Trading Module [BackQuant]

A modular overlay that lets you combine three core components, a Trend Model, an Impulse Model, and an optional Stop Loss framework, then layer in a multi-symbol RSI screener plus a full price action toolkit (market structure, FVGs, order blocks, volumetric S/R). Built for discretionary execution and study, not for blind automation.
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What this script is
This indicator is designed like a “module picker”. Instead of forcing one opinionated system, it gives you selectable models that can be combined into a workflow:
1) Trend Model, answers “what side is the market biased to?”
2) Impulse Model, answers “is there currently expansion, pressure, or a momentum event worth paying attention to?”
3) Stop Loss Layer, answers “where are reasonable invalidation zones if I’m managing risk manually?”
4) RSI Screener, answers “what are my watchlist assets doing right now, on multiple timeframes, in one place?”
5) Price Action Concepts, answers “what structure levels, imbalances, institutional zones, and volume-based levels matter?”
You can run it as a lightweight overlay (trend + impulse only), or turn on the heavier price action stack when you want deeper context.
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How to use it, the intended workflow
Step 1, pick your Trend Model
The trend model is your baseline directional filter. It is meant to reduce “random trading” by keeping you aligned with the dominant structure or momentum bias.
Trend Models (examples)
Typical usage:
- If the trend model reads bullish, you focus on long setups and avoid shorting into strength.
- If the trend model reads bearish, you focus on short setups and avoid catching bottoms.
- If the trend model is neutral or mixed, you reduce size or wait for confirmation.
What you can expect from the options (without exposing internal weighting or thresholds):
- Universal Trend+, a composite trend regime model that blends multiple families of trend evidence. It is designed to be more robust than a single indicator and reduce “one-indicator failure modes”.
- EMA Cross, a classic fast vs slow trend bias. Simple, responsive, but can whipsaw in ranges.
- DEMA ATR, a smoother trend anchor that adapts to volatility. Often cleaner in chop than basic crosses.
- Relative Strength Overlay, a strength scoring style bias built from an RSI-style internal scoring process. Useful when you want “strength state” more than “moving average state”.
Color conventions:
- Long color and short color are user-defined, so you can keep consistent visuals across your BackQuant suite.
Step 2, pick your Impulse Model
Impulse is separate from trend on purpose. Trend answers direction, impulse answers timing. A market can be trending but not currently impulsing, or impulsing in a counter-trend squeeze.
Impulse Models (examples)
How to use impulse signals:
- Treat impulse as “permission” to engage, not as a standalone trade trigger.
- Best pairing is trend aligned impulse, meaning bullish trend model plus bullish impulse, bearish plus bearish.
- Counter-trend impulses can be used as warning signals, take-profit cues, or short-lived mean reversion opportunities, depending on your style.
The impulse options in this module are built around pressure and expansion detection. They are meant to identify moments where conditions shift from “noise” to “initiative activity”.
Step 3, choose a Stop Loss framework
This script includes optional stop visualization modes. These are not meant to be blindly used as a “one true stop”, they are tools for structuring invalidation around volatility or defined percentage bands.
Stop Loss (examples)
Stop loss options:
- None, no overlay.
- Dynamic, a volatility-aware band. Useful when you want stops to widen in high vol and tighten in low vol.
- Fixed, preset percentage bands. Useful for quick structure around risk units, scaling, or rule-based journaling.
- Bar-to-Bar, a micro-structure invalidation reference that uses the prior bar as a risk anchor. Useful for very tight management and fast invalidation.
How to apply them properly:
- Stops should be placed where the trade idea is wrong, not where you “feel pain”.
- A volatility stop is usually an environment stop, while a fixed stop is usually a plan stop.
- If you use impulses for entries, your stop should account for impulse volatility, otherwise you get stopped on the exact move you’re trying to capture.
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RSI Screener module
This module is built for scanning multiple symbols and timeframes from one chart, without switching tabs.
RSI Screener (example)
What it does:
- Lets you define up to 10 symbols (defaults to major crypto pairs).
- Each slot can have its own timeframe.
- Computes an RSI value per symbol and assigns a directional state relative to a midline threshold.
- Displays a stacked overlay readout using a monospace label style for quick scanning.
How to use it:
- Set slots 1–5 as your majors, 6–10 as your rotation candidates.
- Use higher timeframes for regime, lower timeframes for timing.
- Use the midline threshold as a “trend bias” line, not an overbought or oversold line.
- Treat the screener as context, not a signal. Your chart model and price action still decide the trade.
Performance note:
- Screeners are heavy by nature because each symbol is a security() request. Keep the number of enabled slots reasonable if you are on lower-end hardware or running many scripts.
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Price Action Concepts and Market Structure stack
This script includes a full price action toolkit intended to provide “where” context, levels, zones, and structural breaks, so the trend and impulse models are not operating in a vacuum.
Price Action Concepts / Market Structure (example)
This section is split into five major blocks:
1) Market Structure, Swing and Internal
You can enable swing structure and internal structure separately, with independent lookbacks.
- Swing structure tracks larger, slower pivots, better for macro trend structure.
- Internal structure tracks tighter pivots, better for entry timing and micro shifts.
It prints structure events as:
- BOS (Break of Structure), continuation-style break.
- MSB (Market Structure Break), shift-style break. Some traders call this CHoCH, here it’s presented as an MSB concept.
Usage:
- Swing BOS is good for confirming a larger regime.
- Internal structure is good for timing entries within the swing context.
- If internal flips but swing does not, treat it as a warning, not necessarily a full reversal.
2) Fair Value Gaps (FVG)
Optional imbalance boxes that highlight displacement zones.
Key controls:
- Timeframe selection (or current timeframe).
- How many to keep on chart.
- How far to extend them right.
Usage:
- FVGs are best treated as “areas of interest”, not guaranteed support/resistance.
- They help you frame where price might rebalance after an impulse event.
3) Order Blocks (OB)
Optional institutional-style zones detected from structure and candle logic, with filters.
Key controls:
- Fractal type (3 or 5) changes how “strict” structure detection is.
- Break method (close vs high/low) changes confirmation strictness.
- Optional filter with FVG distance to reduce low-quality blocks.
- Extend, delete-when-filled, and label options for chart hygiene.
Usage:
- OBs are strongest when aligned with swing context and confirmed by volume or displacement.
- Filled blocks are informational, they can be removed to reduce clutter.
4) Volumetric Support and Resistance
This module creates support and resistance “zones” based on high-volume pivot events, then manages them over time.
Key controls:
- Detection sensitivity, volume multiplier, and lookback period.
- Minimum distance between zones to avoid stacking duplicates.
- Remove broken, extend, and volume display toggles.
How to interpret:
- Levels are thicker zones, not single price lines.
- “Touches” are tracked as an interaction count, useful for identifying repeatedly defended or attacked zones.
- High-volume zones are visually emphasized, these tend to matter more than low volume pivots.
Usage:
- Pair volumetric levels with impulse signals, an impulse into a high-volume resistance zone is not the same as an impulse in open space.
- Use volumetric levels as structure anchors for invalidation and targets.
5) Alerts
The price action stack includes alerts for new levels, touches, breaks, and order block creation or interaction.
Use alerts for:
- Watchlist management, you get notified when price hits an area.
- Avoiding screen-watching, especially when you run multi-timeframe setups.
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Core philosophy of the module
This indicator is not “one model to rule them all”. It is meant to let you build a trading process:
- Trend decides bias.
- Impulse decides engagement timing.
- Price action decides location and structure.
- Stops decide risk containment.
- Screener decides where to look.
If you only use one layer, you are throwing away most of the edge this style of framework is designed to create. The strength is in confluence and filtering.
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Suggested presets
Preset A, clean trend-following overlay
- Trend Model, Universal Trend+ or DEMA ATR
- Impulse Model, either option
- Stop Loss, Dynamic
- Price action modules off (structure off, FVG off, OB off, volumetric off)
- Screener on (high timeframe)
Preset B, execution and structure mode
- Trend Model on
- Impulse Model on
- Market Structure on (swing + internal)
- FVG on (current timeframe or one higher)
- Order Blocks on with FVG filter
- Volumetric S/R on
- Stop Loss, Dynamic or Bar-to-Bar depending on speed
Preset C, watchlist scanner mode
- Screener on
- Minimal chart overlays on
- Use alerts for touches and breaks
- Only open charts that show alignment across trend and impulse
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Notes and limitations
- This is a heavy script when multiple modules are enabled, because it draws objects and can request multiple symbols.
- The models are designed to be modular, so not every combination will be optimal for every market or timeframe.
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Quick input map
Main Settings/Models
- Select Trend Model
- Select Impulse Model
- Select Stop Loss
- Show Screener
- Long/Short colors
Screener Settings
- Label size and offsets
- RSI length and midline
- Up to 10 symbol slots with per-slot timeframe and enable toggle
Market Structure
- Swing and internal structure mode and lookbacks
- Bull and bear colors
Fair Value Gaps
- Enable, count, timeframe, extend, colors
Order Blocks
- Enable, labels, fractal type, break method
- FVG filter and distance
- Lookback, extend, delete-when-filled, colors
Volumetric S/R
- Sensitivity, volume multiplier, analysis window
- Level limits, distance rules, extension and cleanup rules
- Volume display preferences
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End note
This is intended as a full visual decision-support module for discretionary traders who want trend, timing, structure, and watchlist scanning in one place. Use it to build a repeatable process, then validate that process with proper testing and journaling before risking real capital.
Skrip jemputan sahaja
Hanya pengguna disahkan oleh penulis boleh mengakses skrip ini. Anda perlu memohon dan mendapatkan kebenaran untuk menggunakannya. Keizinan selalunya diberikan selepas pembayaran. Untuk lebih butiran, ikuti arahan penulis di bawah atau hubungi BackQuant secara terus.
TradingView TIDAK menyarankan pembayaran atau penggunaan skrip kecuali anda mempercayai sepenuhnya penulis dan memahami bagaimana ia berfungsi. Anda juga boleh menjumpai alternatif sumber terbuka dan percuma yang lain di dalam skrip komuniti kami.
Arahan penulis
Penafian
Skrip jemputan sahaja
Hanya pengguna disahkan oleh penulis boleh mengakses skrip ini. Anda perlu memohon dan mendapatkan kebenaran untuk menggunakannya. Keizinan selalunya diberikan selepas pembayaran. Untuk lebih butiran, ikuti arahan penulis di bawah atau hubungi BackQuant secara terus.
TradingView TIDAK menyarankan pembayaran atau penggunaan skrip kecuali anda mempercayai sepenuhnya penulis dan memahami bagaimana ia berfungsi. Anda juga boleh menjumpai alternatif sumber terbuka dan percuma yang lain di dalam skrip komuniti kami.