histogram levels declined while price continued higher
🔻 This suggested that buying pressure was weakening, even though price hadn’t turned
🔻 Volume flow behavior didn’t support the continuation possibly indicating buyer exhaustion
Just before the peak, the histogram nearly reached its lower threshold, despite price still being near its highs.
💡 How to Read It:
When volume pressure (shown by the histogram) starts to fade while price is still rising, it can indicate that momentum is weakening. This may precede a pullback or reversal particularly if other factors like divergence or zone exhaustion are also present.
Conversely, rising histogram values during a price drop may suggest potential accumulation.
👉 Use the histogram as a volume intensity gauge, not a signal on its own especially when evaluating whether a move is supported by actual flow, or just price momentum.
The Table – Fast, Visual Multi-Timeframe Flow Insight
The multi-timeframe flow table in LiquidEdge provides a consolidated view of volume momentum across several key timeframes so you don’t need to switch between charts to compare flow strength.
👉 Instead of flipping from 5-minute to 15M, 1H, 4H, and Daily, the table displays flow direction on all of them at a glance.
Example layout:
🔼 Daily: Up
🔽 1H: Down
🔼 15M: Up
🔽 5M: Down
This setup gives you a quick read on whether volume momentum is aligned across multiple timeframes or diverging which can help frame your trade approach.
🧠 Why It’s Useful:
✅ Supports timeframe alignment
If higher timeframes show strong inflow while lower ones are mixed, you may interpret it as a swing-based opportunity. If short timeframes show pressure but higher frames are flat, it might suggest short-term setups with caution.
✅ Improves context awareness
Instead of interpreting a move in isolation, the table helps you assess whether short-term signals are part of a broader shift or going against higher timeframe flow.
💡 Pro Tip: Use the table as a starting point in your analysis. It’s a simple but effective snapshot of current liquidity pressure across the board helping you plan trades with broader context, rather than reacting chart-by-chart.
🔚 Final Thoughts
If you're focused on trading with better clarity and structure, LiquidEdge is designed to help you interpret what’s happening beneath the surface not just follow price movement.
While many tools highlight price alone, LiquidEdge combines volume pressure, divergence filtering, and trend-based context to help identify potential areas of accumulation, distribution, or momentum shifts even before they become obvious on a chart.
👉 This isn’t just another signal tool. It’s a framework to support smarter decision-making:
✔️ One that helps you filter out noise
✔️ One that scores setups using multiple layers of confirmation
✔️ One that brings volume context into every trade idea
Whether you're scalping on a 5-minute chart or managing a longer-term swing trade, LiquidEdge is built to help you stay aligned with volume-driven behavior not just react to price alone.
If you've struggled with late entries, unreliable setups, or second-guessing trades, this tool was designed to bring more structure to your process. It won’t remove all uncertainty but it can help you stay more selective, confident, and intentional.
✅ Trade with clarity
✅ Stay process-driven
✅ Focus on structure, not noise
LiquidEdge is not meant to replace your strategy. It’s here to enhance it.
In this chart, the 200 EMA filter was applied. As a result, only signals that aligned with the dominant trend direction were displayed helping to reduce distractions and focus on setups with stronger context.
💡 Using a higher EMA setting like 200 can reduce the number of signals shown, but may help you focus on higher-conviction opportunities.
That said, every trader is different:
Longer EMAs = fewer signals, but more trend-filtered setups
Shorter EMAs = more signals, faster entries but with potentially more noise
👉 Adjust the filter based on your trading style. Use a 200 EMA for swing trading, or reduce it to 50, 25, or even 5 if you're trading more aggressively or intraday.
LiquidEdge adapts to you not the other way around.
🔁 Adjusting EMA for Your Trading Style
Personal Tip: When trading more aggressively, I often use a 5 EMA filter especially when combining histogram strength with other tools. This increases signal responsiveness and may help highlight short-term flow shifts more quickly.
Below are visual examples that show how different EMA lengths impact the behavior of LiquidEdge:
50 EMA ON
25 EMA ON
5 EMA ON
Lower EMA Example – Gold with the 5 EMA
In this example, the 5 EMA filter was applied to Gold. As expected, more signals were plotted compared to higher EMA settings. The tool became more responsive to rapid shifts in volume momentum, making it more suitable for fast-paced trading environments.
This setting can help traders who prefer early entries but it also introduces more sensitivity, so context and additional confirmation become even more important.
Each setting affects signal frequency and filtering:
Higher EMA → fewer signals, more trend-confirmed setups
Lower EMA → more signals, quicker responses, but with more potential for noise
Choose what fits your approach:
Long-term swing → Stick with 200 EMA
Intraday or scalping → Consider shorter EMAs (50, 25, or 5)
💡 Reminder: EMA filtering is fully adjustable. LiquidEdge doesn’t lock you into one trading style it’s meant to adapt to your process, whether you’re swing trading or scalping short-term moves.
But There’s a Catch…
Using a lower EMA setting (like 5) opens up faster, more frequent signals but it also increases the need for precision and stronger trade management.
❗ More signals = More responsiveness
❗ Faster setups mean quicker decisions
❗ Risk control becomes even more important
💡 Lower Timeframes = More Detail, Less Margin for Error
A short EMA (like 5) can help you:
✅ Identify early momentum shifts
✅ Respond before traditional trend-followers
✅ Highlight short-term divergence and volume changes
But it also comes with tradeoffs:
❌ Greater signal noise
❌ Higher potential for misreads or fakeouts
❌ Requires clear structure and disciplined entries
🚩 Watch Out for Liquidity Grabs
In lower timeframes, a common trap is the liquidity grab where price pushes beyond recent highs or lows, triggers stops, then quickly reverses.
📌 These moves can look like breakouts, but often reverse quickly possibly reflecting institutional order placement or low-liquidity manipulation.
🧭 How to Approach It Smartly
✅ Use structure: Mark support and resistance to frame moves
✅ Confirm volume behavior: Is histogram strength rising or fading?
✅ Avoid chasing: Look for confluence, not just a single signal
✅ Be intentional with stops: Place them with structure in mind to avoid being swept out
NASDAQ Futures Example – Low Timeframe Setups with LiquidEdge
In this example, we look at how LiquidEdge was used to identify both short and long setups on the NASDAQ Futures (NQ) particularly on a low timeframe (5M), where quick decision-making and volume precision matter most.
⚠️ A Note on Futures and Volume
When trading futures, especially on intraday charts, it’s important to separate overnight volume from regular session activity.
🕒 Overnight Volume ≠ Real Volume Context
Overnight price action is informative, but the volume data itself may not reflect true market participation. In LiquidEdge, histogram and pressure calculations emphasize regular session flow helping avoid skewed signals that could come from low-volume overnight moves.
Using the Histogram to Spot Potential Shifts
One of the key cues I use is color transition in the histogram:
🔴 A flip from strong green to red can signal fading buying pressure, sometimes marking the beginning of a potential short setup.
🟢 A shift from red to green may indicate that buyers are returning, suggesting possible accumulation.
These shifts serve as early visual cues of changing pressure especially when confirmed by other tools or context.
🔁 Adding Context with the Line + Structure
After spotting a histogram shift, I look at:
1️⃣ Slope Line – Is it confirming the same directional pressure?
2️⃣ Support/Resistance – Are we near a meaningful zone?
3️⃣ Additional Tools – This includes trendlines, VWAP, EMAs, and overall price structure.
On lower timeframes like 5M, these pieces become even more important. LiquidEdge gives directional insight, but your full setup provides confirmation and execution logic.
⚠️ Disclaimer
LiquidEdge is not a signal tool. It’s a visual representation of market pressure and flow designed to help you make more informed trading and investing decisions. It shows you what’s happening beneath the price action but you are still responsible for your decisions.
Always combine LiquidEdge with your own strategy, research, and supporting tools. That includes trend analysis, support/resistance levels, chart patterns, and fundamentals (like P/E ratios, price-to-sales, debt ratios, etc.).
This tool should never be used alone or treated as financial advice.
Some content may include AI-powered enhancements for clarity or formatting.
Always do your own research. For personal financial guidance, speak with a licensed financial advisor.
TBL HTF Highs&LowsThis script plots the previous Daily, Weekly, and Monthly High and Low levels directly on your chart, helping you identify key higher-timeframe support and resistance zones.
Features:
Daily, Weekly, Monthly Lines: Toggle visibility for each timeframe's high/low levels.
Customization Options:
Choose color, style (Solid, Dashed, Dotted), width, and transparency for each line type.
Automatic Updates: Lines update at the start of each new session (day, week, or month).
Summary Table: Displays the latest Pre-Daily High/Low (PDH/PDL), Pre-Weekly High/Low (PWH/PWL), and Pre-Monthly High/Low (PMH/PML) in the top-right corner of the chart.
Configurable Table Font Size: Choose between Tiny, Small, Medium, or Large text.
Use Case:
Ideal for traders who rely on key higher-timeframe levels for confluence, breakout trading, or mean-reversion strategies. The visual lines and summary table provide instant context without cluttering your chart.
COT Commitment of Traders IndexOVERVIEW
Commitment of Traders (COT) Indicator is a trading tool which designed to visualise net positions/commitment of traders that is reported weekly basis to the commissions.
CONCEPTS
The Indicator help you understand the position of long or short trades by market participants relative to their historical positioning. The change in position will help you in analysing the medium-to-long term market trend.
The commercial traders represents producers or consumers of the commodity that usually positions as hedgers in the market, protecting their asset over market fluctuation risk. The non-commercial traders represents fund or money managers that the goal is speculate and take profit from the market fluctuations. Non-reportable represents small or retail traders.
Understand the relative of those all traders will give better insight of how to positions ourselves in the market.
DETAILS & EXAMPLE OF HOW TO USE
An example of Gold Future chart (GC1!) to demonstrate the indicator in real market scenario.
Blue graph indicate the Commercial Index, showing on the extreme low under 20 level. Commercial traders as a hedgers indicate the turning point over an asset in extreme value. This showing the potential change in market direction the upside.
On the same time, Orange graph indicate the Non-Commercial Index, showing an extreme high level above 80. Non-Commercial traders will most of the time trade with the trend. This showing the potential continuation of market direction to the upside.
Base on those information, combine with other technical strategy on the same timeframe or even lower timeframe. For example using Supply & Demand to find the entry.
The result is a massive push to the upside in the long term direction.
FEATURES
3 Index in 1 indicator
Customisable historical period and threshold
LIMITATIONS
The Indicator is best applied on weekly, due to the weekly release of COT data.
Not intended as a stand-alone signal, but should be as part of long-term strategy analysis.
Should be combined with other lower-timeframe technical tools like supply and demand.
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.
Capitulation ScoutCapitulation Scout - Description
Overview
The Capitulation Scout is a streamlined technical indicator designed to identify potential market reversals by spotting moments of "capitulation" – extreme fear ( bearish capitulation ) or euphoria ( bullish capitulation ). It combines two independent filter groups to provide reliable reversal signals: an Extremes Filter (RSI + Bollinger Bands) and a Confirmation Filter (Volume Spike + MA Deviation). The indicator dynamically adapts to the current chart timeframe, making it versatile for day traders and long-term investors alike.
How It Works
This indicator uses two filter groups to detect capitulation, which can be enabled or disabled individually:
1. Extremes Filter (RSI + Bollinger Bands) : Identifies overbought (default: RSI > 70) or oversold (default: RSI < 30) conditions combined with price breaking through the Bollinger Bands (default: 200-period, 2x multiplier), indicating an extreme price movement.
2. Confirmation Filter (Volume Spike + MA Deviation) : Requires both a significant volume increase (default: 2x the 20-period average volume on lower timeframes, dynamically adjusted on higher timeframes) and a significant price deviation from a moving average (default: 5% deviation from a 50-period SMA) to confirm the capitulation event.
A signal is generated if at least one filter is enabled and all enabled filters meet their respective conditions.
Signals
- Bearish Capitulation : Marked with a red downward triangle (customizable in the "Style" tab) above the candle. Occurs when the enabled filters detect a potential top, e.g., overbought RSI and price above the upper Bollinger Band (if Extremes Filter enabled), and/or a volume spike combined with a significant upward deviation from the MA (if Confirmation Filter enabled).
- Bullish Capitulation : Marked with a green upward triangle (customizable in the "Style" tab) below the candle. Occurs when the enabled filters detect a potential bottom, e.g., oversold RSI and price below the lower Bollinger Band (if Extremes Filter enabled), and/or a volume spike combined with a significant downward deviation from the MA (if Confirmation Filter enabled).
Note : At least one filter must be enabled to generate signals. If both filters are disabled, no signals will be shown.
How to Use
1. Add the Capitulation Scout to your chart.
2. Look for red downward triangles ( bearish capitulation ) at market tops or green upward triangles ( bullish capitulation ) at market bottoms as potential reversal signals.
3. Use the signals in conjunction with other technical analysis tools (e.g., support/resistance levels, trendlines) to confirm trades.
4. Set up alerts for bearish or bullish capitulation signals to get real-time notifications.
5. Adjust the settings to suit your trading style and timeframe. For smaller timeframes (e.g., 5M or 15M), consider reducing the Bollinger Bands length for more sensitivity.
Settings
- Extremes Filter Settings
- Use Extremes Filter (RSI + Bollinger Bands) : Enable/disable the RSI and Bollinger Bands filter (default: enabled).
- RSI Length : Period for RSI calculation (default: 14 periods, relative to the chart timeframe).
- RSI Overbought/Oversold Levels : Thresholds for overbought/oversold conditions (default: 70/30).
- Bollinger Bands Length/Multiplier : Settings for Bollinger Bands (default: 200 periods, 2x multiplier).
- Confirmation Filter Settings
- Use Confirmation Filter (Volume Spike + MA Deviation) : Enable/disable the combined Volume Spike and MA Deviation filter (default: enabled). When enabled, both a volume spike and a significant MA deviation are required to meet the filter condition.
- Volume Spike Threshold (Base Multiplier) : Multiplier for detecting volume spikes on lower timeframes (default: 2x the 20-period average). On higher timeframes (e.g., weekly or monthly), the threshold is dynamically reduced to be more sensitive (e.g., 1.5x on weekly, 1x on monthly).
- Moving Average Length : Period for the SMA (default: 50 periods, relative to the chart timeframe).
- MA Deviation Threshold (%) : Percentage deviation from the MA to consider the price stretched (default: 5%).
Features
- MA Deviation Filter Visualization : The moving average used for the MA deviation filter can be enabled in the "Style" tab under "MA for Deviation Filter (Optional)" and is displayed in blue by default. It is disabled by default and must be manually enabled in the "Style" tab. Its color, line width, and style can be customized in the "Style" tab.
- Customizable Visuals : In the "Style" tab, you can toggle the visibility of signal markers and customize their colors, sizes, and styles.
- Alerts : Set up alerts for bearish or bullish capitulation signals to get real-time notifications.
Notes
- The indicator automatically adapts to the current chart timeframe (e.g., 1M, 15M, 1H, 1D, etc.). On smaller timeframes, consider reducing the RSI Length, Bollinger Bands Length, and Volume Period for better sensitivity. For example, on a 5-minute chart, a Bollinger Bands Length of 200 covers 1,000 minutes (over 16 hours), which might be too long – try lowering it to 50 or 100.
- Capitulation events are generally more reliable on higher timeframes (e.g., 1H, 4H, 1D), but the indicator can be used on any timeframe with proper adjustments. On weekly or monthly timeframes, the volume spike threshold is dynamically reduced to detect capitulation events more effectively.
- You can enable any combination of filters to generate signals. For example, disabling the Extremes Filter and enabling only the Confirmation Filter will generate signals based solely on volume spikes combined with MA deviation.
- Always combine with other analysis methods to reduce false signals.
- Test the indicator on your preferred markets (stocks, ETFs, crypto, etc.) and tweak the settings as needed.
Example
The thumbnail shows the Capitulation Scout on a daily chart of ETHUSD on Coinbase. Two red downward triangles ( bearish capitulation ) marked a major local top in early 2024, and from there, the ETH price started to correct. Two green upward triangles ( bullish capitulation ) marked a major bottom in April 2025, followed by a significant rally. For more examples, follow my account – I’ll aim to share and track such signals with you in the future.
Grid Trade Helper📌 Grid Trade Helper – Range-Based Grid Planning Tool
This tool is designed for range-based traders and manual grid strategy operators, providing a framework to balance execution efficiency and risk exposure.
By referencing historical weekly volatility, it helps estimate a reasonable grid width, visualizes key levels, and supports position management with quantitative guidance.
🧭 Design Philosophy:
In multi-entry systems like grid trading, there's always a tradeoff:
"Tighter grids improve opportunity density but increase risk; wider grids reduce risk but lower efficiency."
This tool seeks to provide a dynamic equilibrium between the two, using past volatility to determine practical grid intervals and suggest safe leverage thresholds.
✨ Core Features:
Weekly open level tracking (custom time + time zone support)
Volatility-based suggestions for grid width and safe grid count
Visual range plotting with optional stop-line overlay
Compact live table showing key metrics: average range, grid width, grid count, leverage cap
🔧 Customizable Parameters:
Time zone and custom weekly open hour
Max number of visual elements (lines, boxes)
Color and line style options
📈 Suggested Use Cases:
Planning manual grid structures with volatility-adjusted intervals
Visual support for range-bound or sideways market strategies
Estimating leverage exposure and grid density for better position control
⚠️ This indicator is intended as a strategic support tool and does not constitute financial advice. Use according to your own risk framework and market understanding.
AxisAxis Indicator: Dynamic Trend Lines & Support/Resistance with Trading Mode Presets
Overview
The Axis indicator is a powerful, all-in-one tool for traders, designed to identify key trend lines and support/resistance (S&R) levels across various trading strategies. With 11 predefined trading modes—Scalping, Day Trading, Swing Trading, Long-Term, Position Trading, Breakout Trading, Mean Reversion, Trend Following, Range Trading, Volatility Trading, and Counter-Trend Trading—Axis adapts to your trading style by automatically adjusting parameters like volume Moving Average (MA) periods, fractal lookbacks, and alert proximity. Built-in timeframe validation ensures you’re using the optimal chart timeframe for your selected mode, with a warning label displayed if the timeframe is unsuitable. Whether you’re a scalper chasing quick moves or a position trader eyeing long-term trends, Axis provides precise, volume-filtered signals to enhance your trading decisions.
How It Works
Axis plots two sets of trend lines (A and B) and two sets of S&R levels (A and B) on your chart, each tailored to the selected trading mode:
Trend Lines (A & B): Identifies uptrend and downtrend lines using pivot highs/lows with mode-specific lookback periods. Lines are drawn only when volume exceeds the mode’s volume MA, ensuring high-probability signals.
Support/Resistance (A & B): Plots horizontal S&R levels based on pivot highs/lows, filtered by volume to highlight significant price levels.
Volume MA: Uses a mode-specific MA type (SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA, or VWMA) to validate pivots. MA periods are scaled by timeframe (e.g., 1m, 1h, Daily) and capped at 5,000 candles to prevent errors.
Timeframe Validation: Checks if the chart’s timeframe matches the mode’s recommended range (e.g., 5m–1h for Volatility Trading). If not, a yellow warning label appears (e.g., “Timeframe may not suit Scalping”).
Alerts: Triggers alerts for new trend lines, S&R levels, and price crosses, allowing real-time trade monitoring.
Trading Modes & Recommended Timeframes
Each mode is preconfigured with optimized settings for specific strategies and timeframes:
Scalping (1m–15m): Fast signals with short lookbacks (1–3 bars) and tight alerts (0.2%) for intraday scalps.
Day Trading (15m–1h): Intraday focus with moderate lookbacks (2–4 bars) and 0.3% alert proximity.
Swing Trading (1h–4h): Multi-day/week trades with balanced settings (2–5 bars, 0.5% alerts).
Long-Term (Daily–Weekly): Major trends with longer lookbacks (3–7 bars, 1.0% alerts).
Position Trading (Weekly–Monthly): Long-term moves with robust settings (4–20 bars, 1.5% alerts).
Breakout Trading (30m–4h): Detects breakouts with sensitive settings (1–4 bars, 0.25% alerts).
Mean Reversion (1h–Daily): Targets reversals with moderate settings (3–8 bars, 0.7% alerts).
Trend Following (4h–Weekly): Captures trends with longer lookbacks (4–18 bars, 1.2% alerts).
Range Trading (1h–4h): Optimized for consolidation with balanced settings (2–6 bars, 0.4% alerts).
Volatility Trading (5m–1h): High-volatility markets with ultra-sensitive settings (1–2 bars, 0.15% alerts).
Counter-Trend Trading (4h–Daily): Contrarian reversals with robust settings (3–9 bars, 0.9% alerts).
Key Features
11 Trading Modes: Preconfigured settings for diverse strategies, eliminating manual tuning.
Dynamic Volume MA: Supports SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA, and VWMA, scaled by timeframe for accuracy.
Timeframe Validation: Warns if the chart timeframe doesn’t suit the mode, preventing suboptimal setups.
Customizable Visuals: Adjust line widths and colors for trend lines and S&R levels.
Comprehensive Alerts: Alerts for new trend lines, S&R levels, and price crosses, integrable with TradingView’s alert system.
Performance Optimized: MA periods capped at 5,000 candles to avoid errors and ensure smooth operation.
How to Use
Add to Chart: Apply the Axis indicator to your TradingView chart.
Select Trading Mode: Choose a mode from the “Trading Mode” dropdown in the indicator settings (e.g., Volatility Trading for crypto on 5m).
Check Timeframe: Ensure your chart’s timeframe matches the mode’s recommended range (e.g., 5m–1h for Volatility Trading). A yellow warning label appears if the timeframe is unsuitable.
Customize Visuals: Adjust line widths and colors for trend lines (A & B) and S&R (A & B) in the settings.
Set Alerts: Create alerts for new trend lines, S&R levels, or price crosses via TradingView’s alert menu.
Trade Signals:
Trend Lines: Use uptrend/downtrend lines for trend confirmation or breakout setups.
S&R Levels: Trade bounces or breaks at support/resistance, confirmed by volume.
Alerts: Act on price cross alerts for entries/exits based on your strategy.
Tips for Best Results
Match Timeframe to Mode: Stick to recommended timeframes (e.g., 1h–4h for Swing Trading) to maximize signal accuracy. Heed warning labels for timeframe mismatches.
Test Across Assets: Volatility Trading shines in crypto during news events, while Range Trading suits forex/stocks in consolidation.
Backtest Strategies: Convert Axis to a strategy (e.g., enter on S&R cross, exit after X bars) to validate performance.
Optimize for Performance: If lag occurs on low timeframes, reduce the MA cap to 2,500 (edit math.min(..., 2500) in the code).
Combine with Other Tools: Pair Axis with indicators like RSI or MACD for confluence.
Why Choose Axis?
Axis simplifies technical analysis by offering a single indicator that adapts to your trading style. Its mode-based presets, volume-filtered signals, and timeframe validation make it ideal for traders of all levels, from scalpers to long-term investors. Whether you’re trading crypto, forex, or stocks, Axis delivers actionable insights with minimal setup.
Feedback & Support
If you have questions, suggestions, or need help customizing Axis, feel free to comment or contact me via TradingView. Your feedback helps improve the indicator for the community!
VWAP Indicator Channel | Multi Timeframe by Osbrah📊 Multi-Timeframe VWAP Indicator (Session / Weekly / Monthly)
This powerful indicator plots the Volume Weighted Average Price (VWAP) across multiple timeframes: intraday session, weekly, and monthly. It's designed to give traders a clear understanding of the market’s fair value over different horizons.
Key Features:
* Display Session VWAP (resets daily)
* Enable Weekly and Monthly VWAPs for broader market context
* Customize colors, styles, and visibility for each VWAP
* Toggle between standard VWAP or anchored to session opens
Use Cases:
* Identify value zones where price tends to gravitate
* Spot institutional levels of interest and potential reversal points
* Align entries with VWAP bounces or breaks
* Combine with EMAs or price action for high-probability setups
Perfect for day traders, swing traders, and institutional-style strategies, this VWAP tool helps you stay aligned with volume-based price dynamics across all market phases.
CoT-Mike-Long&Short Quantile CoT-Mike-Long&Short visualizes the weekly net positions of commercial traders (Commitments of Traders, COT) for both long and short sides. The indicator calculates the highest and lowest values of commercial long and short positions over a user-defined lookback period (default: 208 weeks) and plots customizable quantile lines (default: 75% and 25%) for both sides.
By default, only the short side is displayed, but you can enable the long side in the settings.
The 25% and 75% quantile lines are used to identify extreme positioning of commercials. When commercial positions reach these extreme levels, it often signals potential market turning points, as commercials are considered the "smart money" and tend to act against the prevailing market trend. These quantile levels help traders spot overbought or oversold conditions and filter out less significant signals, supporting a more disciplined and contrarian trading approach.
Features:
• Weekly-based calculation, independent of the chart timeframe
• Customizable lookback period (in weeks)
• Adjustable quantile levels (e.g. 75%/25%, 80%/20%, etc.)
• Option to display only shorts, only longs, or both
• Visualizes key levels for both long and short positions
• Useful for identifying extreme positioning and potential market turning points
How to use:
Add the indicator to your chart
Adjust the lookback period and quantile levels if needed
Enable or disable the display of long/short positions as desired
Use the quantile lines to spot overbought/oversold conditions in commercial positioning
Note: The data is always calculated on a weekly basis, regardless of your current chart timeframe.
BooRSI📘 BooRSI – Multi-Dimensional RSI Framework with Advanced Visual Context
BooRSI is not just another RSI overlay. It is a multi-layered momentum framework that blends traditional RSI dynamics with a set of enhanced visual and structural components to help traders identify market imbalances, momentum shifts, and confluence zones across multiple timeframes. The indicator was designed to assist both discretionary and systematic traders in spotting RSI-based inflection points with greater clarity and context.
🔍 What Makes BooRSI Different?
Unlike standard RSI tools, BooRSI provides a modular visualization layer that lets you:
View RSI in both candle format and classic line mode, making intrabar momentum shifts visible.
Plot dynamic or static Fibonacci retracement levels directly on the RSI scale — useful for identifying confluence between RSI pullbacks and trend continuation zones.
Activate a weekly RSI vs weekly RSI MA crossover highlight, enabling long-term trend filters directly within the intraday or daily RSI window.
Apply subtle gradient band fills to the 30–50–70 zones to enhance zone memory without overwhelming the visual space.
Toggle a custom RSI Moving Average for smoother signal interpretation.
🧠 Underlying Logic & Structure
RSI Calculation: Classic RSI with adjustable OHLC input (default: close). When in “Candle Mode,” it uses RSI(Open), RSI(High), RSI(Low), RSI(Close) to form OHLC candles for intrabar detail.
RSI MA Filter: A secondary SMA (default: 14) smooths RSI values to assist in trend determination.
Fibonacci Mapping: Based on a fixed or dynamic length (default: 55), key Fib levels (38.2%, 50%, 61.8%, etc.) are plotted on the RSI window to map out overreaction or pullback zones.
Multi-Timeframe Context: The system calculates weekly RSI and its moving average, then uses background highlights to show whether the current trend aligns with the higher timeframe momentum direction.
⚙️ Default Settings
Parameter Default Description
RSI Length 14 Base RSI period
RSI MA Length 14 SMA on RSI for trend filtering
Fibonacci Lookback 55 Length for Fibo level projections
Show 30/50/70 Bands True Gradient fill zones for RSI decision zones
Show Fibonacci Levels False Optional – static/dynamic Fib lines on RSI
Candle Mode False Switch between RSI line and RSI OHLC candles
Fibo Style Toggle True Switch between solid, dashed or dotted lines
🎯 Best Use Cases
Momentum Filters: For trend-based strategies, use RSI-MA and HTF background for filter alignment.
Reversal Signals: Use RSI candles to spot strong rejection patterns inside extreme zones.
Mean-Reversion Timing: Combine Fibonacci levels with 30–70 bands to fine-tune entries.
⚠️ Important Note
This is a closed-source indicator due to proprietary RSI candle mapping logic and unique Fibonacci interaction methods. However, this description fully discloses how the tool works and how it adds value beyond a basic RSI implementation.
BooRSI – Çok Katmanlı RSI Çerçevesi
BooRSI, klasik RSI göstergesini birden fazla katmanda zenginleştirerek momentum değişimlerini, aşırı alım/aşırı satım bölgelerini ve farklı zaman dilimi trendlerini daha net görmenizi sağlar:
Çubuk ve Çizgi Modu: RSI’yı hem OHLC mumları hem de klasik çizgi olarak gösterebilir, böylece intrabar hareketleri de izlenebilir.
RSI MA Filtreleme: RSI üzerine uygulanan SMA (varsayılan 14) trend yönünü belirlemenize yardımcı olur.
Fibonacci Seviyeleri: RSI ölçeği üzerinde dinamik veya sabit Fibonacci retracement çizgileri (38.2%, 50%, 61.8% vb.) ekleyerek dönüş ve devam bölgelerini tespit eder.
Haftalık Konteks: Günlük veya daha kısa zaman diliminde, haftalık RSI ve haftalık RSI MA kesişimlerini arka plan rengiyle vurgular.
Gradient 30/50/70 Bantları: Karar bölgelerini boğucu olmayan degradelerle öne çıkarır.
Bu kapalı kaynak gösterge, RSI mum haritalama ve Fib etkileşimindeki özgün mantığı nedeniyle gizlidir; açıklama ise nasıl çalıştığını tam olarak ortaya koyar.
Base Detector Pro [AletheiaTradeLab]This custom Trading View indicator combines William O’Neal “Base” patterns with several complementary tools—David Ryan’s ANT indicator, key pivot‐based price levels, index and earnings lines, relative strength (RS) line, and moving averages—to help you pinpoint base formations and validate whether each one merits a trade.
1. Bases (William O'Neal)
A “base” is simply a period of price consolidation following a significant run-up. During this phase, a stock moves mostly sideways within a defined trading range, forming clear support and resistance lines.
Key Criteria for a Valid Base
- Prior Uptrend
Before a base begins, the stock should already have a healthy advance—typically at least a 30% gain.
- Shapes of Bases
Bases can form in several distinct geometric patterns, each signaling a different kind of consolidation and potential breakout:
Flat Base
Shape : A horizontal rectangle bounded by nearly parallel support (bottom) and resistance (top) trendlines.
Minimum Length : 5 weeks
Maximum Length : 65 weeks
Depth : < 15%
Pivot Point : Left-side high of base
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
Cup Base
Shape : A smooth, rounded “U” curve.
Minimum Length : 6 weeks
Maximum Length : 65 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : Left-side high of base
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
Sauce Base
Shape : A very gradual, broad “U” curve, often taking more length than cup bases.
Minimum Length : 6 weeks
Maximum Length : 65 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : Left-side high of base
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
Cup with Handle Base
Shape : A “U”‐shaped cup followed by a smaller downward-sloping flag or channel (the handle).
Minimum Length : 6 weeks
Maximum Length : 65 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : High of the handle
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
Saucer with Handle Base
Shape : Similar to cup with handle, but cup looks like the saucer base.
Minimum Length : 6 weeks
Maximum Length : 65 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : High of the handle
i.ibb.co
Ascending Base
Shape : An upward-sloping channel or wedge with 3 pullbacks. Each pullback low should be higher than the previous one. It needs around 20% increase from a base to the other.
Minimum Length : 8 weeks
Maximum Length : 16 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : Left-side high of third base
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
Consolidation Base
Shape : Similar to flat base, but wider and fails to form any of the above bases.
Minimum Length : 8 weeks
Maximum Length : 16 weeks
Minimum Depth : 8%
Maximum Depth : 50%
Pivot Point : Left-side high of base
i.ibb.co i.ibb.co
- Base Stages
Once a stock has completed its initial 30% run-up and formed its first base, that pattern is labeled Stage 1.
After a breakout from Stage N, the stock must rally at least 20% above the Stage N pivot (the base’s resistance point). If it does, the next valid base becomes Stage N + 1.
When a breakout fails to advance at least 20% a base on base forms. This is considered an extension for the current base stage, and a letter is assigned after the stage number.
When a breakout fails and the price undercuts the low for the previous base, the base stages reset, and a rally of 30% will be needed to form a new stage 1 base.
Note that for IPO stocks, a 30% increase is not required to form the first base. As soon as it meets any of the shape of any of the available bases, it will be drawn.
- Base statistics
To help you determine how healthy is a base, some statistics are available when you hover on the small dot shown above the high-left side of each base.
i.ibb.co
Base : The specific pattern type (Flat, Cup, Sauce, etc.).
Stage : The stage number of the base (1, 2, 3 …) and, in parentheses, how many distinct bases have formed since the very first base (including base-on-base like 1a, 1b, etc.).
Pivot : The resistance level that defines the top of the base. A close above this price often signals a valid breakout and a potential entry point.
Length : The number of bars (days on a daily chart; weeks on a weekly chart) between the start of the base and the bar immediately before breakout. (The initial bar and the breakout bar themselves are not counted.)
Depth : How far, in percentage terms, the low of the base has fallen below its left-side high.
Prior Uptrend : The percent gain from the pivot of the previous base up to the start of the current base.
Blue/Red Count : The number of up days (Blue) and down days (Red) during the base where volume was above the 50-period moving average.
Price % : The percent change from the close at the end of the base to the close at the breakout bar.
Volume % : The percent difference between the volume on the breakout bar and the 50-period average volume at the end of the base.
2. ANT Indicator (David Ryan)
The ANT indicator, developed by David Ryan, is a momentum-based signal used to identify high-potential breakout candidates during a stock’s run-up phase. It complements the base patterns by flagging moments of unusually strong price and volume activity within an uptrend, helping confirm emerging strength before or during a base formation.
i.ibb.co
3. Key Price Levels (Pivots)
Plots recent pivot-based support and resistance levels.
i.ibb.co
4. Index Line Overlay
Overlays a chosen index (e.g. SPX) on the top portion of the chart to compare relative performance.
i.ibb.co
5. Relative Strength (RS) Line
Plots the price ratio of the symbol vs. an index (e.g. SPX) to identify outperformance.
i.ibb.co
6. Moving Averages (SMA & RS-MA)
Allows up to four simple (or exponential) moving averages on price (daily/weekly) and three on the RS line.
7. Earnings Line & EPS Change
Marks earnings events on daily/weekly charts and optionally plots YoY EPS change in a lower portion of the chart. The earnings line also shows a projection to estimated earnings. To maintain alignment with the price chart, the line and YoY EPS data are limited to the most recent 28 quarters on weekly charts and 8 quarters on daily charts. For analyzing older data, you can use the replay feature.
i.ibb.co
8. Bars
Since Trading View displays very thin bars when zoomed out, I added 2-pixel-wide vertical lines over the bars to make them easier to see.
9. Dark Theme
I added this for a quick workaround to adapt colors for dark theme. Enabling this overrides any custom settings. Uncheck to customize colors.
i.ibb.co
True Seasonal Pattern [tradeviZion]True Seasonal Pattern: Uncover Hidden Market Cycles
Markets have rhythms and patterns that repeat with surprising regularity. The True Seasonal Pattern indicator reveals these hidden cycles across different timeframes, helping you anticipate potential market movements based on historical seasonal tendencies.
What This Indicator Does
The True Seasonal Pattern analyzes years of historical price data to identify recurring seasonal trends. It then plots these patterns on your chart, showing you both the historical pattern and future projection based on past seasonal behavior.
Automatic Timeframe Detection: Works with Monthly, Weekly, and Daily charts
Historical Pattern Analysis: Analyzes up to 100 years of data (customizable)
Future Projection: Projects the seasonal pattern ahead on your chart
Smart Smoothing: Applies appropriate smoothing based on your timeframe
How to Use This Indicator
Add the indicator to a Daily, Weekly, or Monthly chart (not designed for intraday timeframes)
The indicator automatically detects your chart's timeframe
The blue line shows the historical seasonal pattern
Watch for potential turning points in the pattern that align with other technical signals
Seasonal patterns work best as a supporting factor in your analysis, not as standalone trading signals. They are particularly effective in markets with well-established seasonal influences.
Best Applications
Futures Markets: Commodities and futures often show strong seasonal tendencies due to production cycles, weather patterns, and economic factors
Stock Indices: Many stock markets demonstrate regular seasonal patterns (like the "Sell in May" phenomenon)
Individual Stocks: Companies with seasonal business cycles often show predictable price patterns
Practical Applications
Identify potential turning points based on historical seasonal patterns
Plan entries and exits around seasonal tendencies
Add seasonal context to your existing technical analysis
Understand why certain months or periods might show consistent behavior
Pro Tip: For best results, use this tool on instruments with at least 5+ years of historical data. Longer timeframes often reveal more reliable seasonal patterns.
Important Notes
This indicator works best on Daily, Weekly, and Monthly timeframes - not intraday charts
Seasonal patterns are tendencies, not guarantees
Always combine seasonal analysis with other technical tools
Past patterns may not repeat exactly in the future
// Sample of the seasonal calculation approach
float yearHigh = array.max(currentYearHighs)
float yearLow = array.min(currentYearLows)
// Calculate seasonality for each period
for i = 0 to array.size(currentYearCloses) - 1
float periodClose = array.get(currentYearCloses, i)
if not na(periodClose) and yearHigh != yearLow
float seasonality = (periodClose - yearLow) / (yearHigh - yearLow) * 100
I developed this indicator to help traders incorporate seasonal analysis into their trading approach without the complexity of traditional seasonal tools. Whether you're analyzing agricultural commodities, energy futures, or stock indices, understanding the seasonal context can provide valuable insights for your trading decisions.
Remember: Markets don't always follow seasonal patterns, but when they do, being aware of these tendencies can give you a meaningful edge in your analysis.
Cup & Handle Post-Breakout Correction FinderWhat This Script Tries to Do (Simple Summary)
Finds a Specific Setup: It looks for stocks that might be getting ready to move up again after a specific sequence:
A big "Cup & Handle" breakout happened 1-3 years ago.
The stock then pulled back (corrected) for at least a few months (~4 months by default) without crashing too hard (less than 35% drop by default).
The main weekly moving averages are now tightly bunched together (suggesting a pause or "squeeze").
The price just crossed above its 200-day moving average (a potential positive sign).
The price hasn't already broken above the high point of the recent pullback.
The Signal: If all these conditions are met, it places a small, bright green circle below the price bar on your chart.
Reference Line: It also shows the 200-period moving average (usually the 200-week, as this script is best on Weekly charts) as a red line.
Best Way to Use It (Simple Guide)
Use on Daily or Weekly Charts: The script's settings (like pullback in weeks) make it more suitable for the Weekly timeframe.
Look for the Green Circle: This is the main signal that the script found a potential setup matching all its rules.
Don't Trade Blindly! The green circle is just an alert, not a guaranteed buy signal. It means "This stock might fit the pattern, check it out!".
Confirm with Your Eyes & Other Tools:
Does the chart look like the pattern the script is searching for (past breakout, recent pullback, current tightening)?
Switch to the Daily chart to see how the cross above the 200-day EMA looks. Is it clean?
Check the volume. Is buying interest picking up as the signal appears? (Good sign).
Consider the overall market trend. Is it a good time to be buying stocks?
Customize (Optional): You can adjust the settings (gear icon ⚙️) to make the rules stricter or looser (e.g., change the pullback duration, allowed drop percentage, EMA tightness).
Manage Risk: If you decide to trade based on this signal (after confirming it), always know where you'll place your stop-loss in case the pattern fails.
MACD Multi-Timeframe x4 (Custom Params)■About this indicator
・This indicator can display 4 MACD lines for different time frames. (Multi-time framework)
・The color of the MACD line changes when the MACD has a golden or dead cross.
All MACDs can be set individually for long time period, short time period, and signal smoothing.
All MACDs can show/hide MACD lines, signal lines, histograms, and select colors.
■Explanation of effective usage
By displaying MACDs in multiple time frames, you can time the push.
For example, let's say you have three MACDs: one weekly, one daily, and one hour.
With the weekly and daily MACDs continuing to golden cross, the timing for the hourly MACD to golden cross is considered a push opportunity.
An example chart is attached below for your reference.
The area circled vertically is a push-buying opportunity.
Yellow-green: Weekly Green: Daily Light blue: Hourly
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
■このインジケーターについて
・このインジケーターは別の時間軸の4本のMACDを表示させることが出来ます。(マルチタイムフレームワーク)
・MACDがゴールデンクロス・デッドクロスした場合にMACDラインの色が変化します。
・全てのMACDについて個別に長期の期間・短期の期間・シグナルの平滑化を設定できます。
・全てのMACDはMACDライン・シグナルライン・ヒストグラムの表示/非表示、色の選択ができます。
■有効な使い方の説明
マルチタイムフレームでMACDを表示することで、押し目のタイミングを計ることが出来ます。
例えば、3本のMACDを1週間・1日・1時間とします。
週足と日足のMACDがゴールデンクロスを継続した状態で、1時間足のMACDがゴールデンクロスしてくるタイミングは押し目買いのチャンスと考えられます。
以下に例題のチャートを付けますので、参考にしてください。
縦に囲った辺りが押し目買いのチャンスになります。
黄緑:週足 緑:日足 水色:1時間足
Multi-Timeframe Closures with Signals month week dayMulti-Timeframe Price Anchoring Indicator (Monthly, Weekly, Daily)
This indicator provides a powerful visual framework for analyzing price action across three major timeframes: monthly, weekly, and daily. It plots the closing prices of each timeframe directly on the chart to help traders assess where current price stands in relation to significant historical levels.
🔍 Core Features:
Monthly, Weekly, and Daily Close Lines: Automatically updated at the start of each new period.
Color-coded Price Anchors: Each timeframe is visually distinct for fast interpretation.
Multi-timeframe Awareness: Helps you identify trend alignment or divergence across different time horizons.
Long & Short Bias Signals: The script can optionally display long or short suggestions based on where the current price stands relative to the anchored closing prices.
📈 How to Use:
Trend Confirmation: If price is consistently above all three levels, it signals a strong bullish trend (potential long bias). If it’s below, the opposite applies (short bias).
Reversal or Pullback Zones: When price becomes extended far above/below the monthly and weekly closes, it may suggest overbought/oversold conditions and the possibility of a reversal or retracement.
Intraday Alignment: Useful for traders who want to enter positions on lower timeframes while being aware of higher timeframe trends.
This indicator is ideal for swing traders, day traders, and position traders who want to anchor their decisions to meaningful multi-timeframe reference points.
MTF Analysis Panel [Invesmate]MTF Analysis Panel
This indicator provides a compact Multi-Timeframe (MTF) view of trend and momentum conditions directly on the chart. It combines EMA trend checks, RSI momentum checks, and optional Relative Strength analysis to offer an intuitive overview of market structure across intraday, daily, weekly, and monthly timeframes.
Trend and Momentum Analysis
The script uses two primary methods for assessing the market:
Trend Detection: Based on price relation to a user-selected EMA for each timeframe.
Momentum Detection: Based on whether RSI is above or below 50 for each timeframe.
Users can independently toggle these modules through inputs to customize the panel for different analysis needs.
Trend and momentum are calculated separately to avoid bias, helping traders capture the real state of the market across multiple timeframes.
Relative Strength (Optional)
If enabled, when either Weekly or Monthly timeframes are selected, the panel will display Relative Strength (RS ) data.
RS measures the stock's performance relative to a benchmark symbol (like NSE:NIFTY).
This value shows the percent outperformance or underperformance over a user-defined period (default 55 days), allowing deeper market strength analysis.
Table and Display Logic
The indicator draws a neat panel on the chart using TradingView’s table functionality.
Each selected timeframe (15m, 1h, 4h, 1D, 1W, 1M) will display:
Trend (EMA): Green for bullish trend (Price > EMA), Red for bearish trend (Price < EMA), Gray if neutral or not applicable.
Momentum (RSI): Green if RSI > 50, Red if RSI < 50, Gray if neutral.
Symbols for trend and momentum can be customized between:
Emoji mode (e.g., 🟢, 🔴, 🟦, 🟥)
Text mode (e.g., UP, DOWN, NEUTRAL)
The panel is customizable for position (Top Left, Top Right, Bottom Left, Bottom Right) to fit user preference.
Color Codes
Strong Bullish: All selected timeframes are trending up and momentum is rising — shown with a light green background.
Strong Bearish: All selected timeframes are trending down and momentum is falling — shown with a light red background.
Mixed: Any mixed state (some up, some down) — shown with a neutral gray background.
This helps traders instantly recognize overall market sentiment without manually checking individual timeframes.
Summary Labels
At the bottom of the panel, two powerful summaries are displayed:
Trend Summary: Overall trend aggregation across selected timeframes ("STRONG BULLISH", "STRONG BEARISH", or "MIXED").
Momentum Summary: Overall momentum aggregation ("MOMENTUM UP", "MOMENTUM DOWN", or "MOMENTUM MIXED").
When Relative Strength is available (Weekly or Monthly enabled), it is also shown separately at the bottom, providing a complete strength-versus-benchmark view.
Input Controls
Enable EMA Trend Check: Toggle EMA-based trend detection.
Enable RSI Momentum Check: Toggle RSI-based momentum detection.
Timeframes to Display: 15m, 1h, 4h, 1D, 1W, 1M can be independently turned on or off.
EMA Length per Timeframe: Customize EMA lengths for different timeframes.
RSI Length: Set RSI calculation period.
Comparative Symbol: Select the benchmark symbol for Relative Strength calculations.
RS Period: Choose the lookback period for Relative Strength.
Emoji Display Toggle: Switch between emoji-based or text-based display styles.
Table Location: Choose where the analysis panel appears on the chart.
Special Features
Realtime Updating: The panel updates dynamically as bars close, maintaining real-time relevance.
Maximum Label Control : Designed to respect TradingView's maximum label limits to avoid runtime errors.
Optimized for Performance: Uses conditional requests and security calls efficiently, minimizing script execution load.
Known Limitations
Request.security limitations: Relative Strength is only calculated on Daily data for stability; lower timeframe RS is not implemented.
TradingView Table Size: On some screen sizes or with many timeframes selected, table may overlap candles. Adjust panel location accordingly.
Flow State Model [TakingProphets]🧠 Indicator Purpose:
The "Flow State Model" by Taking Prophets is a precision-built trading framework based on the Inner Circle Trader (ICT) methodology. This script implements and automates the Flow State Model, a highly effective multi-timeframe trading system created and popularized by ITS Johnny.
It is designed to help traders systematically align higher timeframe liquidity draws with lower timeframe confirmation patterns, offering a clear roadmap for catching institutional moves with high confidence.
🌟 What Makes This Indicator Unique:
This is not a simple liquidity indicator or a basic FVG plotter. The Flow State Model executes a full multi-step process:
Higher Timeframe PD Array Detection: Automatically identifies and displays Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) from Daily, Weekly, and Monthly timeframes.
Liquidity Sweep Monitoring: Tracks swing highs and lows to detect Buyside or Sellside Liquidity sweeps into the HTF PD Arrays.
CISD Detection: Waits for a Change in State of Delivery (CISD) by monitoring bullish or bearish displacement after a sweep.
Full Trade Checklist: Visual checklist ensures all critical conditions are met before signaling a completed Flow State setup.
Sensitivity Control: Adapt detection strictness (High, Medium, Low) based on market volatility.
⚙️ How the Indicator Works (Detailed):
Fair Value Gap Mapping:
The indicator constantly scans higher timeframes (4H, Daily, Weekly) for valid bullish or bearish Fair Value Gaps that are large enough (based on ATR multiples) and not weekend gaps.
These FVGs are displayed on the current timeframe with full extension logic and mitigation handling (clearing when invalidated).
Liquidity Sweep Detection:
Swing highs and lows are identified using pivot logic (3-bar pivots). When price sweeps beyond a recent liquidity point into an active FVG, it flags the potential for a Flow State setup.
Change in State of Delivery (CISD) Confirmation:
After a sweep, the script monitors price action for a sequence of bullish or bearish candles followed by displacement (break in delivery).
Only after displacement closes beyond the initiating sequence does a CISD level plot, confirming the market's new delivery state.
Execution Checklist:
An optional table tracks whether critical components are present:
Higher Timeframe PD Array.
Aligned Timeframe Bias.
Liquidity Sweep into FVG.
SMT Divergence (optional manual confirmation).
CISD Confirmation.
Dynamic Management:
Active gaps are extended automatically.
Cleared gaps and mitigated CISDs are deleted to keep charts clean.
Distance-to-FVG prioritization keeps only the nearest active setups visible.
🎯 How to Use It:
Step 1: Identify the bias by locating active higher timeframe FVGs.
Step 2: Wait for a Liquidity Sweep into a PD Array (active FVG).
Step 3: Watch for a CISD event (the Flow State confirmation).
Step 4: Once all conditions are checked off, execute trades based on retracements to CISD levels or continuation after displacement.
Best Timing:
During ICT Killzones: London Open, New York AM.
After daily or weekly liquidity events.
🔎 Underlying Concepts:
Liquidity Theory: Markets seek to engineer liquidity for real institutional entries.
Fair Value Gaps: Imbalances where price is expected to react or rebalance.
Change in State of Delivery (CISD): Confirmation that the market's delivery mechanism has shifted, validating bias continuation.
Flow State Principle: Seamlessly aligning higher timeframe liquidity draws with lower timeframe confirmation to maximize trade probability.
🎨 Customization Options:
Adjust sensitivity (High / Medium / Low) for volatile or calm conditions.
Customize FVG visibility, CISD display, labels, line colors, and sizing.
Set checklist visibility and manual tracking of SMT or aligned bias.
✅ Recommended for:
Traders studying Inner Circle Trader (ICT) models.
Intraday scalpers and swing traders seeking confluence-driven setups.
Traders looking for a structured, checklist-based execution process.






















