[blackcat] L2 EMA NexusOVERVIEW
The L2 EMA Nexus is a comprehensive trading indicator that utilizes a three-tiered Exponential Moving Average (EMA) system to identify potential trading opportunities. This script combines technical analysis with robust risk management features to help traders make informed decisions.
KEY FEATURES
• Triple EMA Analysis:
Customizable source inputs for each EMA
Adjustable length parameters (3, 8, 21 periods)
Dynamic color coding based on trend direction
Real-time price action monitoring
• Advanced Entry Signals:
High-low price action verification
EMA cross-overs and cross-unders
Multi-timeframe trend confirmation
Dynamic position sizing limits
• Risk Management:
Configurable Take Profit levels
Flexible Stop Loss settings
Optional TP/SL activation
Clear visual indicators for levels
HOW TO USE
Setup Initial Parameters:
Configure EMA lengths for your timeframe
Set Take Profit percentage (default 25%)
Define Stop Loss percentage (default 2.5%)
Adjust pyramiding limit as needed
Enable/Disable Features:
Toggle TP/SL settings based on strategy
Customize alert conditions
Modify visual labels for clarity
Monitor Trading Signals:
Watch for buy/sell labels
Track TP/SL levels
Monitor position status
TRADE MANAGEMENT
• Entry Conditions:
Long Entry: Higher high with rising EMA1 and stable EMA3
Short Entry: Lower low with falling EMA1 and stable EMA2
• Exit Conditions:
Take Profit: Price reaches defined percentage above/below entry
Stop Loss: Price reaches defined percentage below/above entry
• Position Control:
Limited to specified number of positions
Automatic position tracking
Clear visual indication of current trades
TECHNICAL DETAILS
• EMA Calculation:
Uses Exponential Moving Average for trend following
Color-coded based on 2-bar trend direction
Multiple timeframe compatibility
• Label System:
Clear buy/sell markers
Take Profit and Stop Loss indicators
Real-time position status updates
• Alert Configuration:
Customizable alert messages
Multiple alert conditions
Option to enable/disable specific alerts
LIMITATIONS
⚠️ Important Considerations:
Results may vary across different market conditions
Historical performance does not guarantee future results
Always backtest strategy before live trading
Consider complementing with additional analysis tools
BEST PRACTICES
• Recommended Timeframes:
Daily charts for long-term strategies
4-hour charts for swing trading
1-hour charts for short-term trading
• Risk Management Tips:
Start with small position sizes
Always use TP/SL in live trading
Monitor market volatility before entering trades
TROUBLESHOOTING
• Common Issues:
Ensure proper chart resolution
Verify alert conditions are enabled
Check for conflicting indicators
• Performance Optimization:
Use appropriate timeframe for your strategy
Adjust indicator parameters based on market conditions
Monitor for potential overfitting
Moving Averages
[blackcat] L1 Dynamic EdgeOVERVIEW
📈 The L1 Dynamic Edge is a sophisticated trend-following indicator designed to empower traders with a comprehensive view of market dynamics and precise buy/sell signals. By leveraging multiple Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) and advanced signal processing, this indicator aims to capture the essence of price momentum and provide actionable insights across various financial instruments and timeframes.
🔑 Key Features:
Fully customizable EMA settings
Multi-dimensional trend analysis using high, low, and midpoint EMAs
Intuitive color-coded trend visualization
Accurate buy/sell signals with visual confirmation
Flexible alert system for real-time notifications
Seamless integration with TradingView's charting tools
FEATURES
📉 Advanced Trend Detection:
Utilizes three distinct EMAs (high, low, and midpoint) for a holistic view of market trends
Employs sophisticated logic to determine rising and falling trends
🌟 Dynamic Visualization:
Automatically adjusts the color of EMA plots based on detected trend direction
Fills the area between high and low EMAs for enhanced visual clarity
📈 Precision Signal Generation:
Identifies potential trend reversals using a combination of price action and EMA behavior
Generates clear buy/sell signals based on trend changes
📊 Comprehensive Chart Integration:
Displays buy/sell signals as easily identifiable shapes on the chart
Adds descriptive labels to signal bars for quick reference
🔔 Customizable Alert System:
Provides alert conditions for both buy and sell signals
Allows users to stay informed about potential trading opportunities even when away from the chart
🛠️ User-Friendly Interface:
Simple input parameters for easy customization
Clean and uncluttered chart appearance without overwhelming the user
🌐 Versatile Application:
Adaptable to various financial instruments, including stocks, forex, commodities, and cryptocurrencies
Effective across different timeframes, from short-term scalping to long-term investing
HOW TO USE
✨ Adding the Indicator:
Open your TradingView chart
Click on "Add Indicator" at the top of the screen
Search for " L1 Dynamic Edge" and add it to your chart
🔧 Customizing Settings:
Adjust the EMA length in the input panel to suit your trading style and preferences
Experiment with different values to find what works best for your specific strategy
🕵️♂️ Analyzing Trends:
Observe the color of the EMA bands to quickly assess the overall market sentiment
Note how the filling between the high and low EMAs responds to price movements
📈 Identifying Opportunities:
Watch for buy/sell signals indicated by triangles and labels on the chart
Consider these signals as potential entry/exit points for your trades
🎯 Implementing Strategies:
Combine the indicator's signals with your own analysis and risk management techniques
Use the provided alerts to stay informed about new trading opportunities
🚨 Setting Up Alerts:
Configure alert conditions for buy and sell signals
Choose your preferred notification method (email, SMS, push notifications, etc. )
📊 Fine-Tuning Your Approach:
Regularly review and analyze the indicator's performance
Adjust the EMA length and other parameters as needed to adapt to changing market conditions
LIMITATIONS
Like any technical indicator, the L1 Dynamic Edge should not be used as a standalone trading system
Its effectiveness may be limited during periods of extreme volatility or in highly ranging markets
The indicator's performance will vary depending on the specific instrument and timeframe being analyzed
New traders might need some time to fully understand and effectively utilize all features of the indicator
NOTES
This script utilizes Pine Script version 5 for optimal performance and compatibility with TradingView's latest features
The default EMA length is set to 3, which provides a balance between responsiveness and noise reduction
The indicator's color scheme has been carefully chosen to ensure maximum visibility while maintaining a clean chart appearance
For best results, consider combining this indicator with other forms of technical and fundamental analysis
Regular backtesting and forward testing are crucial to optimize the indicator's settings for your specific trading style and market conditions
THANKS
We extend our deepest gratitude to the vibrant TradingView community for their invaluable feedback, suggestions, and support throughout the development process of the L1 Dynamic Edge indicator. Special thanks to all the dedicated traders who took the time to test and refine this tool, helping us create a more robust and user-friendly experience for everyone.
Swing Trade TarayıcıSwing Trade Scanner (v6) User Guide
1. Purpose:
This TradingView indicator (written in Pine Script v6) is designed to help identify swing trading opportunities. It calculates an overall trend strength and direction score by combining multiple technical analyses for up to 20 financial assets (stocks, cryptocurrencies, forex, etc.) that you specify. It presents the results in a customizable table, allowing you to quickly scan the market.
2. Analyses Used and Their Roles:
By default, the indicator uses the following 4 main technical analyses:
EMA Crossover (Default: 9/21): Used to capture short-term trend direction and potential momentum shifts. When the fast EMA (9) crosses above the slow EMA (21), it's considered a bullish signal; when it crosses below, it's a bearish signal. It's often one of the main entry/exit triggers.
RSI (Relative Strength Index - Default: 14): Measures the speed of price movements to identify overbought (OB) and oversold (OS) conditions. Reversals from the OB zone can signal potential downturns, while reversals from the OS zone can signal potential upturns. It also provides insight into the strength of the momentum.
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence - Default: 12, 26, 9): A trend-following momentum indicator. The relationship between the MACD line and the signal line (crossovers) and the state of the histogram (position relative to the zero line) are used to confirm momentum shifts and trend strength.
ADX/DI (Average Directional Index - Default: 14, 14): Measures the strength (ADX) and direction (+DI/-DI lines) of a trend. Its main role is to filter signals from other indicators. A trend is considered to exist if the ADX is above a certain threshold (e.g., 25). +DI above -DI indicates an uptrend, and the reverse indicates a downtrend.
3. Scoring System:
The indicator calculates an individual score for each analysis and then combines these scores using weights you define to create a final Trend Score:
Individual Scores: Each analysis (EMA, RSI, MACD, ADX/DI) generates a decimal score between -1.0 (Strong Negative/Bearish) and +1.0 (Strong Positive/Bullish) based on its own rules. For example, RSI might score +1.0 if oversold, -1.0 if overbought, and 0.0 if neutral. MACD and ADX/DI scores can also take intermediate values reflecting both direction and strength (e.g., ±1.0, ±0.6, ±0.3, 0.0).
Weighting: In the settings, you can assign a weight (between 0.0 and 1.0) to each analysis, determining how much it influences the final score. For instance, you might give EMA crossover a higher weight and use RSI with a lower weight.
Total Score: The individual scores of the active analyses are multiplied by their assigned weights and summed up. This total is then divided by the sum of the weights of the active analyses to obtain a final, normalized Trend Score between -1.0 and +1.0. This score represents the combined view of all analyses.
4. Trend Determination:
The calculated final Trend Score is classified into an overall TREND status based on threshold values you set in the settings:
S.UP (Strong Up): Score > Strong Up Threshold (Default: 0.70)
UP: Up Threshold < Score <= Strong Up Threshold (Default: 0.35 < Score <= 0.70)
NEUTRAL: Down Threshold <= Score <= Up Threshold (Default: -0.35 <= Score <= 0.35)
DOWN: Strong Down Threshold <= Score < Down Threshold (Default: -0.70 <= Score < -0.35)
S.DOWN (Strong Down): Score < Strong Down Threshold (Default: -0.70)
This classification allows you to see at a glance which assets have strong trend potential.
5. Table Structure and Meanings:
The indicator displays the results in a table with the following columns:
TICKER: The symbol of the analyzed asset (abbreviated).
TREND: The overall trend status determined by the total score (S.UP, UP, NEUTRAL, DOWN, S.DOWN). The background color of this column also reflects this overall trend (Dark Green, Green, Gray, Red, Dark Red).
SCORE: The calculated weighted total score (between -1.00 and +1.00, with two decimal places). The background color of this column also reflects the overall trend.
EMA: Shows the result of only the EMA 9/21 analysis.
▲: EMA(9) > EMA(21) (Green Background)
▼: EMA(9) < EMA(21) (Red Background)
N: Neutral (Gray Background)
-: Analysis disabled or no data (Pale Gray Background)
RSI: Shows the result of only the RSI analysis.
OS: Oversold (RSI < 30) (Green Background)
M+: Mid Positive (30 <= RSI < 45) (Light Green/Lime Background)
N: Neutral (45 <= RSI <= 55) (Gray Background)
M-: Mid Negative (55 < RSI <= 70) (Orange Background)
OB: Overbought (RSI > 70) (Red Background)
-: Analysis disabled or no data (Pale Gray Background)
MACD: Shows the result of only the MACD analysis.
S+: Strong Positive (MACD > Signal AND Histogram > 0) (Green Background)
M+: Mid Positive (MACD > Signal BUT Histogram < 0) (Light Green/Lime Background)
N: Neutral (Other cases) (Gray Background)
M-: Mid Negative (MACD < Signal BUT Histogram > 0) (Orange Background)
S-: Strong Negative (MACD < Signal AND Histogram < 0) (Red Background)
-: Analysis disabled or no data (Pale Gray Background)
ADX/DI: Shows the result of only the ADX/DI analysis.
S+: Strong Uptrend (ADX > 40 AND +DI > -DI) (Green Background)
M+: Mid Uptrend (25 < ADX <= 40 AND +DI > -DI) (Light Green/Lime Background)
W: Weak Trend (ADX <= 25) (Gray Background)
M-: Mid Downtrend (25 < ADX <= 40 AND -DI > +DI) (Orange Background)
S-: Strong Downtrend (ADX > 40 AND -DI > +DI) (Red Background)
-: Analysis disabled or no data (Pale Gray Background)
6. Settings (Inputs):
You can customize the indicator's behavior using the following settings:
General Settings:
Analysis Timeframe: Select the timeframe for the scans (Leave blank to use the chart timeframe).
Auto Adjust Parameters and Weights: If checked, predefined parameters and weights based on the selected timeframe (1h, 4h, 1D, 1W) are used. If unchecked, or if an unsupported timeframe is selected, the manual settings below apply.
Strong/Normal Up/Down Thresholds: Adjust the score thresholds used to determine the TREND column.
Analysis Settings (Separate Group for Each Analysis):
Enable ... Analysis: Check to include the respective analysis in the score.
... Weight (Manual): If auto-adjust is off, set the weight of this analysis in the total score.
... Period/Level (Manual): If auto-adjust is off, adjust the parameters (period, level, etc.) of the respective indicator.
Symbols (1-10):
Checkbox: Check to include the respective symbol in the scan.
Text Box: Enter the symbol of the asset you want to analyze (e.g., "NASDAQ:AAPL", "BINANCE:BTCUSDT").
Table Settings:
Table Position: Choose where the table appears on the chart.
Cell Width: Adjust the width of the table cells.
Text Size: Select the general size of the text in the table (individual analysis columns are usually shown one size smaller).
7. How to Use:
Add the indicator to your TradingView chart.
Enter the indicator settings.
In the Symbols section, enter the symbols of the assets you want to analyze and check the boxes next to them.
In the General Settings section, select your desired Analysis Timeframe.
Decide whether the Auto Adjust Parameters and Weights option should be checked. If not, adjust the manual parameters and weights for each indicator in the Analysis Settings section according to your strategy.
Examine the table:
The TREND and SCORE columns give you a general overview. Focus on strong signals (S.UP, S.DOWN) or states that have just crossed thresholds (UP, DOWN).
The EMA, RSI, MACD, ADX/DI columns allow you to see in detail which analyses influenced the overall score. You can track confirming or conflicting signals here.
Combine these scan results with other rules of your swing trading strategy (support/resistance, patterns, risk management, etc.) to make trading decisions.
8. Important Notes:
This indicator does not constitute financial advice. It is merely a tool that combines technical analysis tools to help you scan the market.
The default parameters and weights in the indicator settings are for general use. For best results, it is strongly recommended that you optimize these settings by backtesting them on historical data according to your own strategy, the assets you trade, and market conditions.
No technical indicator or system generates 100% accurate signals. Always apply risk management principles and do not trade with money you cannot afford to lose.
I hope this guide helps you use the indicator effectively!
Anchored Moving Average by TradeSeekersThis script plots an SMA that resets based on the selected anchored timeframe, by default it is 1D.
There exists some other AMA scripts but I didn't find anything that plotted the non-anchored MA alongside the AMA and displayed the point of convergence.
The non-anchored MA presents slightly opaque as a circle plot until the anchored MA converges.
Until the anchored MA contains enough data an simple average is calculated of all source prices collected starting from the anchor.
For example, if the timeframe has reset and source is set to closing prices, then after the first bar the AMA is essentially the last closing price. After two bars have closed then the AMA is an average of the last two closing prices.
Future updates may add additional average types as time permits.
Moving Average ToolkitMoving Average Toolkit - Advanced MA Analysis with Flexible Source Input
A powerful and versatile moving average indicator designed for maximum flexibility. Its unique source input feature allows you to analyze moving averages of ANY indicator or price data, making it perfect for creating custom combinations with RSI, Volume, OBV, or any other technical indicator.
Key Features:
• Universal Source Input:
- Analyze moving averages of any data: Price, Volume, RSI, MACD, Custom Indicators
- Perfect for creating advanced technical setups
- Identify trends in any technical data
• 13 Moving Average Types:
- Traditional: SMA, EMA, WMA, RMA, VWMA
- Advanced: HMA, T3, DEMA, TEMA, KAMA, ZLEMA, McGinley, EPMA
• Dual MA System:
- Compare two different moving averages
- Independent settings for each MA
- Perfect for multiple timeframe analysis
• Visual Offset Analysis:
- Dynamic color changes based on momentum
- Fill between current and offset values
- Clear visualization of trend strength
Usage Examples:
• Price Trend: Traditional MA analysis using price data
• Volume Trend: Apply MA to volume for volume trend analysis
• RSI Trend: Smooth RSI movements for clearer signals
• Custom: Apply to any indicator output for unique insights
Settings:
• Fully customizable colors for bull/bear conditions
• Adjustable offset periods
• Independent length settings
• Optional second MA for comparison
Perfect for:
• Advanced technical analysts
• Multi-indicator strategy developers
• Custom indicator creators
• Traders seeking flexible analysis tools
This versatile toolkit goes beyond traditional moving averages by allowing you to apply sophisticated MA analysis to any technical data, creating endless possibilities for custom technical analysis strategies.
BTC Price-Volume Efficiency Z-Score (PVER-Z)Overview:
This PVER-Z Score measures Bitcoin’s price movement efficiency relative to trading volume, normalized using a Z-Score over a long-term 200-day period.
It highlights statistically rare inefficiencies, helping investors spot extreme accumulation and distribution zones for systematic SDCA strategies.
Concept:
- Measures how efficiently price has moved relative to the volume that supported it over a long historical window (Default 200 days) but can be adjustable.
- It compares cumulative price changes vs cumulative volume flow.
- Then normalizes those inefficiencies using Z-Score statistics.
How It Works:
1. Calculates the absolute daily price change divided by volume (price-volume efficiency ratio).
2. Applies EMA smoothing to remove noisy fluctuations.
3. Normalizes the result into a Z-Score to detect statistically significant outliers.
4. Plots dynamic heatmap colors as the efficiency score moves through different deviation zones.
5. Background fills appear when the Z-Score moves beyond ±2 to ±3 SD, signaling rare macro opportunities.
Why is Bitcoin price rising while PVER-Z is falling toward green zone?
1. PVER-Z is not just "price" — it's price change relative to volume. PVER-Z measures how efficient the price movement is relative to volume. It's not "price going up" or "price going down" directly. It's how unusual or inefficient the price versus volume relationship is, compared to its historical average.
2. A rising Bitcoin price + weak efficiency = PVER-Z falls.
If Bitcoin rises but volume is super strong (normal buying volume), no problem, the PVER-Z stays normal. If Bitcoin rises but with very weak volume support, PVER-Z falls.
***Usage Notes***:
- Best used on the daily timeframe or higher.
- When the Z-Score enters the green zone (-2 to -3 SD), it signals a historically rare accumulation zone — favoring long-term buying for SDCA.
- When the Z-Score enters the red zone (+2 to +3 SD), it signals overextended distribution — caution recommended.
- Designed strictly for mean-reversion analysis, no trend-following signals.
- The red zone on a proper Z chart would be -2SD to -3SD and +2SD to +3SD for the green zone. At the time of publishing I do not know how to adjust the values on the indicator itself. The red zone at -2SD is actually +2 Standard Deviations on a Z Score SD Chart. (overbought zone).
- Your green zone at +2SD is actually -2SD Standard Deviations (oversold zone).
- Built manually with no reliance on built-in indicators
- Designed for Bitcoin on the 1D, 3D, or Weekly timeframes. NOT for intraday trading.
- DO NOT SOELY RELY ON THIS INDICATOR FOR YOUR LONG TERM VALUATION. I AM NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR FINANICAL ASSETS.
Gabriel's Adaptive MA📜 Gabriel's Adaptive MA — Indicator Description
Gabriel's Adaptive Moving Average (GAMA) is a dynamic trend-following indicator that intelligently adjusts its smoothing based on both trend strength and market volatility.
It is designed to provide faster responsiveness during strong moves while maintaining stability during choppy or consolidating periods.
🧠 What it does:
This indicator plots a custom-built, highly dynamic Moving Average that adapts itself intelligently based on:
Trend Strength (via Perry Kaufman's Efficiency Ratio)
Market Volatility (via Tushar Chande's Volatility Ratio)
It reacts faster when the market is trending strongly and/or highly volatile,
and it smooths out and slows down when the market is choppy or calm.
🔍 How it works (step-by-step):
1. User Inputs:
length: (default 14)
How many bars to look back for calculations.
fastSC: Fastest possible smoothing constant (hardcoded as 2 / (2+1))
slowSC: Slowest possible smoothing constant (hardcoded as 2 / (30+1))
(These are used to control how fast/slow the KAMA can react.)
2. Calculate Trendiness — Kaufman Efficiency Ratio (ER):
Net Change = Absolute difference between current close and close from length bars ago.
Sum of Absolute Changes = Sum of absolute price changes between every bar inside the length window.
Efficiency Ratio (ER) = Net Change divided by Sum of Changes.
✅ If ER is close to 1 → Smooth, trending market.
✅ If ER is close to 0 → Choppy, sideways market.
3. Calculate Bumpiness — Volatility Ratio (VR):
Short-Term Volatility = Standard deviation of close over length.
Long-Term Volatility = Standard deviation of close over length * 2.
Volatility Ratio (VR) = Short-Term Volatility divided by Long-Term Volatility.
✅ If VR is >1 → Market is becoming more volatile recently.
✅ If VR is <1 → Market is calming down.
4. Create the Hybrid Alpha:
Multiply ER × VR.
Then square the result (math.pow(..., 2)).
This hybrid alpha decides how aggressive the MA should be based on both trend and volatility.
If ER and VR are both strong → big alpha → fast movement.
If ER and/or VR are weak → small alpha → slow movement.
5. Calculate the Final Adaptive Smoothing Constant (hybridSC):
hybridSC = slowSC + hybridAlpha × (fastSC - slowSC)
This smoothly interpolates between the slowest and fastest smoothing depending on market conditions.
6. Calculate and Plot the Adaptive MA:
The moving average is manually calculated:
hybridMA := na(hybridMA ) ? close : hybridMA + hybridSC * (close - hybridMA )
It behaves like an EMA but with dynamic smoothing, not a fixed alpha.
✅ If hybridSC is high → MA hugs the price closely.
✅ If hybridSC is low → MA stays smooth and resists noise.
Finally, it plots this Adaptive MA on the chart in blue color.
📊 Visual Summary
Market Type What Happens to GAMA
Trending hard + volatile Follows price quickly
Trending hard + calm Follows steadily but carefully
Sideways + volatile Reacts carefully (won't chase noise)
Sideways + calm Smooths heavily (avoids fakeouts)
✨ Main Strengths:
Adapts automatically without you tuning settings manually every time market changes.
Responds smartly to both trend quality (ER) and market energy (VR).
Reduces lag during real moves.
Filters out false signals during choppy mess.
🧪 Key Innovation compared to normal MAs:
Traditional MA Gabriel's Adaptive MA
Same smoothing every bar Dynamic smoothing every bar
Slow during fast moves Adapts fast during real moves
No understanding of volatility or trendiness Full market sensitivity
⚡ **Simple One-Line Description:**
"Gabriel's Adaptive MA is a dynamic, trend-and-volatility-sensitive moving average that intelligently adjusts its speed to match market conditions."
Cointegration Buy and Sell Signals [EdgeTerminal]The Cointegration Buy And Sell Signals is a sophisticated technical analysis tool to spot high-probability market turning points — before they fully develop on price charts.
Most reversal indicators rely on raw price action, visual patterns, or basic and common indicator logic — which often suffer in noisy or trending markets. In most cases, they lag behind the actual change in trend and provide useless and late signals.
This indicator is rooted in advanced concepts from statistical arbitrage, mean reversion theory, and quantitative finance, and it packages these ideas in a user-friendly visual format that works on any timeframe and asset class.
It does this by analyzing how the short-term and long-term EMAs behave relative to each other — and uses statistical filters like Z-score, correlation, volatility normalization, and stationarity tests to issue highly selective Buy and Sell signals.
This tool provides statistical confirmation of trend exhaustion, allowing you to trade mean-reverting setups. It fades overextended moves and uses signal stacking to reduce false entries. The entire indicator is based on a very interesting mathematically grounded model which I will get into down below.
Here’s how the indicator works at a high level:
EMAs as Anchors: It starts with two Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) — one short-term and one long-term — to track market direction.
Statistical Spread (Regression Residuals): It performs a rolling linear regression between the short and long EMA. Instead of using the raw difference (short - long), it calculates the regression residual, which better models their natural relationship.
Normalize the Spread: The spread is divided by historical price volatility (ATR) to make it scale-invariant. This ensures the indicator works on low-priced stocks, high-priced indices, and crypto alike.
Z-Score: It computes a Z-score of the normalized spread to measure how “extreme” the current deviation is from its historical average.
Dynamic Thresholds: Unlike most tools that use fixed thresholds (like Z = ±2), this one calculates dynamic thresholds using historical percentiles (e.g., top 10% and bottom 10%) so that it adapts to the asset's current behavior to reduce false signals based on market’s extreme volatility at a certain time.
Z-Score Momentum: It tracks the direction of the Z-score — if Z is extreme but still moving away from zero, it's too early. It waits for reversion to start (Z momentum flips).
Correlation Check: Uses a rolling Pearson correlation to confirm the two EMAs are still statistically related. If they diverge (low correlation), no signal is shown.
Stationarity Filter (ADF-like): Uses the volatility of the regression residual to determine if the spread is stationary (mean-reverting) — a key concept in cointegration and statistical arbitrage. It’s not possible to build an exact ADF filter in Pine Script so we used the next best thing.
Signal Control: Prevents noisy charts and overtrading by ensuring no back-to-back buy or sell signals. Each signal must alternate and respect a cooldown period so you won’t be overwhelmed and won’t get a messy chart.
Important Notes to Remember:
The whole idea behind this indicator is to try to use some stat arb models to detect shifting patterns faster than they appear on common indicators, so in some cases, some assumptions are made based on historic values.
This means that in some cases, the indicator can “jump” into the conclusion too quickly. Although we try to eliminate this by using stationary filters, correlation checks, and Z-score momentum detection, there is still a chance some signals that are generated can be too early, in the stock market, that's the same as being incorrect. So make sure to use this with other indicators to confirm the movement.
How To Use The Indicator:
You can use the indicator as a standalone reversal system, as a filter for overbought and oversold setups, in combination with other trend indicators and as a part of a signal stack with other common indicators for divergence spotting and fade trades.
The indicator produces simple buy and sell signals when all criteria is met. Based on our own testing, we recommend treating these signals as standalone and independent from each other . Meaning that if you take position after a buy signal, don’t wait for a sell signal to appear to exit the trade and vice versa.
This is why we recommend using this indicator with other advanced or even simple indicators as an early confirmation tool.
The Display Table:
The floating diagnostic table in the top-right corner of the chart is a key part of this indicator. It's a live statistical dashboard that helps you understand why a signal is (or isn’t) being triggered, and whether the market conditions are lining up for a potential reversal.
1. Z-Score
What it shows: The current Z-score value of the volatility-normalized spread between the short EMA and the regression line of the long EMA.
Why it matters: Z-score tells you how statistically extreme the current relationship is. A Z-score of:
0 = perfectly average
> +2 = very overbought
< -2 = very oversold
How to use it: Look for Z-score reaching extreme highs or lows (beyond dynamic thresholds). Watch for it to start reversing direction, especially when paired with green table rows (see below)
2. Z-Score Momentum
What it shows: The rate of change (ROC) of the Z-score:
Zmomentum=Zt − Zt − 1
Why it matters: This tells you if the Z-score is still stretching out (e.g., getting more overbought/oversold), or reverting back toward the mean.
How to use it: A positive Z-momentum after a very low Z-score = potential bullish reversal A negative Z-momentum after a very high Z-score = potential bearish reversal. Avoid signals when momentum is still pushing deeper into extremes
3. Correlation
What it shows: The rolling Pearson correlation coefficient between the short EMA and long EMA.
Why it matters: High correlation (closer to +1) means the EMAs are still statistically connected — a key requirement for cointegration or mean reversion to be valid.
How to use it: Look for correlation > 0.7 for reliable signals. If correlation drops below 0.5, ignore the Z-score — the EMAs aren’t moving together anymore
4. Stationary
What it shows: A simplified "Yes" or "No" answer to the question:
“Is the spread statistically stable (stationary) and mean-reverting right now?”
Why it matters: Mean reversion strategies only work when the spread is stationary — that is, when the distance between EMAs behaves like a rubber band, not a drifting cloud.
How to use it: A "Yes" means the indicator sees a consistent, stable spread — good for trading. "No" means the market is too volatile, disjointed, or chaotic for reliable mean reversion. Wait for this to flip to "Yes" before trusting signals
5. Last Signal
What it shows: The last signal issued by the system — either "Buy", "Sell", or "None"
Why it matters: Helps avoid confusion and repeated entries. Signals only alternate — you won’t get another Buy until a Sell happens, and vice versa.
How to use it: If the last signal was a "Buy", and you’re watching for a Sell, don’t act on more bullish signals. Great for systems where you only want one position open at a time
6. Bars Since Signal
What it shows: How many bars (candles) have passed since the last Buy or Sell signal.
Why it matters: Gives you context for how long the current condition has persisted
How to use it: If it says 1 or 2, a signal just happened — avoid jumping in late. If it’s been 10+ bars, a new opportunity might be brewing soon. You can use this to time exits if you want to fade a recent signal manually
Indicator Settings:
Short EMA: Sets the short-term EMA period. The smaller the number, the more reactive and more signals you get.
Long EMA: Sets the slow EMA period. The larger this number is, the smoother baseline, and more reliable trend bases are generated.
Z-Score Lookback: The period or bars used for mean & std deviation of spread between short and long EMAs. Larger values result in smoother signals with fewer false positives.
Volatility Window: This value normalizes the spread by historical volatility. This allows you to prevent scale distortion, showing you a cleaner and better chart.
Correlation Lookback: How many periods or how far back to test correlation between slow and long EMAs. This filters out false positives when EMAs lose alignment.
Hurst Lookback: The multiplier to approximate stationarity. Lower leads to more sensitivity to regime change, higher produces a more stricter filtering.
Z Threshold Percentile: This value sets how extreme Z-score must be to trigger a signal. For example, 90 equals only top/bottom 10% of extremes, 80 = more frequent.
Min Bars Between Signals: This hard stop prevents back-to-back signals. The idea is to avoid over-trading or whipsaws in volatile markets even when Hurst lookback and volatility window values are not enough to filter signals.
Some More Recommendations:
We recommend trying different EMA pairs (10/50, 21/100, 5/20) for different asset behaviors. You can set percentile to 85 or 80 if you want more frequent but looser signals. You can also use the Z-score reversion monitor for powerful confirmation.
LotusThis Pine Script is designed to plot multiple moving averages (SMA and EMA) on the chart, with dynamic color changes based on whether the price is above or below each moving average. The script includes customizable inputs for different SMA and EMA lengths, and each moving average has its own color scheme, which changes depending on the market price's position relative to the moving average.
Features:
Multiple Moving Averages:
SMA (Simple Moving Average) SELL: Configured with a default length of 22. This moving average is used for determining the "SELL" zone, and its color changes based on price action.
SMA (Simple Moving Average) CONTROL: Configured with a default length of 200. This moving average is a longer-term trend indicator used as a "control" reference. It’s color changes as well depending on price action.
SMA (Simple Moving Average) BUY: Configured with a default length of 50. This moving average acts as the "BUY" zone, where color changes help signal when price is above or below this moving average.
EMA (Exponential Moving Average): Configured with a default length of 13, which reacts more quickly to price changes compared to SMA. It’s plotted but hidden by default.
Dynamic Color Changes: Each moving average has two color states:
When the price is above the moving average, the color shifts to a positive tone, signaling potential buy signals.
When the price is below the moving average, the color turns negative, signaling potential sell or warning zones.
Colors used are:
SMA SELL: Green when above, Red when below.
SMA CONTROL: Blue when above, Red when below.
SMA BUY: Blue when above, Red when below.
EMA: Dark tone when above, Blue tone when below.
Customizable Inputs:
SMA 22 (SELL), SMA 200 (CONTROL), SMA 50 (BUY), and EMA 13 can be adjusted via the input panel to suit different trading strategies.
Source for calculations: The default source for all calculations is the close price.
Plotting and Visibility:
The SMA 22 and EMA 13 are hidden by default but can be revealed as per user preferences.
The SMA 200 and SMA 50 are visible by default for comparison.
How the Script Works:
Color Logic:
The moving averages are colored based on the position of the price relative to the moving average:
Green (Up trend): Price is above the moving average.
Red (Down trend): Price is below the moving average.
Blue (Neutral): For the SMA 50 and EMA, price is either neutral or ranging.
Dynamic Indicators:
The SMA SELL (22) helps traders spot short-term selling opportunities when the price is below this line.
The SMA CONTROL (200) helps gauge the long-term trend and acts as a control line.
The SMA BUY (50) is considered a neutral or buy zone, where the price is seen as more favorable for buying when above the line.
The EMA 13 reacts quickly to price changes, providing faster signals for traders looking for a more dynamic approach.
How to Use:
Trend Confirmation: Use the SMA 200 (Control line) for long-term trend confirmation.
Entry and Exit:
Buy: Look for price above the SMA 50 (BUY) and the SMA 22 (SELL) showing an uptrend.
Sell: Watch for price below the SMA 50 (BUY) or SMA 22 (SELL) indicating a possible downtrend or a selling opportunity.
EMA 13: Acts as a faster, more responsive trend indicator that can be used for shorter time-frame trades.
Example:
SMA SELL (22): The green line suggests potential buying opportunities when the price is above it. The red line suggests possible selling when the price is below.
SMA CONTROL (200): This acts as the primary trend indicator. If the price is above this, the long-term trend is bullish. If the price is below, the long-term trend is bearish.
SMA BUY (50): When the price is above this line, it indicates a favorable buying zone. When the price is below it, it suggests a potential bearish move.
EMA 13: Often used for short-term trades, especially when the price is moving quickly either above or below it.
Customization:
You can adjust the lengths of the SMA SELL, SMA CONTROL, SMA BUY, and EMA based on your personal strategy or trading style.
Modify the colors of each moving average line to better suit your chart preferences.
This script is suitable for traders looking to combine trend-following and short-term trading strategies using moving averages. It allows for an adaptable approach with visual cues based on the price's relationship with key moving averages.
EMA20/50/100/200 with extended lines and labels by TradeCrafted📈 EMA20/50/100/200 with Extended Lines and Labels by TradeCrafted
Overview
This script plots four key Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) — 20, 50, 100, and 200 — directly on the chart for enhanced trend visualization.
In addition to the standard plots, it extends each EMA forward with a projected line, helping traders anticipate potential future dynamic support and resistance zones.
Clear, color-coded labels are attached to each EMA, updating live to improve chart readability without clutter.
This tool is designed for educational and informational purposes only and does not provide financial advice or guaranteed trading results.
✨ Features
Plots EMA 20, EMA 50, EMA 100, and EMA 200 in distinct colors.
Extends each EMA line forward by a user-defined number of bars.
Dynamic floating labels show the EMA name and live value.
Minimalistic and clean design, ideal for all trading styles.
Open-source and customizable for user transparency.
📚 Usage
Use this indicator to:
Identify overall market trends across different timeframes.
Spot potential areas of dynamic support and resistance.
Observe EMA crossovers for possible trend shifts.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This script is intended for educational and informational purposes only.
It does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any asset.
Always perform your own analysis before making trading decisions.
Event-Based Multi MA v1.1📈 Event-Based Multi MA v1.1 — Smart Trading with Dynamic MA Updates
Overview
In a world where most moving averages blindly follow every candle, Event-Based Multi MA v1.1 introduces a smarter logic:
➡️ Update moving averages only when significant price movements occur.
Forget the noise. Focus on what's important.
This indicator recalculates your moving averages only after meaningful price shifts, allowing you to spot true trends and avoid market whipsaws.
Key Features
✅ Event-Driven Logic
Set events based on:
Points: Absolute price change
Percent: Relative price movement
ATR: Volatility-adjusted dynamic movement
✅ Seven Fully Customizable Moving Averages (MA1–MA7)
Each MA offers:
Custom timeframe
Selection of types (EMA, SMA, WMA, VWMA, HMA, LSMA, DEMA, TEMA, ALMA, RMA)
Adjustable lengths and colors
✅ Reduced Market Noise
MAs adjust only after important price actions — cutting down lag and false signals.
✅ Multi-Timeframe Analysis
You can blend moving averages from different timeframes (e.g., 15m, 1H, Daily) into a single chart — perfect for professional multi-frame strategy building.
Settings Explained
Event Trigger Type: Select Points, Percent, or ATR-based movement.
Event Threshold: The amount of price movement needed to trigger a new calculation.
ATR Length: If ATR mode is selected, this controls the sensitivity.
Each Moving Average (MA1 to MA7) has:
MA Type: Choose the smoothing method that suits your trading style.
Length: The number of bars used in the calculation.
Color: Customize visual styling.
Timeframe: Load MAs from different timeframes into your current chart.
How to Use It in Trading
🔹 Trend Confirmation
Wait for event-triggered updates. Fresh MAs after a significant move are much stronger signals than constantly refreshing MAs.
🔹 Momentum Breakouts
Combine short-term (e.g., MA1, MA2) and long-term (e.g., MA5, MA6) MAs. When short-term MAs cross above/below long-term after an event, it's a powerful breakout cue.
🔹 Dynamic Support/Resistance
Use slow-moving MAs like 100-200 length across different timeframes.
The event-based recalculation keeps them relevant to recent major price moves.
🔹 Volatility Filters
Switch to ATR-based events to adapt moving average updates during volatile periods and calm markets.
Why It Beats Traditional Moving Averages
🚀 No More Overfitting to Every Candle
You focus only on impactful price changes.
🚀 Multi-Timeframe Flexibility
Blend micro and macro views seamlessly in one chart.
🚀 Cleaner Signals, Less Noise
Event-triggered recalculations filter out useless minor price wobbles.
🚀 Customization Beyond Standard MAs
TEMA, HMA, ALMA, DEMA, VWMA — all included for ultra-fine-tuned strategies.
✨ Ready to Upgrade Your Trading?
Forget the old, slow MAs.
Use intelligence. Trade events, not noise.
→ Add Event-Based Multi MA v1.1 to your chart and experience true precision!
Institutional Composite Moving Average (ICMA) [Volume Vigilante]Institutional Composite Moving Average (ICMA)
The Next Evolution of Moving Averages — Built for Real Traders.
ICMA blends the strength of four powerful averages (SMA, EMA, WMA, HMA) into a single ultra-responsive, ultra-smooth signal.
It reacts faster than traditional MAs while filtering out noise, giving you clean trend direction with minimal lag.
🔹 Key Features:
• Faster reaction than SMA, EMA, or WMA individually
• Smoother and more stable than raw HMA
• Naturally adapts across trend, momentum, and consolidation conditions
• Zero gimmicks. Zero repainting. Full institutional quality.
🔹 Designed For:
• Scalping
• Swing trading
• Signal engines
• Algorithmic systems
📎 How to Use:
• Overlay it on any chart
• Fine-tune the length per timeframe
• Combine with your entries/exits for maximum edge
Created by Volume Vigilante 🧬 — Delivering Real-World Trading Tools.
DMM Face-Melter Pro v2🔧 Core Components & Functionality
📐 Dynamic Fibonacci Levels (Slow)
Five ultra-reliable zones based on extended Fibonacci sequences (think 377, 610, 987, etc.).
Specifically designed to remain hidden until price proximity matters.
When price action moves within ~10% of one of these levels, it’s automatically activated and displayed.
As price moves away, the level enters a cooldown phase and stops printing on the chart.
Especially powerful in swing setups and macro timeframes, where these levels often mark major turning points or hidden support/resistance, yet are not routinely tracked due their long length.
🧊 Cool 9 + Gradient Suite (Fast to Medium)
Cool 9: A fast-reacting line with a smooth visual gradient stretching to the Fibonacci 34. The gradient visually communicates momentum decay and near-term exhaustion.
Cool 21 and Cool 55: Optional overlays that round out this trio of reactive lines. These mid-length Fib levels are ideal for spotting rhythm-based reversals and continuation patterns.
All three have proven effectiveness across all timeframes, from intraday to monthly charts, with an emphasis on oscillation structure.
🌫 Death Metal Bands (Candle Coloring Logic)
Candle colors shift dynamically based on interaction with a Bollinger Bands–inspired cloud.
Candles get brighter or darker as they close deeper into the upper or lower cloud, giving an intuitive sense of price extremes without extra lines.
The color sequence resets when price enters the middle zone.
Choose between:
Standard Mode: Green/red candles shift toward white/gray.
Low-Stress Mode: Cream/gray candles shift toward purple/blue—for reduced screen fatigue and clearer judgment in high-volatility conditions.
🟨 200-Day Cloud
A cloud-based visualization of the 200-period moving average, enhanced with an embedded Fibonacci level.
Helps identify high-confluence zones that institutional traders often react to, but which are rarely marked with this level of refinement.
🧠 How to Use It
This script was built for traders who need high-signal input and low chart noise:
Swing traders can use the dynamic Fibonacci levels to monitor hidden zones where price often pivots.
Trend followers can lean on the Cool 9 suite to confirm direction and strength in real time.
Visual and discretionary traders will benefit from candle color cues that highlight exhaustion without clashing with other systems or charts.
Death Metal Fire & IceA dynamic support/resistance system built from modified Fibonacci-based moving averages, designed to assist with structure identification in trending markets — particularly when price is moving into uncharted territory.
🧠 Core Logic
Twelve Fibonacci-based moving averages are mathematically adjusted by the square root of a standard trading Fibonacci ratio to create projected zones above and around price. These dynamic levels are labeled L1 to L12 and automatically adjust with trend velocity and volatility.
Faster levels (L1–L5) often serve as immediate reaction zones in volatile markets and provide ceilings for rising price action.
Slower levels (L6–L12) tend to behave as longer-term structure — both above and below current price.
These levels are dynamic, non-static, and provide forward-looking structure that adapts as markets move. Price tends to range between these levels until conditions change, which becomes visually apparent through the breaking of support/resistance.
⚙️ Features
Smart Mode: Hides levels that are not relevant to current price proximity. Price action needs to get within 10% of the level for it to appear. If price action moves away from the level, there will be a cooldown period for the line to cease printing on the chart.
Gradient Mode: Fills space between levels with a visual overlay to help visualize distance and potential volatility.
Levels can be toggled on/off individually.
🧩 Use Case
Designed for trending markets where traditional support/resistance is unavailable or unreliable.
Applicable across all assets and timeframes — stocks, crypto, futures, etc.
[blackcat] L2 FiboKAMA Adaptive TrendOVERVIEW
The L2 FiboKAMA Adaptive Trend indicator leverages advanced technical analysis techniques by integrating Fibonacci principles with the Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average (KAMA). This combination creates a dynamic and responsive tool designed to adapt seamlessly to changing market conditions. By providing clear buy and sell signals based on adaptive momentum, this indicator helps traders identify potential entry and exit points effectively. Its intuitive design and robust features make it a valuable addition to any trader’s arsenal 📊💹.
According to the principle of Kaufman's Adaptive Moving Average (KAMA), it is a type of moving average line specifically designed for markets with high volatility. Unlike traditional moving averages, KAMA can automatically adjust its period based on market conditions to improve accuracy and responsiveness. This makes it particularly useful for capturing market trends and reducing false signals in varying market environments.
The use of Fibonacci magic numbers (3, 8, 13) enhances the performance and accuracy of KAMA. These numbers have special mathematical properties that align well with the changing trends of KAMA moving averages. Combining them with KAMA can significantly boost its effectiveness, making it a popular choice among traders seeking reliable signals.
This fusion not only smoothens price fluctuations but also ensures quick responses to market changes, offering dependable entry and exit points. Thanks to the flexibility and precision of KAMA combined with Fibonacci magic numbers, traders can better manage risks and aim for higher returns.
FEATURES
Enhanced Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average (KAMA): Incorporates Fibonacci principles for improved adaptability:
Source Price: Allows customization of the price series used for calculation (default: HLCC4).
Fast Length: Determines the period for quicker adjustments to recent price changes.
Slow Length: Sets the period for smoother transitions over longer-term trends.
Dynamic Lines:
KAMA Line: A yellow line representing the primary adaptive moving average, which adapts quickly to new trends.
Trigger Line: A fuchsia line serving as a reference point for detecting crossovers and generating signals.
Visual Cues:
Buy Signals: Green 'B' labels indicating potential buying opportunities.
Sell Signals: Red 'S' labels signaling possible selling points.
Fill Areas: Colored regions between the KAMA and Trigger lines to visually represent trend directions and strength.
Alert Functionality: Generates real-time alerts for both buy and sell signals, ensuring timely notifications for actionable insights 🔔.
Customizable Parameters: Offers flexibility through adjustable inputs, allowing users to tailor the indicator to their specific trading strategies and preferences.
HOW TO USE
Adding the Indicator:
Open your TradingView chart and navigate to the indicators list.
Select L2 FiboKAMA Adaptive Trend and add it to your chart.
Configuring Parameters:
Adjust the Source Price to choose the desired price series (e.g., close, open, high, low).
Set the Fast Length to define how quickly the indicator responds to recent price movements.
Configure the Slow Length to determine the smoothness of long-term trend adaptations.
Interpreting Signals:
Monitor the chart for green 'B' labels indicating buy signals and red 'S' labels for sell signals.
Observe the colored fill areas between the KAMA and Trigger lines to gauge trend strength and direction.
Setting Up Alerts:
Enable alerts within the indicator settings to receive notifications whenever buy or sell signals are triggered.
Customize alert messages and frequencies according to your trading plan.
Combining with Other Tools:
Integrate this indicator with additional technical analysis tools and fundamental research for comprehensive decision-making.
Confirm signals using other indicators like RSI, MACD, or Bollinger Bands for increased reliability.
Optimizing Performance:
Backtest the indicator across various assets and timeframes to understand its behavior under different market conditions.
Fine-tune parameters based on historical performance and current market dynamics.
Integrating Magic Numbers:
Understand the basic principles of KAMA to find suitable entry points for Fibonacci magic numbers.
Utilize the efficiency ratio to measure market volatility and adjust moving average parameters accordingly.
Apply Fibonacci magic numbers (3, 8, 13) to enhance the responsiveness and accuracy of KAMA.
LIMITATIONS
Market Volatility: May produce false signals during periods of extreme volatility or sideways movement.
Parameter Sensitivity: Requires careful tuning of fast and slow lengths to balance responsiveness and stability.
Asset-Specific Behavior: Effectiveness can vary significantly across different financial instruments and time horizons.
Complementary Analysis: Should be used alongside other analytical methods to enhance accuracy and reduce risk.
NOTES
Historical Data: Ensure adequate historical data availability for precise calculations and backtesting.
Demo Testing: Thoroughly test the indicator on demo accounts before deploying it in live trading environments.
Continuous Learning: Stay updated with market trends and continuously refine your strategy incorporating feedback from the indicator's performance.
Risk Management: Always implement proper risk management practices regardless of the signals provided by the indicator.
ADVANCED USAGE TIPS
Multi-Timeframe Analysis: Apply the indicator across multiple timeframes to gain deeper insights into underlying trends.
Divergence Strategy: Look for divergences between price action and the KAMA line to spot potential reversals early.
Volume Integration: Combine volume analysis with the indicator to confirm the strength of identified trends.
Custom Scripting: Modify the script to include additional filters or conditions tailored to your unique trading approach.
IMPROVING KAMA PERFORMANCE
Increase Length: Extend the KAMA length to consider more historical data, reducing the impact of short-term price fluctuations.
Adjust Fast and Slow Lengths: Make KAMA smoother by increasing the fast length and decreasing the slow length.
Use Smoothing Factor: Apply a smoothing factor to control the level of smoothness; typical values range from 0 to 1.
Combine with Other Indicators: Pair KAMA with other smoothing indicators like EMA or SMA for more reliable signals.
Filter Noise: Use filters or other technical analysis tools to eliminate price noise, enhancing KAMA's effectiveness.
Percentage difference to averagesSimple indicator to analyse the distance of price and average.
An indicator that shows the percentage distance between the current price and a moving average (MA) is a powerful tool to assess how far the price has deviated from its recent average. It provides insights into market extremes, momentum, and potential reversal zones.
Identifying Overbought / Oversold Conditions:
When the price is significantly above the moving average (e.g., +10% or more), it might suggest that the asset is overbought and could be due for a correction or consolidation.
If the price is far below the MA (e.g., –10%), it might indicate oversold conditions and a potential rebound.
Gauging Strength or Weakness:
- A large positive distance shows strong bullish momentum – price is surging away from its average.
- A large negative distance can suggest weakness, panic selling, or capitulation.
This helps traders and analysts see whether current price action is strong or potentially stretched.
Entry/Exit Signal Aid
- Trend followers might enter when the price pulls back toward the MA after a strong run.
- Mean reversion traders use the distance to bet on a return toward the average when the deviation gets too extreme.
SnipeSquad NQ-Survival SniperRapid-fire scalping toolkit for the 1-minute CME Nasdaq-100 futures chart (NQ/MNQ) that stacks a higher-time-frame trend bias, intraday VWAP, and momentum/RSI triggers, then auto-maps stop & target levels so $nipeSquad members can drop OCO orders in a click.
What the script does
• Context filter – Pulls a 34-EMA from a higher time-frame (default 15 min) and checks where price sits versus that EMA and the current-session VWAP.
o Price > EMA and VWAP ⇒ bullish context
o Price < EMA and VWAP ⇒ bearish context
• Entry trigger – On the 1-minute chart it waits for:
o an 8/21 EMA crossover / cross-under, plus
o an RSI sanity check (RSI < 60 for longs, > 40 for shorts).
• Risk template – You define the risk per trade in ticks (default 20).
o Script instantly projects a stop and a target at your chosen Reward-to-Risk multiple (default 2 R).
o Each new trade is tagged with an ID label that shows direction and tick target so you can fire an OCO order fast.
• Visual outputs
o VWAP line (session-reset) and Higher-TF EMA line
o Green/red triangles for entries
o Up/down labels that display the projected target price
• Alerts ready – alertcondition() lines fire the moment a long or short signal prints, so you can route them to a broker, Discord, or wherever the $nipeSquad hangs out.
Adjustable inputs
Input Default Purpose
Context TF 15 (min) Higher-time-frame used for trend bias
Risk (ticks) 20 Size of the stop in ticks
Reward-to-Risk 2.0 Multiplier that sets the profit target
VWAP session / UTC 1800-1600 / UTC-4 Lets you anchor VWAP to your preferred trading session
How to use
1. Add the script on a 1-minute NQ or MNQ chart.
2. Set your risk ticks so the dollar value lines up with your prop-firm rules or personal risk limits.
3. Wait for a triangle that aligns with your bias; the label shows stop & target prices.
4. Place an OCO order (or link an automation) using those levels.
5. Repeat until daily goal is hit, or your risk plan says stop.
(The “$2 K” idea is purely an illustrative target—there is no guarantee this script will produce that, or any, profit.)
Educational & Risk Disclaimer 📚⚠️
This indicator is provided solely for educational purposes. It is not financial advice, a trading signal service, or a promise of profit. Futures trading involves substantial risk and can result in losses exceeding your initial investment.
By using this script you acknowledge that you alone are responsible for your trading decisions. Past performance—real or simulated—does not guarantee future results. The author accepts no liability for any loss or damage arising from the use of this code or the information herein. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial professional before trading.
EMA Trend Pro: Dynamic Clouds & ColorsEMA Trend Pro is your ultimate trend companion, built for traders who want clarity, precision, and confidence in their entries.
This script fuses dynamic EMA cloud zones with breakout and pullback signals — giving you real-time insights into market structure and momentum. Whether you're trading crypto, forex, stocks, or futures, EMA Trend Pro adapts to your style.
🔧 Key Features:
✅ EMA Stack Clouds with Folding Sensitivity (9/21/48/200)
✅ Bullish / Bearish trend labels with real-time dashboard
✅ Volume strength analysis (High, Normal, Low)
✅ Breakout signal alerts (momentum-based)
✅ Pullback signal alerts (trend resumption)
✅ Fully customizable: EMA lengths, signal visibility, cloud opacity
✅ Works across all assets and timeframes
🛠️ Designed for scalping, swing trading, and intraday setups.
🔔 Built-in alerts make automation seamless — no guesswork.
💡 Usage Tips:
Use clouds and trend labels to identify structure and bias
Trade breakouts when EMAs align and volume confirms
Look for pullbacks into the EMA zone and enter on resumption
📅 Market Hours Filter: Keeps signals relevant during core trading hours (9:30 AM–4 PM ET).
👤 Developed by @glapougbaegarmondeh
🧠 Version 1.0 | 📆 Released: April 24, 2025
Amihud Liquidity RatioCalculates liquidity as a sort of moving average over time
The Amihud Illiquidity Ratio (ILLIQ) measures the price impact of trading volume. It's calculated as the absolute daily return divided by the daily dollar volume:
𝐼𝐿𝐿𝐼𝑄ₜ = |𝑅ₜ| / 𝑉𝑂𝐿𝐷ₜ
Where:
|𝑅ₜ| is the absolute value on return day t
𝑉𝑂𝐿𝐷ₜ is the dollar trading volume on day t
Here's how you can incorporate this indicator into your analysis:
1. Identifying Liquidity Regimes:
High Liquidity (Low Indicator Values): When the indicator is consistently low, it suggests a market or asset where it's generally easier to enter and exit positions without significant slippage. This might be a more favorable environment for strategies that rely on tight spreads and efficient order execution.
Low Liquidity (High Indicator Values): When the indicator is consistently high or spiking, it signals periods of lower liquidity. This can lead to:
Increased Volatility: Fewer participants and larger bid-ask spreads can amplify price movements.
Higher Slippage: Executing large orders might result in getting a worse price than expected.
Gap Risk: Significant price gaps can occur between trading sessions due to a lack of continuous trading interest.
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2. Confirming Trends and Breakouts:
Trend Confirmation:
Uptrend with Increasing Liquidity (Falling Amihud): A healthy uptrend often sees increasing participation and ease of trading. A falling Amihud during an uptrend can provide confidence in the trend's sustainability.
Uptrend with Decreasing Liquidity (Rising Amihud): An uptrend accompanied by rising Amihud might be less stable. It could suggest that the price increase is driven by fewer participants and might be more prone to reversals.
The same logic applies to downtrends, but in reverse.
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Breakout Confirmation:
Breakout with Increasing Liquidity (Falling Amihud): A breakout accompanied by increasing liquidity (falling Amihud) can suggest strong conviction and a higher probability of the breakout being sustained.
Breakout with Decreasing Liquidity (Rising Amihud): A breakout on low liquidity might be more suspect and could be a "fakeout" if there isn't enough sustained buying or selling pressure.
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3. Identifying Potential Reversal Points:
Liquidity Exhaustion: Sometimes, a prolonged period of low liquidity (high Amihud) might precede a reversal. The lack of active trading interest at those levels could make the price more susceptible to a shift in sentiment.
Liquidity Surges: A sudden spike in liquidity (a sharp drop in Amihud) after a period of low liquidity could indicate renewed interest and potentially the start of a new trend or a reversal of the previous one.
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TrendCraft ICT SwiftEdge// The TrendCraft ICT SwiftEdge is a trend-following indicator that combines Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) with Inner Circle Trader (ICT) concepts, specifically Break of Structure (BOS) and Market Structure Shift (MSS), to generate precise buy and sell signals. This unique mashup leverages the strengths of trend confirmation through SMAs and market structure analysis via ICT to help traders identify high-probability trend entries. The indicator is designed to be intuitive, customizable, and suitable for traders of all levels seeking to align with market trends on various timeframes.
//
// ### What It Does
// The indicator plots two SMAs based on the high and low prices of candles to define the trend direction. It colors the SMAs and fills the area between them to visually indicate whether the price is in a bullish (above both SMAs), bearish (below both SMAs), or neutral (between SMAs) state. Simultaneously, it identifies BOS and MSS levels on a user-defined higher timeframe to confirm trend continuation or reversal points. Buy and sell signals are generated when the price closes above/below the latest BOS or MSS level (based on user preference) while also being correctly positioned relative to the SMAs, ensuring alignment with the trend.
//
// ### Why Combine SMAs and ICT?
// SMAs provide a reliable way to gauge trend direction by smoothing price data, but they can lag or generate false signals in choppy markets. ICT's BOS and MSS concepts address this by focusing on key market structure breaks, offering context for significant price movements. By requiring price to close beyond a BOS or MSS level and align with the SMA-defined trend, the TrendCraft ICT SwiftEdge filters out noise and enhances signal reliability. This combination creates a robust system that balances trend-following simplicity with structural market insights, making it ideal for trend traders.
//
// ### How to Use
// 1. **SMA Length**: Adjust the `SMA Length` (default: 20) to control the sensitivity of the SMAs. Shorter lengths react faster to price changes, while longer lengths provide smoother trends.
// 2. **Structure Timeframe**: Set the `Structure Timeframe` to a higher timeframe (e.g., "1H" on a 15M chart) to calculate BOS and MSS levels. This ensures structural signals are based on significant market moves.
// 3. **Chart Timeframe**: Select the `Chart Timeframe` to optimize pivot point calculations for your current chart (e.g., "30M" for a 30-minute chart).
// 4. **Signal Type**: Choose between "BOS" (default) for signals based on trend continuation breaks or "MSS" for signals based on potential reversal points (breakers).
// 5. **Display Options**: Enable/disable `Show Continuation (BOS)` and `Show Breaker (MSS)` to toggle the visibility of BOS and MSS lines. Customize their colors for better chart clarity.
//
// ### Signals
// - **Buy Signal**: Appears when the close price crosses above the latest BOS or MSS level (based on Signal Type) and is above both SMAs, indicating a bullish trend entry. Marked with a green "Buy" label.
// - **Sell Signal**: Appears when the close price crosses below the latest BOS or MSS level (based on Signal Type) and is below both SMAs, indicating a bearish trend entry. Marked with a red "Sell" label.
//
// ### Originality
// The TrendCraft ICT SwiftEdge stands out by integrating the trend-following reliability of SMAs with the structural precision of ICT's BOS and MSS. Unlike standalone SMA or ICT indicators, this script requires both trend alignment and structural confirmation, reducing false signals. The user-selectable Signal Type (BOS or MSS) adds versatility, allowing traders to adapt the indicator to trend-following or counter-trend strategies. Its dynamic timeframe adjustments and visual clarity make it a unique tool for traders seeking to capture trend entries with confidence.
//
// ### Notes
// - Ensure the `Structure Timeframe` is higher than your chart timeframe to avoid calculation issues.
// - Signals are generated only when the trend state changes to avoid redundant signals in the same trend direction.
// - Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always combine this indicator with other analysis and risk management techniques.
EMA Pullback & Trend Indicator MyraxesEMA Pullback & Trend Indicator by Max Retri
Plots five EMAs—9, 15, 30, 65 and 200—and draws clean, easy-to-interpret signals when the fast EMAs cross in the direction of the longer-term trend. No other indicators or overlays are required; simply add it to your chart and watch for the arrows and crosses.
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What It Does & How It Works
1. EMAs & Colors
• Red (EMA 9) – Fast signal line
• Blue (EMA 15) – Confirmation line
• Orange (EMA 30) – Pullback zone 1
• Purple (EMA 65) – Pullback zone 2 & mid-term trend
• White (EMA 200) – Long-term trend
2. Trend Filter
• Bullish regime when price is above both EMA 65 and EMA 200.
• Bearish regime when price is below both EMA 65 and EMA 200.
3. Pullback Requirement
• Only consider a signal if price has retraced into the EMA 30 or EMA 65 zone.
4. Signal Logic
Long Entry ▲: EMA 9 (red) crosses above EMA 15 (blue) while in a bullish regime and after a pullback into EMA 30/65.
Short Entry ▼: EMA 9 crosses below EMA 15 while in a bearish regime and after a retracement up to EMA 30/65.
Exit ✖: Opposite EMA 9/15 crossover marks the close of the position.
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How to Use
1. Add the indicator to any chart/timeframe.
2. Identify trend: make sure price is aligned above or below the 65 and 200 EMAs.
3. Watch for pullbacks into the orange or purple EMAs.
4. Enter on the black ▲ or ▼ arrow.
5. Exit when you see the gray ✖ cross.
Because it’s a pure‐EMA indicator (no heavy calculations), it runs quickly even on lower-end machines.
Linear Regression with StdDev BandsLinear Regression with Standard Deviation Bands Indicator
This indicator plots a linear regression line along with upper and lower bands based on standard deviation. It helps identify potential overbought and oversold conditions, as well as trend direction and strength.
Key Components:
Linear Regression Line: Represents the average price over a specified period.
Upper and Lower Bands: Calculated by adding and subtracting the standard deviation (multiplied by a user-defined factor) from the linear regression line. These bands act as dynamic support and resistance levels.
How to Use:
Trend Identification: The direction of the linear regression line indicates the prevailing trend.
Overbought/Oversold Signals: Prices approaching or crossing the upper band may suggest overbought conditions, while prices near the lower band may indicate oversold conditions.
Dynamic Support/Resistance: The bands can act as potential support and resistance levels.
Alerts: Option to enable alerts when the price crosses above the upper band or below the lower band.
Customization:
Regression Length: Adjust the period over which the linear regression is calculated.
StdDev Multiplier: Modify the width of the bands by changing the standard deviation multiplier.
Price Source: Choose which price data to use for calculations (e.g., close, open, high, low).
Alerts: Enable or disable alerts for band crossings.
This indicator is a versatile tool for understanding price trends and potential reversal points.
Easy MA SignalsEasy MA Signals
Overview
Easy MA Signals is a versatile Pine Script indicator designed to help traders visualize moving average (MA) trends, generate buy/sell signals based on crossovers or custom price levels, and enhance chart analysis with volume-based candlestick coloring. Built with flexibility in mind, it supports multiple MA types, crossover options, and customizable signal appearances, making it suitable for traders of all levels. Whether you're a day trader, swing trader, or long-term investor, this indicator provides actionable insights while keeping your charts clean and intuitive.
Configure the Settings
The indicator is divided into three input groups for ease of use:
General Settings:
Candlestick Color Scheme: Choose from 10 volume-based color schemes (e.g., Sapphire Pulse, Emerald Spark) to highlight high/low volume candles. Select “None” for TradingView’s default colors.
Moving Average Length: Set the MA period (default: 20). Adjust for faster (lower values) or slower (higher values) signals.
Moving Average Type: Choose between SMA, EMA, or WMA (default: EMA).
Show Buy/Sell Signals: Enable/disable signal plotting (default: enabled).
Moving Average Crossover: Select a crossover type (e.g., MA vs VWAP, MA vs SMA50) for signals or “None” to disable.
Volume Influence: Adjust how volume impacts candlestick colors (default: 1.2). Higher values make thresholds stricter.
Signal Appearance Settings:
Buy/Sell Signal Shape: Choose shapes like triangles, arrows, or labels for signals.
Buy/Sell Signal Position: Place signals above or below bars.
Buy/Sell Signal Color: Customize colors for better visibility (default: green for buy, red for sell).
Custom Price Alerts:
Custom Buy/Sell Alert Price: Set specific price levels for alerts (default: 0, disabled). Enter a non-zero value to enable.
Set Up Alerts
To receive notifications (e.g., sound, popup, email) when signals or custom price levels are hit:
Click the Alert button (alarm clock icon) in TradingView.
Select Easy MA Signals as the condition and choose one of the four alert types:
MA Crossover Buy Alert: Triggers on MA crossover buy signals.
MA Crossover Sell Alert: Triggers on MA crossover sell signals.
Custom Buy Alert: Triggers when price crosses above the custom buy price.
Custom Sell Alert: Triggers when price crosses below the custom sell price.
Enable Play Sound and select a sound (e.g., “Bell”).
Set the frequency (e.g., Once Per Bar Close for confirmed signals) and create the alert.
Analyze the Chart
Moving Average Line: Displays the selected MA with color changes (green for bullish, red for bearish, gray for neutral) based on price position relative to the MA.
Buy/Sell Signals: Appear as shapes or labels when crossovers or custom price levels are hit.
Candlestick Colors: If a color scheme is selected, candles change color based on volume strength (high, low, or neutral), aiding in trend confirmation.
Why Use Easy MA Signals?
Easy MA Signals is designed to simplify technical analysis while offering advanced customization. It’s ideal for traders who want:
A clear visualization of MA trends and crossovers.
Flexible signal generation based on MA crossovers or custom price levels.
Volume-enhanced candlestick coloring to identify market strength.
Easy-to-use settings with tooltips for beginners and pros alike.
This script is particularly valuable because it combines multiple features into one indicator, reducing chart clutter and providing actionable insights without overwhelming the user.
Benefits of Easy MA Signals
Highly Customizable: Supports SMA, EMA, and WMA with adjustable lengths.
Offers multiple crossover options (VWAP, SMA10, SMA20, etc.) for tailored strategies.
Custom price alerts allow precise targeting of key levels.
Volume-Based Candlestick Coloring: 10 unique color schemes highlight volume strength, helping traders confirm trends.
Adjustable volume influence ensures adaptability to different markets.
Flexible Signal Visualization: Choose from various signal shapes (triangles, arrows, labels) and positions (above/below bars).
Customizable colors improve visibility on any chart background.
Alert Integration: Built-in alert conditions for crossovers and custom prices support sound, email, and app notifications.
Easy setup for real-time trading decisions.
User-Friendly Design: Organized input groups with clear tooltips make configuration intuitive.
Suitable for beginners and advanced traders alike.
Example Use Cases
Swing Trading with MA Crossovers:
Scenario: A trader wants to trade Bitcoin (BTC/USD) on a 4-hour chart using an EMA crossover strategy.
Setup:
Set Moving Average Type to EMA, Length to 20.
Set Moving Average Crossover to “MA vs SMA50”.
Enable Show Buy/Sell Signals and choose “arrowup” for buy, “arrowdown” for sell.
Select “Emerald Spark” for candlestick colors to highlight volume surges.
Usage: Buy when the EMA20 crosses above the SMA50 (green arrow appears) and volume is high (dark green candles). Sell when the EMA20 crosses below the SMA50 (red arrow). Set alerts for real-time notifications.
Scalping with Custom Price Alerts:
Scenario: A day trader monitors Tesla (TSLA) on a 5-minute chart and wants alerts at specific support/resistance levels.
Setup:
Set Custom Buy Alert Price to 150.00 (support) and Custom Sell Alert Price to 160.00 (resistance).
Use “labelup” for buy signals and “labeldown” for sell signals.
Keep Moving Average Crossover as “None” to focus on price alerts.
Usage: Receive a sound alert and label when TSLA crosses 150.00 (buy) or 160.00 (sell). Use volume-colored candles to confirm momentum before entering trades.
When NOT to Use Easy MA Signals
High-Frequency Trading: Reason: The indicator relies on moving averages and volume, which may lag in ultra-fast markets (e.g., sub-second trades). High-frequency traders may need specialized tools with real-time tick data.
Alternative: Use order book or market depth indicators for faster execution.
Low-Volatility or Sideways Markets:
Reason: MA crossovers and custom price alerts can generate false signals in choppy, range-bound markets, leading to whipsaws.
Alternative: Use oscillators like RSI or Bollinger Bands to trade within ranges.
This indicator is tailored more towards less experienced traders. And as always, paper trade until you are comfortable with how this works if you're unfamiliar with trading! We hope you enjoy this and have great success. Thanks for your interested in Easy MA Signals!