WaveTrend [MastroFran]Great indicator to show short term price movements. 5 day moving average oscillator. When green crosses red and under the 60 mark, buy with caution. when over the 60 mark and red crosses green sell immediately for highest profits.
Komut dosyalarını "市值60亿的股票" için ara
Hersheys CoCo VolumeCoCo Volume shows you volume movement of your symbol after subtracting the movement from another symbol, preferrably the sector or market the stock belongs to.
My latest update to my CoCoVolume Indicator. It calculates today's volume percent over the 60 period average for both your symbol and index, and displays that difference. If the percent is over the max it highlights the color, showing BIG action for that stock.
The last version was calculating the percent volume difference from yesterday to today for the stock and index and displaying the difference. The prior method had large swings on low volume stocks... this one shows the independent volume action much better. The default values will suit most stocks.
You can set three variables...
- the index symbol, default is SPY
- the period for averaging, default is 60
- the max volume percent, default is 500
Good trading!
Brian Hershey
close-hl2 Price actionStill not tested, but looks very good ; it is the difference between EMA median price and EMA close in different time frame, I used 240, 60, and the current Time frame ,plus one more customed period ; can forcast the price movement , but it s not in scale, so it can not show how much higher or lower the price can goes but just the next direction. I think intraday on 5 ,15 ,60 better then high frame.If you need to try on Daily frame have to change the period to higher then Daily
Everyday 0002 _ MAC 1st Trading Hour WalkoverThis is the second strategy for my Everyday project.
Like I wrote the last time - my goal is to create a new strategy everyday
for the rest of 2016 and post it here on TradingView.
I'm a complete beginner so this is my way of learning about coding strategies.
I'll give myself between 15 minutes and 2 hours to complete each creation.
This is basically a repetition of the first strategy I wrote - a Moving Average Crossover,
but I added a tiny thing.
I read that "Statistics have proven that the daily high or low is established within the first hour of trading on more than 70% of the time."
(source: )
My first Moving Average Crossover strategy, tested on VOLVB daily, got stoped out by the volatility
and because of this missed one nice bull run and a very nice bear run.
So I added this single line: if time("60", "1000-1600") regarding when to take exits:
if time("60", "1000-1600")
strategy.exit("Close Long", "Long", profit=2000, loss=500)
strategy.exit("Close Short", "Short", profit=2000, loss=500)
Sweden is UTC+2 so I guess UTC 1000 equals 12.00 in Stockholm. Not sure if this is correct, actually.
Anyway, I hope this means the strategy will only take exits based on price action which occur in the afternoon, when there is a higher probability of a lower volatility.
When I ran the new modified strategy on the same VOLVB daily it didn't get stoped out so easily.
On the other hand I'll have to test this on various stocks .
Reading and learning about how to properly test strategies is on my todo list - all tips on youtube videos or blogs
to read on this topic is very welcome!
Like I said the last time, I'm posting these strategies hoping to learn from the community - so any feedback, advice, or corrections is very much welcome and appreciated!
/pbergden
Gold Power Hours Strategy📈 Gold Power Hours Trading Strategy
Trade XAUUSD (Gold) or XAUEUR during the most volatile hours of the New York session, using momentum and trend confirmation, with session-specific risk/reward profiles.
✅ Strategy Rules
🕒 Valid Trading Times ("Power Hours"):
Trades are only taken during high-probability time windows on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays , corresponding to key New York session activity:
Morning Session:
08:00 – 11:00 (NY time)
Afternoon Session:
12:30 – 16:00
19:00 – 22:00
These times align with institutional activity and economic news releases.
📊 Technical Indicators Used:
50-period Simple Moving Average (SMA50):
Identifies the dominant market trend.
14-period Relative Strength Index (RSI):
Measures market momentum with session-adjusted thresholds.
🟩 Buy Signal Criteria:
Price is above the 50-period SMA (bullish trend)
RSI is greater than:
60 during Morning Session
55 during Afternoon Session
Must be during a valid day (Tue–Thu) and Power Hour session
🟥 Sell Signal Criteria:
Price is below the 50-period SMA (bearish trend)
RSI is less than:
40 during Morning Session
45 during Afternoon Session
Must be during a valid day and Power Hour session
🎯 Trade Management Rules:
Morning Session (08:00–11:00)
Stop Loss (SL): 50 pips
Take Profit (TP): 150 pips
Risk–Reward Ratio: 1:3
Afternoon Session (12:30–16:00 & 19:00–22:00)
Stop Loss (SL): 50 pips
Take Profit (TP): up to 100 pips
Risk–Reward Ratio: up to 1:2
⚠️ TP is slightly reduced in the afternoon due to typically lower volatility compared to the morning session.
📺 Visuals & Alerts:
Buy signals: Green triangle plotted below the bar
Sell signals: Red triangle plotted above the bar
SMA50 line: Orange
Valid session background: Light pink
Alerts: Automatic alerts for buy/sell signals
VDN 7 - Ichimoku Fibonacci Strategy (Tenkan:13 / Kijun:21)This strategy utilizes a customized Ichimoku system with Fibonacci-based parameters:
• Tenkan-sen (Conversion Line): 13
• Kijun-sen (Base Line): 21
A long position is opened when Tenkan crosses above Kijun.
A short position is opened when Tenkan crosses below Kijun.
This crossover system filters out noise and captures medium-term trends using Fibonacci-inspired smoothing periods. The strategy is designed for use on 60-minute charts and does not rely on fixed take profit or stop loss — positions are closed upon opposite signal only.
Position size is fixed at 1 lot by default.
VWMA + ML RSI StrategyVWMA + ML RSI Strategy
This strategy combines the power of Volume-Weighted Moving Average (VWMA) with a Machine Learning-enhanced RSI to generate high-probability long entries.
✅ Buy Logic:
A buy signal is triggered when:
The candle closes above the VWMA
The ML RSI (smoothed using advanced moving averages) is above 60
If only one of the above conditions is met, the strategy waits for the second to confirm before entering.
❌ Sell Logic:
The position is closed when:
The candle closes below the VWMA, and
The ML RSI falls below 40
🎯 Risk Management:
Take Profit: 1.5% above entry
Stop Loss: 1.5% below entry
🤖 ML RSI Explanation:
The ML RSI is a refined version of the traditional RSI using smoothing techniques (like ALMA, EMA, etc.) to reduce noise and enhance responsiveness to price action. It helps filter out weak signals and improves trend confirmation.
🔧 Customization:
Adjustable VWMA length
Configurable ML RSI smoothing method, length, and ALMA sigma
Thresholds for entry/exit RSI levels
3.RSI LIJO 45*55//@version=6
indicator(title="3.RSI LIJO 45*55", shorttitle="RSI-LIJO-45-55", format=format.price, precision=2, timeframe="", timeframe_gaps=true)
rsiLengthInput = input.int(9, minval=1, title="RSI Length", group="RSI Settings")
rsiSourceInput = input.source(close, "Source", group="RSI Settings")
calculateDivergence = input.bool(false, title="Calculate Divergence", group="RSI Settings", display=display.data_window, tooltip="Calculating divergences is needed in order for divergence alerts to fire.")
change = ta.change(rsiSourceInput)
up = ta.rma(math.max(change, 0), rsiLengthInput)
down = ta.rma(-math.min(change, 0), rsiLengthInput)
rsi = down == 0 ? 100 : up == 0 ? 0 : 100 - (100 / (1 + up / down))
// Change RSI line color based on bands
rsiColor = rsi > 50 ? color.green : rsi < 50 ? color.red : color.white
rsiPlot = plot(rsi, "RSI", color=rsiColor)
rsiUpperBand = hline(55, "RSI Upper Band", color=color.rgb(5, 247, 22))
midline = hline(50, "RSI Middle Band", color=color.new(#787B86, 50))
rsiLowerBand = hline(45, "RSI Lower Band", color=color.rgb(225, 18, 14))
fill(rsiUpperBand, rsiLowerBand, color=color.rgb(126, 87, 194, 90), title="RSI Background Fill")
midLinePlot = plot(50, color=na, editable=false, display=display.none)
fill(rsiPlot, midLinePlot, 100, 55, top_color=color.new(color.green, 0), bottom_color=color.new(color.green, 100), title="Overbought Gradient Fill")
fill(rsiPlot, midLinePlot, 45, 0, top_color=color.new(color.red, 100), bottom_color=color.new(color.red, 0), title="Oversold Gradient Fill")
// Smoothing MA inputs
GRP = "Smoothing"
TT_BB = "Only applies when 'SMA + Bollinger Bands' is selected. Determines the distance between the SMA and the bands."
maTypeInput = input.string("SMA", "Type", options= , group=GRP, display=display.data_window)
maLengthInput = input.int(31, "Length", group=GRP, display=display.data_window)
bbMultInput = input.float(2.0, "BB StdDev", minval=0.001, maxval=50, step=0.5, tooltip=TT_BB, group=GRP, display=display.data_window)
var enableMA = maTypeInput != "None"
var isBB = maTypeInput == "SMA + Bollinger Bands"
// Smoothing MA Calculation
ma(source, length, MAtype) =>
switch MAtype
"SMA" => ta.sma(source, length)
"SMA + Bollinger Bands" => ta.sma(source, length)
"EMA" => ta.ema(source, length)
"SMMA (RMA)" => ta.rma(source, length)
"WMA" => ta.wma(source, length)
"VWMA" => ta.vwma(source, length)
// Smoothing MA plots
smoothingMA = enableMA ? ma(rsi, maLengthInput, maTypeInput) : na
smoothingStDev = isBB ? ta.stdev(rsi, maLengthInput) * bbMultInput : na
plot(smoothingMA, "RSI-based MA", color=color.yellow, display=enableMA ? display.all : display.none, editable=enableMA)
bbUpperBand = plot(smoothingMA + smoothingStDev, title="Upper Bollinger Band", color=color.green, display=isBB ? display.all : display.none, editable=isBB)
bbLowerBand = plot(smoothingMA - smoothingStDev, title="Lower Bollinger Band", color=color.green, display=isBB ? display.all : display.none, editable=isBB)
fill(bbUpperBand, bbLowerBand, color=isBB ? color.new(color.green, 90) : na, title="Bollinger Bands Background Fill", display=isBB ? display.all : display.none, editable=isBB)
// Divergence
lookbackRight = 5
lookbackLeft = 5
rangeUpper = 60
rangeLower = 5
bearColor = color.red
bullColor = color.green
textColor = color.white
noneColor = color.new(color.white, 100)
_inRange(bool cond) =>
bars = ta.barssince(cond)
rangeLower <= bars and bars <= rangeUpper
plFound = false
phFound = false
bullCond = false
bearCond = false
rsiLBR = rsi
if calculateDivergence
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bullish
// rsi: Higher Low
plFound := not na(ta.pivotlow(rsi, lookbackLeft, lookbackRight))
rsiHL = rsiLBR > ta.valuewhen(plFound, rsiLBR, 1) and _inRange(plFound )
// Price: Lower Low
lowLBR = low
priceLL = lowLBR < ta.valuewhen(plFound, lowLBR, 1)
bullCond := priceLL and rsiHL and plFound
//------------------------------------------------------------------------------
// Regular Bearish
// rsi: Lower High
phFound := not na(ta.pivothigh(rsi, lookbackLeft, lookbackRight))
rsiLH = rsiLBR < ta.valuewhen(phFound, rsiLBR, 1) and _inRange(phFound )
// Price: Higher High
highLBR = high
priceHH = highLBR > ta.valuewhen(phFound, highLBR, 1)
bearCond := priceHH and rsiLH and phFound
plot(
plFound ? rsiLBR : na,
offset = -lookbackRight,
title = "Regular Bullish",
linewidth = 2,
color = (bullCond ? bullColor : noneColor),
display = display.pane,
editable = calculateDivergence)
plotshape(
bullCond ? rsiLBR : na,
offset = -lookbackRight,
title = "Regular Bullish Label",
text = " Bull ",
style = shape.labelup,
location = location.absolute,
color = bullColor,
textcolor = textColor,
display = display.pane,
editable = calculateDivergence)
plot(
phFound ? rsiLBR : na,
offset = -lookbackRight,
title = "Regular Bearish",
linewidth = 2,
color = (bearCond ? bearColor : noneColor),
display = display.pane,
editable = calculateDivergence)
plotshape(
bearCond ? rsiLBR : na,
offset = -lookbackRight,
title = "Regular Bearish Label",
text = " Bear ",
style = shape.labeldown,
location = location.absolute,
color = bearColor,
textcolor = textColor,
display = display.pane,
editable = calculateDivergence)
alertcondition(bullCond, title='Regular Bullish Divergence', message="Found a new Regular Bullish Divergence, Pivot Lookback Right number of bars to the left of the current bar.")
alertcondition(bearCond, title='Regular Bearish Divergence', message='Found a new Regular Bearish Divergence, Pivot Lookback Right number of bars to the left of the current bar.')
CipherMatrix Dashboard (MarketCipher B)Pre-compute MarketCipher-B values for each fixed timeframe (5 m, 15 m, 30 m, 60 m, 4 H, Daily).
Pass those values into plotRow() instead of calling request.security() inside the helper—removes the style warning.
Added explicit range parameters to table.clear(dash, 0, 0, 2, 6) to satisfy v6’s argument requirement.
This version should compile without the previous warnings/errors. Swap in your real MarketCipher-B histogram when you’re ready, and the dashboard is good to go!
Tsallis Entropy Market RiskTsallis Entropy Market Risk Indicator
What Is It?
The Tsallis Entropy Market Risk Indicator is a market analysis tool that measures the degree of randomness or disorder in price movements. Unlike traditional technical indicators that focus on price patterns or momentum, this indicator takes a statistical physics approach to market analysis.
Scientific Foundation
The indicator is based on Tsallis entropy, a generalization of traditional Shannon entropy developed by physicist Constantino Tsallis. The Tsallis entropy is particularly effective at analyzing complex systems with long-range correlations and memory effects—precisely the characteristics found in crypto and stock markets.
The indicator also borrows from Log-Periodic Power Law (LPPL).
Core Concepts
1. Entropy Deficit
The primary measurement is the "entropy deficit," which represents how far the market is from a state of maximum randomness:
Low Entropy Deficit (0-0.3): The market exhibits random, uncorrelated price movements typical of efficient markets
Medium Entropy Deficit (0.3-0.5): Some patterns emerging, moderate deviation from randomness
High Entropy Deficit (0.5-0.7): Strong correlation patterns, potentially indicating herding behavior
Extreme Entropy Deficit (0.7-1.0): Highly ordered price movements, often seen before significant market events
2. Multi-Scale Analysis
The indicator calculates entropy across different timeframes:
Short-term Entropy (blue line): Captures recent market behavior (20-day window)
Long-term Entropy (green line): Captures structural market behavior (120-day window)
Main Entropy (purple line): Primary measurement (60-day window)
3. Scale Ratio
This measures the relationship between long-term and short-term entropy. A healthy market typically has a scale ratio above 0.85. When this ratio drops below 0.85, it suggests abnormal relationships between timeframes that often precede market dislocations.
How It Works
Data Collection: The indicator samples price returns over specific lookback periods
Probability Distribution Estimation: It creates a histogram of these returns to estimate their probability distribution
Entropy Calculation: Using the Tsallis q-parameter (typically 1.5), it calculates how far this distribution is from maximum entropy
Normalization: Results are normalized against theoretical maximum entropy to create the entropy deficit measure
Risk Assessment: Multiple factors are combined to generate a composite risk score and classification
Market Interpretation
Low Risk Environments (Risk Score < 25)
Market is functioning efficiently with reasonable randomness
Price discovery is likely effective
Normal trading and investment approaches appropriate
Medium Risk Environments (Risk Score 25-50)
Increasing correlation in price movements
Beginning of trend formation or momentum
Time to monitor positions more closely
High Risk Environments (Risk Score 50-75)
Strong herding behavior present
Market potentially becoming one-sided
Consider reducing position sizes or implementing hedges
Extreme Risk Environments (Risk Score > 75)
Highly ordered market behavior
Significant imbalance between buyers and sellers
Heightened probability of sharp reversals or corrections
Practical Application Examples
Market Tops: Often characterized by gradually increasing entropy deficit as momentum builds, followed by extreme readings near the actual top
Market Bottoms: Can show high entropy deficit during capitulation, followed by normalization
Range-Bound Markets: Typically display low and stable entropy deficit measurements
Trending Markets: Often show moderate entropy deficit that remains relatively consistent
Advantages Over Traditional Indicators
Forward-Looking: Identifies changing market structure before price action confirms it
Statistical Foundation: Based on robust mathematical principles rather than empirical patterns
Adaptability: Functions across different market regimes and asset classes
Noise Filtering: Focuses on meaningful structural changes rather than price fluctuations
Limitations
Not a Timing Tool: Signals market risk conditions, not precise entry/exit points
Parameter Sensitivity: Results can vary based on the chosen parameters
Historical Context: Requires some historical perspective to interpret effectively
Complementary Tool: Works best alongside other analysis methods
Enjoy :)
EMA Cross PThis is 20 , 50 , 200 ema line , display, you can also edit to any ema of your choice, you can also mark their crossover and highlight them at any time. so this is not for just the 20 50 or 200 , it can be 10 20 30 40 50 60 80 90 100 150 200 any ema of your choice, you can plot upto 3 ema with a single indicator. Thanks for your support.
Buy Opportunity Score Table (21 Points)## 📊 Script Title:
**Buy Opportunity Score Table (21 Points)**
---
## 📝 Script Description:
This TradingView script is a **custom multi-indicator scoring system** designed to identify **buying opportunities** in stocks, indices, or ETFs by evaluating momentum, volume strength, and overall market sentiment. It gives a score out of **21 points** using 6 key indicators, and highlights **potential buy signals** when the score crosses **8 points or more**.
---
## ✅ Key Features:
### 📌 1. **Indicators Used (21 Points Max)**
Each of the following indicators contributes up to 4 points (except Nifty trend, which adds 1 point):
| Indicator | Max Points | Logic |
| ----------- | ---------- | ---------------------------------- |
| Volume | 4 | Volume > 20-day average and rising |
| OBV | 4 | OBV rising for 3+ days |
| MFI | 4 | MFI > 60 and increasing |
| RSI | 4 | RSI > 50 and increasing |
| ROC | 4 | Rate of change positive and rising |
| Nifty Trend | 1 | Nifty > yesterday and above 20 EMA |
---
### 📌 2. **Scoring Output**
* The **total score** is plotted on the chart and capped at 21.
* Score of **8 or higher** is treated as a **buy trigger**.
* Permanent horizontal lines are plotted at **8**, **13**, and **17** to show key levels:
* **8** → Entry zone
* **13** → Accumulation/Build zone
* **17** → Strong bullish momentum
---
### 📌 3. **Table Panel (Top Right Corner)**
A table shows:
* Current and previous day’s score for each indicator
* Total score and change from previous day
---
### 📌 4. **Visual Aids**
* Background turns **green** when score is **≥ 8**
* Permanent **horizontal lines** at score levels **8, 13, and 17** for easy reference
---
### 📌 5. **Alerts**
* An `alertcondition` is triggered **when score crosses 8 from below**
* You can use this for mobile/email alerts or automated strategies
---
## ⚙️ Inputs:
You can customize:
* Length of **ROC**, **MFI**, **RSI**, and **Volume SMA**
Default values are:
* ROC: 10
* MFI: 14
* RSI: 14
* Volume MA: 20
---
## 🎯 Use Case:
This tool is ideal for:
* **Swing traders** looking for early signals of accumulation
* **Investors** filtering stocks with rising internal strength
* **Algo traders** building signal-based strategies based on multi-factor models
RFM Strategy - High QualityI trade high-probability resistance fades using a systematic 4-pillar approach that has delivered a proven 60%+ win rate with 2.5+ profit factor."
📊 Core Strategy Elements:
1. VRF Resistance Identification:
Multiple resistance level confluence (minimum 2 levels)
Dynamic resistance zones using 20-period high/low ranges
Only trade when price approaches clustered resistance
2. Volume Weakness Confirmation:
Volume ROC must be ≤ -30% (weak buying pressure)
Identifies exhaustion rallies with poor participation
Confirms institutional selling vs retail buying
3. Momentum Divergence:
SMI ≥ 60 (extreme overbought) OR 25-point momentum collapse
Multi-timeframe confirmation for higher reliability
Catches momentum exhaustion at key levels
4. Price Rejection Patterns:
Long upper wicks (2x body size) at resistance
Doji formations showing indecision
Failed breakout patterns with immediate rejection
⚡ Execution:
Entry: Only when ALL 4 conditions align simultaneously
Risk Management: 6-point stops, 12-point targets (2:1 R/R minimum)
Timeframe: 5-minute charts for precise entries
Selectivity: Quality over quantity - average 5 trades per period
🏆 Performance:
60% win rate (matches manual trading performance)
2.59 Profit Factor (highly profitable)
Systematic approach eliminates emotional decisions
"This strategy automates the discretionary resistance fade setups that institutional traders use, with strict filters ensuring only the highest-probability opportunities."
✅ 200 EMA + RSI Pullback + Volume Surge (Full Strategy)200 EMA Trend + RSI Pullback + Volume Surge Strategy (Advanced)
📖 Strategy Description:
This strategy is designed to identify high-probability entries in trending markets using a combination of trend-following and momentum re-entry principles. It works effectively for intraday and swing trading on equities, indices, and crypto.
🔍 Entry Logic:
✅ Long Entry Conditions:
Trend Confirmation:
Price must be above the 200 EMA, indicating a bullish trend.
RSI Pullback:
RSI must drop below a defined level (default 40), indicating a healthy pullback in an uptrend.
Volume Surge:
Current volume must be above 1.5× the 20-period average, confirming strong buying activity.
Entry Triggered on Candle Close:
Ensures reliable confirmation instead of premature entries.
Short Entry Conditions (reverse logic):
Price below the 200 EMA
RSI above threshold (default 60)
Volume surge
Entry only after candle close
Exit Conditions:
Take Profit (TP):
Book profits at 2% move (configurable).
Stop Loss (SL):
Protect capital at 1% loss (configurable).
Trailing Stop Loss (TSL):
Follows the price with a 1.5% trail to lock in profits.
Time-Based Exit:
Closes position automatically after a fixed number of candles (default: 5 bars).
Alerts:
Built-in alerts notify when a Long or Short setup is triggered, allowing traders to act or automate execution.
Best Used On:
Timeframes: 15-minute, 1-hour, or Daily
Markets: NIFTY, BANKNIFTY, RELIANCE, INFY, BTC/USD, ETH/USD
Styles: Intraday, Swing, Trend-followinG
Ideal For:
Traders who follow pullback entries in strong trends
Users looking for automated alerts and exits
Strategies requiring volume confirmation + trend bias
Boomerang Trading Indicator# Boomerang News Trading Indicator
## Overview
The Boomerang Trading Indicator is designed to identify potential reversal opportunities following major economic news releases. This indicator analyzes the initial market reaction to news events and provides visual cues for potential counter-trend trading opportunities based on Fibonacci retracement levels.
## How It Works
### News Event Detection
- Automatically detects major news release times (NFP, CPI, FOMC, etc.)
- Analyzes the first significant price movement following news releases
- Requires minimum candle size threshold to filter out weak reactions
### First Move Analysis
The indicator employs multiple analytical methods to determine the initial market direction:
**Simple Analysis (High Confidence):**
- When the news candle has ≥70% body-to-total ratio, uses straightforward bullish/bearish classification
**Advanced Analysis (Complex Cases):**
- Volume-weighted direction analysis
- Momentum and wick pattern analysis
- Market structure and gap analysis
- Weighted voting system combining all methods
### Entry Signal Generation
Based on the "boomerang" concept where markets often reverse after initial news reactions:
**For Bullish First Moves (Price Up Initially):**
- Generates SHORT entry signals when price retraces to 1.25-1.5 Fibonacci levels
- Visual: Red triangles above price bars
**For Bearish First Moves (Price Down Initially):**
- Generates LONG entry signals when price retraces to -0.25 to -0.5 Fibonacci levels
- Visual: Green triangles below price bars
## Key Features
### Visual Elements
- **Fibonacci Levels**: Displays key retracement levels based on the initial reaction range
- **Entry Zones**: Clear visual marking of optimal entry areas
- **Direction Arrows**: Shows the initial market reaction direction
- **Target Levels**: Displays profit target zones at 50% and 100% retracement levels
### Information Panel
Real-time display showing:
- Current setup status
- First move direction and body percentage
- Recommended trade direction
- Key price levels (reaction high/low)
- Profit targets with historical success rates
### Alert System
- Pre-news warnings (customizable timing)
- News event notifications
- Setup activation alerts
- Entry signal notifications
### Success Tracking
- Visual "BOOM!" animations when targets are hit
- Target 1 (50% level): ~95% historical success rate
- Target 2 (Main target): ~80% historical success rate
## Configuration Options
### Time Settings
- News release hour and minute (customizable for different events)
- Pre-news alert timing
- Setup duration (default 60 bars after news)
### Fibonacci Levels
- Adjustable retracement percentages
- Customizable target levels
- Mid-level importance weighting
### Risk Management
- Minimum reaction candle size filter
- Maximum risk point setting
- Visual risk/reward display
### Display Options
- Toggle Fibonacci level visibility
- Toggle target level display
- Toggle animation effects
- Customizable alert preferences
## Applicable News Events
This indicator is designed for high-impact economic releases:
- Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) - First Friday, 8:30 AM ET
- Consumer Price Index (CPI) - Monthly, 8:30 AM ET
- Producer Price Index (PPI) - Monthly, 8:30 AM ET
- Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - Quarterly, 8:30 AM ET
- FOMC Interest Rate Decisions - 8 times yearly, 2:00 PM ET
## Trading Strategy Framework
### Core Principle
Markets often overreact to news initially, then reverse toward more rational price levels. This "boomerang effect" creates short-term trading opportunities.
### Entry Strategy
1. Wait for significant initial reaction (>10 points minimum)
2. Identify the initial direction using multi-factor analysis
3. Trade opposite to the initial reaction when price reaches sweet spot zones
4. Use Fibonacci retracement levels as entry triggers
### Risk Management
- Always use appropriate position sizing
- Set stop losses beyond recent swing levels
- Consider market volatility and news importance
- Monitor for setup invalidation signals
## Important Notes
### Educational Purpose
This indicator is for educational and analytical purposes. Users should:
- Thoroughly test strategies in demo environments
- Understand the risks involved in news trading
- Consider market conditions and volatility
- Use proper risk management techniques
### Market Considerations
- High volatility during news events increases both opportunity and risk
- Spreads may widen significantly during news releases
- Different brokers may have varying execution conditions
- Economic calendar timing may vary between sources
### Limitations
- Past performance does not guarantee future results
- Market conditions can change, affecting strategy effectiveness
- News events may have unexpected outcomes affecting normal patterns
- Technical analysis should be combined with fundamental analysis
## Version Information
- Compatible with TradingView Pine Script v5
- Designed for 1-minute timeframe optimal performance
- Works on major forex pairs, indices, and commodities
- Regular updates based on market condition changes
---
**Disclaimer:** This indicator is provided for educational purposes only. Trading involves substantial risk and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Users should conduct their own research and consider their financial situation before making trading decisions.
Normalized Open InterestNormalized Open Interest (nOI) — Indicator Overview
What it does
Normalized Open Interest (nOI) transforms raw futures open-interest data into a 0-to-100 oscillator, so you can see at a glance whether participation is unusually high or low—similar in spirit to an RSI but applied to open interest. The script positions today’s OI inside a rolling high–low range and paints it with contextual colours.
Core logic
Data source – Loads the built-in “_OI” symbol that TradingView provides for the current market.
Rolling range – Looks back a user-defined number of bars (default 500) to find the highest and lowest OI in that window.
Normalization – Calculates
nOI = (OI – lowest) / (highest – lowest) × 100
so 0 equals the minimum of the window and 100 equals the maximum.
Visual cues – Plots the oscillator plus fixed horizontal levels at 70 % and 30 % (or your own numbers). The line turns teal above the upper level, red below the lower, and neutral grey in between.
User inputs
Window Length (bars) – How many candles the indicator scans for the high–low range; larger numbers smooth the curve, smaller numbers make it more reactive.
Upper Threshold (%) – Default 70. Anything above this marks potentially crowded or overheated interest.
Lower Threshold (%) – Default 30. Anything below this marks low or capitulating interest.
Practical uses
Spot extremes – Values above the upper line can warn that the long side is crowded; values below the lower line suggest disinterest or short-side crowding.
Confirm breakouts – A price breakout backed by a sharp rise in nOI signals genuine engagement.
Look for divergences – If price makes a new high but nOI does not, participation might be fading.
Combine with volume or RSI – Layer nOI with other studies to filter false signals.
Tips
On intraday charts for non-crypto symbols the script automatically fetches daily OI data to avoid gaps.
Adjust the thresholds to 80/20 or 60/40 to fit your market and risk preferences.
Alerts, shading, or additional signal logic can be added easily because the oscillator is already normalised.
Momentum Trajectory Suite📈 Momentum Trajectory Suite
🟢 Overview
Momentum Trajectory Suite is a multi-faceted indicator designed to help traders evaluate trend direction, volatility conditions, and behavioral sentiment in a single consolidated view.
By combining a customizable Trajectory EMA, adaptive Bollinger Bands, and a Greed vs. Fear heatmap, this tool empowers traders to identify directional bias, measure momentum strength, and spot potential reversals or continuation setups.
🧠 Concept
This indicator merges three classic techniques:
Trend Analysis: Trajectory EMA highlights the prevailing directional momentum by smoothing price action over a customizable period.
Volatility Envelopes: Bollinger Bands adapt to dynamic price swings, showing overbought/oversold extremes and periods of contraction or expansion.
Behavioral Sentiment: A Greed vs. Fear heatmap combines RSI and MACD Histogram readings to visualize when markets are dominated by buying enthusiasm or selling pressure.
The combination is designed to help traders interpret market context more effectively than using any single component alone.
🛠️ How to Use the Indicator
Trajectory EMA:
Use the blue EMA line to assess overall trend direction.
Price closing above the EMA may indicate bullish momentum; closing below may indicate bearish bias.
Buy/Sell Signals:
Green circles appear when price crosses above the EMA (potential long entry).
Red circles appear when price crosses below the EMA (potential exit or short entry).
Bollinger Bands:
Monitor upper/lower bands for overbought and oversold price extremes.
Narrowing bands may signal upcoming volatility expansion.
Greed vs. Fear Heatmap:
Green histogram bars indicate bullish sentiment when RSI exceeds 60 and MACD Histogram is positive.
Red histogram bars indicate bearish sentiment when RSI is below 40 and MACD Histogram is negative.
Gray bars indicate neutral or mixed conditions.
Background Color Zones:
The chart background shifts to green when EMA slope is positive and red when negative, providing quick directional cues.
All inputs are adjustable in settings, including EMA length, Bollinger Band parameters, and oscillator configurations.
📊 Interpretation
Bullish Conditions:
Price above the Trajectory EMA, background green, and Greed heatmap active.
May signal trend continuation and increased buying pressure.
Bearish Conditions:
Price below the Trajectory EMA, background red, and Fear heatmap active.
May signal momentum breakdown or potential continuation to the downside.
Volatility Clues:
Wide Bollinger Bands = trending, volatile market.
Narrow Bollinger Bands = low volatility and possible breakout setup.
Signal Confirmation:
Consider combining signals (e.g., EMA crossover + Greed/Fear heatmap + Bollinger Band touch) for higher-confidence entries.
📝 Notes
The script does not repaint or use future data.
Suitable for multiple timeframes (intraday to daily).
May be combined with other confirmation tools or price action analysis.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading carries risk and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always perform your own due diligence before making trading decisions.
Squeeze & Breakout Confirmation StrategyThis strategy focuses on identifying periods of low volatility (Bollinger Band Squeeze) and then confirming the direction of the subsequent breakout with momentum, volume, and candle strength.
Concepts Applied: Bollinger Bands (Squeeze), RSI (Momentum), Market Volume (Conviction), Candle Size (Strength)
Buy Signal:
Bollinger Band Squeeze: Look for a period where the Bollinger Bands contract significantly, indicating low volatility and consolidation. The bands should be very close to the price action.
RSI Breakout: After the squeeze, wait for the price to break decisively above the upper Bollinger Band. Simultaneously, the RSI should break above 60 (or even 70), indicating strong bullish momentum.
Volume Surge: The breakout candle should be accompanied by a significant increase in trading volume, ideally above its recent average, confirming strong buying interest.
Strong Bullish Candle: The breakout candle itself should be a large, bullish candle (e.g., a strong green candle with a small upper wick or a bullish engulfing pattern), demonstrating buyer conviction.
Sell Signal (Short):
Bollinger Band Squeeze: Look for a period where the Bollinger Bands contract significantly.
RSI Breakdown: After the squeeze, wait for the price to break decisively below the lower Bollinger Band. Simultaneously, the RSI should break below 40 (or even 30), indicating strong bearish momentum.
Volume Surge: The breakdown candle should be accompanied by a significant increase in trading volume, ideally above its recent average, confirming strong selling interest.
Strong Bearish Candle: The breakdown candle itself should be a large, bearish candle (e.g., a strong red candle with a small lower wick or a bearish engulfing pattern), demonstrating seller conviction.
CirclesCircles - Support & Resistance Levels
Overview
This indicator plots horizontal support and resistance levels based on W.D. Gann's mathematical approach of dividing 360 degrees by 2 and by 3. These divisions create natural price magnetism points that have historically acted as significant support and resistance levels across all markets and timeframes.
How It Works
360÷2 Levels (Blue): 5.63, 11.25, 33.75, 56.25, 78.75, etc.
360÷3 Levels (Red): 7.5, 15, 30, 37.5, 52.5, 60, 75, etc.
Both Levels (Yellow): 22.5, 45, 67.5, 90, 112.5, 135, 157.5, 180 - These are "doubly strong" as they appear in both calculations
Key Features
Auto-Scaling: Automatically adjusts for any price range (from $0.001 altcoins to $100K+ Bitcoin)
Manual Scaling: Choose from 0.001x to 1000x multipliers or set custom values
Full Customization: Colors, line widths, styles (solid/dashed/dotted)
Historical View: Option to show all levels regardless of current price
Clean Display: Adjustable label positioning and line extensions
Use Cases
Identify potential reversal zones before price reaches them
Set profit targets and stop losses at key mathematical levels
Confirm breakouts when price decisively moves through major levels
Works on all timeframes and all markets (stocks, crypto, forex, commodities)
Gann Theory
W.D. Gann believed that markets move in mathematical harmony based on geometric angles and time cycles. These 360-degree divisions represent natural balance points where price often finds support or resistance, making them valuable for both short-term trading and long-term analysis.
Perfect for traders who use:
Support/Resistance trading
Fibonacci levels
Pivot points
Mathematical/geometric analysis
Multi-timeframe analysis
Super PerformanceThe "Super Performance" script is a custom indicator written in Pine Script (version 6) for use on the TradingView platform. Its main purpose is to visually compare the performance of a selected stock or index against a benchmark index (default: NIFTYMIDSML400) over various timeframes, and to display sector-wise performance rankings in a clear, tabular format.
Key Features:
Customizable Display:
Users can toggle between dark and light color themes, enable or disable extended data columns, and choose between a compact "Mini Mode" or a full-featured table view. Table positions and sizes are also configurable for both stock and sector tables.
Performance Calculation:
The script calculates percentage price changes for the selected stock and the benchmark index over multiple periods: 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 200 days. It then checks if the stock is outperforming the index for each period.
Conviction Score:
For each period where the stock outperforms the index, a "conviction score" is incremented. This score is mapped to qualitative labels such as "Super solid," "Solid," "Good," etc., and is color-coded for quick visual interpretation.
Sector Performance Table:
The script tracks 19 sector indices (e.g., REALTY, IT, PHARMA, AUTO, ENERGY) and calculates their performance over 1, 5, 10, 20, and 60-day periods. It then ranks the top 5 performing sectors for each timeframe and displays them in a sector performance table.
Visual Output:
Two tables are constructed:
Stock Performance Table: Shows the stock's returns, index returns, outperformance markers (✔/✖), and the difference for each period, along with the overall conviction score.
Sector Performance Table: Ranks and displays the top 5 sectors for each timeframe, with color-coded performance values for easy comparison.
Initial balance - weeklyWeekly Initial Balance (IB) — Indicator Description
The Weekly Initial Balance (IB) is the price range (High–Low) established during the week’s first trading session (most commonly Monday). You can measure it over the entire day or just the first X hours (e.g. 60 or 120 minutes). Once that session ends, the IB High and IB Low define the key levels where the initial weekly range formed.
Why Measure the Weekly IB?
Week-Opening Sentiment:
Monday’s range often sets the tone for the rest of the week. Trading above the IB High signals bullish control; trading below the IB Low signals bearish control.
Key Liquidity Zones:
Large institutions tend to place orders around these extremes, so you’ll frequently see tests, breakouts, or rejections at these levels.
Support & Resistance:
The IB High and IB Low become natural barriers. Price will often return to them, bounce off them, or break through them—ideal spots for entries and exits.
Volatility Forecast:
The width of the IB (High minus Low) indicates whether to expect a volatile week (wide IB) or a quieter one (narrow IB).
Significance of IB Levels
Breakout:
A clear break above the IB High (for longs) or below the IB Low (for shorts) can ignite a strong trending move.
Fade:
A rejection off the IB High/Low during low momentum (e.g. low volume or pin-bar formations) offers a high-probability reversal trade.
Mid-Point:
The 50% level of the IB range often “magnetizes” price back to it, providing entry points for continuation or reversal strategies.
Three Core Monday IB Strategies
A. Breakout (Open-Range Breakout)
Entry: Wait for 1–2 candles (e.g. 5-minute) to close above IB High (long) or below IB Low (short).
Stop-Loss: A few pips below IB High (long) or above IB Low (short).
Profit-Target: 2–3× your risk (Reward:Risk ≥ 2:1).
Best When: You spot a clear impulse—such as a strong pre-open volume spike or news-driven move.
B. Fade (Reversal at Extremes)
Entry: When price tests IB High but shows weakening momentum (shrinking volume, upper-wick candles), enter short; vice versa for IB Low and longs.
Stop-Loss: Just beyond the IB extreme you’re fading.
Profit-Target: Back toward the IB mid-point (50% level) or all the way to the opposite IB extreme.
Best When: Monday’s action is range-bound and lacks a clear directional trend.
C. Mid-Point Trading
Entry: When price returns to the 50% level of the IB range.
In an up-trend: buy if it bounces off mid-point back toward IB High.
In a down-trend: sell if it reverses off mid-point back toward IB Low.
Stop-Loss: Just below the nearest swing-low (for longs) or above the nearest swing-high (for shorts).
Profit-Target: To the corresponding IB extreme (High or Low).
Best When: You see a strong initial move away from the IB, followed by a pullback to the mid-point.
Usage Steps
Configure your session: Measure IB over your chosen Monday timeframe (whole day or first X hours).
Choose your strategy: Align Breakout, Fade, or Mid-Point entries with the current market context (trend vs. range).
Manage risk: Keep risk per trade ≤ 1% of account and maintain at least a 2:1 Reward:Risk ratio.
Backtest & forward-test: Verify performance over multiple Mondays and in a paper-trading environment before going live.
Scanner Candles v2.01The "Scanner Candle v.2.01" is an indicator classifies candles based on the body/range ratio: indecisive (small body, ≤50%), decisive (medium body), explosive (large body, ≥70%). It includes EMAs to identify trends and "Reset Candles" (RC), small-bodied candles near EMAs, signaling potential reversals or continuations. Useful for analyzing volatility, breakouts, reversals, and risk management.
Description of the indicator:
The "Scanner Candle v.2.01" indicator classifies candles into three categories based on the proportion of the candle's body to its range (high-low):
Indecisive: candles with a small body (≤ set threshold, default 50%), indicating low volatility or market uncertainty.
Decisive: candles with a medium body, reflecting a clear but not extreme price movement.
Explosive: candles with a large body (≥ set threshold, default 70%), signaling strong directional moves.
Additionally, the indicator includes:
Customizable exponential moving averages (EMAs) to identify trends and support/resistance levels.
Detection of "Reset Candles" (RC), specific candles (e.g., dojis, ) with a small bodies body near EMAs, useful for identifying potential reversal or continuation points.
Coloring and visualization:
Candles are colored by category (white for indecisive, orange for decisive, purple for explosive).
Reset Candles are marked with circles above/below the candle (green for bullish, red for bearish).
Potential uses:
Volatility analysis: Identifying uncertain (indecisive), directional (decisive), or impulsive (explosive) market phases.
Breakout trading: Explosive candles can signal entry opportunities on strong moves.
Reversal detection: Reset Candles near EMAs can indicate turning points or trend continuation.
Trend-following support: Integrated EMAs contextualize candles within the main trend.
Risk management: Indecisive candles suggest avoiding trades in low-directionality phases.
The indicator is customizable (thresholds, colors, thresholdsEMAs, ) and adaptable to various timeframes and strategies, from day trading to swing trading.
Reset Candles:
Reset Candles (RC) are specific candles signaling potential reversals or continuations, often near EMAs. They are defined by:
Small body: Body < 5% of the range of the last 10 candles, indicating low volatility (e.g., doji).
EMA proximity: The candle is near or crosses a defined EMA (e.g., 10, 60, or 223 periods).
Trend conditions: Follows a red candle, with the close of the previous previous candles above a specific EMA, suggesting a potential bullish resumption or stabilization.
Limited spike: The candle has minimal tails (spikes, ) below a set threshold (default 1%).
Minimum timeframe: Appears on timeframes ≥ set value (default 5 minutes) or daily charts.
Non-consecutive: Not preceded by other RCs in the last 3 candles.
Types:
Doji_fin: Green circle above, signaling a bullish bullish setup near longer EMAs.
Dojifin_2: Yellow Red circle below, signaling a bearish setup near shorter EMAs.
Trading uses:
Reversal: RCs near EMAs signal bounces or rejections, ideal for counter-trend trades.
Continuation: In trends, RCs indicate pauses before trend resumption, offering low-risk entries.
Support/resistance confirmation: EMA proximity strengthens the level's significance.
Risk management: Small bodies and EMA proximity allow tight stop-losses.
Limitations:
False signals: Common in volatile or sideways markets; use with additional confirmation.
Timeframe dependency: More reliable on higher timeframes (e.g., 1-hour or daily).
Customization needed: Thresholds (e.g., spike, timeframe) must be tailored to the market.
Conclusion:
Reset Candles highlight low-volatility moments near technical levels (EMAs) that may precede significant moves. They are ideal for precise entries with tight stops in reversal or continuation strategies but require clear market context and additional confirmation for optimal effectiveness.
#ema #candlepattern #scalping
Share SizePurpose: The "Share Size" indicator is a powerful risk management tool designed to help traders quickly determine appropriate share/contract sizes based on their predefined risk per trade and the current market's volatility (measured by ATR). It calculates potential dollar differences from recent highs/lows and translates them into a recommended share/contract size, accounting for a user-defined ATR-based offset. This helps you maintain consistent risk exposure across different instruments and market conditions.
How It Works: At its core, the indicator aims to answer the question: "How many shares/contracts can I trade to keep my dollar risk within limits if my stop loss is placed at a recent high or low, plus an ATR-based buffer?"
Price Difference Calculation: It first calculates the dollar difference between the current close price and the high and low of the current bar (Now) and the previous 5 bars (1 to 5).
Tick Size & Value Conversion: These price differences are then converted into dollar values using the instrument's specific tickSize and tickValue. You can select common futures contracts (MNQ, MES, MGC, MCL), a generic "Stock" setting, or define custom values.
ATR Offset: An Average True Range (ATR) based offset is added to these dollar differences. This offset acts as a buffer, simulating a stop loss placed beyond the immediate high/low, accounting for market noise or volatility.
Risk-Based Share Size: Finally, using your Default Risk ($) input, the indicator calculates how many shares/contracts you can take for each of the 6 high/low scenarios (current bar, 5 previous bars) to ensure your dollar risk per trade remains constant.
Dynamic Table: All these calculations are presented in a clear, real-time table at the bottom-left of your chart. The table dynamically adjusts its "Label" to show the selected symbol preset, making it easy to see which instrument's settings are currently being used. The "Shares" rows indicate the maximum shares/contracts you can trade for a given risk and stop placement. The cells corresponding to the largest dollar difference (and thus smallest share size) for both high and low scenarios are highlighted, drawing your attention to the most conservative entry points.
Key Benefits:
Consistent Risk: Helps maintain a consistent dollar risk per trade, regardless of the instrument or its current price/volatility.
Dynamic Sizing: Automatically adjusts share/contract size based on market volatility and your chosen stop placement.
Quick Reference: Provides a real-time, easy-to-read table directly on your chart, eliminating manual calculations.
Informed Decision Making: Assists in quickly assessing trade opportunities and potential position sizes.
Setup Parameters (Inputs)
When you add the "Share Size" indicator to your chart, you'll see a settings dialog with the following parameters:
1. Symbol Preset:
Purpose: This is the primary setting to define the tick size and value for your chosen trading instrument.
Options:
MNQ (Micro Nasdaq 100 Futures)
MES (Micro E-mini S&P 500 Futures)
MGC (Micro Gold Futures)
MCL (Micro Crude Oil Futures)
Stock (Generic stock setting, with tick size/value of 0.01)
Custom (Allows you to manually input tick size and value)
Default: MNQ
Importance: Crucial for accurate dollar calculations. Ensure this matches the instrument you are trading.
2. Tick Size (Manual Override):
Purpose: Only used if Symbol Preset is set to Custom. This defines the smallest price increment for your instrument.
Type: Float
Default: 0.25
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none) unless "Custom" is selected. You might need to change display=display.none to display=display.inline in the code if you want to see and adjust it directly in the settings for "Custom" mode.
3. Tick Value (Manual Override):
Purpose: Only used if Symbol Preset is set to Custom. This defines the dollar value of one tickSize increment.
Type: Float
Default: 0.50
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none) unless "Custom" is selected. Similar to Tick Size, you might need to adjust its display property if you want it visible.
4. Default Risk ($):
Purpose: This is your maximum desired dollar risk per trade. All share size calculations will be based on this value.
Type: Float
Default: 50.0
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none). It's a critical setting, so consider making it visible by changing display=display.none to display=display.inline in the code if you want users to easily adjust their risk.
ATR Offset Settings (Group): This group of settings allows you to fine-tune the ATR-based buffer added to your potential stop loss.
5. ATR Offset Length:
Purpose: Defines the lookback period for the Average True Range (ATR) calculation used for the offset.
Type: Integer
Default: 7
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none).
6. ATR Offset Timeframe:
Purpose: Specifies the timeframe on which the ATR for the offset will be calculated. This allows you to use ATR from a higher timeframe for your stop buffer, even if your chart is on a lower timeframe.
Type: Timeframe string (e.g., "1" for 1 minute, "60" for 1 hour, "D" for Daily)
Default: "1" (1 Minute)
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none).
7. ATR Offset Multiplier (x ATR):
Purpose: Multiplies the calculated ATR value to determine the final dollar offset added to your high/low price difference. A value of 1.0 means one full ATR is added. A value of 0.5 means half an ATR is added.
Type: Float
Minimum Value: 0 (no offset)
Default: 1.0
Hidden: This input is hidden (display=display.none).