Fractal Manipulation Projections [keypoems]Fractal Manipulation Projections 0-30 minutes
This study draws statistical hourly rails that help visualize how far price normally travels during the first half‑hour of each hour.
How it works
On the first bar of every clock hour (New York time) the script records the hourly open.
It then looks up the historical mean (μ) and standard deviations (σ) of (open - low for bearish| high - open for bullish candles) of the first 5 / 10 / 15 / 20 / 25 / 30‑minute candle that followed that open.
Lines are plotted at ±0.5 σ, ±1 σ and ±1.5 σ above and below the open; optional polylines or smooth curves can connect equal‑σ levels.
A small on‑chart table shows the current ±1.5 σ ranges for quick reference.
Data set
Pre‑computed distributions were built from 1‑minute CME Nasdaq‑100 futures (NQ1!) data:
2020‑present for all other hours (default).
2010‑present for the 02:00 hour (optional toggle).
No external data or HTTP requests are used; the script is fully self‑contained.
Inputs
Select which time‑slices (5 m … 30 m) and which σ levels to draw.
Choose straight or Catmull‑Rom curves, colors, line styles, and how many past hours (1‑6) remain visible.
Intended use
These projections do not predict direction or supply trade signals; they simply show where price would lie if it moved a typical ±σ distance from the hourly open. Use them as a contextual volatility gauge alongside your own strategy.
For educational purposes only. Nothing in this script constitutes financial advice. Past performance‑based statistics do not guarantee future results.
Statistics
Micro Futures Contract Calculator Micro Futures Contract Calculator
Synopsis: The Micro Futures Contract Calculator is a sleek, minimalist indicator that calculates the number of Micro E-mini Nasdaq-100 (MNQ) or S&P 500 (MES) contracts you can trade based on a fixed dollar risk and stop-loss (in ticks). Displayed in a compact, professional table in the top-right corner, it shows your risk, stop-loss, contract type, and calculated contracts, helping traders maintain consistent risk management.
How to Use:
Add the indicator to your chart (search “Micro Futures Contract Calculator”).
In settings, input:
Maximum Risk ($): Your total risk per trade (e.g., $100).
Stop-Loss (Ticks): Stop-loss size in ticks (e.g., 20 ticks = 5 points).
Contract Type: Select MNQ or MES.
Check the top-right table for:
Risk, stop-loss, contract type, and number of contracts (e.g., “10” for MNQ, “4” for MES).
Use the contract number to size trades, ensuring risk stays fixed.
Why Standardized Risk is Important:
Consistency: Fixed risk per trade (e.g., $100) prevents oversized losses, stabilizing long-term performance.
Discipline: Removes emotional guesswork, enforcing a systematic approach across MNQ/MES trades.
Capital Protection: Limits exposure, preserving your account during losing streaks and volatile markets.
Scalability: Aligns position sizing with your risk tolerance, enabling confident scaling as your account grows.
This indicator simplifies risk management, making it essential for disciplined futures trading.
Smart LevelsSmart Levels - Professional Support & Resistance Indicator
🔥 ADVANCED TRUE OPENS & HIGH/LOW DETECTION SYSTEM
Smart Levels is a comprehensive technical analysis tool designed for professional traders who demand precision in identifying key market levels across multiple timeframes. This indicator automatically detects and displays critical support and resistance levels based on institutional trading concepts.
🎯 KEY FEATURES
TRUE OPENS DETECTION
Annual True Open: April 1st market opening (Q2 institutional cycle start)
Monthly Q1 & Q2 True Opens: First and second Monday of each month (customizable hours: 18:00 NY or 00:00 NY)
Weekly True Open: Every Monday at 18:00 NY (institutional week start)
Daily True Open: Midnight NY time (00:00 NY)
HIGH/LOW LEVELS IDENTIFICATION
Daily Highs & Lows: Previous day's extreme levels
Weekly Highs & Lows: Previous week's extreme levels
Monthly Highs & Lows: Previous month's extreme levels
Quarterly Highs & Lows: Previous quarter's extreme levels
Annual Highs & Lows: Previous year's extreme levels
ADVANCED CUSTOMIZATION
Master Controls: Enable/disable entire groups with one click
⚙️ Auto Scale Adjustment: Keep chart focused on price action (lines don't compress the view)
Individual Control: Each level can be configured independently
Line Styles: Solid, dashed, or dotted lines
Extension Types: Fixed displacement or last candle alignment
Color Coding: Fully customizable colors for each timeframe
PROFESSIONAL DISPLAY
Information Table: Live quarterly cycle status with color coding
Smart Labels: Price levels clearly marked with descriptive text
Multiple Positioning: Table can be positioned anywhere on chart
Clean Interface: Professional appearance with customizable text sizes
📊 INSTITUTIONAL CONCEPTS
This indicator is built on institutional trading principles:
Q1 (Accumulation): Smart money accumulation phase
Q2 (Manipulation): Price manipulation and liquidity hunting
Q3 (Distribution): Smart money distribution phase
Q4 (Continuation/Reversal): Trend continuation or major reversal
⚡ MASTER CONTROLS
🔥 DISPLAY ALL TRUE OPENS
Toggle all True Open levels on/off with a single click
📊 DISPLAY ALL HIGHS & LOWS
Toggle all High/Low levels on/off with a single click
⚙️ AUTO SCALE ADJUSTMENT (NEW FEATURE)
ON: Lines extend but don't affect chart scaling (maintains focus on price action)
OFF: Traditional behavior (lines may compress chart view)
Default: ENABLED for optimal trading experience
🛠 CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
True Open Settings (Per Timeframe)
Enable/Disable individual True Opens
Hour selection for monthly levels (18:00 NY or 00:00 NY)
Extension type: Fixed displacement or last candle alignment
Line appearance: Color, style, and width
Maximum number of lines displayed
High/Low Settings (Per Timeframe)
Enable/Disable individual High/Low pairs
Extension configuration
Separate colors for highs and lows
Line styling options
Information Table
Show/Hide information panel
Detailed view toggle
Position selection (6 options)
Text and background color customization
Text size adjustment
🎨 VISUAL FEATURES
Color-Coded Quarters: Each quarterly phase has distinct colors
Smart Positioning: Lines extend 20 candles beyond current price for clarity
Professional Labels: Clean price level identification
Memory Efficient: Automatic cleanup of old levels
Multi-Timeframe: Works on all timeframes from 1-minute to monthly
💡 TRADING APPLICATIONS
Support & Resistance
Previous High/Low levels act as natural S&R zones
True Opens often become significant pivot points
Institutional Analysis
Track quarterly cycles for macro trend analysis
Identify accumulation and distribution phases
Entry & Exit Points
Use level breaks for entry signals
Set targets at next timeframe levels
Risk Management
Place stops beyond key institutional levels
Size positions based on level confluence
🔧 TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Pine Script Version: v6
Overlay: Yes (displays directly on price chart)
Max Objects: 500 lines, 500 labels, 500 boxes
Timezone: America/New_York (institutional standard)
Performance: Optimized for all chart timeframes
Compatibility: Works with all TradingView accounts
📈 RECOMMENDED USAGE
Enable Master Controls for full functionality
Keep Auto Scale ON for optimal chart viewing
Customize colors to match your trading style
Use Information Table to track current quarterly phase
Combine with price action for high-probability setups
Smart Levels transforms complex institutional concepts into clear, actionable visual information. Whether you're scalping intraday moves or analyzing long-term trends, this indicator provides the precision levels professional traders depend on.
📊 Trade with institutional precision. Trade with Smart Levels.Tentar novamenteO Claude pode cometer erros. Confira sempre as respostas.Pesquisa Sonnet 4
Price Range Retrace statisticks [HERMAN]📈 Price Range Retrace Stats
This indicator is designed to help traders quantify how often price retraces to a selected equilibrium level (e.g., 50%) after sweeping the high/low of a defined time-based range.
It is especially useful for modeling sessions such as the London Opening Range (e.g., 02:00–03:00 NY time), checking if price sweeps that range in a subsequent window (e.g., 03:00–04:00), and returns to its 50% level.
✅ What does it do?
Lets you define multiple time ranges (e.g. London, NY Open, custom ranges).
Draws the range box for the selected session time.
Calculates and plots the retracement level (default 50%).
Checks if price sweeps the high/low of the range before retracing.
Tracks success rate, average distance, sample size and displays these stats in a table.
⚙️ Key Features:
Fully customizable time windows (range box time and retracement check time).
-Configurable retracement % (default 50% equilibrium).
-Optional sweep condition (only count retracements if price sweeps the high/low first).
-Clean, theme-adaptive stats table with success rates and averages.
-Supports two independent levels (e.g. London and NY sessions).
📊 Why use it?
This tool turns session-based setups into statistical models:
Backtest session strategies over many days.
Quantify edge with % success over time.
Validate trading ideas with data.
Use probabilities instead of gut feeling.
Example insight you can track:
“Between 3–4 AM NY time, price swept the high/low of the 2–3 AM London Opening Range and returned to its 50% equilibrium level in 64% of 234 sessions.”
📌 Ideal for:
ICT concepts (Opening Range, Sweep, Equilibrium Return).
Algo developers wanting probabilities.
Anyone who wants data-driven confirmation for session range mean-reversion.
Instructions:
1️⃣ Enable the desired Price Range (1 or 2).
2️⃣ Set your Range Time (e.g. 02:00–03:00).
3️⃣ Set your Retracement Check Time (e.g. 03:00–04:00).
4️⃣ Choose retracement % (e.g. 50%).
5️⃣ Watch the box and retrace line plot on chart.
6️⃣ Review the success statistics in the table.
OI Bahavior MapThis indicator visualizes Open Interest (OI) changes for Binance Futures and highlights the behavior of market participants — whether takers or makers are opening or closing positions.
📊 Supported display modes:
• Taker or Maker
• Longs or Shorts
• Cumulative or Per-Bar
• Displayed in USD or Coins
💡 Each candle color reflects the dominant trade direction (delta):
🟢 Green = Aggressive buying (Delta Buy)
🔴 Red = Aggressive selling (Delta Sell)
OI direction (↑/↓) determines whether positions are being opened or closed.
🛠️ Optional metrics:
• Moving average of OI (SMA, EMA, WMA, VWMA, LSMA)
• Volatility channels (Bollinger Bands or Extremums)
⚙️ How it works:
• Fetches OI data from the SYMBOL_OI ticker (e.g., BTCUSDT_OI)
• Compares current OI with the previous bar
• Uses signed volume delta (close - open) to infer intent
• Classifies bar as open/close, long/short, taker/maker
• Displays the net effect as a colored candle on a secondary chart
🤔 How to interpret Taker and Maker?
• Taker: The aggressive participant who removes liquidity (initiates the trade)
• Maker: The passive participant who provides liquidity (places resting orders)
You can choose to display the same event from either the Taker or Maker perspective — the chart will look the same, but the interpretation changes.
🧠 Core Logic Mapping
```
🟢 Green: Taker Longs (Buy, OI↑) | Maker Shorts (Buy, OI↓)
🔴 Red: Taker Shorts (Sell, OI↑) | Maker Longs (Sell, OI↓)
```
⚠️ Limitations:
• Works only for Binance Futures
• Requires existence of SYMBOL_OI ticker on TradingView
• Represents approximate intent based on OI + volume behavior
💬 Open Source
The script is open for the community. Suggestions and feedback are welcome in the comments!
__________________________________________________________________________________
Этот индикатор визуализирует изменения открытого интереса (OI) для Binance Futures и показывает поведение участников рынка — открывают или закрывают позиции тейкеры или мейкеры.
📊 Доступные режимы отображения:
• Taker или Maker
• Longs или Shorts
• Кумулятивный или по бару
• В USD или в монетах
💡 Каждый цвет свечи отражает преобладающее направление сделок (дельта):
🟢 Зеленый = Агрессивные покупки (Delta Buy)
🔴 Красный = Агрессивные продажи (Delta Sell)
Направление OI (↑/↓) показывает, открываются или закрываются позиции.
🛠️ Дополнительные метрики:
• Скользящая средняя OI (SMA, EMA, WMA, VWMA, LSMA)
• Волатильностные каналы (Bollinger Bands или экстремумы)
⚙️ Как работает:
• Получает данные OI из тикера SYMBOL_OI (например, BTCUSDT_OI)
• Сравнивает текущий OI с предыдущим баром
• Использует направленную дельту объема (close - open) для определения намерения
• Классифицирует бар как открытие/закрытие, лонг/шорт, тейкер/мейкер
• Отображает итог в виде цветной свечи на дополнительном графике
🤔 Как интерпретировать Taker и Maker?
• Taker: Агрессивный участник, который изымает ликвидность (инициирует сделку)
• Maker: Пассивный участник, который создает ликвидность (выставляет лимитные заявки)
Вы можете выбрать отображение события с позиции тейкера или мейкера — график будет одинаковым, но смысл меняется.
🧠 Схема логики
```
🟢 Зеленый: Taker Longs (Покупка, OI↑) | Maker Shorts (Покупка, OI↓)
🔴 Красный: Taker Shorts (Продажа, OI↑) | Maker Longs (Продажа, OI↓)
```
⚠️ Ограничения:
• Работает только для Binance Futures
• Требуется наличие тикера SYMBOL_OI на TradingView
• Показывает приблизительное намерение на основе OI и дельты объема
💬 Open Source
Скрипт открыт для сообщества. Предложения и обратная связь приветствуются в комментариях!
BTC/Fiat Divergence & Spread Monitor📄 BTC/Fiat Divergence & Spread Monitor
This indicator visualizes Bitcoin’s relative performance across multiple fiat currencies and highlights periods of unusual divergence. It helps traders assess which fiat pairs BTC has outperformed or underperformed over a configurable lookback period and monitor the dynamic spread between the strongest and weakest pairs.
Features:
Relative Performance Matrix:
Ranks BTC returns in 6 fiat pairs, displaying a color-coded table of percentage changes and ranks.
Divergence Spread Oscillator:
Calculates the spread between the top and bottom performing pairs and normalizes this using a Z-Score. The oscillator helps identify when fiat pricing divergence is unusually high or compressed.
Dynamic Smoothing:
Optional Hull Moving Average smoothing to reduce noise in the spread signal.
Customizable Inputs:
Lookback period for percent change.
Z-Score normalization window.
Smoothing length.
Symbol selection for each fiat pair.
Visual Mode Toggle:
Switch between relative performance lines and spread oscillator view.
Potential Use Cases:
Fiat Rotation:
Identify which fiat is relatively weak or strong to optimize your exit currency when taking BTC profits.
Volatility Detection:
Use the spread Z-Score to detect periods of high divergence across fiat pairs, signaling macro FX volatility or dislocations.
Regime Analysis:
Track when fiat spreads are converging or expanding, potentially signaling market regime shifts.
Risk Management:
When divergence is extreme (Z-Score > +1), consider reducing position sizing or waiting for reversion.
Disclaimer:
This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security or asset. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial professional before making trading decisions. Use at your own risk.
Tip:
Experiment with different lookback periods and smoothing settings to adapt the indicator to your timeframe and trading style.
Uptrick: Universal Z-Score ValuationOverview
The Uptrick: Universal Z-Score Valuation is a tool designed to help traders spot when the market might be overreacting—whether that’s on the upside or the downside. It does this by combining the Z-scores of multiple key indicators into a single average, letting you see how far the current market conditions have stretched away from “normal.” This average is shown as a smooth line, supported by color-coded visuals, signal markers, optional background highlights, and a live breakdown table that shows the contribution of each indicator in real time. The focus here is on spotting potential reversals, not following trends. The indicator works well across all timeframes and asset classes, from fast intraday charts like the 1-minute and 5-minute, to higher timeframes such as the 4-hour, daily, or even weekly. Its universal design makes it suitable for any market — whether you're trading crypto, stocks, forex, or commodities.
Introduction
To understand what this indicator does, let’s start with the idea of a Z-score. In simple terms, a Z-score tells you how far a number is from the average of its recent history, measured in standard deviations. If the price of an asset is two standard deviations above its mean, that means it’s statistically “rare” or extended. That doesn’t guarantee a reversal—but it suggests the move is unusual enough to pay attention.
This concept isn’t new, but what this indicator does differently is apply the Z-score to a wide set of market signals—not just price. It looks at momentum, volatility, volume, risk-adjusted performance, and even institutional price baselines. Each of those indicators is normalized using Z-scores, and then they’re combined into one average. This gives you a single, easy-to-read line that summarizes whether the entire market is behaving abnormally. Instead of reacting to one indicator, you’re reacting to a statistically balanced blend.
Purpose
The goal of this script is to catch turning points—places where the market may be topping out or bottoming after becoming overstretched. It’s built for traders who want to fade sharp moves rather than follow trends. Think of moments when price explodes upward and starts pulling away from every moving average, volume spikes, volatility rises, and RSI shoots up. This tool is meant to spot those situations—not just when price is stretched, but when multiple different indicators agree that something is overdone.
Originality and Uniqueness
Most indicators that use Z-scores only apply them to one thing—price, RSI, or maybe Bollinger Bands. This one is different because it treats each indicator as a contributor to the full picture. You decide which ones to include, and the script averages them out. This makes the tool flexible but also deeply informative.
It doesn’t rely on complex or hidden math. It uses basic Z-score formulas, applies them to well-known indicators, and shows you the result. What makes it unique is the way it brings those signals together—statistically, visually, and interactively—so you can see what’s happening in the moment with full transparency. It’s not trying to be flashy or predictive. It’s just showing you when things have gone too far, too fast.
Inputs and Parameters
This indicator includes a wide range of configurable inputs, allowing users to customize which components are included in the Z-score average, how each indicator is calculated, and how results are displayed visually. Below is a detailed explanation of each input:
General Settings
Z-Score Lookback (default: 100): Number of bars used to calculate the mean and standard deviation for Z-score normalization. Larger values smooth the Z-scores; smaller values make them more reactive.
Bar Color Mode (default: None): Determines how bars are visually colored. Options include: None: No candle coloring applied. - Heat: Smooth gradient based on the Z-score value. - Latest Signal: Applies a solid color based on the most recent buy or sell signal
Boolean - General
Plot Universal Valuation Line (default: true): If enabled, plots the average Z-score (zAvg) line in the separate pane.
Show Signals (default: true): Displays labels ("𝓤𝓹" for buy, "𝓓𝓸𝔀𝓷" for sell) when zAvg crosses above or below user-defined thresholds.
Show Z-Score Table (default: true): Displays a live table listing each enabled indicator's Z-score and the current average.
Select Indicators
These toggles enable or disable each indicator from contributing to the Z-score average:
Use VWAP Z-Score (default: true)
Use Sortino Z-Score (default: true)
Use ROC Z-Score (default: true)
Use Price Z-Score (default: true)
Use MACD Histogram Z-Score (default: false)
Use Bollinger %B Z-Score (default: false)
Use Stochastic K Z-Score (default: false)
Use Volume Z-Score (default: false)
Use ATR Z-Score (default: false)
Use RSI Z-Score (default: false)
Use Omega Z-Score (default: true)
Use Sharpe Z-Score (default: true)
Only enabled indicators are included in the average. This modular design allows traders to tailor the signal mix to their preferences.
Indicator Lengths
These inputs control how each individual indicator is calculated:
MACD Fast Length (default: 12)
MACD Slow Length (default: 26)
MACD Signal Length (default: 9)
Bollinger Basis Length (default: 20): Used to compute the Bollinger %B.
Bollinger Deviation Multiplier (default: 2.0): Standard deviation multiplier for the Bollinger Band calculation.
Stochastic Length (default: 14)
ATR Length (default: 14)
RSI Length (default: 14)
ROC Length (default: 10)
Zones
These thresholds define key signal levels for the Z-score average:
Neutral Line Level (default: 0): Baseline for the average Z-score.
Bullish Zone Level (default: -1): Optional intermediate zone suggesting early bullish conditions.
Bearish Zone Level (default: 1): Optional intermediate zone suggesting early bearish conditions.
Z = +2 Line Level (default: 2): Primary threshold for bearish signals.
Z = +3 Line Level (default: 3): Extreme bearish warning level.
Z = -2 Line Level (default: -2): Primary threshold for bullish signals.
Z = -3 Line Level (default: -3): Extreme bullish warning level.
These zone levels are used to generate signals, fill background shading, and draw horizontal lines for visual reference.
Why These Indicators Were Merged
Each indicator in this script was chosen for a specific reason. They all measure something different but complementary.
The VWAP Z-score helps you see when price has moved far from the volume-weighted average, often used by institutions.
Sortino Ratio Z-score focuses only on downside risk, which is often more relevant to traders than overall volatility.
ROC Z-score shows how fast price is changing—strong momentum may burn out quickly.
Price Z-score is the raw measure of how far current price has moved from its mean.
RSI Z-score shows whether momentum itself is stretched.
MACD Histogram Z-score captures shifts in trend strength and acceleration.
%B (Bollinger) Z-score indicates how close price is to the upper or lower volatility envelope.
Stochastic K Z-score gives a sense of how high or low price is relative to its recent range.
Volume Z-score shows when trading activity is unusually high or low.
ATR Z-score gives a read on volatility, showing if price movement is expanding or contracting.
Sharpe Z-score measures reward-to-risk performance, useful for evaluating trend quality.
Omega Z-score looks at the ratio of good returns to bad ones, offering a more nuanced view of efficiency.
By normalizing each of these using Z-scores and averaging only the ones you turn on, the script creates a flexible, balanced view of the market’s statistical stretch.
Calculations
The core formula is the standard Z-score:
Z = (current value - average) / standard deviation
Every indicator uses this formula after it’s calculated using your chosen settings. For example, RSI is first calculated as usual, then its Z-score is calculated over your selected lookback period. The script does this for every indicator you enable. Then it averages those Z-scores together to create a single value: zAvg. That value is plotted and used to generate visual cues, signals, table values, background color changes, and candle coloring.
Sequence
Each selected indicator is calculated using your custom input lengths.
The Z-score of each indicator is computed using the shared lookback period.
All active Z-scores are added up and averaged.
The resulting zAvg value is plotted as a line.
Signal conditions check if zAvg crosses user-defined thresholds (default: ±2).
If enabled, the script plots buy/sell signal labels at those crossover points.
The candle color is updated using your selected mode (heatmap or signal-based).
If extreme Z-scores are reached, background highlighting is applied.
A live table updates with each individual Z-score so you know what’s driving the signal.
Features
This script isn’t just about stats—it’s about making them usable in real time. Every feature has a clear reason to exist, and they’re all there to give you a better read on market conditions.
1. Universal Z-Score Line
This is your primary reference. It reflects the average Z-score across all selected indicators. The line updates live and is color-coded to show how far it is from neutral. The further it gets from 0, the brighter the color becomes—cyan for deeply oversold conditions, magenta for overbought. This gives you instant feedback on how statistically “hot” or “cold” the market is, without needing to read any numbers.
2. Signal Labels (“𝓤𝓹” and “𝓓𝓸𝔀𝓷”)
When the average Z-score drops below your lower bound, you’ll see a "𝓤𝓹" label below the bar, suggesting potential bullish reversal conditions. When it rises above the upper bound, a "𝓓𝓸𝔀𝓷" label is shown above the bar—indicating possible bearish exhaustion. These labels are visually clear and minimal so they don’t clutter your chart. They're based on clear crossover logic and do not repaint.
3. Real-Time Z-Score Table
The table shows each indicator's individual Z-score and the final average. It updates every bar, giving you a transparent breakdown of what’s happening under the hood. If the market is showing an extreme average score, this table helps you pinpoint which indicators are contributing the most—so you’re not just guessing where the pressure is coming from.
4. Bar Coloring Modes
You can choose from three modes:
None: Keeps your candles clean and untouched.
Heat: Applies a smooth gradient color based on Z-score intensity. As conditions become more extreme, candle color transitions from neutral to either cyan (bullish pressure) or magenta (bearish pressure).
Latest Signal: Applies hard coloring based on the most recent signal—greenish for a buy, purple for a sell. This mode is great for tracking market state at a glance without relying on a gradient.
Every part of the candle is colored—body, wick, and border—for full visibility.
5. Background Highlighting
When zAvg enters an extreme zone (typically above +2 or below -2), the background shifts color to reflect the market’s intensity. These changes aren’t overwhelming—they’re light fills that act as ambient warnings, helping you stay aware of when price might be reaching a tipping point.
6. Customizable Zone Lines and Fills
You can define what counts as neutral, overbought, and oversold using manual inputs. Horizontal lines show your thresholds, and shaded regions highlight the most extreme zones (+2 to +3 and -2 to -3). These lines give you visual structure to understand where price currently stands in relation to your personal reversal model.
7. Modular Indicator Control
You don’t have to use all the indicators. You can enable or disable any of the 12 with a simple checkbox. This means you can build your own “blend” of market context—maybe you only care about RSI, price, and volume. Or maybe you want everything on. The script adapts accordingly, only averaging what you select.
8. Fully Customizable Sensitivity and Lengths
You can adjust the Z-score lookback length globally (default 100), and tweak individual indicator lengths separately. This lets you tune the indicator’s responsiveness to suit your trading style—slower for longer swings, faster for scalping.
9. Clean Integration with Any Chart Layout
All visual elements are designed to be informative without taking over your chart. The coloring is soft but clear, the labels are readable without being huge, and you can turn off any feature you don’t need. The indicator can work as a full dashboard or as a simple line with a couple of alerts—it’s up to you.
10. Precise, Real-Time Signal Logic
The crossover logic for signals is exact and only fires when the Z-score moves across your defined boundary. No estimation, no delay. Everything is calculated based on current and previous bar data, and nothing repaints or back-adjusts.
Conclusion
The Universal Z-Score Valuation indicator is a tool for traders who want a clear, unbiased way to detect overextension. Instead of relying on a single signal, you get a composite of several market perspectives—momentum, volatility, volume, and more—all standardized into a single view. The script gives you the freedom to control the logic, the visuals, and the components. Whether you use it as a confirmation tool or a primary signal source, it’s designed to give you clarity when markets become chaotic.
Disclaimer
This indicator is for research and educational use only. It does not constitute financial advice or guarantees of performance. All trading involves risk, and users should test any strategy thoroughly before applying it to live markets. Use this tool at your own discretion.
Pristine Fundamental AnalysisThe Pristine Fundamental Analysis indicator enables users to perform comprehensive fundamental stock analysis in a fraction of the time! 🏆
For swing/position traders, fundamental analysis is essential—it informs stock selection and strengthens conviction, enabling traders to stay in positions long enough to capture larger moves. Since every ticker represents both a business and a tradable asset, fundamental analysis perfectly complements technical analysis.
💠 Fundamental Analysis Insights - Weekly Timeframe
EPS & sales trends, margins & ratios, and valuation metrics are displayed on the weekly timeframe for in-depth analysis outside market hours.
💠 Fundamental Analysis Insights - Daily Timeframe
A slimmed down version of the fundamental analysis table is displayed on the daily timeframe to provide users quick insights into the fundamentals, while allowing them to focus on technical analysis during market hours.
💠 Fundamental Analysis Metrics to Deepen Understanding of Companies!
EARNINGS & SALES TRENDS
Why does it matter? Company stock prices tend to track the growth trajectory of earnings and sales over time. By analyzing fundamentals, users can gain an edge that pure technical traders do not have. This edge is most pronounced during big market dislocations when investors are forced to liquidate their top holdings.
▪ EPS - Measures year-over-year growth, quarter-over-quarter growth, and the surprise between actuals & analyst estimates
▪ Sales Analysis - Measures year-over-year growth, quarter-over-quarter growth, and the surprise between actuals & analyst estimates
MARGIN ANALYSIS
Why does it matter? Revenue is the lifeblood of a company. Margins measure company profits and expenditures as a percentage of revenue
▪ G% - Gross margin measures the percentage of revenue a company retained after subtracting the direct costs of producing the goods or services it sells, known as the cost of goods sold (COGS)
▪ CFO% - Measures the percentage of a company's revenue that was converted to Cash flow from operations (CFO). CFO, also known as operating cash flow (OCF), is the amount of cash a company generated from its core business activities over a specific period. It reflects the actual cash inflows and outflows resulting from the company’s main operations, such as selling products or providing services, and excludes cash flows from investing and financing activities.
▪ Net% - Net margin measures the percentage of revenue that was converted to net profit
▪ ROE% - Return on Equity measures how much net income a company produced for each dollar of equity invested by shareholders
▪ R&D% - R&D margin measures how much the company invested in research & development as a percentage of revenue
▪ D/E - The Debt to Equity ratio measures how much of a company’s financing comes from creditors (debt) versus owners (equity), providing insight into the company’s financial leverage and risk profile. The indicator tracks changes in the ratio over time
VALUATION METRICS
Why does it matter? Valuation metrics provide users an understanding of the potential risk if the fundamental trajectory of the company, or the broad market, changes! The more highly valued a company is, the more downside risk is present if conditions worsen, and vice versa.
▪ PE - The Price-to-Earnings ratio measures a company’s current share price relative to its trailing twelve-month(TTM) earnings per share (EPS). It helps investors assess how much they are paying for each dollar of a company’s earnings and is often used to gauge whether a stock is overvalued, undervalued, or fairly valued compared to its peers or historical averages.
▪ PS - The Price-to-Sales ratio measures a company’s current share price relative to its trailing twelve-month(TTM) sales per share. It helps investors assess how much they are paying for each dollar of a company’s sales and is often used to gauge whether a stock is overvalued, undervalued, or fairly valued compared to its peers or historical averages.
▪ BB% - Buyback yield measures the annual percentage of stock repurchased by the company. Share buybacks reduce total share count, which directly increases earnings per share!
💠 What Makes This Indicator Unique
There are many fundamental dashboards, however, what makes this indicator unique is customized metrics that were used to achieve back-to-back top finishes in the US Investing Championship. The main purpose of the indicator is to highlight companies with a history of EPS and sales acceleration , rather than focusing on the values in isolation, or even the growth of the values. Our goal is further evolution of the metrics and color signals based on continued backtesting and analysis of real-time market data.
▪ Custom Margin Metrics : Several of the margin metrics are unique and offer significant value beyond EPS and sales data alone.
For example, there are plenty of companies that have negative EPS due to non-cash expenses and/or investments they are making into their business, but that does not by itself mean that the companies are not worthy of an investment. Roblox (RBLX) is a great example. The company has consistently negative EPS, but the CFO% margin is positive! That means the core business throws off significant amounts of cash, and a large amount of it is being allocated to aggressive R&D spend, which is captured by the R&D% metric. This could propel the fundamentals of the business well into the future.
▪ Color Signals Based on Thresholds : The background colors of metrics are based on historical analysis and apply relevant thresholds to help users identify companies with strong fundamentals
▪ Comprehensive Inline Documentation : All headers cells offer detailed information about the relevant calculations/metrics as well as in-depth information on color coding and how to interpret each value. This small, yet important detail, allows users to quickly identify accelerating fundamental trends
💠 Practical Use Case Examples
Analyzing fundamentals to trade a Power Earnings Gap setup 👇
In August 2023, APP reported a +467% YoY increase in EPS, 181% higher than Wall Street estimates! This sparked a generational trading opportunity.👇
After the first earnings report with stellar earnings growth, APP rallied > 1000% in 2 years, following the trajectory of sales and EPS.👇
💠 Settings and Preferences
💠 Tips and Tricks
Fundamentals drive price action during periods of fundamental transition
▪ Pre-revenue companies that are anticipated to start earning revenue
▪ Revenue-generating companies that are anticipated to flip from negative to positive EPS
▪ Revenue-generating companies that are anticipated to flip from negative cash flow to positive cash flow
▪ Major accelerations or decelerations in sales or EPS
Pristine Market Analysis DashboardThe Pristine Market Analysis indicator enables users to perform comprehensive top-down analysis of global risk assets in a fraction of the time! 🏆
Top-down analysis is important because the overall market environment has a significant impact on the success of individual trading setups.
💠 Market Analysis Insights
▪ Identify if money is flowing into equities, or equity alternatives like bonds,gold,and bitcoin
▪ Perform relative strength analysis of US vs International equities
▪ Identify rotation into risk-on or risk-off assets to determine overall market health
▪ Detect leading sectors to enable targeted stock screening, or to trade the ETFs themselves
💠 Market Analysis Metrics to Improve Your Situational Awareness!
▪ %Δ - 1-day percent change
▪ ATR Δ - 1-day percent change/ ATR %
▪ DCR - Daily closing range
▪ 52WR - Measures where a security is trading in relation to it’s 52wk high and 52wk low
▪ MAx - Measures how extended price is from a key moving average of your choosing in ATR% multiple terms
▪ ST ↑↓ (Short- Term Stage) - Measures the short-term trend using key moving averages of your choosing
▪ LT ↑↓ (Long-Term Stage) - Measures the long-term trend using key moving averages of your choosing
The indicator automatically sorts from greatest to least based on the %Δ column 👇
What is ATR?
The average true range (ATR) is a technical analysis indicator introduced by market technician J. Welles Wilder Jr. in his book New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems that measures security volatility by decomposing the entire range of an asset price for a time period.
Why do we use it?
Because converting price moves into ATR terms better contextualizes them relative to the asset's historical volatility!
Example: If the ATR is $2.50, it means the average price range each day is roughly $2.50.
We use an ATR length of 20 days in our calculation, and convert the 20D ATR into a 20D ATR %. The formula for ATR % is as follows:
ATR % = (ATR/Current Price) * 100
Why does MAx matter?
MAx measures the number of ATR % multiples a security is trading away from a key moving average.The default moving average length is 50 days.
MAx can be used to identify mean reversion trades . When a security trends strongly in one direction and moves significantly above or below its moving average, the price often tends to revert back toward the average.
Example, if the ATR % of the security is 5%, and the stock is trading 50% higher than the 50D SMA, the MAx would be 50%/5% = 10. A user might opt to take a countertrend trade when the MAx exceeds a predetermined level.
The MAx can also be useful when trading breakouts above or below the key moving average of your choosing. The lower the MAx, the tighter stop loss one can take if trading against that level.
Identifying an extreme price extension using MAx 👇
Price mean reverted immediately following the high MAx 👇
Why does 52WR matter?
Historical analysis conducted by market legends like William O’Neill and Mark Minervini indicates that stocks trading at or near 52wk highs tend to outperform over time, and vice versa for stocks trading close to 52wk lows. Avoiding stocks trading with a low 52WR metric can help traders avoid buying stocks in downtrends. Likewise, focusing on stocks trading with a high 52WR provides a technical edge.
💠 Stage Analysis Guide
Short-term and long-term stage analysis data is provided in the two rightmost columns of each table. The columns are labeled ST ⇅ and LT ⇅.
Why is Stage Analysis important? Popularized by Stan Weinstein, stage analysis is a trend following system that classifies assets into four stages based on price-trend analysis.
The problem? The interpretation of stage analysis is highly subjective. Based on the methodology provided in Stan Weinstein’s books, five different traders could look at the same chart, and come to different conclusions as to which stage the security is in!
We solved for this by creating our own methodology for classifying stocks into stages using moving averages. This indicator automates that analysis, and produces short-term and long-term trend signals based on user-defined key moving averages. You won’t find this in any textbook or course, because it’s completely unique to the Pristine trading methodology.
Our indicator calculates a short-term trend signal using two moving averages; a fast moving average, and a slow moving average. We default to the 10D EMA as the fast moving average & the 20D SMA as the slow moving average. A trend signal is generated based on where price is currently trading with respect to the fast moving average and the slow moving average. We use the signal to guide shorter-term swing trades.
In general, we want to take long trades in stocks with strengthening trends, and short trades in stocks with weakening trends. The user is free to change the moving averages based on their own short-term timeframe. Every trader is unique!
The same process is applied to calculate the long-term trend signal. We default to the 50D SMA as our fast moving average, and the 200D SMA as the slow moving average for the LT ⇅ signal calculation, but users can change these to fit their own unique trading style.
What is Stage 1?
Stage 1 identifies stocks that transitioned from downtrends, into bottoming bases.
Stage 1A - Bottom Signal: Marks the first day a security shows initial signs of recovery after a downtrend, with early indications of strength emerging.👇
Stage 1B - Bottoming Process: Identifies the ongoing phase where the security continues to stabilize and strengthen, confirming the base-building process after the initial signal.👇
Stage 1R - Failed Uptrend: Detects when a security that had entered an early uptrend loses momentum and slips back into a bottoming phase, signaling a failed breakout.👇
What is Stage 2?
Stage 2 identifies stocks that transitioned from bottoming bases to uptrends.
Stage 2A - Breakout: Marks the first day a security decisively breaks out, signaling the start of a new uptrend.👇
Stage 2B - Uptrend: Identifies when the security continues to trade in an established uptrend following the initial breakout, with momentum building but not yet showing full strength.👇
Stage 2C - Strong Uptrend: Detects when the uptrend strengthens further, with the security displaying clear signs of accelerating strength and buying pressure.👇
Stage 2R - Failed Breakdown: Detects when a security that had recently entered a corrective phase reverses course and reclaims its upward trajectory, moving back into an uptrend.👇
What is Stage 3?
Stage 3 identifies stocks that transitioned from uptrends to topping bases.
Stage 3A - Top Signal: Marks the first day a security shows initial signs of weakness after an uptrend, indicating the start of a potential topping phase.👇
Stage 3B - Topping Process: Identifies the period following the initial signal when the security continues to show signs of distribution and potential trend exhaustion.👇
Stage 3R - Failed Breakdown: Detects when a security that had entered a deeper corrective phase reverses upward, recovering enough strength to re-enter the topping phase.👇
What is Stage 4?
Stage 4 identifies stocks that transitioned from topping bases to downtrends.
Stage 4A - Breakdown: Marks the first day a security decisively breaks below key support levels, signaling the start of a new downward trend.👇
Stage 4B - Downtrend: Identifies when the security continues to trend lower following the initial breakdown, with sustained bearish momentum, though not yet fully entrenched.👇
Stage 4C - Strong Downtrend: Detects when the downtrend intensifies, with the security displaying clear signs of accelerating weakness and selling pressure.👇
Stage 4R - Failed Bottom: Detects when a security that had begun to show early signs of bottoming reverses course and resumes its decline, falling back into a downtrend.👇
Stage N/A - Recent IPO: Applies to stocks that recently IPO’ed and don’t have enough data to calculate all necessary moving averages.
💠 Historical Analysis
Users can leverage the Replay feature in TradingView to perform historical analysis and see how the overall configuration of global risk assets looked at key turning points in the market!
To perform historical analysis:
1) Show the chart if previously hidden (see Tips and Tricks).
2) Click the Replay button on the toolbar at the top of the chart.
3) Use the slider on the chart to select the bar to begin the analysis.
💠 Comprehensive Tooltips
Hover over header labels to get detailed information about the data and relevant calculations.
For stage analysis (Short Term and Long Term), the tooltips provide a complete key of all the relevant stages.
💠 Settings and Preferences
▪ Customize this script by setting preferred colors and thresholds.
▪ There are two tables that can be customized, one on each side of the chart. For each table you can configure the location and show/hide each table. You can also specify colors for header and row data, including your preferred text size.
▪ You can customize the moving averages that are used in stage analysis. Specify your preferred fast and slow moving averages for both short-term and long-term analysis.
▪ For the ATR extension, the default moving average is 50D SMA. You can choose the length and type (SMA or EMA) to align with your trading preferences.
💠 Tips and Tricks
▪ Hide/Show Chart:
To provide a clean backdrop for the tables, it can be helpful to hide the chart. Hover your mouse over the symbol information in the upper right. Select the "..." option and choose "Hide" option. Choose the option "Show" to see the chart details if hidden.
▪ Futures Outside Regular Trading Hours (RTH):
In order for the data in the “%Δ” column of the the “Equity Alternatives” table to populate correctly when outside of regular trading hours, you must have your chart displaying a futures contract. Examples: ES, NQ, RTY, GC.
FeraTrading Pattern Recognition Engine🧠 Overview:
The FeraTrading Pattern Recognition Engine (PRE) is a lightweight, adaptive model that transforms raw chart data into pattern signatures and tracks their performance in real time.
Instead of relying on fixed formulas or lagging indicators, it learns from what has worked before on your chart—highlighting bull and bear patterns that have a track record of hitting a profit target within a specified number of bars.
This system is ideal for traders who want evolving entries that reflect live market behavior without repainting or hardcoding.
⚙️ How It Works:
🔹 Pattern Encoding:
The script monitors recent price action and builds a unique pattern ID using selected features:
Up to 10 feature toggles (detailed below)
Each feature is converted into a categorical value
The combination of features over a lookback window defines the pattern signature
Bullish and bearish patterns are tracked separately.
🔹 Pattern Evaluation & Learning:
As each pattern appears:
A unique ID is generated.
The script checks if price reaches the required % move within N bars.
If successful, it logs the pattern as a win.
Accuracy and sample size are updated.
Only patterns with 10+ past samples are eligible for live signals.
🔹 Signal Generation:
When today's pattern matches one of the top historically successful bull or bear patterns:
🟢 Green Triangle (below bar) = Bullish pattern match
🔴 Red Triangle (above bar) = Bearish pattern match
Signals are confirmed one bar after pattern completion to avoid repainting.
🧶 Feature Toggles:
Each of the following can be turned on/off to customize the pattern logic:
Candle Type: Bullish, Bearish, or Doji classification.
RSI > 50: Adds momentum context.
Higher High / Lower Low: Tracks continuation or breakout structure.
Volume Spike: Flags volume > 1.5x 20-bar average.
Relative Range: True if bar range > 5-bar average.
Body-to-Range > 60%: Filters for full-bodied candles.
Wick Dominance: Flags wicky/exhaustion candles.
EMA Alignment: Checks if price is in directional alignment with fast/slow EMAs.
Gap From Prior Close: Flags price gaps from previous close.
RSI Slope: Captures trend acceleration or deceleration in RSI.
Tip: 2–3 features = broader learning. 5+ features = more selective precision.
🤷 Inputs & Customization:
Target Move %: How far price must move to qualify as a win.
Lookback Bars: How far back to check for pattern definition.
Bars Forward: How much time the pattern has to hit target.
Signal Toggles: Enable/disable bullish and bearish signals.
🎯 What Makes It Original:
Learns from live data—no static formulas or preset patterns.
Signals only appear if historical accuracy + sample size threshold is met.
One-bar delayed confirmation = no repainting.
Configurable features allow full user control of complexity.
Works on any asset, any timeframe.
✅ How to Use:
Add to any intraday chart (1m–30m ideal).
Start with 2–3 features toggled on.
Let the script learn as data comes in.
Watch for triangle signals (green = bullish, red = bearish).
Combine with other tools for added confluence.
Over time, the engine becomes more selective and accurate.
💎 Why It’s Worth Paying For
The PRE isn’t a repackaged signal script—it’s a real-time learning engine. It provides:
A dynamic model that evolves with your chart
Customizable pattern encoding across 10 behavioral features
Verified, statistically accurate signals
Confirmed, non-repainting outputs
Applicability to any asset or market condition
This isn't theoretical—it's performance-driven signal logic trained by your own chart.
✅ Compliance & Originality This tool was developed from scratch by FeraTrading using fully original logic. No open-source logic or reused libraries were used. All detection methods, signal logic, and pattern encodings are unique and built with compliance in mind. This is absolutely an original script, one we think may be unique to TradingView completely and never seen before.
⚠️ Risk Disclaimer & Access Policy
This script is a historical pattern tracker—not a forecasting engine. No prediction of future price behavior is implied or guaranteed.
Use with proper risk management and trade discretion.
To protect the core pattern engine, this script is invite-only and closed-source. Opening the source would allow cloning of its real-time pattern encoding and filtering logic.
Restricting access ensures:
Proper use by qualified traders
Prevention of misuse or unauthorized distribution
Protection of the tool’s proprietary logic and long-term value
The PRE is designed to be part of a professional workflow, and its access model reflects that goal.
FastMetrixLibrary "FastMetrix"
This is a library I've been tweaking and working with for a while and I find it useful to get valuable technical analysis metrics faster (why its called FastMetrix). A lot of is personal to my trading style, so sorry if it does not have everything you want. The way I get my variables from library to script is by copying the return function into my new script.
TODO: Volatility and short term price analysis functions
slope(source, smoothing)
Parameters:
source (float)
smoothing (int)
integral(topfunction, bottomfunction, start, end)
Parameters:
topfunction (float)
bottomfunction (float)
start (int)
end (int)
deviation(x, y)
Parameters:
x (float)
y (float)
getema(len)
TODO: return important exponential long term moving averages and derivatives/variables
Parameters:
len (simple int)
getsma(len)
TODO: return requested sma
Parameters:
len (int)
kc(mult, len)
TODO: Return Keltner Channels variables and calculations
Parameters:
mult (simple float)
len (simple int)
bollinger(len, mult)
TODO: returns bollinger bands with optimal settings
Parameters:
len (int)
mult (simple float)
volatility(atrlen, smoothing)
TODO: Returns volatility indicators based on atr
Parameters:
atrlen (simple int)
smoothing (int)
premarketfib()
countinday(xcondition)
Parameters:
xcondition (bool)
countinsession(condition, n)
Parameters:
condition (bool)
n (int)
Open Interest Footprint IQ [TradingIQ]Hello Traders!
Th e Open Interest Footprint IQ indicator is an advanced visualization tool designed for cryptocurrency markets. It provides a granular, real-time breakdown of open interest changes across different price levels, allowing traders to see how aggressive market participation is distributed within each bar.
Unlike standard footprint charts that rely solely on volume, this indicator offers unique insights by focusing on the interaction between price action and changes in open interest (OI) — a leading metric often used to infer trader intent and positioning.
How it works
The Open Interest Footprint IQ processes lower timeframe price and open interest data to build a footprint-style chart that shows how traders are positioning themselves within each candle.
Here’s a breakdown of the process:
1. Granular OI & Price Sampling
The script retrieves lower-timeframe data (1-minute, 1-second, or 1-tick, based on your setting).
For each candle, it captures:
High and low prices
Price change direction
Change in open interest (OI)
2. Classifying Trader Behavior
For each lower-timeframe segment, the indicator determines the type of positioning occurring based on price movement and OI change:
If price is moving up and open interest is increasing, it suggests that long positions are being opened. This is considered a "Longs Opening" event, labeled as UU (Up/Up).
If price is moving up but open interest is decreasing, it indicates that short positions are being closed. This is referred to as UD (Up/Down), or "Shorts Closing."
If price is moving down and open interest is increasing, it signals that short positions are being opened. This is known as DU (Down/Up), or "Shorts Opening."
If price is moving down while open interest is also decreasing, it means that long positions are being closed. This is labeled as DD (Down/Down), or "Longs Closing."
These are stored in separate arrays and displayed at specific price levels.
It is particularly useful for identifying:
Where longs or shorts are opening/closing positions
Stacked imbalances (indicative of potential absorption or exhaustion)
Value area zones and POC (Point of Control) based on OI, not volume
This footprint runs on your choice of sub-bar granularity and is ideal for high-frequency trading, scalping, and entries based on order flow dynamics.
Key Features
Footprint Visualization
At each price level within a candle:
Long/short opening and closing behavior is broken down.
Delta (net open interest change) is displayed both numerically and color-coded.
Optional gradient coloring shows intensity and type of flow (longs/shorts opened/closed).
Cumulative or per-bar reset modes allow you to track OI evolution over time.
The image above explains the information that each Footprint box shows across a candlestick!
Each footprint box shows:
OI Delta
OI Delta %
Longs Opened (LO)
Longs Closed (LC)
Shorts Opened (SO)
Shorts Closed (SC)
The image above explains the color-coding feature of the indicator.
Boxes are color coded to show which position action
dominated at the price area.
For this example:
Green boxes = Long positions being opened dominated
Purple boxes = Long positions being closed dominated
Red boxes = Short positions being opened dominated
Yellow boxes = Short positions being closed dominated
All colors are customizable.
Additionally, for traders who are only interested in whether OI increased/decreased, a "two-color" option is available in the settings.
For the two-color option, footprint boxes can be one of two colors. Showing whether OI increased or decreased at the level.
Cumulative Levels
Open Interest Footprint IQ contains a "Cumulative Levels" feature that tracks/stores open interest change at tick levels over time, rather than resetting per bar.
With the "Cumulative Levels" feature enabled, traders can see open interest changes persist across all candlesticks. This feature is useful for determining whether longs opening, longs closing, shorts opening, or shorts closing are dominating at particular price areas over time rather than on a single bar.
A useful feature to see if shorts/longs are favoring certain price throughout the day, week, month, etc.
Input Settings Explained
Granularity (Dropdown: Granularity)
Options: 1-Minute, 1-Second, 1-Tick
Determines how finely the script samples the lower timeframe data to construct the footprint.
For precision:
1-Tick = Highest accuracy, but more resource-intensive.
1-Second/1-Minute = Suitable for broader or more zoomed-out analysis.
Tick Level Distance (Tick Level Distance (0 = Auto))
Defines the vertical spacing between levels in the footprint chart.
If 0, the script uses an automatic calculation based on ATR to adapt to volatility.
Set a manual value (e.g., 5) to control the height granularity of each level in ticks.
Cumulative Levels (Toggle)
If enabled, the footprint builds cumulatively over time, rather than resetting per candle.
Use case: Visualize ongoing buildup of OI activity across a session or day.
Cumulative Levels Reset TF (Timeframe)
Sets the reset interval for the cumulative view (e.g., reset daily, hourly, etc.)
Works only when Cumulative Levels is enabled.
Delta Box Display Settings
Show Delta Percentage
Toggles the display of the percentage change in OI across the footprint level.
Helpful to gauge how aggressive positioning is relative to total OI at that level.
Show Longs/Shorts (Opened/Closed)
Show Longs Opened: Displays OI increase in up candles (price ↑, OI ↑).
Show Longs Closed: Displays OI decrease in down candles (price ↓, OI ↓).
Show Shorts Opened: OI increase in down candles (price ↓, OI ↑).
Show Shorts Closed: OI decrease in up candles (price ↑, OI ↓).
These behaviors are color-coded to give traders instant context:
Blue-green for longs opening.
Purple for longs closing.
Red for shorts opening.
Yellow for shorts closing.
Value Area & POC
Value Area % (Value Area %)
Controls how much cumulative open interest is used to define the value area.
Example: 70% means the smallest range of prices that contains 70% of total OI in that bar will be marked.
Helps identify zones of interest, support/resistance, and institutional levels.
The image above explains how to identify the VAH/VAL/POC shown by Open Interest Footprint IQ.
VAH = Upper 🞂
POC = ●
VAL = Lower 🞂
Imbalances
Imbalance Percentage
Defines the minimum delta % required at a level to be marked as an imbalance.
If the net open interest change at a level exceeds this threshold, a visual marker appears.
Stacked Imbalance Count
If the number of consecutive imbalance levels meets this count, a “Stacked Imbalance” alert will trigger.
This can signal aggressive buying or selling pressure, potential breakout zones, or institutional absorption.
Color Settings
Longs Opened / Closed, Shorts Opened / Closed
Customize the color palette for each order flow behavior.
These colors appear in the background gradient of the footprint boxes.
Up/Down Only Mode
Toggle to override all behavior-based colors with a single Up Color and Down Color.
Useful if you prefer a simple bull/bear view.
Up Color / Down Color
If "Up/Down Only" is enabled, these two colors are used to represent all net positive or negative deltas.
Special Notes
Crypto only: This script works only with crypto tickers on TradingView.
For other assets (stocks, futures), a warning message will appear instead.
OI data must be available from the exchange (many perpetual pairs support this).
If the footprint is too small or invisible, increase your tick level spacing in the settings.
Alerts
When a stacked imbalance is detected, an alert is fired ("Stacked Imbalance").
This feature is useful for automated systems, bots, or simply staying informed of potential trade setups.
And that's all for now!
If you have any questions or features you'd like to see feel free to share them in the comments below!
Thank you traders!
Z Score Overlay [BigBeluga]🔵 OVERVIEW
A clean and effective Z-score overlay that visually tracks how far price deviates from its moving average. By standardizing price movements, this tool helps traders understand when price is statistically extended or compressed—up to ±4 standard deviations. The built-in scale and real-time bin markers offer immediate context on where price stands in relation to its recent mean.
🔵 CONCEPTS
Z Score Calculation:
Z = (Close − SMA) ÷ Standard Deviation
This formula shows how many standard deviations the current price is from its mean.
Statistical Extremes:
• Z > +2 or Z < −2 suggests statistically significant deviation.
• Z near 0 implies price is close to its average.
Standardization of Price Behavior: Makes it easier to compare volatility and overextension across timeframes and assets.
🔵 FEATURES
Colored Z Line: Gradient coloring based on how far price deviates—
• Red = oversold (−4),
• Green = overbought (+4),
• Yellow = neutral (~0).
Deviation Scale Bar: A vertical scale from −4 to +4 standard deviations plotted to the right of price.
Active Z Score Bin: Highlights the current Z-score bin with a “◀” arrow
Context Labels: Clear numeric labels for each Z-level from −4 to +4 along the side.
Live Value Display: Shows exact Z-score on the active level.
Non-intrusive Overlay: Can be applied directly to price chart without changing scaling behavior.
🔵 HOW TO USE
Identify overbought/oversold areas based on +2 / −2 thresholds.
Spot potential mean reversion trades when Z returns from extreme levels.
Confirm strong trends when price remains consistently outside ±2.
Use in multi-timeframe setups to compare strength across contexts.
🔵 CONCLUSION
Z Score Overlay transforms raw price action into a normalized statistical view, allowing traders to easily assess deviation strength and mean-reversion potential. The intuitive scale and color-coded display make it ideal for traders seeking objective, volatility-aware entries and exits.
Daily Trading Barometer (DTB) with DJIA OverlayThe "Daily Trading Barometer (DTB) with DJIA Overlay" is a custom technical indicator designed to identify intermediate-term overbought and oversold conditions in the stock market, inspired by Edson Gould's original DTB methodology. This indicator combines three key components:
A 7-day advance-decline oscillator, a 20-day volume oscillator, and a 28-day DJIA price ratio, normalized into a composite index scaled around 110–135. Values below 110 signal potential oversold conditions, while values above 135 indicate overbought territory, aiding in timing market reversals.
The overlay of a normalized DJIA plot allows for visual correlation with the broader market trend. Use this tool to anticipate turning points in oscillating markets, though it’s best combined with other indicators for confirmation. Ideal for traders seeking probabilistic insights into bear or bull market transitions.
How to use -
If the DTB line (blue) and normalized DJIA (orange) are under the green dashed line, high probability for a long and reversal.
Use with the symbol SPX/QQQ
Dow Jones Industrial Average - DJIA
Gap % Distribution Table (2% Bins)Description
This indicator displays a Gap % Distribution Table categorized in 2% bins ranging from `< -20%` to `> +20%`. It calculates the gap between today’s open and the previous day’s close, and groups occurrences into defined bins. The table includes:
Gap range, count, and percentage for each bin
A total row summarizing all entries
Customizable appearance including:
Font color, cell background fill (with transparency), and table border color
Column headers and full outer border
Date filtering using selectable start and end dates
Position control for placing the table on the chart area
Ideal for analyzing the historical behavior of opening gaps for any instrument.
Order Flow Delta Matrix Pro @MaxMaserati 2.0Order Flow Delta Matrix Pro @MaxMaserati 2.0
Institutional-level order flow analysis
This advanced indicator displays institutional order flow data in an easy-to-read time-series matrix, revealing hidden buying and selling pressure that drives price movements.
KEY FEATURES
🔥 REAL-TIME DELTA TRACKING
- Delta Row: Net buying vs selling pressure per time period
- Live Countdown: Shows exact time remaining until next candle close
- Extended historical view for pattern recognition
CUSTOMIZABLE ROWS (Toggle On/Off)
- Max Delta: Highest buying pressure spikes (accumulation zones)
- *Min Delta: Lowest selling pressure spikes (distribution zones)
- Cumulative Delta: Running total showing institutional bias
- Delta/Volume Ratio: Quality of directional flow vs total volume
- Session Delta: Net flow since session start
- Volume: Raw transaction volume with high-volume highlighting
ADVANCED CONTROLS
- Time Direction: View oldest→newest OR newest→oldest
- 12/24 Hour Format: Choose your preferred time display
- Current Time Highlighting: Blue highlight on active time period
- Full Color Customization: Adapt to any chart theme
- Smart Sensitivity: Low/Normal/High modes for different markets
🎓 HOW TO USE IT
🟢 BULLISH SIGNALS
- Positive Delta Spikes: Look for green +500K+ delta values
- Rising Cumulative Delta: Upward trending cumulative line = institutional accumulation
- High Max Delta: Strong buying pressure at support levels
🔴 BEARISH SIGNALS
- Negative Delta Spikes: Look for red -500K+ delta values
- Falling Cumulative Delta: Downward trending cumulative = institutional distribution
- High Min Delta: Strong selling pressure at resistance levels
PRO TECHNIQUES
-Divergence Analysis: Price goes up but cumulative delta goes down = potential reversal
- Volume Confirmation: High delta + high volume = strong institutional conviction
- Session Bias: Positive session delta = bullish bias, negative = bearish bias
BEST USED FOR
- Scalping: 1-5 minute timeframes for quick institutional flow detection
- Day Trading: 15-60 minute timeframes for session bias and reversal spots
- Volume Profile: Combine with volume profile for complete order flow picture
- Futures Trading: Excellent for ES, NQ, crude oil, forex majors
PRO TIPS
1. Watch for Delta Divergences - Most reliable reversal signal
2. High Volume + High Delta = Institutional activity
3. Session Delta Direction = Overall market bias
4. Blue highlighted column= Current live data
5. Use with Support/Resistance for entry/exit timing
IMPORTANT NOTES
- Works on ALL timeframes and ALL markets
- Real-time updates for live trading decisions
- Historical data available for backtesting strategies
- No repainting - all signals are final and reliable
The matrix format makes complex data easy to interpret, giving a significant edge in understanding market dynamics and smart money order timing.
PRICE MOVEMENT STATISTICS# Price Movement Statistics - Advanced Pattern Recognition System
## Foundation
Price Movement Statistics (PMS) represents a fundamentally different approach to market analysis compared to traditional indicators like RSI, Moving Averages, or Bollinger Bands. While most indicators rely on mathematical transformations of price data, PMS implements a **machine learning-inspired nearest-neighbor algorithm** that compares current market conditions against thousands of historical patterns across multiple correlated instruments.
### What Makes This Original
Unlike standard indicators that follow predetermined formulas, PMS:
1. **Multi-Symbol Pattern Database**: Analyzes up to 4 different but correlated symbols simultaneously, creating a massive historical pattern database that single-symbol indicators cannot access
2. **8-Feature Normalized Vector Comparison**: Converts each candlestick into 8 numerical features (body-to-range ratios, wick proportions, relative positioning, momentum characteristics) and uses Manhattan distance calculations to find statistically similar historical situations
3. **Forward-Looking Statistical Validation**: Instead of just identifying patterns, PMS tracks what actually happened 1-5 bars after similar patterns occurred historically, providing probabilistic forecasts with sample sizes and confidence levels
4. **Adaptive Similarity Scoring**: Uses real-time distance calculations between current conditions and historical patterns, allowing traders to see exactly how many similar cases existed and their outcomes
## Technical Methodology Explained
### Pattern Recognition Engine
The core algorithm transforms each market condition into a normalized 8-dimensional vector containing:
- Short vs. long-term range ratios computed using proprietary envelope calculations
- Price position relative to recent ranges using adaptive scaling methods
- Volatility comparisons across multiple timeframes with logarithmic return analysis
- Momentum divergences between short and long-term linear regression slopes
- Volume behavior patterns using statistical deviation scoring
- Candlestick structure metrics including ATR ratios and boundary touch frequencies
### Advanced Code Architecture
**Multi-Symbol Data Pipeline**: The system employs Pine Script's `request.security()` function in a sophisticated loop structure that simultaneously processes up to 4 different instruments. Each symbol contributes its own 8-feature vector, creating a 32-dimensional search space that dramatically expands pattern recognition capabilities beyond single-symbol analysis.
**Adaptive Normalization Engine**: Rather than using simple percentage changes, the code implements a custom `scale_adaptive()` function that ranks current values against rolling historical distributions. This percentile-based approach ensures pattern recognition remains consistent across different market volatility regimes and price levels.
**Distance Matrix Calculations**: The matching algorithm runs nested loops through thousands of historical bars, computing Manhattan distances for each potential match. The code optimizes performance by using vectorized operations and early termination conditions when similarity thresholds aren't met.
**Forward-Looking Analysis Pipeline**: Once matches are identified, the system implements a sophisticated outcome tracking mechanism that categorizes future price movements, volume behaviors, and candle characteristics. This requires careful index management to avoid look-ahead bias while maintaining real-time calculation efficiency.
### Similarity Matching Process
1. **Data Normalization**: Features are processed through custom percentile ranking against 500-bar rolling windows
2. **Distance Calculation**: Optimized Manhattan distance computation across 8-dimensional vectors with early exit conditions
3. **Multi-Symbol Aggregation**: Matches from different symbols are weighted and combined using statistical averaging techniques
4. **Threshold Filtering**: Dynamic similarity boundaries that adapt to market volatility conditions
5. **Outcome Analysis**: Forward-looking statistical compilation with bias tracking and magnitude calculations
### Statistical Output Generation
The system's proprietary aggregation engine provides:
- **Win/Loss Ratios**: Calculated from actual forward-price movements with statistical weighting
- **Sample Sizes**: Match counts across all symbols with confidence scoring algorithms
- **Average Magnitude**: Expected move calculations using historical outcome distributions
- **Volume Context**: Pattern-specific volume analysis using normalized scoring methods
- **Directional Bias**: Multi-timeframe probability calculations with cross-symbol validation
## Why This Approach is Worth the Investment
### Beyond Traditional Indicators
Standard indicators like RSI or MACD give you oversold/overbought signals or momentum divergences, but they don't answer the crucial question: "What happened historically when similar conditions occurred?" PMS bridges this gap by providing:
1. **Quantified Probabilities**: Instead of subjective pattern recognition, you get actual win rates and sample sizes
2. **Cross-Market Validation**: Patterns confirmed across multiple correlated instruments carry more statistical weight
3. **Sample Size Transparency**: You can see whether a signal is based on 5 occurrences or 500, adjusting confidence accordingly
4. **Magnitude Expectations**: Historical data shows not just direction, but expected move sizes
### Practical Trading Applications
**Entry Timing**: When PMS shows >70% historical win rate with 100+ matches, you have statistical evidence supporting your entry rather than relying on visual pattern interpretation.
**Risk Management**: Historical magnitude data helps size positions appropriately based on expected adverse moves in similar past situations.
**Confirmation**: Multi-symbol analysis provides cross-market confirmation that single-symbol indicators cannot offer.
## How to Use the System
### Signal Interpretation
- **Bias Ratio >1.5**: Historically bullish (more winning long trades than losing ones)
- **Bias Ratio <0.67**: Historically bearish (more winning short trades than losing ones)
- **Sample Size >50**: High confidence (sufficient historical data)
- **Sample Size <20**: Low confidence (limited historical precedent)
### Setup Optimization
- **Symbol Selection**: Choose 3-4 correlated instruments (e.g., stock + sector ETF + index, or currency pairs with base currency relationships)
- **Timeframe Coordination**: Use higher timeframes for broader context, lower timeframes for precise entry timing
- **Threshold Adjustment**: Lower similarity thresholds find more specific matches; higher thresholds increase sample sizes
## Technical Requirements and Limitations
**Data Depth**: Requires minimum 1000 bars per symbol for meaningful analysis; 3000+ bars recommended for optimal performance.
**Computational Load**: Real-time pattern matching across multiple symbols and thousands of historical bars requires TradingView's advanced Pine Script capabilities.
**Market Applicability**: Most effective in liquid markets with sufficient historical data; less reliable in newly listed instruments or during unprecedented market conditions.
## Important Disclaimers
This system identifies historical statistical patterns under similar conditions—it does not predict future movements with certainty. Effectiveness depends on intelligent symbol selection, appropriate timeframe usage, and integration with proper risk management. Past performance patterns do not guarantee future results, and all trading involves substantial risk of loss.
The algorithm's sophistication lies not in complex mathematical formulas, but in its ability to efficiently search through massive historical datasets and quantify pattern outcomes—something impossible to do manually and unavailable in standard technical indicators.
SIP Evaluator and Screener [Trendoscope®]The SIP Evaluator and Screener is a Pine Script indicator designed for TradingView to calculate and visualize Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) returns across multiple investment instruments. It is tailored for use in TradingView's screener, enabling users to evaluate SIP performance for various assets efficiently.
🎲 How SIP Works
A Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) is an investment strategy where a fixed amount is invested at regular intervals (e.g., monthly or weekly) into a financial instrument, such as stocks, mutual funds, or ETFs. The goal is to build wealth over time by leveraging the power of compounding and mitigating the impact of market volatility through disciplined, consistent investing. Here’s a breakdown of how SIPs function:
Regular Investments : In an SIP, an investor commits to investing a fixed sum at predefined intervals, regardless of market conditions. This consistency helps inculcate a habit of saving and investing.
Cost Averaging : By investing a fixed amount regularly, investors purchase more units when prices are low and fewer units when prices are high. This approach, known as dollar-cost averaging, reduces the average cost per unit over time and mitigates the risk of investing a large amount at a peak price.
Compounding Benefits : Returns generated from the invested amount (e.g., capital gains or dividends) are reinvested, leading to exponential growth over the long term. The longer the investment horizon, the greater the potential for compounding to amplify returns.
Dividend Reinvestment : In some SIPs, dividends received from the underlying asset can be reinvested to purchase additional units, further enhancing returns. Taxes on dividends, if applicable, may reduce the reinvested amount.
Flexibility and Accessibility : SIPs allow investors to start with small amounts, making them accessible to a wide range of individuals. They also offer flexibility in terms of investment frequency and the ability to adjust or pause contributions.
In the context of the SIP Evaluator and Screener , the script simulates an SIP by calculating the number of units purchased with each fixed investment, factoring in commissions, dividends, taxes and the chosen price reference (e.g., open, close, or average prices). It tracks the cumulative investment, equity value, and dividends over time, providing a clear picture of how an SIP would perform for a given instrument. This helps users understand the impact of regular investing and make informed decisions when comparing different assets in TradingView’s screener. It offers insights into key metrics such as total invested amount, dividends received, equity value, and the number of installments, making it a valuable resource for investors and traders interested in understanding long-term investment outcomes.
🎲 Key Features
Customizable Investment Parameters: Users can define the recurring investment amount, price reference (e.g., open, close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4), and whether fractional quantities are allowed.
Commission Handling: Supports both fixed and percentage-based commission types, adjusting calculations accordingly.
Dividend Reinvestment: Optionally reinvests dividends after a user-specified period, with the ability to apply tax on dividends.
Time-Bound Analysis: Allows users to set a start year for the analysis, enabling historical performance evaluation.
Flexible Dividend Periods: Dividends can be evaluated based on bars, days, weeks, or months.
Visual Outputs: Plots key metrics like total invested amount, dividends, equity value, and remainder, with customizable display options for clarity in the data window and chart.
🎲 Using the script as an indicator on Tradingview Supercharts
In order to use the indicator on charts, do the following.
Load the instrument of your choice - Preferably a stable stocks, ETFs.
Chose monthly timeframe as lower timeframes are insignificant in this type of investment strategy
Load the indicator SIP Evaluator and Screener and set the input parameters as per your preference.
Indicator plots, investment value, dividends and equity on the chart.
🎲 Visualizations
Installments : Displays the number of SIP installments (gray line, visible in the data window).
Invested Amount : Shows the cumulative amount invested, excluding reinvested dividends (blue area plot).
Dividends : Tracks total dividends received (green area plot).
Equity : Represents the current market value of the investment based on the closing price (purple area plot).
Remainder : Indicates any uninvested cash after each installment (gray line, visible in the data window).
🎲 Deep dive into the settings
The SIP Evaluator and Screener offers a range of customizable settings to tailor the Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) simulation to your preferences. Below is an explanation of each setting, its purpose, and how it impacts the analysis:
🎯 Duration
Start Year (Default: 2020) : Specifies the year from which the SIP calculations begin. When Start Year is enabled via the timebound option, the script only considers data from the specified year onward. This is useful for analyzing historical SIP performance over a defined period. If disabled, the script uses all available data.
Timebound (Default: False) : A toggle to enable or disable the Start Year restriction. When set to False, the SIP calculation starts from the earliest available data for the instrument.
🎯 Investment
Recurring Investment (Default: 1000.0) : The fixed amount invested in each SIP installment (e.g., $1000 per period). This represents the regular contribution to the SIP and directly influences the total invested amount and quantity purchased.
Allow Fractional Qty (Default: True) : When enabled, the script allows the purchase of fractional units (e.g., 2.35 shares). If disabled, only whole units are purchased (e.g., 2 shares), with any remaining funds carried forward as Remainder. This setting impacts the precision of investment allocation.
Price Reference (Default: OPEN): Determines the price used for purchasing units in each SIP installment. Options include:
OPEN : Uses the opening price of the bar.
CLOSE : Uses the closing price of the bar.
HL2 : Uses the average of the high and low prices.
HLC3 : Uses the average of the high, low, and close prices.
OHLC4 : Uses the average of the open, high, low, and close prices. This setting affects the cost basis of each purchase and, consequently, the total quantity and equity value.
🎯 Commission
Commission (Default: 3) : The commission charged per SIP installment, expressed as either a fixed amount (e.g., $3) or a percentage (e.g., 3% of the investment). This reduces the amount available for purchasing units.
Commission Type (Default: Fixed) : Specifies how the commission is calculated:
Fixed ($) : A flat fee is deducted per installment (e.g., $3).
Percentage (%) : A percentage of the investment amount is deducted as commission (e.g., 3% of $1000 = $30). This setting affects the net amount invested and the overall cost of the SIP.
🎯 Dividends
Apply Tax On Dividends (Default: False) : When enabled, a tax is applied to dividends before they are reinvested or recorded. The tax rate is set via the Dividend Tax setting.
Dividend Tax (Default: 47) : The percentage of tax deducted from dividends if Apply Tax On Dividends is enabled (e.g., 47% tax reduces a $100 dividend to $53). This reduces the amount available for reinvestment or accumulation.
Reinvest Dividends After (Default: True, 2) : When enabled, dividends received are reinvested to purchase additional units after a specified period (e.g., 2 units of time, defined by Dividends Availability). If disabled, dividends are tracked but not reinvested. Reinvestment increases the total quantity and equity over time.
Dividends Availability (Default: Bars) : Defines the time unit for evaluating when dividends are available for reinvestment. Options include:
Bars : Based on the number of chart bars.
Weeks : Based on weeks.
Months : Based on months (approximated as 30.5 days). This setting determines the timing of dividend reinvestment relative to the Reinvest Dividends After period.
🎯 How Settings Interact
These settings work together to simulate a realistic SIP. For example, a $1000 recurring investment with a 3% commission and fractional quantities enabled will calculate the number of units purchased at the chosen price reference after deducting the commission. If dividends are reinvested after 2 months with a 47% tax, the script fetches dividend data, applies the tax, and adds the net dividend to the investment amount for that period. The Start Year and Timebound settings ensure the analysis aligns with the desired timeframe, while the Dividends Availability setting fine-tunes dividend reinvestment timing.
By adjusting these settings, users can model different SIP scenarios, compare performance across instruments in TradingView’s screener, and gain insights into how commissions, dividends, and price references impact long-term returns.
🎲 Using the script with Pine Screener
The main purpose of developing this script is to use it with Tradingview Pine Screener so that multiple ETFs/Funds can be compared.
In order to use this as a screener, the following things needs to be done.
Add SIP Evaluator and Screener to your favourites (Required for it to be added in pine screener)
Create a watch list containing required instruments to compare
Open pine screener from Tradingview main menu Products -> Screeners -> Pine or simply load the URL - www.tradingview.com
Select the watchlist created from Watchlist dropdown.
Chose the SIP Evaluator and Screener from the "Choose Indicator" dropdown
Set timeframe to 1 month and update settings as required.
Press scan to display collected data on the screener.
🎲 Use Case
This indicator is ideal for educational purposes, allowing users to experiment with SIP strategies across different instruments. It can be applied in TradingView’s screener to compare SIP performance for stocks, ETFs, or other assets, helping users understand how factors like commissions, dividends, and price references impact returns over time.
Rapid Ultimat Trading ZonesCRITICAL: The "Set It and Forget It" Timezone System
Have you ever had your session indicators become misaligned when London or New York changes clocks for Daylight Saving Time (DST)? This is a universal problem for traders, forcing you to manually adjust settings twice a year to avoid missing key trading windows. It’s confusing, frustrating, and can lead to costly mistakes.
The Rapid Ultimate Trading Zones indicator permanently solves this issue. We have engineered it with a powerful 'Set It and Forget It' timezone system that provides unmatched accuracy and peace of mind.
How It Works : Automatic DST Adjustment
Each Killzone and each Opening Range in this indicator has its own independent timezone setting. You simply match each session to its real-world location one time. From that moment on, the indicator handles everything automatically.
For the London Session: Set its timezone to Europe/London. The indicator will automatically handle the switch between GMT (winter) and BST (summer). You do not need to do anything.
For the New York Session: Set its timezone to America/New_York. The indicator will automatically handle the switch between EST (winter) and EDT (summer).
Once configured, your session timings will remain perfectly accurate forever. No more manual adjustments. No more confusion. Just precise, reliable session data, day in and day out.
Here is the complete user guide with the newly emphasized section integrated for your convenience.
Rapid Ultimate Trading Zones - User Guide
Created by Rapid Lodgements
1. Introduction: Your All-in-One Session & Levels Tool
Tired of manually marking out trading sessions and key levels every day? The Rapid Ultimate Trading Zones indicator is a comprehensive, institutional-grade tool designed to automatically visualize the most important price and time levels on your chart.
From London Killzone highs and lows to multiple, flexible Opening Ranges, this indicator provides a clean, automated, and fully customizable solution to help you focus on what matters most: your trading.
2. CRITICAL: The "Set It and Forget It" Timezone System
Have you ever had your session indicators become misaligned when London or New York changes clocks for Daylight Saving Time (DST)? This is a universal problem for traders, forcing you to manually adjust settings twice a year to avoid missing key trading windows. It’s confusing, frustrating, and can lead to costly mistakes.
The Rapid Ultimate Trading Zones indicator permanently solves this issue. We have engineered it with a powerful 'Set It and Forget It' timezone system that provides unmatched accuracy and peace of mind.
How It Works: Automatic DST Adjustment
Each Killzone and each Opening Range in this indicator has its own independent timezone setting. You simply match each session to its real-world location one time. From that moment on, the indicator handles everything automatically.
For the London Session: Set its timezone to Europe/London. The indicator will automatically handle the switch between GMT (winter) and BST (summer). You do not need to do anything.
For the New York Session: Set its timezone to America/New_York. The indicator will automatically handle the switch between EST (winter) and EDT (summer).
Once configured, your session timings will remain perfectly accurate forever. No more manual adjustments. No more confusion. Just precise, reliable session data, day in and day out.
3. Feature Breakdown
Killzones & Killzone Pivots
This is the core feature of the indicator. Killzones are specific, high-volume time windows for the major market sessions. The indicator will automatically draw a box around these times and mark their high and low price pivots.
Killzones Settings:
Enable/disable each session (Asia, London, NY AM, NY Lunch, NY PM) with the checkbox.
Customize the Session start and end times.
Crucially, set the Timezone for each session to its local market time.
Killzone Pivots Settings:
Labels & Colors: Customize the text label and color for each Killzone's high and low pivot lines. The color you choose here controls the color for the pivots and the session box.
Extend Pivots: Choose if the pivot lines should disappear after being touched (Until Mitigated) or continue to extend.
Alert Broken Pivots: Enable this to receive a TradingView alert whenever price breaks a recent Killzone high or low.
Show Midpoints: Optionally display the 50% level between a Killzone's high and low.
Flexible Opening Ranges (Up to 3 Instances)
This powerful feature allows you to track the initial price range of up to three different sessions independently.
Use Cases:
Track the first 15 minutes of the New York session with Opening Range 1.
Track the first hour of the London session with Opening Range 2.
Track the Asian session range with Opening Range 3.
Configuration (for each OR):
Enable OR: Toggle the specific range on or off.
Session Start-End: Defines the main session you are analyzing.
Timezone: Set the correct local timezone for the session you are tracking.
Range Minutes: The most important setting. Defines how long the opening range lasts (e.g., 15 for the first 15 minutes).
Extend OR lines right: Extends the high and low lines into the future.
Custom Lines & Timestamps
For marking your own specific levels and times that are independent of the Killzones.
Dedicated Timezone : This entire section is controlled by one separate timezone menu, which is set to GMT+0 by default. All times you enter here will be interpreted based on this setting.
Horizontal Lines (H-Line): Draws a horizontal line at the open price of the candle that occurs at your specified time. You get two independent lines.
Vertical Lines (V-Line): Draws a vertical line at the time you specify. You get two independent lines.
Daily, Weekly, Monthly (DWM) Levels
For a higher-timeframe perspective, this feature automatically plots:
Daily, Weekly, and Monthly Opening Prices.
Previous Day, Week, and Month Highs and Lows.
Vertical line separators for the start of each Day, Week, or Month.
4. General Settings
Session Drawing Limit: This is your master history control. It sets how many past days of drawings (for Killzones, Opening Ranges, etc.) will be kept on your chart. A lower number improves performance.
Timeframe Limit: To keep your chart clean, drawings will not appear on timeframes greater than or equal to the one you select here.
Label Size / Text Color: Controls the appearance of all text and labels drawn by the indicator.
TradeCrafted - Previous 10 Highs and LowsUnlock the power of historical price action with the 10-Day Highs & Lows Indicator! This innovative tool analyzes the highest and lowest price levels of the past 10 trading days and projects them as fixed lines onto the current session. By plotting these crucial support and resistance levels, traders gain a clear visual edge to anticipate market reactions, trend reversals, and breakout opportunities.
🔥 Key Features:
✅ Precision Levels – Automatically plots the previous 10 days' highs and lows for accurate decision-making.
✅ Fixed Lines for Clarity – Levels remain unchanged throughout the session, providing a stable reference.
✅ Enhanced Market Structure Analysis – Identify key zones where price is likely to react.
✅ Ideal for All Traders – Whether you're a scalper, swing trader, or intraday enthusiast, these levels offer a strong foundation for your strategy.
🚀 Why Use This Indicator?
Markets move in cycles, and historical highs and lows act as magnets for price action. By integrating this tool into your trading arsenal, you can spot potential breakouts, retests, and reversals with greater confidence!
Elevate your technical analysis and trade smarter with the 10-Day Highs & Lows Indicator! 🔥
How to use : Trader Can take Buy entry if price is near line and taking reversal from it so it will be very good for trader to manage the stop loss. Simply if it goes below the line, just cut the trade to avoid unnecessary and huge loss. This Indicator will help Trader to take correct entry and exit.
Hope my effort will help trader to stay in profit.
Long/Short/Exit/Risk management Strategy # LongShortExit Strategy Documentation
## Overview
The LongShortExit strategy is a versatile trading system for TradingView that provides complete control over entry, exit, and risk management parameters. It features a sophisticated framework for managing long and short positions with customizable profit targets, stop-loss mechanisms, partial profit-taking, and trailing stops. The strategy can be enhanced with continuous position signals for visual feedback on the current trading state.
## Key Features
### General Settings
- **Trading Direction**: Choose to trade long positions only, short positions only, or both.
- **Max Trades Per Day**: Limit the number of trades per day to prevent overtrading.
- **Bars Between Trades**: Enforce a minimum number of bars between consecutive trades.
### Session Management
- **Session Control**: Restrict trading to specific times of the day.
- **Time Zone**: Specify the time zone for session calculations.
- **Expiration**: Optionally set a date when the strategy should stop executing.
### Contract Settings
- **Contract Type**: Select from common futures contracts (MNQ, MES, NQ, ES) or custom values.
- **Point Value**: Define the dollar value per point movement.
- **Tick Size**: Set the minimum price movement for accurate calculations.
### Visual Signals
- **Continuous Position Signals**: Implement 0 to 1 visual signals to track position states.
- **Signal Plotting**: Customize color and appearance of position signals.
- **Clear Visual Feedback**: Instantly see when entry conditions are triggered.
### Risk Management
#### Stop Loss and Take Profit
- **Risk Type**: Choose between percentage-based, ATR-based, or points-based risk management.
- **Percentage Mode**: Set SL/TP as a percentage of entry price.
- **ATR Mode**: Set SL/TP as a multiple of the Average True Range.
- **Points Mode**: Set SL/TP as a fixed number of points from entry.
#### Advanced Exit Features
- **Break-Even**: Automatically move stop-loss to break-even after reaching specified profit threshold.
- **Trailing Stop**: Implement a trailing stop-loss that follows price movement at a defined distance.
- **Partial Profit Taking**: Take partial profits at predetermined price levels:
- Set first partial exit point and percentage of position to close
- Set second partial exit point and percentage of position to close
- **Time-Based Exit**: Automatically exit a position after a specified number of bars.
#### Win/Loss Streak Management
- **Streak Cutoff**: Automatically pause trading after a series of consecutive wins or losses.
- **Daily Reset**: Option to reset streak counters at the start of each day.
### Entry Conditions
- **Source and Value**: Define the exact price source and value that triggers entries.
- **Equals Condition**: Entry signals occur when the source exactly matches the specified value.
### Performance Analytics
- **Real-Time Stats**: Track important performance metrics like win rate, P&L, and largest wins/losses.
- **Visual Feedback**: On-chart markers for entries, exits, and important events.
### External Integration
- **Webhook Support**: Compatible with TradingView's webhook alerts for automated trading.
- **Cross-Platform**: Connect to external trading systems and notification platforms.
- **Custom Order Execution**: Implement advanced order flows through external services.
## How to Use
### Setup Instructions
1. Add the script to your TradingView chart.
2. Configure the general settings based on your trading preferences.
3. Set session trading hours if you only want to trade specific times.
4. Select your contract specifications or customize for your instrument.
5. Configure risk parameters:
- Choose your preferred risk management approach
- Set appropriate stop-loss and take-profit levels
- Enable advanced features like break-even, trailing stops, or partial profit taking as needed
6. Define entry conditions:
- Select the price source (such as close, open, high, or an indicator)
- Set the specific value that should trigger entries
### Entry Condition Examples
- **Example 1**: To enter when price closes exactly at a whole number:
- Long Source: close
- Long Value: 4200 (for instance, to enter when price closes exactly at 4200)
- **Example 2**: To enter when an indicator reaches a specific value:
- Long Source: ta.rsi(close, 14)
- Long Value: 30 (triggers when RSI equals exactly 30)
### Best Practices
1. **Always backtest thoroughly** before using in live trading.
2. **Start with conservative risk settings**:
- Small position sizes
- Reasonable stop-loss distances
- Limited trades per day
3. **Monitor and adjust**:
- Use the performance table to track results
- Adjust parameters based on how the strategy performs
4. **Consider market volatility**:
- Use ATR-based stops during volatile periods
- Use fixed points during stable markets
## Continuous Position Signals Implementation
The LongShortExit strategy can be enhanced with continuous position signals to provide visual feedback about the current position state. These signals can help you track when the strategy is in a long or short position.
### Adding Continuous Position Signals
Add the following code to implement continuous position signals (0 to 1):
```pine
// Continuous position signals (0 to 1)
var float longSignal = 0.0
var float shortSignal = 0.0
// Update position signals based on your indicator's conditions
longSignal := longCondition ? 1.0 : 0.0
shortSignal := shortCondition ? 1.0 : 0.0
// Plot continuous signals
plot(longSignal, title="Long Signal", color=#00FF00, linewidth=2, transp=0, style=plot.style_line)
plot(shortSignal, title="Short Signal", color=#FF0000, linewidth=2, transp=0, style=plot.style_line)
```
### Benefits of Continuous Position Signals
- Provides clear visual feedback of current position state (long/short)
- Signal values stay consistent (0 or 1) until condition changes
- Can be used for additional calculations or alert conditions
- Makes it easier to track when entry conditions are triggered
### Using with Custom Indicators
You can adapt the continuous position signals to work with any custom indicator by replacing the condition with your indicator's logic:
```pine
// Example with moving average crossover
longSignal := fastMA > slowMA ? 1.0 : 0.0
shortSignal := fastMA < slowMA ? 1.0 : 0.0
```
## Webhook Integration
The LongShortExit strategy is fully compatible with TradingView's webhook alerts, allowing you to connect your strategy to external trading platforms, brokers, or custom applications for automated trading execution.
### Setting Up Webhooks
1. Create an alert on your chart with the LongShortExit strategy
2. Enable the "Webhook URL" option in the alert dialog
3. Enter your webhook endpoint URL (from your broker or custom trading system)
4. Customize the alert message with relevant information using TradingView variables
### Webhook Message Format Example
```json
{
"strategy": "LongShortExit",
"action": "{{strategy.order.action}}",
"price": "{{strategy.order.price}}",
"quantity": "{{strategy.position_size}}",
"time": "{{time}}",
"ticker": "{{ticker}}",
"position_size": "{{strategy.position_size}}",
"position_value": "{{strategy.position_value}}",
"order_id": "{{strategy.order.id}}",
"order_comment": "{{strategy.order.comment}}"
}
```
### TradingView Alert Condition Examples
For effective webhook automation, set up these alert conditions:
#### Entry Alert
```
{{strategy.position_size}} != {{strategy.position_size}}
```
#### Exit Alert
```
{{strategy.position_size}} < {{strategy.position_size}} or {{strategy.position_size}} > {{strategy.position_size}}
```
#### Partial Take Profit Alert
```
strategy.order.comment contains "Partial TP"
```
### Benefits of Webhook Integration
- **Automated Trading**: Execute trades automatically through supported brokers
- **Cross-Platform**: Connect to custom trading bots and applications
- **Real-Time Notifications**: Receive trade signals on external platforms
- **Data Collection**: Log trade data for further analysis
- **Custom Order Management**: Implement advanced order types not available in TradingView
### Compatible External Applications
- Trading bots and algorithmic trading software
- Custom order execution systems
- Discord, Telegram, or Slack notification systems
- Trade journaling applications
- Risk management platforms
### Implementation Recommendations
- Test webhook delivery using a free service like webhook.site before connecting to your actual trading system
- Include authentication tokens or API keys in your webhook URL or payload when required by your external service
- Consider implementing confirmation mechanisms to verify trade execution
- Log all webhook activities for troubleshooting and performance tracking
## Strategy Customization Tips
### For Scalping
- Set smaller profit targets (1-3 points)
- Use tighter stop-losses
- Enable break-even feature after small profit
- Set higher max trades per day
### For Day Trading
- Use moderate profit targets
- Implement partial profit taking
- Enable trailing stops
- Set reasonable session trading hours
### For Swing Trading
- Use longer-term charts
- Set wider stops (ATR-based often works well)
- Use higher profit targets
- Disable daily streak reset
## Common Troubleshooting
### Low Win Rate
- Consider widening stop-losses
- Verify that entry conditions aren't triggering too frequently
- Check if the equals condition is too restrictive; consider small tolerances
### Missing Obvious Trades
- The equals condition is extremely precise. Price must exactly match the specified value.
- Consider using floating-point precision for more reliable triggers
### Frequent Stop-Outs
- Try ATR-based stops instead of fixed points
- Increase the stop-loss distance
- Enable break-even feature to protect profits
## Important Notes
- The exact equals condition is strict and may result in fewer trade signals compared to other conditions.
- For instruments with decimal prices, exact equality might be rare. Consider the precision of your value.
- Break-even and trailing stop calculations are based on points, not percentage.
- Partial take-profit levels are defined in points distance from entry.
- The continuous position signals (0 to 1) provide valuable visual feedback but don't affect the strategy's trading logic directly.
- When implementing continuous signals, ensure they're aligned with the actual entry conditions used by the strategy.
---
*This strategy is for educational and informational purposes only. Always test thoroughly before using with real funds.*
M2 Liquidity Divergence ModelM2 Liquidity Divergence Model
The M2 Liquidity Divergence Model is a macro-aware visualization tool designed to compare shifts in global liquidity (M2) against the performance of a benchmark asset (default: Bitcoin). This script captures liquidity flows across major global economies and highlights whether price action is aligned ("Agreement") or diverging ("Divergence") from macro trends.
🔍 Core Features
M2 Global Liquidity Index (GLI):
Aggregates M2 money supply from major global economies, FX-adjusted, including extended contributors like India, Brazil, and South Africa. The slope of this composite is used to infer macro liquidity trends.
Lag Offset Control:
Allows the M2 signal to lead benchmark asset price by a configurable number of days (Lag Offset), useful for modeling the forward-looking nature of macro flows.
Gradient Macro Context (Background):
Displays a color-gradient background—aqua for expansionary liquidity, fuchsia for contraction—based on the slope and volatility of M2. This contextual backdrop helps users visually anchor price action within macro shifts.
Divergence Histogram (Optional):
Plots a histogram showing dynamic correlation or divergence between the liquidity index and the selected benchmark.
Agreement Mode: M2 and asset are moving together.
Divergence Mode: Highlights break in expected macro-asset alignment.
Adaptive Transparency Scaling:
Histogram and background gradients scale their visual intensity based on statistical deviation to emphasize stronger signals.
Toggle Options:
Show/hide the M2 Liquidity Index line.
Show/hide divergence histogram.
Enable/disable visual offset of M2 to benchmark.
🧠 Suggested Usage
Macro Positioning: Use the background context to align directional trades with macro liquidity flows.
Disagreement as Signal: Use divergence plots to identify when price moves against macro expectations—potential reversal or exhaustion zones.
Time-Based Alignment: Adjust Lag Offset to synchronize M2 signals with asset price behavior across different market conditions.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is designed for educational and analytical purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice or an investment recommendation. Always conduct your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making trading decisions.
LMAsLibrary "LMAs"
Credits
Thank you to @QuantraSystems for dynamic calculations.
Introduction
This lightweight library offers dynamic implementations of popular moving averages that adapt their length automatically as new bars are added to the chart.
Each function is built on a dynamic length formula:
len = math.min(maxLength, bar_index + 1)
This approach ensures that calculations begin as early as the first bar, allowing for smoother initialization and more consistent behavior across all timeframes. It’s especially useful in custom scripts that run from bar 0 or when historical data is limited.
Usage
You can use this library as a drop-in replacement for standard moving averages. It provides more flexibility and stability in live or backtesting environments where fixed-length indicators may delay or fail to initialize properly.
Why Use This?
• Works from the very first bar
• Avoids na values during early bars
• Great for real-time indicators, strategies, and bar-replay
• Clean and efficient code with dynamic behavior
How to Use
Import the library into your script and call any of the included functions just like you would with their native counterparts.
Summary
A lightweight Pine Script™ library offering dynamic moving averages that work seamlessly from the very first bar. Ideal for strategies and indicators requiring robust initialization and adaptive behavior.
SMA(sourceData, maxLength)
Dynamic SMA
Parameters:
sourceData (float)
maxLength (int)
EMA(src, length)
Dynamic EMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
DEMA(src, length)
Dynamic DEMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
TEMA(src, length)
Dynamic TEMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
WMA(src, length)
Dynamic WMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
HMA(src, length)
Dynamic HMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
VWMA(src, volsrc, length)
Dynamic VWMA
Parameters:
src (float)
volsrc (float)
length (int)
SMMA(src, length)
Dynamic SMMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
LSMA(src, length, offset)
Dynamic LSMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
offset (int)
RMA(src, length)
Dynamic RMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
ALMA(src, length, offset_sigma, sigma)
Dynamic ALMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
offset_sigma (float)
sigma (float)
ZLSMA(src, length)
Dynamic ZLSMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
FRAMA(src, length)
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
KAMA(src, length)
Dynamic KAMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
JMA(src, length, phase)
Dynamic JMA
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
phase (float)
T3(src, length, volumeFactor)
Dynamic T3
Parameters:
src (float)
length (int)
volumeFactor (float)