Volume Profile Histogram [SS]I usually (and by usually, I mean the past year xD) release a significant indicator as my Christmas gift to the community on Christmas Eve. Last year, it was the Z-Score buy and sell signal; this year, it's something a little more conventional. So here is this year’s gift—hope you like it! 🎁
Seems like everyone has their take on Volume Profiles (aka SVP or VSP). I decided to create one, and in true Steversteves fashion, you can expect to find all the goodies that come with most of my stuff, including a volume profile presented in a bell-curve/histogram style (chart above) and statistical frequency tables showing the cases by ranges:
And it wouldn't be a true Steversteves indicator without some kind of ATR thing:
So, what does it do?
At the end of the day, it is a form of an SVP indicator. However, it is meant to operate on a larger scale, sorting volume in a traditional bell-curve style. In addition to displaying volume, it breaks down buying vs. selling volume. Selling volume is classified as such when the open is greater than close, while buying is when close is greater than open. This breakdown allows you to see the distribution, by price range, of where selling and buying occur.
This permits the indicator to provide 2 Points of Control (POCs). A POC is defined as an area of high volume activity. Because buying and selling volumes are broken down into two, we can identify areas with high selling and areas with high buying. Sometimes they coincide, sometimes they differ.
If we look at SQQQ, for example:
We can see that the bearish point of control is one point below the bullish POC. This is interesting because it essentially shows where people may be "panic selling" or setting their stop-outs. If SQQQ drops below 18.8, then it's likely to trigger panic selling, as indicated by the histogram.
Conversely, we can observe that traders tend to position long between $18 and $24. The POC is noted in the stats table and also displayed on the chart. Bullish POC is shown in purple, bearish in yellow. These, of course, can be toggled off.
The Frequency Table:
The frequency table shows how many observations were obtained in each price range. The histogram illustrates the cumulative volume traded, while the frequency simply counts how many cases occurred over the lookback period.
ATR Range Analytics by Volume:
The indicator also has the ability to display range analytics by volume. When you toggle on the range analytics by volume option, a range chart will appear:
www.tradingview.com
The range chart goes from the minimum recorded volume to the maximum recorded volume in the period, showing the average range and direction associated with this volume. This is crucial to pay attention to because not all stocks behave the same way.
For example, in the chart above (AMD), we can see that low volume produces a general bearish bias, and high volume produces a general bullish bias. However, if we look at the range analytics for SPY:
Low volume has the inverse effect. Low volume is associated with a more bullish bias, and high volume indicates a more bearish bias. In the ATR chart, the threshold volume to transition from bullish bias to bearish bias is approximately > 78,607,268 traded shares.
The Stats Table:
The stats table can be toggled on or off. It simply displays the POCs and the time range for the VSP. The default time range is 1 trading year (252 days), assuming you are on the daily timeframe. However, you can use this on any timeframe.
The percentages displayed in the histogram is the cumulative percent of buying and selling volume independently. So when you see the percentage on the selling histogram, its the percent of cumulative selling only. Same for the buying.
And that's the indicator! I hope you enjoy it. Let me know your thoughts. I hope you all have safe holidays, a Merry Christmas for you North Americans, and a Happy Christmas for you UKers, and whatever else you celebrate/care about and do! Safe trades, everyone, and enjoy your holidays! 🎁🎄🎄🎄⭐⭐⭐ 🕎 🕎 🕎
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Bias AnalyzerName: Bias Analyzer
Category: Market Analyzer
Timeframe: 1H and 1D, depending on the Analysis type.
Technical Analysis: Usually when we think about a Trading System we start from an idea. This idea comes normally from observation and the study of the market.
Have we ever observed a market - for example Bitcoin - and thought that it increases at the start of a USA session? Great, this is a well-known category of Trading System and the purpose of the Bias Analyzer is to study these phenomena.
There are different types of Trading System that we can classify considering the market in-efficiency that we use to our advantage. In this case we make the Bias. Literally "inclination" or "presupposition" or precisely "tendency" of the price to go up or down in a temporal way.
The characteristics of the Bias depend on how much the Bias is persistent on the market since the analysed period. therefore we can consider:
Hourly Bias : analysing the hourly behaviours during the week. Trades normally last from a few hours to a few days.
Seasonal Bias : analysing the behaviour of the weeks in the monthly or annual context, evaluating the seasons.
Suggested usage: The possibilities of the tool are infinite, these are some scenarios of use:
Development of Intraday Trading Systems based on Hourly Bias with possible filters for specific days of the week.
Development of a Multi-day Trading System based on daily Bias with monthly analysis.
To identify the best day to execute our investment through Dollar Cost Average with a bit of healthy buy the dip
Main features:
Hourly Summary organized in Week
The cells contain the sum of the various price deltas for the single hour. The transparency indicates the frequency in which the candles close positive or negative. This information is available both in a synthetic way, as in the first column "Sum", and for each day of the week.
Hourly Details organized in different entry/exit
Shows the cumulative data of the various deltas, considering the purchase and the sale at certain times. In the rows are represented the buying hours and in the columns the selling hours.
Daily Summary organized in Months
The cells contain the summation of the various price deltas for the single day.
Hourly Details organized in different entry/exit
Allows to visualise the detailed analysis table, choosing to do it for all the months or for a specific month and shows the cumulative data of the various deltas, considering the purchase and the sale in certain days.
Configuration: You can configure the tool easily and completely.
Analysis
Calculate from Close to Open : this is the core of the whole analysis where the "Price Delta" to be calculated is defined. At this moment there is the possibility to calculate the distance between opening and closing.
Calculate in Percent or Cash : this allows to calculate the Price Delta in Percent or in Cash.
Analysis on 1H Timeframe
Show Hourly Summary on : allows to visualise the summary analysis table of the week. The cells contain the sum of the various price deltas for the single hour. The transparency indicates the frequency in which the candles close positive or negative. This information is available both in a synthetic way, as in the first column "Sum", and for each day of the week. At the bottom left there is also data which allows us to understand how many candles are being analysed. At the bottom of each day it is possible to visualise the cumulative data of the day. The position of the table is customizable.
Show Hourly Details of on : allows to visualise the detailed analysis table, choosing to do it for all days or for a specific day, and shows the cumulative data of the various deltas, considering the purchase and the sale at certain times. In the rows are represented the buying hours and in the columns the selling hours. For example, going to the table "All Days" we can see in the cell of row 13 and in column 22 the cumulative data of a possible buy on 13 and a sell at the end of 22. To facilitate the research of the values there is a configurable transparency system.
Analysis on 1D Timeframe
Show Daily Summary on : allows to visualise the summary analysis table of the month. The cells contain the summation of the various price deltas for the single day: The first row is the summation of all days of the month for all months in the analysis period, while the other rows represent the analysis for the various days of the individual months.
Show Daily Details of on : allows to visualise the detailed analysis table, choosing to do it for all the months or for a specific month and shows the cumulative data of the various deltas, considering the purchase and the sale in certain days. In the rows are represented the buying days and in the columns the selling days. For example, going to the table "All Months" we can see in the cell at row 1 and at column 3 the cumulative of a possible purchase on the 1st and the sale on the 3rd. To facilitate the research of the values, there is a configurable transparency system.
Table Layout
Size : allows to define the size of the text in the table.
Precision : it is possible to define the decimal precision of the calculations presented in the tables.
Transparency Factor : allows the application of a multiplication factor when the table calculates the transparency of detail tables.
Colours : allows to specify the colours of Profit, Loss and Neutral, besides to adapt a style coherent with the Dark Mode or Light Mode of Trading View
Volatility Filter
It is possible to directly apply a filter to the time series on which the delta is calculated. The volatility filter uses the ATR - an indicator that allows you to calculate the volatility in a given period. Briefly: the higher the ATR value, the higher the volatility. Therefore the filter works by comparing the volatility on two periods and indicates compression or expansion.
Backtest Dates
In order to facilitate the identification of in-sample and out-of-sample data, as well as the degradation of a given behaviour, it is possible to specify a period in which to do the analysis.
Thiru TimeCyclesThiru TimeCycles Indicator: Overview and Features
Based on the provided Pine Script code (version 6), the "Thiru TimeCycles" indicator is a comprehensive, customizable tool designed for intraday traders, particularly those following Smart Money Concepts (SMC), ICT (Inner Circle Trader) methodologies, and time-based cycle analysis. It overlays session-based boxes, lines, and labels on charts to highlight key trading windows, ranges, and structural levels. The indicator is timezone-aware (default GMT-4, e.g., New York time) and focuses on killzones (high-volatility sessions), Zeussy-inspired 90-minute macro cycles, and 30-minute sub-cycles. It's optimized for timeframes below 4H, with automatic hiding on higher timeframes like 1D, 1W, 1M, or 1Y.
This indicator is ideal for forex, indices (e.g., Nasdaq futures like MNQ1!), stocks, and commodities, helping traders identify order flow, liquidity zones, and potential reversals within structured time cycles. It's built by Thiru Trades and includes educational elements like range tables and watermarks for a professional setup.
Core Purpose
Time Cycle Visualization: Breaks the trading day into repeatable cycles (e.g., 30-min, 90-min, and larger sessions) to anticipate market behavior, such as accumulation, manipulation, and distribution (AMD) phases.
Session Highlighting: Draws boxes and lines for major sessions (Asia, London, NY AM/PM, Lunch, Power Hour) to focus on high-probability "killzones."
Range and Pivot Analysis: Tracks highs/lows, midpoints, and ranges for each cycle/session, with optional alerts for breaks.
Customization Focus: Extensive inputs for colors, transparency, labels, and limits, making it adaptable for scalping, day trading, or swing setups.
Performance: Limits drawings to prevent chart clutter (e.g., max 500 boxes/lines/labels), with cutoff times to stop extensions (e.g., at 15:00).
Key Features
Here's a breakdown of the indicator's main components and functionalities, grouped by category:
Killzone Sessions (Standard Trading Windows):
Sessions Included: Asia (18:00-02:31), London (02:30-07:01), NY AM (07:00-11:31), Lunch (12:00-13:01), NY PM (11:30-16:01), Power Hour (15:00-16:01).
Visualization: Semi-transparent boxes (95% transparency default) with optional text labels (e.g., "London", "NY AM").
Pivots and Midpoints: Optional high/low pivot lines (solid style, extend until mitigated or cutoff), midpoints (dotted), and labels (e.g., "LO.H" for London High).
Alerts: Break alerts for pivots (e.g., "Broke London High").
Range Table: Optional table showing current and average ranges (over 5 sessions) for each killzone, positioned at top-right (customizable size/position).
Zeussy 90-Minute Macro Time Cycles:
Inspired By: Zeussy's time cycle theory (from X/Twitter), dividing sessions into 90-min phases starting at 02:30 NY time.
Cycles Included:
London: A (02:30-04:01, blue), M (04:00-05:31, red), D (05:30-07:01, green).
NY AM: A (07:00-08:31, blue), M (08:30-10:01, red), D (10:00-11:31, green).
NY PM/Lunch: A (11:30-13:01, blue), M (13:00-14:31, red), D (14:30-16:01, green).
Visualization: Boxes (90% transparency) with optional small labels ("London A", etc.) at the top of each box.
Extensions: High/low lines extend until broken or cutoff; optional equilibrium (EQ) levels.
Benefits: Helps identify AMD phases within larger sessions; focus on NY AM/PM for best results (Asia/London for global traders).
Zeussy 30-Minute Sub-Cycles:
Sub-Division: Further breaks 90-min cycles into 30-min segments (e.g., London A: A1 02:30-03:01, A2 03:00-03:31, A3 03:30-04:01).
All Sub-Cycles: 18 total (3 per macro cycle across London A/M/D, NY AM A/M/D, NY PM A/M/D).
Visualization: Optional boxes (90% transparency, hidden text by default) with small labels (e.g., "A1", "M1") at the bottom.
Customization: Separate show/hide toggle and label size (default "Small"); can divide further into 10-min if needed via presets.
Use Case: For finer granularity in scalping; shows order flow within macros (e.g., support at previous low after break).
Day Range Divider:
Vertical Separators: Dotted lines (custom color/width/style) at midnight (00:00) for each trading day (Mon-Fri only).
Day Labels: Monday-Friday labels (e.g., "Monday" with letter-spacing) positioned at the top of the chart (0.1% above high, updated dynamically).
Limits: Up to 5 days (customizable); hides on timeframes >=4H (1D, 1W, 1M, 1Y) to avoid clutter.
Offset: Labels above day-high by ticks (default 20); no weekend labels.
Fix Applied: Labels now consistently at top (using high * 1.001 for y-position); removed middle adjustments.
Day/Week/Month (DWM) Levels:
Opens, Highs/Lows, Separators: Lines for daily/weekly/monthly opens (dotted), previous highs/lows (solid), and vertical separators.
Unlimited Mode: Optional to show all history (otherwise limited by max_days).
Alerts: For high/low breaks (e.g., "Hit PDH").
Labels: Optional "D.O", "PWH" (previous week high), etc., with right-side extension.
Opening Prices and Vertical Timestamps:
Custom Opens: Up to 8 user-defined session opens (e.g., DC Open 18:00, 00:00, 09:30) with horizontal lines (dotted).
Vertical Lines: Up to 4 timestamps (e.g., 17:00, 08:00) with extend-both.
Unlimited: Optional to ignore drawing limits.
Range and Statistics Table:
Display: Top-right table (custom position/size) showing current range, average range (over 5 sessions), and min days stored for all enabled killzones/cycles.
Color-Coded: Rows highlight active sessions (e.g., Asia row in purple if active).
Toggle: Show/hide averages; updates on last bar.
Watermark and UI Enhancements:
Custom Watermark: Title ("ㄒ卄丨尺ㄩ"), subtitle ("PATIENCE | COURAGE | WISDOM"), symbol info (ticker + timeframe + date), positioned top-center/bottom-left.
Customization: Colors, sizes (tiny to huge), alignment (left/center/right), transparency.
Settings Groups: Organized into Settings, Killzones, Zeussy 90Min, Zeussy 30Min, Day Range Divider, Watermark, Pivots, Range, DWM, Opens, Vertical.
Performance and Limits:
Timeframe Limit: Hides drawings on >=240min (4H); Day Range hides on >=4H.
Drawing Limits: Max 1-5 days per type (boxes, lines, labels); auto-deletes old ones.
Cutoff: Optional stop at 15:00-15:01 for pivots/opens.
Alerts: Pivot breaks, high/low hits; freq once per bar.
Transparency: Separate for boxes (90-95%) and text (20-75%).
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.
40 Ticker Cross-Sectional Z-Scores [BackQuant]40 Ticker Cross-Sectional Z-Scores
BackQuant’s 40 Ticker Cross-Sectional Z-Scores is a powerful portfolio management strategy that analyzes the relative performance of up to 40 different assets, comparing them on a cross-sectional basis to identify the top and bottom performers. This indicator computes Z-scores for each asset based on their log returns and evaluates them relative to the mean and standard deviation over a rolling window. The Z-scores represent how far an asset's return deviates from the average, and these values are used to rank the assets, allowing for dynamic asset allocation based on performance.
By focusing on the strongest-performing assets and avoiding the weakest, this strategy aims to enhance returns while managing risk. Additionally, by adjusting for standard deviations, the system offers a risk-adjusted method of ranking assets, making it suitable for traders who want to dynamically allocate capital based on performance metrics rather than just price movements.
Key Features
1. Cross-Sectional Z-Score Calculation:
The system calculates Z-scores for 40 different assets, evaluating their log returns against the mean and standard deviation over a rolling window. This enables users to assess the relative performance of each asset dynamically, highlighting which assets are performing better or worse compared to their historical norms. The Z-score is a useful statistical tool for identifying outliers in asset performance.
2. Asset Ranking and Allocation:
The system ranks assets based on their Z-scores and allocates capital to the top performers. It identifies the top and bottom assets, and traders can allocate capital to the top-performing assets, ensuring that their portfolio is aligned with the best performers. Conversely, the bottom assets are removed from the portfolio, reducing exposure to underperforming assets.
3. Rolling Window for Mean and Standard Deviation Calculations:
The Z-scores are calculated based on rolling means and standard deviations, making the system adaptive to changing market conditions. This rolling calculation window allows the strategy to adjust to recent performance trends and minimize the impact of outdated data.
4. Mean and Standard Deviation Visualization:
The script provides real-time visualizations of the mean (x̄) and standard deviation (σ) of asset returns, helping traders quickly identify trends and volatility in their portfolio. These visual indicators are useful for understanding the current market environment and making more informed allocation decisions.
5. Top & Bottom Performer Tables:
The system generates tables that display the top and bottom performers, ranked by their Z-scores. Traders can quickly see which assets are outperforming and underperforming. These tables provide clear and actionable insights, helping traders make informed decisions about which assets to include in their portfolio.
6. Customizable Parameters:
The strategy allows traders to customize several key parameters, including:
Rolling Calculation Window: Set the window size for the rolling mean and standard deviation calculations.
Top & Bottom Tickers: Choose how many of the top and bottom assets to display and allocate capital to.
Table Orientation: Select between vertical or horizontal table formats to suit the user’s preference.
7. Forward Test & Out-of-Sample Testing:
The system includes out-of-sample forward tests, ensuring that the strategy is evaluated based on real-time performance, not just historical data. This forward testing approach helps validate the robustness of the strategy in dynamic market conditions.
8. Visual Feedback and Alerts:
The system provides visual feedback on the current asset rankings and allocations, with dynamic labels and plots on the chart. Additionally, users receive alerts when allocations change, keeping them informed of important adjustments.
9. Risk Management via Z-Scores and Std Dev:
The system’s approach to asset selection is based on Z-scores, which normalize performance relative to the historical mean. By incorporating standard deviation, it accounts for the volatility and risk associated with each asset. This allows for more precise risk management and portfolio construction.
10. Note on Mean Reversion Strategy:
If you take the inverse of the signals provided by this indicator, the strategy can be used for mean-reversion rather than trend-following. This would involve buying the underperforming assets and selling the outperforming ones. However, it's important to note that this approach does not work well with highly correlated assets, as the relationship between the assets could result in the same directional movement, undermining the effectiveness of the mean-reversion strategy.
References
www.uts.edu.au
onlinelibrary.wiley.com
www.cmegroup.com
Final Thoughts
The 40 Ticker Cross-Sectional Z-Scores strategy offers a data-driven approach to portfolio management, dynamically allocating capital based on the relative performance of assets. By using Z-scores and standard deviations, this strategy ensures that capital is directed to the strongest performers while avoiding weaker assets, ultimately improving the risk-adjusted returns of the portfolio. Whether you’re focused on trend-following or looking to explore mean-reversion strategies, this flexible system can be tailored to suit your investment goals.
Volume pressure by GSK-VIZAG-AP-INDIA🔍 Volume Pressure by GSK-VIZAG-AP-INDIA
🧠 Overview
“Volume Pressure” is a multi-timeframe, real-time table-based volume analysis tool designed to give traders a clear and immediate view of buying and selling pressure across custom-selected timeframes. By breaking down buy volume, sell volume, total volume, and their percentages, this indicator helps traders identify demand/supply imbalances and volume momentum in the market.
🎯 Purpose / Trading Use Case
This indicator is ideal for intraday and short-term traders who want to:
Spot aggressive buying or selling activity
Track volume dynamics across multiple timeframes *1 min time frame will give best results*
Use volume pressure as a confirming tool alongside price action or trend-based systems
It helps determine when large buying/selling activity is occurring and whether such behavior is consistent across timeframes—a strong signal of institutional interest or volume-driven trend shifts.
🧩 Key Features & Logic
Real-Time Table Display: A clean, dynamic table showing:
Buy Volume
Sell Volume
Total Volume
Buy % of total volume
Sell % of total volume
Multi-Time frame Analysis: Supports 8 user-selectable custom time frames from 1 to 240 minutes, giving flexibility to analyze volume pressure at various granularities.
Color-Coded Volume Bias:
Green for dominant Buy pressure
Red for dominant Sell pressure
Yellow for Neutral
Intensity-based blinking for extreme values (over 70%)
Dynamic Data Calculation:
Uses volume * (close > open) logic to estimate buy vs sell volumes bar-by-bar, then aggregates by timeframe.
⚙️ User Inputs & Settings
Timeframe Selectors (TF1 to TF8): Choose any 8 timeframes you want to monitor volume pressure across.
Text & Color Settings:
Customize text colors for Buy, Sell, Total volumes
Choose Buy/Sell bias colors
Enable/disable blinking for visual emphasis on extremes
Table Appearance:
Set header color, metric background, and text size
Table positioning: top-right, bottom-right, etc.
Blinking Highlight Toggle: Enable this to visually highlight when Buy/Sell % exceeds 70%—a sign of strong pressure.
📊 Visual Elements Explained
The table has 6 rows and 10 columns:
Row 0: Headers for Today and TF1 to TF8
Rows 1–3: Absolute values (Buy Vol, Sell Vol, Total Vol)
Rows 4–5: Relative percentages (Buy %, Sell %), with dynamic background color
First column shows the metric names (e.g., “Buy Vol”)
Cells blink using alternate background colors if volume pressure crosses thresholds
💡 How to Use It Effectively
Use Buy/Sell % rows to confirm potential breakout trades or identify volume exhaustion zones
Look for multi-timeframe confluence: If 5 or more TFs show >70% Buy pressure, buyers are in control
Combine with price action (e.g., breakouts, reversals) to increase conviction
Suitable for equities, indices, futures, crypto, especially on lower timeframes (1m to 15m)
🏆 What Makes It Unique
Table-based MTF Volume Pressure Display: Most indicators only show volume as bars or histograms; this script summarizes and color-codes volume bias across timeframes in a tabular format.
Customization-friendly: Full control over colors, themes, and timeframes
Blinking Alerts: Rare visual feature to capture user attention during extreme pressure
Designed with performance and readability in mind—even for fast-paced scalping environments.
🚨 Alerts / Extras
While this script doesn’t include TradingView alert functions directly, the visual blinking serves as a strong real-time alert mechanism.
Future versions may include built-in alert conditions for buy/sell bias thresholds.
🔬 Technical Concepts Used
Volume Dissection using close > open logic (to estimate buyer vs seller pressure)
Simple aggregation of volume over custom timeframes
Table plotting using Pine Script table.new, table.cell
Dynamic color logic for bias identification
Custom blinking logic using na(bar_index % 2 == 0 ? colorA : colorB)
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is a tool for analysis, not financial advice. Always backtest and validate strategies before using any indicator for live trading. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Use at your own risk and apply proper risk management.
✍️ Author & Signature
Indicator Name: Volume Pressure
Author: GSK-VIZAG-AP-INDIA
TradingView Username: prowelltraders
Smart Investor - Quarterly Earnings by tarunlalwani007OVERVIEW
Smart Investor - Quarterly Earnings displays comprehensive financial data and moving averages directly on your charts. It shows quarterly/yearly earnings alongside customizable moving averages across multiple timeframes, providing both fundamental and technical analysis in one tool.
This tool is designed purely for analysis purposes. No buy or sell recommendations should be made based solely on the information it provides. Always perform your own due diligence and combine multiple sources of information for trading decisions.
FEATURES
Financial Data Analysis
Displays quarterly (FQ) and yearly (FY) financial metrics
Works with both stocks and futures contracts
Customizable metrics with comparison capabilities
Flexible table positioning options
Multi-Timeframe Moving Averages
Daily, Weekly, and Monthly moving averages adapt to chart timeframe
Support for both EMA and SMA with customizable parameters
Color-coded for easy identification of different timeframes
Company Information Display
Information tags for quick company insights
Display key financial metrics and market performance indicators
SME status identification for small/medium enterprises (only for NSE and BSE India)
FNO and lot size information for derivatives
CALCULATION METHODS
Data Sources
Financial metrics (EPS, Sales, Total Shares) are sourced directly from TradingView's financial API
Price data is obtained using appropriate request functions for the current symbol
Header and Tag Calculations
Current Values: All header and tag metrics use the latest available close price
Market Cap: Latest Close Price × Total Outstanding Shares
Free Float Market Cap: Latest Close Price × Free Float Shares
Free Float Percentage: Obtained directly from TradingView financial data
P/E Ratio: Market Cap / TTM Net Income
52-Week Performance:
Down from 52W High: ((Current Close - 52W High) / 52W High) × 100
Up from 52W Low: ((Current Close - 52W Low) / 52W Low) × 100
Table Calculations
Historical Values: Table metrics use price data from the corresponding quarter/year
Quarter-over-Quarter (QoQ) Change: ((Current Value - Previous Quarter Value) / Previous Quarter Value) × 100
Year-over-Year (YoY) Change: ((Current Value - Value from Same Quarter Last Year) / Value from Same Quarter Last Year) × 100
Quarter names are determined based on the current month: Jan/Feb → Dec, Mar/Apr/May → Mar, Jun/Jul/Aug → Jun, Sep/Oct/Nov → Sep. Each quarter is labeled with its end month and year (e.g., "Mar-2024", "Jun-2024").
Moving Average Implementation
Moving Averages: Calculated based on chart timeframe (daily, weekly, monthly)
EMA/SMA: Uses standard formulas with configurable periods
Included with financial data to provide a complete analysis tool in a single indicator
CUSTOMIZATION OPTIONS
Financial Metrics
The following metrics can be selected for both quarterly and yearly tables:
Sales (Revenue)
EPS (Earnings Per Share)
OPM (Operating Profit Margin)
P/E Ratio
PEG Ratio
Free Float (percentage and value)
Market Cap
PAT (Profit After Tax)
Display Options
Comparison Visualization: Percentage mode, dots mode, or combined
Layout: Multiple table positions, adjustable text size
Themes: Light and dark theme support
History: Display up to 8 periods of historical data
Header Information
Company description
Market capitalization
Free float information
Listing year
Return on Equity (ROE)
Industry/Sector classification
Performance relative to 52-week high/low
FNO status and lot size
HOW TO USE
Add the indicator to your chart
Configure the metrics you want to display in the settings
Position the tables where you prefer on your chart
Customize colors and display options
Adjust moving averages to match your trading style
LIMITATIONS
Financial data availability depends on what TradingView provides for each instrument
Some calculations may show NA when underlying data is unavailable
Small market cap stocks or recently listed companies may have limited historical data
Futures contracts are detected automatically but may require manual verification
TECHNICAL NOTES
Automatic futures contract detection with calculation adjustments
SME status determined using an internal database of symbols that is manually maintained and updated
Date handling adjustments near quarter boundaries ensure consistency
All financial data is sourced directly from TradingView's financial API
Company description and sector information comes directly from TradingView symbol data
ZenAlgo - BenderThis script combines several volume-based methodologies into a single chart overlay to help traders analyze market participation and volume distribution. It aggregates volume from multiple sources—spot and perpetual markets across different exchanges—and processes it to display various insights directly on the chart.
The script provides a detailed view of both individual-bar volume and broader aggregated trends. It calculates certain values, plots different shapes and overlays, and includes an optional informational table. However, it does not offer financial signals or predict future price movements. Instead, it presents multiple volume and range-related highlights for educational or analytical observations.
Below is a detailed breakdown of the core elements in this script:
Core Data Calculation and Aggregation
To build a comprehensive volume picture, the script retrieves volume data from multiple predefined exchanges for both Spot and Perpetual pairs. The volume for each bar is processed in Aggregated mode , meaning it combines data across selected sources to produce a single composite volume value.
The script applies average-based aggregation to calculate the final volume figures. The total volume is then used as the basis for further calculations, such as buy/sell volume decomposition and Delta analysis.
Buy/Sell Volume Decomposition
Each bar’s total volume is separated into an estimated buy portion and a sell portion. This decomposition uses logic that considers wick length, body size, and whether the bar closed higher or lower than it opened. The script assigns fractions of the total volume to the upper wick, lower wick, and body, then multiplies these by the total aggregated volume to estimate buy and sell volumes.
This breakdown is calculated separately for spot-only volume , perp-only volume , and their aggregated sums, allowing traders to analyze how much of each bar’s volume is estimated as "buy" or "sell."
Delta and Cumulative Delta
The script computes a Delta (buy volume minus sell volume) for each bar. A positive Delta suggests more buying during that bar, while a negative Delta suggests more selling.
It also computes Cumulative Delta , summing this Delta over 14 bars (a fixed period). This allows users to observe how short-term buy/sell imbalances accumulate over time.
Visual Bar Coloring (PVSRA Logic)
The script includes logic based on PVSRA (Price Volume Support Resistance Analysis) , which examines average volume over a recent lookback period to determine whether a bar meets certain "climax" or "above-average" thresholds.
Bars are categorized as:
Climax Up or Climax Down: If a bar meets strong volume and range conditions, it is identified as a high-activity bar.
Neutral Colors: Bars that do not meet the threshold are identified as standard volume bars.
Table Summaries
The script includes an optional Spot vs. Perpetual volume table that provides:
Aggregated Spot vs. Perpetual buy/sell volumes
The net difference between buying and selling
The total sum across all included sources
Percentage breakdown of buying vs. selling
A separate multi-timeframe table calculates volume-related metrics for fixed timeframes (15, 60, and 240 minutes), allowing traders to compare their current timeframe with broader trends.
Highlighted Shapes and Diamonds
The script places shape markers above or below bars when certain conditions are met, including:
Dots (circles): Representing a significant increase in net Delta compared to the previous bar.
Diamonds: Markers that appear when volume-based conditions align with predefined thresholds. These vary in size and include an optional "Hardcore Mode" , which applies stricter filtering.
Crossover Triangles: These appear when the internally computed Delta MA (a moving average of Delta) crosses above or below a predefined EMA.
These markers highlight notable changes in volume, Delta, or price action but do not constitute predictive trading signals.
Delta Averages and Overlaid EMAs
The script plots a histogram of the current net Delta (buy minus sell) . Additionally, a Delta Moving Average (Delta MA) is used for tracking trends. The Delta MA is plotted alongside predefined Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) , such as:
A Delta MA calculated using an exponential moving average (EMA) over 21 bars.
A set of predefined EMAs (lengths such as 3, 5, 7, 10, 13, 16, 21, 25, etc.) plotted to visualize momentum changes.
Areas between these EMAs can be filled with translucent shading to highlight momentum shifts.
Comparing the Delta MA to the overlaid EMAs helps track changes in Delta momentum over time.
Interpreting the Elements
When using this script, consider the following:
Volume Aggregation: The script aggregates volume across multiple Spot and Perpetual sources to provide a broad market view.
Delta and Cumulative Delta: The Delta histogram may spike positively or negatively, highlighting areas of potential buying or selling pressure.
Table Data: If enabled, the tables display buy/sell volume splits for Spot and Perpetual markets, along with multi-timeframe comparisons.
EMA Overlays on Delta: The stacked EMAs help visualize short-term vs. longer-term Delta changes.
Shape Markers: Dots, diamonds, and triangles emphasize notable shifts in volume or Delta but do not imply recommendations for action.
Usage Tips
Toggle "Hardcore Mode" to apply stricter filtering to highlight conditions.
Enable or disable the Spot vs. Perpetual Table to see if the breakdown of volume sources is useful.
Use the multi-timeframe table to compare intraday data with broader trends.
If the chart appears too cluttered, toggle off features like PVSRA color tints or some EMAs to focus on specific elements.
Final Thoughts
This script integrates multiple volume-based calculations, range analysis, aggregated volume from predefined tickers, and various moving averages for Delta. Its visual layers—color-coded bars, histograms, shape markers, and tables—offer a rich perspective on market activity.
Users can analyze these elements across any timeframe or market combination they prefer. The script does not provide buy/sell signals or make predictions —it is purely an analytical tool for understanding volume-based market dynamics.
Traders should interpret these visual elements according to their own strategy and trading approach.
Relative Performance SuiteOverview
The Relative Performance Suite (RPS) is a versatile and comprehensive indicator designed to evaluate an asset's performance relative to a benchmark. By offering multiple methods to measure performance, including Relative Performance, Alpha, and Price Ratio, this tool helps traders and investors assess asset strength, resilience, and overall behavior in different market conditions.
Key Features:
✅ Multiple Performance Measures:
Choose from various relative performance calculations, including:
Relative Performance:
Measures how much an asset has outperformed or underperformed its benchmark over a given period.
Relative Performance (Proportional):
A proportional version of relative performance,
factoring in scaling effects.
Relative Performance (MA Based):
Uses moving averages to smooth performance fluctuations.
Alpha:
A measure of an asset’s performance relative to what would be expected based on its beta and the benchmark’s return. It represents the excess return above the risk-free rate after adjusting for market risk.
Price Ratio:
Compares asset prices directly to determine relative value over time.
✅ Customizable Moving Averages:
Apply different moving average types (SMA, EMA, SMMA, WMA, VWMA) to smooth price inputs and refine calculations.
✅ Beta Calculation:
Includes a Beta measure used in Alpha calculation, which users can toggle the visibility of helping users understand an asset's sensitivity to market movements.
✅ Risk-Free Rate Adjustment:
Incorporate risk-free rates (e.g., US Treasury yields, Fed Funds Rate) for a more accurate calculation of Alpha.
✅ Logarithmic Returns Option:
Users can switch between standard returns and log returns for more refined performance analysis.
✅ Dynamic Color Coding:
Identify outperformance or underperformance with intuitive color coding.
Option to color bars based on relative strength, making chart analysis easier.
✅ Customizable Tables for Data Display:
Overview table summarizing key metrics.
Explanation table offering insights into how values are derived.
How to Use:
Select a Benchmark: Choose a comparison symbol (e.g., TOTAL or SPX ).
Pick a Performance Metric: Use different modes to analyze relative performance.
Customize Calculation Methods: Adjust moving averages, timeframes, and log returns based on preference.
Interpret the Colors & Tables: Utilize the dynamic coloring and tables to quickly assess market conditions.
Ideal For:
Traders looking to compare individual asset performance against an index or benchmark.
Investors analyzing Alpha & Beta to understand risk-adjusted returns.
Market analysts who want a visually intuitive and data-rich performance tracking tool.
This indicator provides a powerful and flexible way to track relative asset strength, helping users make more informed trading decisions.
Risk RewardThe Risk Reward indicator, developed by OmegaTools, is a versatile technical tool designed to help traders visualize and evaluate potential reward and risk levels in their trades. By comparing recent price action against moving averages and volatility deviations, it calculates a range-weighted assessment of upside reward and downside risk. It provides a clear, color-coded visual representation of these potential ranges, along with critical support and resistance levels to aid in trade decision-making. This indicator is ideal for traders seeking to optimize their risk-reward ratio and make informed trade management decisions.
Features
Reward and Risk Visualization: Provides a histogram showing the relative potential of upside reward versus downside risk based on current price action.
Dynamic Support and Resistance Levels: Calculates and plots key price levels based on extreme of historical volatility, helping traders to identify important price zones.
Trade Size Customization: Users can adjust the trade size, and the indicator will calculate and display the estimated risk and reward in monetary terms based on the contract value.
Adaptive Volatility Extensions: Automatically adjusts extension lines based on volume, helping traders anticipate future price ranges and potential breakouts or breakdowns.
Customizable Visuals: Allows users to personalize the color scheme for bullish and bearish scenarios, making the chart more intuitive and user-friendly.
User Guide
Trade Size (size): Adjust the trade size in units (default is 1). This parameter impacts the risk and reward calculation shown in the summary table.
Length (lnt): Set the length for the exponential moving average (EMA) and the highest/lowest price calculations. This length determines the sensitivity of the indicator.
Different Visual (down): A boolean input to adjust the method for calculating downside risk. When set to true, it uses a different visual scheme.
Bullish Color (upc): Customize the color of the bullish (upside) histogram and support levels.
Bearish Color (dnc): Customize the color of the bearish (downside) histogram and resistance levels.
Plots
First Probability: Displays a histogram representing the higher value between reward and risk. It is colored according to whether the upside or downside is greater, providing a clear signal for potential trade direction.
Second Probability: A secondary histogram plot that visualizes the lower value between reward and risk, offering an additional perspective on the trade’s risk-reward balance.
Low Level/High Level: Displays dynamic support and resistance levels based on historical price data and volatility deviations.
Extension Lines: Visualize potential future price levels using volatility-adjusted projections. These lines help traders anticipate where price could move based on current conditions.
On-Chart Labels and Risk-Reward Table:
Risk and Reward Calculations: The indicator calculates the monetary value of downside risk and upside reward based on the provided trade size, volatility measures, and price movements.
Risk/Reward Table: Displayed directly on the chart, showing the downside risk and upside reward in easy-to-understand numerical values. This helps traders quickly assess the feasibility of a trade.
How It Works:
Moving Average Comparison: The indicator first calculates the 21-period (default) exponential moving average (EMA). It then compares the current price against this moving average to determine whether the market is in a bullish or bearish phase.
Deviation Calculation: It calculates the average deviation between the price and the EMA for both bullish and bearish movements, which is used to establish dynamic support and resistance levels.
Risk-Reward Calculation: Based on the highest and lowest price levels over the set period and the calculated deviations, it determines the potential upside reward and downside risk. The reward is calculated as the distance between the current price and the upper resistance levels, while the risk is determined as the distance to the lower support levels.
Visual Representation
The indicator plots histograms representing the relative magnitude of potential reward and risk.
Support and resistance levels are dynamically plotted on the chart using circles and lines, helping traders easily spot key areas of interest.
Extension lines are drawn to visualize potential future price levels based on current volatility.
Risk/Reward Table: This feature displays the calculated monetary risk and reward based on the trade size. It updates dynamically with price changes, offering a constant reference point for traders to evaluate their trade setup.
Practical Application
Identify Entry Points: Use the dynamic support and resistance levels to identify ideal trade entry points. The histogram helps determine whether the potential reward justifies the risk.
Risk Management: The calculated downside risk provides traders with an objective view of where to place stop-loss levels, while the upside reward aids in setting profit targets.
Trade Execution: By visually assessing whether reward outweighs risk, traders can make more informed decisions on trade execution, with the risk-reward ratio clearly displayed on the chart.
Best Practices:
Use Alongside Other Indicators: While this indicator offers a powerful standalone tool for assessing risk and reward, it works best when combined with other trend or momentum indicators for confirmation.
Adjust Inputs Based on Market Conditions: Adjust the length and trade size inputs depending on the asset being traded and the time horizon, as different assets may require different sensitivity settings.
ATR Price Range Prediction V.2### ATR Price Range Prediction V.2
This script calculates the expected high and low prices for the current day based on the Average True Range (ATR) and displays the proportion of days where the daily range (high - low) is greater than or equal to the ATR. Additionally, the script provides an option to adjust the size of the text displayed in the top-right corner of the chart.
#### How It Works
1. **ATR Calculation**: The script calculates the ATR for a specified period (`atrPeriod`). ATR is a measure of volatility that represents the average range between the high and low prices over a specified number of periods.
2. **Expected High and Low Calculation**:
- **Expected High**: Calculated by adding the ATR value to the low price of the current day.
- **Expected Low**: Calculated by subtracting the ATR value from the high price of the current day.
3. **Proportion Calculation**: The script calculates the proportion of days where the daily range (high - low) is greater than or equal to the ATR value. This proportion is updated in real-time as new data comes in.
4. **Table Display**: Instead of displaying labels on each candle, the script shows the expected high, expected low, and the calculated proportion in a table located at the top-right corner of the chart. The size of the text in this table can be adjusted using the `Table Size` input.
5. **Color Coding**: The script changes the color of the bars to yellow if the daily range is greater than or equal to the ATR value, making it easy to identify these bars visually.
#### How to Use
- **ATR Period (`atrPeriod`)**: Adjust the period for the ATR calculation using the input parameter. The default value is 14.
- **Table Size (`tableSizeOption`)**: Choose the size of the text displayed in the table. Options include `tiny`, `small`, `normal`, `large`, and `huge`.
- **Expected High and Low**: Use the green and red lines to identify potential target prices or stop-loss levels for your trades. The green line represents the expected high, and the red line represents the expected low.
- **Proportion**: The table in the top-right corner of the chart shows the proportion of days where the daily range is greater than or equal to the ATR value. This can provide insight into the volatility of the asset.
- **Color Coding**: Yellow bars indicate days where the daily range is greater than or equal to the ATR value.
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### ภาษาไทย
### ATR คาดการณ์ราคาสูงสุดและต่ำสุด พร้อมสัดส่วน
สคริปต์นี้คำนวณราคาสูงสุดและต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์สำหรับวันปัจจุบันโดยอิงจากค่าเฉลี่ยช่วงที่แท้จริง (ATR) และแสดงสัดส่วนของวันที่ช่วงราคาต่อวัน (สูง - ต่ำ) มากกว่าหรือเท่ากับค่า ATR นอกจากนี้ยังมีตัวเลือกในการปรับขนาดข้อความที่แสดงในกล่องข้อความมุมขวาบนของกราฟ
#### วิธีการทำงาน
1. **การคำนวณ ATR**: สคริปต์คำนวณค่า ATR สำหรับช่วงเวลาที่กำหนด (`atrPeriod`) ATR เป็นมาตรวัดความผันผวนที่แสดงช่วงเฉลี่ยระหว่างราคาสูงสุดและต่ำสุดในช่วงเวลาที่กำหนด
2. **การคำนวณราคาสูงสุดและต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์**:
- **ราคาสูงสุดที่คาดการณ์**: คำนวณโดยการบวกค่า ATR กับราคาต่ำสุดของวันปัจจุบัน
- **ราคาต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์**: คำนวณโดยการลบค่า ATR จากราคาสูงสุดของวันปัจจุบัน
3. **การคำนวณสัดส่วน**: สคริปต์คำนวณสัดส่วนของวันที่ช่วงราคาต่อวัน (สูง - ต่ำ) มากกว่าหรือเท่ากับค่า ATR สัดส่วนนี้จะอัปเดตแบบเรียลไทม์เมื่อมีข้อมูลใหม่เข้ามา
4. **การแสดงผลในตาราง**: แทนที่จะแสดงป้ายกำกับบนแท่งเทียนแต่ละแท่ง สคริปต์จะแสดงราคาสูงสุดที่คาดการณ์ ราคาต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์ และสัดส่วนที่คำนวณในตารางที่มุมขวาบนของกราฟ โดยสามารถปรับขนาดข้อความในตารางได้
5. **การใช้สี**: สคริปต์จะเปลี่ยนสีของแท่งเทียนเป็นสีเหลืองหากช่วงราคาต่อวันมากกว่าหรือเท่ากับค่า ATR ทำให้สามารถระบุแท่งเทียนเหล่านี้ได้ง่ายขึ้น
#### วิธีการใช้งาน
- **ATR Period (`atrPeriod`)**: ปรับช่วงเวลาสำหรับการคำนวณ ATR โดยใช้พารามิเตอร์การป้อนค่า ค่าเริ่มต้นคือ 14
- **Table Size (`tableSizeOption`)**: เลือกขนาดข้อความที่แสดงในตาราง ตัวเลือกได้แก่ `tiny`, `small`, `normal`, `large`, และ `huge`
- **ราคาสูงสุดและต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์**: ใช้เส้นสีเขียวและสีแดงเพื่อระบุราคาที่เป็นเป้าหมายหรือระดับการหยุดขาดทุนสำหรับการซื้อขายของคุณ เส้นสีเขียวแสดงถึงราคาสูงสุดที่คาดการณ์และเส้นสีแดงแสดงถึงราคาต่ำสุดที่คาดการณ์
- **สัดส่วน**: ตารางที่มุมขวาบนของกราฟแสดงสัดส่วนของวันที่ช่วงราคาต่อวันมากกว่าหรือเท่ากับค่า ATR ซึ่งสามารถให้ข้อมูลเชิงลึกเกี่ยวกับความผันผวนของสินทรัพย์
- **การใช้สี**: แท่งเทียนสีเหลืองบ่งบอกถึงวันที่ช่วงราคาต่อวันมากกว่าหรือเท่ากับค่า ATR
_____
High/Low of week: Stats & Day of Week tendencies// Purpose:
-To show High of Week (HoW) day and Low of week (LoW) day frequencies/percentages for an asset.
-To further analyze Day of Week (DoW) tendencies based on averaged data from all various custom weeks. Giving a more reliable measure of DoW tendencies ('Meta Averages').
-To backtest day-of-week tendencies: across all asset history or across custom user input periods (i.e. consolidation vs trending periods).
-Education: to see how how data from a 'hard-defined-week' may be misleading when seeking statistical evidence of DoW tendencies.
// Notes & Tips:
-Only designed for use on DAILY timeframe.
-Verification table is to make sure HoW / LoW DAY (referencing previous finished week) is printing correctly and therefore the stats table is populating correctly.
-Generally, leaving Timezone input set to "America/New_York" is best, regardless of your asset or your chart timezone. But if misaligned by 1 day =>> tweak this timezone input to correct
-If you want to use manual backtesting period (e.g. for testing consolidation periods vs trending periods): toggle these settings on, then click the indicator display line three dots >> 'Reset Points' to quickly set start & end dates.
// On custom week start days:
-For assets like BTC which trade 7 days a week, this is quite simple. Pick custom start day, use verification table to check all is well. See the start week day & time in said verification table.
-For traditional assets like S&P which trade only 5 days a week and suffer from occasional Holidays, this is a bit more complicated. If the custom start day input is a bank holiday, its custom 'week' will be discounted from the data set. E.g.1: if you choose 'use custom start day' and set it to Monday, then bank holiday Monday weeks will be discounted from the data set. E.g.2: If you choose 'use custom start day' and set it to Thursday, then the Holiday Thursday custom week (e.g Thanksgiving Thursday >> following Weds) would be discounted from the data set.
// On 'Meta Averages':
-The idea is to try and mitigate out the 'continuation bias' that comes from having a fixed week start/end time: i.e. sometimes a market is trending through the week start/end time, so the start/end day stats are over-weighted if one is trying to tease out typical weekly profile tendencies or typical DoW tendencies. You'll notice this if you compare the stats with various custom start days ('bookend' start/end days are always more heavily weighted). I wanted to try to mitigate out this 'bias' by cycling through all the possible new week start/end days and taking an average of the results. i.e. on BTC/USD the 'meta average' for Tuesday would be the average of the Tuesday HoW frequencies from the set of all 7 possible custom weeks(Mon-Sun, Tues-Mon, Weds-Tues, etc etc).
// User Inputs:
~Week Start:
-use custom week start day (default toggled OFF); Choose custom week start day
-show Meta Averages (default toggled ON)
~Verification Table:
-show table, show new week lines, number of new week lines to show
-table formatting options (position, color, size)
-timezone (only for tweaking if printed DoW is misaligned by 1 day)
~Statistics Table:
-show table, table formatting options (position, color, size)
~Manual Backtesting:
-Use start date (default toggled OFF), choose start date, choose vline color
-Use end date (defautl toggled OFF), choose end date, choose vline color
// Demo charts:
NQ1! (Nasdaq), Full History, Traditional week (Mon>>Friday) stats. And Meta Averages. Annotations in purple:
NQ1! (Nasdaq), Full History, Custom week (custom start day = Wednesday). And Meta Averages. Annotations in purple:
OctaScalp Precision Pro [By TraderMan]What is OctaScalp Precision Pro ? 🚀
OctaScalp Precision is a powerful scalping indicator designed for fast, short-term trades. It combines eight technical indicators to generate 💪 high-accuracy buy 📗 and sell 📕 signals. Optimized for scalpers, this tool targets small price movements in low timeframes (1M, 5M). With visual lines 📈, labels 🎯, and Telegram alerts 📬, it simplifies quick decision-making, enhances risk management, and tracks trade performance.
What Does It Do? 🎯
Fast Signals: Produces reliable buy/sell signals using a consensus of eight indicators.
Risk Management: Offers automated Take Profit (TP) 🟢 and Stop Loss (SL) 🔴 levels with a 2:1 reward/risk ratio.
Trend Confirmation: Validates short-term trends with a 30-period EMA zone.
Performance Tracking: Records trade success rates (%) and the last 5 trades 📊.
User-Friendly: Displays market strength, signal type, and trade details in a top-right table.
Alerts: Sends Telegram-compatible notifications for new positions and trade results 📲.
How Does It Work? 🛠️
OctaScalp Precision integrates eight technical indicators (RSI, MACD, Stochastic, Momentum, 200-period EMA, Supertrend, CCI, OBV) for robust analysis. Each indicator contributes 0 or 1 point to a bullish 📈 or bearish 📉 score (max 8 points). Signals are generated as follows:
Buy Signal 📗: Bullish score ≥6 and higher than bearish score.
Sell Signal 📕: Bearish score ≥6 and higher than bullish score.
EMA Zone 📏: A zone (default 0.1%) around a 30-period EMA confirms trends. Price staying above or below the zone for 4 bars validates the direction:
Up Direction: Price above zone, color green 🟢.
Down Direction: Price below zone, color red 🔴.
Neutral: Price within zone, color gray ⚪.
Entry/Exit: Entries are triggered on new signals, with TP (2% profit) and SL (1% risk) auto-calculated.
Table & Alerts: Displays market strength (% bull/bear), signal type, entry/TP/SL, and success rate in a table. Telegram alerts provide instant notifications.
How to Use It? 📚
Setup 🖥️:
Add the indicator to TradingView and use default settings or customize (EMA length, zone width, etc.).
Best for low timeframes (1M, 5M).
Signal Monitoring 🔍:
Check the table: Bull Strength 📗 and Bear Strength 📕 percentages indicate signal reliability.
Confirm Buy (📗 BUY) or Sell (📕 SELL) signals when trendSignal is 1 or -1.
Entering a Position 🎯:
Buy: trendSignal = 1, bullish score ≥6, and higher than bearish score, enter at the entry price.
Sell: trendSignal = -1, bearish score ≥6, and higher than bullish score, enter at the entry price.
TP and SL: Follow the green (TP) 🟢 and red (SL) 🔴 lines on the chart.
Exiting 🏁:
If price hits TP, trade is marked ✅ successful; if SL, marked ❌ failed.
Results are shown in the “Last 5 Trades” 📜 section of the table.
Setting Alerts 📬:
Enable alerts in TradingView. Receive Telegram notifications for new positions and trade outcomes.
Position Entry Strategy 💡
Entry Conditions:
For Buy: Bullish score ≥6, trendSignal = 1, price above EMA zone 🟢.
For Sell: Bearish score ≥6, trendSignal = -1, price below EMA zone 🔴.
Check bull/bear strength in the table (70%+ is ideal for strong signals).
Additional Confirmation:
Use on high-volume assets (e.g., BTC/USD, EUR/USD).
Validate signals with support/resistance levels.
Be cautious in ranging markets; false signals may increase.
Risk Management:
Stick to the 2:1 reward/risk ratio (TP 2%, SL 1%).
Limit position size to 1-2% of your account.
Tips and Recommendations 🌟
Best Markets: Ideal for volatile markets (crypto, forex) and low timeframes (1M, 5M).
Settings: Adjust EMA length (default 30) or zone width (0.1%) based on the market.
Backtesting: Test on historical data to evaluate success rate 📊.
Discipline: Follow signals strictly and avoid emotional decisions.
OctaScalp Precision makes scalping fast, precise, and reliable! 🚀
AI-Powered ScalpMaster Pro [By TraderMan]🧠 AI-Powered ScalpMaster Pro How It Works
📊 What Is the Indicator and What Does It Do?
🧠 AI-Powered ScalpMaster Pro is a powerful technical analysis tool designed for scalping (short-term, fast-paced trading) in financial markets such as forex, crypto, or stocks. It combines multiple technical indicators (RSI, MACD, Stochastic, Momentum, EMA, SuperTrend, CCI, and OBV) to identify market trends and generate AI-driven buy (🟢) or sell (🔴) signals. The goal is to help traders seize profitable scalping opportunities with quick and precise decisions. 🚀
Key Features:
🧠 AI-Driven Logic: Analyzes signals from multiple indicators to produce reliable trend signals.
📈 Signal Strength: Displays buy (bull) and sell (bear) signal strength as percentages.
✅ Success Rate: Tracks the performance of the last 5 trades and calculates the success rate.
🎯 Entry, TP, and SL Levels: Automatically sets entry points, take profit (TP), and stop loss (SL) levels.
📏 EMA Zone: Analyzes price movement around the EMA 200 to confirm trend direction.
⚙️ How Does It Work?
The indicator uses a scoring system by combining the following technical indicators:
RSI (14): Evaluates whether the price is in overbought or oversold zones.
MACD (12, 26, 9): Analyzes trend direction and momentum.
Stochastic (%K): Measures the speed of price movement.
Momentum: Checks the price change over the last 10 bars.
EMA 200: Determines the long-term trend direction.
SuperTrend: Tracks trends based on volatility.
CCI (20): Measures price deviation from its normal range.
OBV ROC: Analyzes volume changes.
Each indicator generates a buy (bull) or sell (bear) signal. If 6 or more indicators align in the same direction (e.g., bullScore >= 6 for buy), the indicator produces a strong trend signal:
📈 Strong Buy Signal: bullScore >= 6 and bullScore > bearScore.
📉 Strong Sell Signal: bearScore >= 6 and bearScore > bullScore.
🔸 Neutral: No dominant direction.
Additionally, the EMA Zone feature confirms the trend based on the price’s position relative to a zone around the EMA 200:
Price above the zone and sufficiently distant → Uptrend (UP). 🟢
Price below the zone and sufficiently distant → Downtrend (DOWN). 🔴
Price within the zone → Neutral. 🔸
🖥️ Display on the Chart
Table: A table in the top-right corner shows the status of all indicators (✅ Buy / ❌ Sell), signal strength (as %), success rate, and results of the last 5 trades.
Lines and Labels:
🎯 Entry Level: A gray line at the price level when a new signal is generated.
🟢 TP (Take Profit): A green line showing the take-profit level.
🔴 SL (Stop Loss): A red line showing the stop-loss level.
EMA Zone: The EMA 200 and its surrounding colored zone visualize the trend direction (green: uptrend, red: downtrend, gray: neutral).
📝 How to Use It?
Platform Setup:
Add the indicator to the TradingView platform.
Customize settings as needed (e.g., EMA length, risk/reward ratio).
Monitoring Signals:
Check the table: Look for 📈 STRONG BUY or 📉 STRONG SELL signals to prepare for a trade.
AI Text: Trust signals more when it says "🧠 FULL CONFIDENCE" (success rate ≥ 50%). Be cautious if it says "⚠️ LOW CONFIDENCE."
Entering a Position:
🟢 Buy Signal:
Table shows "📈 STRONG BUY" and bullScore >= 6.
Price is above the EMA Zone (green zone).
Entry: Current price (🎯 entry line).
TP: 2% above the entry price (🟢 TP line).
SL: 1% below the entry price (🔴 SL line).
🔴 Sell Signal:
Table shows "📉 STRONG SELL" and bearScore >= 6.
Price is below the EMA Zone (red zone).
Entry: Current price (🎯 entry line).
TP: 2% below the entry price (🟢 TP line).
SL: 1% above the entry price (🔴 SL line).
Position Management:
If the price hits TP, the trade closes profitably (✅ Successful).
If the price hits SL, the trade closes with a loss (❌ Failed).
Results are updated in the "Last 5 Trades" section of the table.
Risk Management:
Default risk/reward ratio is 1:2 (1% risk, 2% reward).
Always adjust position size based on your capital.
Consider smaller lot sizes for "⚠️ LOW CONFIDENCE" signals.
💡 Tips
Timeframe: Use 1-minute, 5-minute, or 15-minute charts for scalping.
Market Selection: Works best in volatile markets (e.g., BTC/USD, EUR/USD).
Confirmation: Ensure the EMA Zone trend aligns with the signal.
Discipline: Stick to TP and SL levels, avoid emotional decisions.
⚠️ Warnings
No indicator is 100% accurate. Always use additional analysis (e.g., support/resistance).
Be cautious during high-volatility periods (e.g., news events).
The success rate is based on past performance and does not guarantee future results.
Stock Performance Dashboard + Sector PerformanceThis indicator, Stock Performance Dashboard + Sector Performance, provides a comprehensive visual analysis of both individual stock performance and sectoral trends directly on your TradingView chart.
Key Features:
Performance Dashboard Table:
Displays the stock’s returns over multiple timeframes (1, 5, 10, 20, 50, 200 days) and compares them to a selected benchmark index (default: NIFTYMIDSML400).
Highlights whether the stock is outperforming the index for each period, shows the difference in performance, and includes an RSI (Relative Strength Index) column for additional momentum insight.
Calculates and displays a “conviction” score and level based on how often the stock outperforms the index across periods.
Sector Performance Table:
Ranks and displays the top-performing sectors from a predefined list of major NSE sector indices over four key periods (1D, 5D, 30D, 50D).
For each period, the top 5 sectors are shown, with color-coded performance for quick visual assessment.
Customization:
Includes options for dark/light mode, table size, position, and which columns to display.
Supports a compact “mini mode” for simplified visualization.
Usage:
This tool is ideal for traders and investors who want a quick, at-a-glance comparison of a stock’s short- and long-term momentum versus its benchmark, as well as a live snapshot of sector rotation and leadership in the Indian market. All data is presented in clear, color-coded tables for actionable decision-making.
Ultimate Market Rhythm Scanner FXReady to feel like a chart-wielding wizard? The Ultimate Market Rhythm Scanner FX is here to supercharge your Forex analysis by piping in multi-timeframe goodness from up to 10 OANDA currency pairs. You’ll see structure breakouts, Ichimoku signals, MACD pulses, RSI/Bollinger momentum waves, and candlestick patterns—all at once.
Think of it as your own personal mission control dashboard, scanning the FX galaxy and beaming back color-coded signals so you know instantly where the market action is hottest. Remember, to keep the data aligned, you’ll want to load this indicator on an OANDA FX pair chart (like OANDA:EURUSD) so everything lines up perfectly behind the scenes.
Key Features
Market Structure Wizardry
Locates pivot highs and lows (Higher High, Lower Low, etc.)
Spots breakouts above/below these pivots
Shouts out “CHoCH” (Change of Character) when structure flips from bullish to bearish (or vice versa)
If you want to understnd more about the market structure logic in this script check out my other script, it uses the same logic:
Tracks price above/below the Ichimoku Cloud
Flags Tenkan/Kijun crosses for bullish or bearish setups
MACD & SMI Insights
MACD line vs. Signal Cross & crossing the Zero line
SMI crosses in overbought/oversold “zones” (because pure oscillator mania is cool)
Momentum Radar
Mashes up RSI + Bollinger + Ichimoku for either “Bullish,” “Bearish,” or “Neutral”
Also checks a separate Daily timeframe for cosmic perspective
Candlestick Pattern Goodness
Detects common candle formations (Hammer, Hanging Man, Marubozu, etc.)
Tells you exactly how many bars ago they flashed their signals
Time Fade Magic
Recent signals shine bright
Older signals fade out like invisible ninjas after a user-defined number of bars
Explanation of Settings
Below lies the control panel for your new chart-snooping sidekick:
Symbol Settings (Symbol 1...Symbol 10)
Select multiple FX OANDA pairs (like OANDA:AUDUSD).
Each pair spawns a new column in the scanner table.
Ensure your chart is also set to an OANDA pair—the script only speaks “OANDA.”
Ichimoku Settings
Use Ichimoku Filter: Toggles everything Ichimoku.
conversionPeriods, basePeriods, laggingSpan2Periods, displacement: The classic Ichimoku parameters to mold your cloud magic.
Pivot Logic
Pivot Source: Wicks vs. Closes for pivot detection.
BOS Confirmation: If you prefer breakouts confirmed by wicks or closes.
Left Swing Length: Bars left for pivots.
Right Swing Length High / Low: Bars right for pivot confirmation.
Invert Right Swing in Bearish Trend: Auto-flip logic when gloom takes over. This means right swing size high value will become right swing size low value in a bearish trend (determined by latest CHoCH).
RSI & Bollinger
RSI Period: The heartbeat of RSI.
RSI Overbought / Oversold: Thresholds for RSI mania.
BB Length / StdDev: The Bollinger band radius for measuring price expansions.
MACD
fastLength, slowLength, signalLength: The trifecta that shapes your MACD wave.
SMI Settings
Nested variables for SMI’s K, D, and EMA lengths.
Overbought and Oversold levels for zone detection.
Time Display Settings
Fade out old signals: Turn the fade effect on/off.
Fade After X Bars: The number of bars after which signals do a ghost trick.
Fade Transparency: How ghostly (0–100) those old signals become.
Table Settings
Show Table: Summon or banish the entire scanner table.
Table Position: Choose the quadrant for your new data-loving sidekick.
Table Text Size: Big or small text for those crucial signals.
Table Layout
With “Show Table” on, a futuristic readout appears, listing:
Columns: Each symbol’s name runs across the top (up to 10).
Rows: A row for each technical aspect, such as:
Last Pivot (pivot) – The most recent pivot type (HH, HL, LH, LL) and how many bars ago.
Last CHoCH – Crows “▲/▼ X bars ago” if structure reversed.
Ichi Cloud (ichi) – Tells you if price soared above or dived below the Cloud.
Multi Mom D (momentum_d) – A daily momentum label (Bullish/Bearish/Neutral). It shows you daily momentum even on times frames lower than the daily. Multi Mom D is not reliable if the chart is on a time frame higher than the daily.
Multi Mom (momentum) – Current timeframe momentum label.
SMI ZONE (smizone) – If SMI’s in a bullish or bearish zone.
MACD 0 LINE (macdzero) – Number of bars since crossing zero.
SMI CROSS (smicross) – A bullish or bearish cross in overbought/oversold territory.
TK Cross (tk) – Tenkan/Kijun cross and how many bars ago.
MACD Cross (macd) – MACD crossing above/below its signal line.
Last Pattern (lastpat) – The candle pattern found and bars since it popped.
Pattern (pattype) – The name of that pattern (Hammer, Hanging Man, etc.).
Each cell can be tinted in a blue-ish glow for bullish vibes, or a purple shade for bearish signals. The “bars ago” text helps you see how fresh the signal is—fewer bars = more relevant.
Usage Notes
OANDA Chart is King
Always apply this indicator on an OANDA-based chart (e.g., OANDA:GBPJPY). If you deviate, the script might not retrieve data properly from the OANDA feed.
Symbol List
For each of the symbols inputs, pick your favorite currency crosses (all from the OANDA universe).
Timeframes
The script runs on your current chart’s timeframe for near-term action.
It simultaneously checks the daily timeframe to measure high-level momentum.
Fade-Out Feature
By default, signals older than 5 bars fade out. Adjust in “Time Display Settings” if you want them to linger.
Confluence is King
If a pivot breakout, bullish Ichimoku cross, and an SMI overbought cross all light up at once, you might have a short-term rocket on your hands. Always confirm with your trading plan!
Summary
Embrace your inner data nerd with the Market Rhythm Scanner FX—the ultimate multi-asset intelligence platform for OANDA Forex pairs. From subtle pivot changes to daily momentum shifts, from candle patterns to MACD fireworks, it’s all consolidated into one easy-to-digest control panel.
Step 1: Load up an OANDA chart (like “OANDA:EURUSD”).
Step 2: Enter your chosen OANDA pairs under “Symbol Settings.”
Step 3: Geek out over the instant real-time multi-indicator table, letting you see which instruments are sizzling or fizzling.
No more frantic tab-hopping. Save your mental bandwidth for the big decisions.
Let the Ultimate Market Rhythm Scanner FX be your ever-watchful sidekick, scanning the charts so you can conquer the Forex battlefield like the tech-savvy champion you are!
This script is free to use at present, but I reserve the right to move it behind a paywall in the future.
[Options Strategies] Selling Covered Calls and Puts (TSO) This trading indicator assists with traditional covered options trading strategies like Covered Calls, Covered Puts, and Cash Secured Puts. It also offers advanced features for trading options intelligently by utilizing options specific levels, such as BE (Break Even) and Strike (all visually shown on chart) in combination with S&R (Support and Resistance), Trend Lines, and other technical analysis tools such as MA (Moving Averages) and ATR Average True Range, all integrated within the indicator.
* Covered options approach over trading shares or options separately offers distinct advantages:
- Reduced Risk and Flexibility : Covered options strategy provides a more conservative approach by combining stock ownership with options trading. It reduces risk exposure compared to buying options outright or trading shares alone. Additionally, it offers flexibility in various market conditions.
- Profitability in Sideways Markets: Covered options allow for profitability in scenarios where the stock price is either moving optimally or remaining sideways. In contrast, just holding stocks might not yield significant gains in a sideways market, and buying options can result in losses due to time decay.
- Protection Against Price Movements: In covered options, if the stock price goes against the trade, the loss is mitigated by the premium received from selling the options. This provides a level of protection compared to other trading strategies where losses can accumulate more rapidly.
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Strategies / Visual Examples:
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Up to 3 Symbols can be monitored at the same time with alerts for each Symbol and a Stats Table. To see Symbol's visuals (Date Range, Strike, BE, etc.) - the chart has to be loaded with that Symbol. Here is an example of trading multiple stocks at same layout on different charts trading AAPL, BAC and TSLA.
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An example of a Smart Covered Calls trading SPY.
STRATEGY EXPLANATION:
* Trade Open Trigger (Bullish/Sideway)
>>> S&R (Support and Resistance) or Trend Line broken, bounced off or simply near (if price is near/slightly crossing S&R/Trend Line > a bounce often takes place)
>>> Confirmation by additional TA (Technical Analysis) tools.
>>> EXAMPLE: Broken Resistance combined with a Trend Line up-bounce, confirmed by bullish 200EMA.
* TP (Take-Profit)
>>> Contracts Expire at Expiration date: Premium received for selling contracts kept.
>>> Assignment: Premium received for selling contracts kept + stock assigned/sold at a higher price than it was purchased.
* BE/SL (Break Even Stop-Loss) |
>>> BE/SL hit: stock sold at a slight loss with options contracts bought out (BTC - Buy to Close) at a lower price than initially sold (since price went down and these are calls), so technically the loss is reduced by the partial Premium still kept from initially sold contracts at trade open.
>>> Increasing the BE/SL distance: for wider BE/SL > Bid Price needs to be increased:
- Set longer Expiration date.
- Set closer Strike price.
NOTE: With longer Expiration date and closer Strike, chances of assignment increase as well. It's best to find an optimal level, where BE/SL is behind a Support/Resistance level and/or an established trend line and/or Large Length Moving Average, yet not extremely far away.
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An example of a Smart Covered Puts trading SPY.
STRATEGY EXPLANATION:
* Trade Open Trigger (Bearish/Sideway)
>>> S&R (Support and Resistance) or Trend Line broken, bounced off or simply near (if price is near/slightly crossing S&R/Trend Line > a bounce often takes place)
>>> Confirmation by additional TA (Technical Analysis) tools.
>>> EXAMPLE: Broken Resistance combined with a Trend Line down-bounce, confirmed by bearish 200EMA.
* TP (Take-Profit)
>>> Contracts Expire at Expiration date: Premium received for selling contracts kept.
>>> Assignment: Premium received for selling contracts kept + stock assigned/bought-to-cover at a lower price than it was shorted.
* BE/SL (Break Even Stop-Loss) |
>>> BE/SL hit: stock bought-to-cover at a slight loss with options contracts bought out (BTC - Buy to Close) at a lower price than initially sold (since price went up and these are puts), so technically the loss is reduced by the partial Premium still kept from initially sold contracts at trade open.
>>> Increasing the BE/SL distance: for wider BE/SL > Bid Price needs to be increased:
- Set longer Expiration date.
- Set closer Strike price.
NOTE: With longer Expiration date and closer Strike, chances of assignment increase as well. It's best to find an optimal level, where BE/SL is behind a Support/Resistance level and/or an established trend line and/or Large Length Moving Average, yet not extremely far away.
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An example of a Smart Secured Cash Puts trading SPY.
STRATEGY EXPLANATION:
* Trade Open Trigger (Bullish/Sideway)
>>> Bullish steady trend.
>>> Confirmation by additional TA (Technical Analysis) tools.
>>> EXAMPLE: Slowly rising price action above 200EMA.
* TP (Take-Profit)
>>> Early BTC: BTC (Buy to Close) before Expiration date if options premium/contract price already reduced by at least 50-90% (the reduced price is the profit, if premium lost 90% - only 10% will need to be paid to buy options out to close the trade) and if the stock price is nearing Resistance, Trend Line or big length moving average (like 200EMA) as a bounce may happen or even a potential reverse of the trend. If there is no trend reversal or a small correction bounce occurs, with further trend continuation > another Cash Secured Puts trade can be opened with new Expiration date and Strike.
>>> Contracts Expire at Expiration date: Premium received for selling contracts kept, considering the Strike was never hit.
>>> Assignment with stock closing below Strike and above/near BE (Break Even): Premium received for selling contracts kept. NOTE: It is best to get rid of the stock ASAP to then open a new Cash Secured Puts trade with lower Strike and a new Expiration date.
* BE/SL (Break Even Stop-Loss) |
>>> BE/SL hit: contracts bought out (BTC - Buy to Close) at a higher price than initially sold (since price went down and these are puts), the amount/difference in current contract price is the loss (as premium received + contract price increase is the total cost, which will have to be paid to buy the countracts out).
>>> Increasing the BE/SL distance: for wider BE/SL > Bid Price needs to be increased:
- Set longer Expiration date.
- Set closer Strike price.
NOTE: With longer Expiration date and closer Strike, chances of assignment increase as well. It's best to find an optimal level, where BE/SL is behind a Support/Resistance level and/or an established trend line and/or Large Length Moving Average, yet not extremely far away.
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An example of Options Wheel strategy trading TQQQ. See how Strike and BE (Break Even) hits are displayed every time they occur.
STRATEGY EXPLANATION:
* Trade Open Trigger (Bullish/Sideway)
>>> Options Wheel strategy combines Cash Secured Puts with Covered Calls, so a steady bullish trend is preferred with lower volatility.
>>> It's best to start with Cash Secured Puts until assignment hits (stocks purchased), then switch to Covered Calls until assignment hits (stocks sold) and so on.
* TP (Take-Profit)
>>> Contracts Expire at Expiration date: Premium received for selling contracts kept.
>>> Assignment: Premium received for selling contracts kept. Stock is assigned (purchased if Cash Secured Puts were sold | sold if Covered Calls were sold ).
* BE/SL (Break Even Stop-Loss)
>>> Assignment is the stop-loss for this strategy, which ends current trade and starts next one. It is not a direct loss, but could result a long unrealized losses if after stock purchase assignment it goes down for a while or even a complete loss if low-cap company is used and it goes out of business.
>>> BE/SL distance can still be increased/kept optimal: for wider BE/SL > Bid Price needs to be increased:
- Set longer Expiration date.
- Set closer Strike price.
NOTE: With longer Expiration date and closer Strike, chances of assignment increase as well. It's best to find an optimal level, where BE/SL is behind a Support/Resistance level and/or an established Trend Line and/or Large Length Moving Average, yet not extremely far away.
| 3.0_wheel_strategy_tqqq_example.png
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Trading open/close/TP/SL labels, plots and colors explanations:
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There are 3 approaches: Cashed Secured Puts, Covered Puts, Covered Calls. Here is an example showing all 3 (the Strikes, Bid prices, Expirations were chosen realistically).
>>> There are 3 symbol templates, the color can be changed for each and each symbol template can be unchecked to be fully hidden or all 3 can be used.
>>> Strike: dashed horizontal line plotted at chosen Strike, if Strike is hit within the Date Range - there will be a label shown.
>>> BE (Break Even): dotted horizontal line plotted at calculated BE, if BE is hit within the Date Range - there will be a label shown.
>>> Stock Purchased: solid horizontal line plotted at input price at which the stock was purchased.
>>> Date Range (STO >>> Expiration ): vertical lines with arrows (arrows direction is based on the approach), which connect Strike, BE (Break Even) and Stock Purchased creating an square/rectangle of the whole trade, making it easy to see everything at once.
>>> Stats Table: shows all the necessary data for each symbol.
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GLOBAL SETTINGS ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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>>> Show: week divider vertical lines: Will show vertical divider lines separating each week.
>>> Show: Mondays and Fridays: Will show M - for Monday, F - for Friday, T - for Tuesday (Tuesday will be shown if there is a Holiday on Monday)
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OPTIONS SETUP: SYMBOL0X /////////////////////////////////////////////////// | (identical for all 3 symbols)
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>>> Symbol0X | Show Table: Turns on symbol01, all visuals on chart, calculations, etc. Table can be separately hidden if desired.
>>> Label Size: Size of the labels on chart showing Strike, BE (Break Even), etc.
>>> Label Color: Color for all symbol0X labels.
>>> Text Color: Text color for all symbol0X labels.
>>> Options Trading Style: 1)Covered Calls: Bullish-sideways market approach (need to own 100 shares of stock per each contract sold), Strike price has to be set above the current stock price | 2)Covered Puts: Bearish-sideways market approach (need to own 100 shares of stock per each contract sold), Strike price has to be set below the current stock price | 3)Cash Secured Puts: Bullish-sideways approach (need to have enough cash to acquire shares at Strike price if hit), Strike price has to be set below the current stock price.
>>> # of contracts sold (1 contract > 100shares): # of contracts sold per trade, for Covered Calls and Covered Puts, every contract must be backed up by 100shares of the underlying stock.
>>> Price per 1 contract (Bid): Premium received per each contract sold.
>>> Strike Price.
>>> Stock Purchase Price: Stock purchase price (NOTE: This is only for Covered Call and Covered Puts, for Secured Cash Puts - stock is only purchased if at Expiration it closes beyond Strike price).
>>> STO (Sell to Open) Date: date at which the contracts were sold and Premium received.
>>> Exp (Expiration) Date: date at which contracts expire, if price never breaks the Strike at Expiration - contracts become worthless!
>>> Alert/Label: Futures Expire Soon: With this setting turned on, an Alert will trigger and a Label will be shown at opening of the first candle bar on the Expiration date. It will certainly be before the end of the day, however depending on the chart TimeFrame during alert creation - it may trigger at a different time. For Example: On a Daily chart TimeFrame SPY (S&P500) will trigger such alert at 9:30AM ET. ||| NOTE: Due to difference in timezones - the solid lines representing the STO >>> Exp range may be off by 1 business day from the date input in the indicator Settings > Inputs, so double check and calibrate the date by setting it 1 day behind/ahead from actual dates so that Alert is received on the actual Expiration date.
>>> Strike price Broken - Style: 'Close': Show/Alert Strike price broken only once candle bar is closed | 'Live': Show/Alert Strike price broken immediately once it happens, before candle bar is closed.
>>> Show: Strike price Broken: will show a label near candle bar breaking the Strike price.
>>> Alert: Strike price Broken: will alert at price breaking the Strike price.
>>> BE (Break Even) price Broken - Alert Style: 'Close': Show/Alert BE (Break Even) price broken only once candle bar is closed | 'Live': Show/Alert BE (Break Even) price broken immediately once it happens, before candle bar is closed.
>>> Show: BE (Break Even) price Broken: will show a label near candle bar breaking the BE price.
>>> Alert: BE (Break Even) price Broken: will alert at price breaking the BE price.
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TA: TREND LINES ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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>>> Trend Lines - Uptrend/downtrend colors
>>> Show: Trend Lines: Show/Hide trend lines
>>> Show: Trend Line Breaks: Show/Hide labels where trend lines were broken
>>> Alert: Trend Line Breaks: Alert when trend line is broken
>>> Trend Lines - Search - Left Bars / Trend Lines - Search - Right Bars: how many candle bars will be used to calculate Trend Lines, the bigger the number > the more precise and less amount of trend lines will be found
>>> Trend Lines - Extend Setting
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TA: S&R (SUPPORT AND RESISTANCE) //////////////////////////////////////////
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>>> S&R (Support and Resistance) - Support/Resistance colors.
>>> Show: S&R (Support and Resistance) Top/Bottom Levels.
>>> Show: S&R (Support and Resistance) Top/Bottom Level Breaks: Show/Hide labels where support/resistance levels were broken
>>> Alert: S&R (Support and Resistance) Top/Bottom Level Breaks: Alert when S&R (Support and Resistance) level is broken
>>> S&R (Support and Resistance) - Search - Left Bars / S&R (Support and Resistance) - Search - Right Bars: how many candle bars will be used to calculate S&R (Support & Resistance) Levels, the bigger the number > the more precise and less amount of support and resistance levels will be found.
>>> S&R Search - Custom Resolution: This is a custom timeframe setting specifically for S&R Search, it disregards current chart timeframe. This is great to use for scalping, for example: with main chart set to 1min and the custom timeframe set to 3min or 5min - there will be stronger support/resistance levels with more detailed price action.
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TA: ADDITIONAL TOOLS //////////////////////////////////////////////////////
>>> Show - MA (Moving Average).
>>> Show - ATR (Average True Range).
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STATS TABLE ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
Stats Table displays all the necessary date about each options setup.
>>> Table positioning
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===========================================================================
Adding Alerts in TradngView
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Add indicator to chart and make sure to check/uncheck which alerts are required, then simply create it.
-Right-click anywhere on the TradingView chart
-Click on Add alert
-Condition: Select this indicator by it’s name
-Immediately below, change it to "alert() function calls only"
-Expiration: Open-ended (that may require higher tier TradingView account, otherwise the alert will need to be occasionally re-triggered)
-Alert name: Whatever you desire
-Hit “Create”
-Note: If you change ANY Settings within the indicator – you must DELETE the current alert and create a new one per steps above, otherwise it will continue triggering alerts per old Settings!
===========================================================================
If you have any questions or issues with the indicator, please message me directly via TradingView.
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Good Luck! (NOTE: Trading is very risky, past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results, so please trade responsibly!)
Scoopy StacksWaffle Around Multiple
(Open, High, Low, Close) Stacks On
Pre/Post Market & (Daily, Weekly,
Monthly, Yearly) Sessions With
Meticulous Columns, Rows, Tooltips,
Colors, Custom Ideas, and Alerts.
Sessions Use Two Step Incremental Values
Default Value: (1) Shows Two Previous
(O, H, L, C); Increasing Value Swaps
Sessions With Next Two Stacks.
⬛️ KEY WORDS:
🟢 Crossover | 🔴 Crossunder
📗 High | 📕 Low
📔 Open | 📓 Close
🥇 First Idea | 🥈 Second Idea
🥉 Third Idea | 🎖️ Fourth Idea
🟥 ALERTS:
Default Option: (Per Bar)
Alerts Once Conditions Are Met
(Bar Close) Alerts When Bar Closes
Default Option: (Reg)
Alerts During Regular Market
Trading Hours, (0930-1600)
(Ext) Alerts During Extended
Market Hours, (1600-0930)
(24/7) Alerts All Day
Optional Preferences:
Regular Alerts - Stocks
Extended Alerts - Futures
24/7 Alerts - Crypto
🟧 STACKS:
Default Value: (1)
Incremental Stack Value, Increasing Value
Swaps Sessions With the Next Two Stacks
(✓) Swap Stacks?
Pre/Post Market High/Lows,
1-2 Day High/Lows, 1-2 Week High/Lows,
1-2 Month High/Lows, 1-2 Year High/Lows
( ) Swap Stacks?
Pre/Post Market Open/Close,
1-2 Day Open/Close, 1-2 Week Open/Close,
1-2 Month Open/Close, 1-2 Year Open/Close
🟨 EXAMPLES:
Default Stack:
🟢 | 📗 Pre Market High (PRE) | 4600.00
🔴 | 📕 Post Market Low (POST) | 420.00
Optional: (Open)
🟢 | 📔 Post Market Open (POST) | 4400.00
Optional: (Close)
🔴 | 📓 Pre Market Close (PRE) | 430.00
Default Stack Value: (1)
🔴 | 📗 1 Day High (1DH) | 460.00
Next Stack Value: (3)
🟢 | 📕 4 Day Low (4DL) | 420.00
Optional: (Open)
🔴 | 📔 2 Day Open (2DO) | 440.00
Optional: (Close)
🟢 | 📓 3 Day Close (3DC) | 430.00
Default Stack Value: (5)
🟢 | 📗 5 Week High (5WH) | 460.00
Next Stack Value: (7)
🔴 | 📕 8 Week Low (8WL) | 420.00
Optional: (Open)
🔴 | 📔 7 Week Open (7WO) | 4400.00
Optional: (Close)
🟢 | 📓 6 Week Close (6WC) | 430.00
Default Stack Value: (9)
🔴 | 📗 9 Month High (9MH) | 460.00
Next Stack Value: (11)
🟢 | 📕 12 Month Low (12ML) | 420.00
Optional: (Open)
🟢 | 📔 11 Month Open (11MO) | 4400.00
Optional: (Close)
🔴 | 📓 10 Month Close (10MC) | 430.00
Default Stack Value: (13)
🟢 | 📗 13 Year High (13YH) | 460.00
Next Stack Value: (15)
🟢 | 📕 16 Year Low (16YL) | 420.00
Optional: (Open)
🔴 | 📔 15 Year Open (15YO) | 4400.00
Optional: (Close)
🔴 | 📓 14 Year Close (14YC) | 430.00
🟩 TABLES:
Default Value: (1)
Moves Table Up, Down, Left, or Right
Based on Second Default Value
First Default Value: (Top Right)
Sets Table Placement, Middle Center
Allows Table To Move In All Directions
Second Default Value: (Default)
Fixed Table Position, Switching Values
Moves Direction of the Table
🟦 IDEAS:
(✓) Show Ideas?
Shows Four Ideas With Custom Texts
and Values; Ideas Are Based Around
Post-It Note Reminders with Alerts
Suggestions For Text Ideas:
Take Profit, Stop Loss, Trim, Hold,
Long, Short, Bounce Spot, Retest,
Chop, Support, Resistance, Buy, Sell
🟪 EXAMPLES:
Default Value: (5)
Shows the Custom Table Value For
Sorted Table Positions and Alerts
Default Text: (🥇)
Shown On First Table Cell and
Message Appearing On Alerts
Alert Shows: 🟢 | 🥇 | 5.00
Default Value: (10)
Shows the Custom Table Value For
Sorted Table Positions and Alerts
Default Text: (🥈)
Shown On Second Table Cell and
Message Appearing On Alerts
Alert Shows: 🔴 | 🥈 | 10.00
Default Value: (50)
Shows the Custom Table Value For
Sorted Table Positions and Alerts
Default Text: (🥉)
Shown On Third Table Cell and
Message Appearing On Alerts
Alert Shows: 🟢 | 🥉 | 50.00
Default Value: (100)
Shows the Custom Table Value For
Sorted Table Positions and Alerts
Default Text: (🎖️)
Shown On Fourth Table Cell and
Message Appearing On Alerts
Alert Shows: 🔴 | 🎖️ | 100.00
⬛️ REFERENCES:
Pre-market Highs & Lows on regular
trading hours (RTH) chart
By Twingall
Previous Day Week Highs & Lows
By Sbtnc
Screener for 40+ instruments
By QuantNomad
Daily Weekly Monthly Yearly Opens
By Meliksah55
trend_vol_stopThe description below is copied from the script's comments. Because TradingView does not allow me to edit this description, please refer to the script's comments section, as well as the release notes, for the most up-to-date information.
----------
Usage:
The inputs define the trend and the volatility stop.
Trend:
The trend is defined by a moving average crossover. When the short
(or fast) moving average is above the long (slow) moving average, the
trend is up. Otherwise, the trend is down. The inputs are:
long: the number of periods in the long/slow moving average.
short: the number of periods in the short/fast moving average.
The slow moving average is shown in various colors (see explanation
below. The fast moving average is a faint blue.
Volatility stop:
The volatility stop has two modes, percentage and rank. The percentage
stop is given in terms of annualized volatility. The rank stop is given
in terms of percentile.
stop_pct and stop_rank are initialized with "-1". You need to set one of
these to the values you want after adding the indicator to your chart.
This is the only setting that requires your input.
mode: choose "rank" for a rank stop, "percentage" for a percentage stop.
vol_window: the number of periods in the historical volatility
calculation. e.g. "30" means the volatility will be a weighted
average of the previous 30 periods. applies to both types of stop.
stop_pct: the volatility limit, annualized. for example, "50" means
that the trend will not be followed when historical volatility rises
above 50%.
stop_rank: the trend will not be followed when the volatility is in the
N-th percentile. for example, "75" means the trend will not be
followed when the current historical volatility is greater than 75%
of previous volatilities.
rank_window: the number of periods in the rank percentile calculation.
for example, if rank_window is "252" and "stop_rank" is "80", the
trend will not be followed when current historical volatility is
greater than 80% of the previous 252 historical volatilities.
Outputs:
The outputs include moving averages, to visually identify the trend,
a volatility table, and a performance table.
Moving averages:
The slow moving average is colored green in an uptrend, red in a
downtrend, and black when the volatility stop is in place.
Volatility table:
The volatility table gives the current historical volatility, annualized
and expressed as a whole number percentage. E.g. "65" means the
instrument's one standard deviation annual move is 65% of its price.
The current rank is expressed, also as a whole number percentage. E.g.
"15" means the current volatility is greater than 15% of previous
volatilities. For convenience, the volatilities corresponding to the
0, 25, 50, 75, and 100th percentiles are also shown.
Performance table:
The performance table shows the current strategy's performance versus
buy-and-hold. If the trend is up, the instrument's return for that
period is added to the strategy's return, because the strategy is long.
If the trend is down, the negative return is added, because the strategy
is short. If the volatility stop is in (the slow moving average is
black), that period's return is excluded from the strategy returns.
Every period's return is added to the buy-and-hold returns.
The table shows the average return, the standard deviation of returns,
and the sharpe ratio (average return / standard deviation of returns).
All figures are expressed as per-period, whole number percentages.
For exmaple, "0.1" in the mean column on a daily chart means a
0.1% daily return.
The number of periods (samples) for each strategy is also shown.
Dynamic S/R Zones Pro [By TraderMan]Dynamic S/R Zones Pro
Short pitch:
Dynamic S/R Zones Pro automatically maps support and resistance levels using pivot highs/lows and draws surrounding zones. It displays lines, labels and a table — making it fast to spot relevant price areas on your chart. 📊✨
🔎 What does this indicator do?
Detects pivot highs/lows and converts them into dynamic S/R levels.
Draws a zone around each level (upper & lower bands) so you can see the interaction area. 🟢🔴
Counts how often each level was tested and writes that “strength” in the table — so you can prioritize levels.
Fully configurable colors, line styles, zone width and table display. 🎛️
Note: Pivot-based S/R is a widely used, objective way to map price levels — see pivot basics.
Investopedia
⚙️ How it works (technical)
Uses pivotRange = 10 to search for highs/lows inside that window.
Looks back analysisPeriod (284 in your script) and selects meaningful pivots; filters by strengthSR threshold.
channelPercent and zonePercent define band thickness (zone), with zoneWidthPercent applied over the last 300 bars.
Strength = number of times price tested that band; used for filtering and the table.
High/Low Zones option draws wide reference bands around the period’s highest/lowest pivots.
(Pivot logic here is pivot-based SR mapping — not classical static pivot formulas, but the same principle of marking widely watched price levels.)
Investopedia
🛠️ How to use (step-by-step)
Enable SR: toggle S/R drawing on/off.
Strength (strengthSR): increase to show only well-tested levels, decrease to show more levels.
Line Style / Width: readability and aesthetics.
Show Zones / Zone Width %: enable zones and set width (e.g. 2% of recent range).
Show High/Low Zones: draw wide reference zones for the highest/lowest pivots.
Extend SR: extend lines across the chart (past/future) for clarity.
Show Table: display levels, zone boundaries and strength in the top-right table. 📋
🎯 Trade entry ideas (examples)
Not financial advice — examples of how traders commonly use S/R zones.
1) Bounce Long (support zone buy)
Condition: Price arrives at a support zone and shows a bullish confirmation candle (e.g., hammer, bullish engulfing).
Extra confirmation: oversold RSI or supportive volume.
Entry: on confirmed candle close (market or limit).
SL: slightly below the zone’s lower band.
TP: next resistance or target R:R ≥ 1:2. (Retest confirmations reduce false-breakout risk.)
fxopen.com
Investopedia
2) Breakout Long
Condition: Price breaks resistance with increased volume.
Tactic: wait for a retest of the broken resistance (now support). Enter on confirmation.
SL: below the retest low or zone lower band.
TP: next zone / predetermined R:R target. Breakouts need volume/retest confirmation to avoid fakeouts.
Investopedia
fxopen.com
3) Scalp
Use narrower zones, smaller TF, very tight SL and smaller R:R (e.g., 1:1), account for spreads/fees.
🛡️ Risk management
Don’t risk too much per trade — follow a fixed % (e.g., 1–2% max).
cmegroup.com
Plan SL & TP before entry; avoid emotional adjustments.
Investopedia
Calculate risk/reward; aim for a favorable R:R and backtest your rules.
CenterPoint Securities
✔️ Practical tips
Filter by strength to remove noisy levels.
Timeframe matters: higher TF = stronger levels.
Combine with other indicators (volume, RSI, MAs) for better confirmation.
Backtest the script and your entry rules before deploying live.
Quick summary: Dynamic S/R Zones Pro is a pivot-based S/R & zone mapper that highlights strong levels and helps you trade bounces, breakouts and retests — but always use SL/TP and solid risk management.
Investopedia
+2
Investopedia
+2
fxopen.com
Disclaimer: Not financial advice. Trading involves risk. 🔒
📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano)📱 Mobile EMA + Trendline Bias (edegrano) — User Manual
Purpose
This indicator provides a simplified, mobile-friendly overview of trend bias using EMA and multi-timeframe regression trendline confluences, plus plots EMA lines and a small info table on the chart.
Inputs Explained
Input Name Description
Custom EMA Timeframe The timeframe on which the EMA 50 and EMA 200 calculations are based (e.g., 1, 3, 5 minutes). This lets you choose which timeframe to analyze EMA trend bias.
Show EMAs on Chart Toggle to show or hide EMA 50 (blue) and EMA 200 (red) lines on your chart.
Regression Length The length (number of bars) used for calculating the linear regression trendlines on fixed 1m, 3m, and 5m timeframes. Lower values make trendlines more reactive, higher values smooth out noise.
Show EMA 50 Bias Row Show or hide the EMA 50 vs EMA 200 bias row in the info table.
Show Trendline Slope Row Show or hide the multi-timeframe trendline slope bias row in the info table.
What It Shows
EMA Lines: EMA 50 (blue) and EMA 200 (red) based on your selected timeframe.
Trendline Slopes: Using linear regression on 1-minute, 3-minute, and 5-minute charts to gauge short-term trend direction.
Info Table (Bottom Left):
EMA 50 > EMA 200 status on your selected timeframe (Bullish/Bearish)
Trendline slope bias combining the 3 fixed timeframes (Bullish/Bearish/Neutral)
Final Suggestion showing overall bias:
Strong Buy 💎 if both EMA and trendline biases are bullish
Strong Sell 💎 if both are bearish
Mixed / Neutral otherwise
Tag on Chart Corner: Displays “📱 edegrano Mobile” label for quick identification.
How To Use
Set the Custom EMA Timeframe:
Choose a timeframe that fits your trading style (e.g., 1m for scalping, 5m for day trading).
Adjust Regression Length:
For faster signals, lower the regression length (e.g., 15).
For smoother, less noisy signals, increase it (e.g., 30 or higher).
Toggle EMA Lines Display:
Show or hide EMA lines based on your preference for chart clarity.
Use the Info Table:
Quickly glance at EMA and trendline bias across timeframes for confluence confirmation.
Interpret the Final Suggestion:
Follow “Strong Buy” or “Strong Sell” signals for potential entry points. If “Mixed / Neutral,” wait for stronger confirmation.
Suggested Parameters by Trading Style
Style EMA Timeframe Regression Length Notes
Scalping 1 min 15-20 Responsive, fast reaction to price
Day Trading 3-5 min 20-30 Balanced sensitivity
Swing Trading 15-30 min 30-50 Smoother trend detection
Position Trading 1 hr+ 50-100 Very smooth, low noise
Tips
Combine this indicator with volume or other indicators for stronger confirmation.
Use the EMA lines on chart visually to confirm trend direction.
The info table updates in real-time, making it easy for quick decisions on mobile.
Adjust inputs and observe how the final suggestion changes to tune for your asset and timeframe.
Dynamic Portfolio TrackerDynamic Portfolio Tracker
The Dynamic Portfolio Tracker is a visual tool for actively managing and monitoring a multi-asset portfolio directly on TradingView. It allows users to input up to 15 custom assets (with a default setup for 5), define how much of each asset they hold, and assign a target allocation percentage to each. The script then calculates live market prices, total portfolio value, current vs. target weightings, and provides clear, color-coded instructions on whether to buy, sell, or hold each asset. It displays all this data in an on-chart table, showing both the dollar amount and the quantity to adjust for each asset, helping users keep their portfolio aligned with their strategy in real time.
How to Use the Inputs (What Each Field Means)
1. Portfolio Assets (Tickers)
Fields: Asset 1 Ticker, Asset 2 Ticker, …, Asset 15 Ticker
What it does: Lets you select which assets (crypto, stocks, etc.) you want to track. These are live symbols pulled from TradingView.
2. Asset Quantities
Fields: Asset 1 Amount, Asset 2 Amount, …, Asset 15 Amount
What it means: How much of each asset you currently hold. For example:
• 0.03 BTC
• 2.1 ETH
Why it’s needed: The script multiplies this by the live price to calculate the current dollar value of each asset in your portfolio.
3. Target %
Fields: Asset 1 Implied %, Asset 2 Implied %, …, Asset 15 Implied %
What it means: Your desired allocation for each asset. For example:
• 40% BTC
• 20% ETH
• 10% SOL, etc.
Important: These must total 100% or less across all assets. The script checks this and shows an error if the total exceeds 100%.
The Dynamic Portfolio Tracker displays two powerful on-chart tables:
1. Main Table — Per Asset Breakdown
This table shows detailed, real-time information for each asset in your portfolio. Each row represents a different asset, and each column has a specific meaning:
Column What It Means
Asset = The symbol of the asset (e.g., BTCUSD, ETHUSD), auto-stripped from the exchange name.
Price = The current market price of the asset, pulled live from TradingView.
Quantity = How much of that asset you currently hold, entered manually in the inputs.
Target % = The percentage of your total portfolio you want this asset to represent.
Actual % = What percentage of your portfolio it currently makes up (based on price × quantity).
Target Value = How much (in $) this asset should be worth in your portfolio.
Actual Value = How much (in $) this asset is currently worth.
Instruction = Whether to Buy, Sell, or Hold to match your target allocation.
Value Change = The dollar amount you’d need to buy/sell to rebalance this asset.
Units to Trade = The number of asset units to buy/sell to reach the target value.
2. Portfolio Summary Table — Portfolio Totals
This smaller table appears in the top-right corner and summarizes your entire portfolio at a glance:
Target % = Total of all your assigned target allocations (should equal 100%).
Actual % = Actual portfolio composition (always 100% unless your capital is zero).
Target Value = Total value your portfolio should be based on your target percentages.
Actual Value = Current live total value of your portfolio.
If there’s a discrepancy between Target Value and Actual Value, the difference is shown in each row of the main table, so you can adjust individual assets accordingly.
Privacy First: Hide Sensitive Financial Data
A unique feature of this tool is the ability to hide sensitive financial data, such as:
• Target Value
• Actual Value
• Total Portfolio Value
You can turn these off using toggle settings, and they’ll be replaced with a crossed-out eye icon (👁️🗨️) — just like on modern crypto exchanges. This feature makes the script safe for streaming, screenshots, or sharing publicly while protecting your privacy.
But more importantly:
Feelings are the enemy of good investing.
Seeing the value of your portfolio fluctuate can trigger fear or greed. By hiding your dollar values, you’re not just securing your data — you’re reducing the temptation to react emotionally.
It’s just numbers. Systems over Feelings.
Table Automatically Adapts to Your Asset Count
The Dynamic Portfolio Tracker is designed to scale with your portfolio. Simply choose how many assets you want to track (up to 15), and the table will automatically resize to fit exactly that number — no wasted space or empty rows.
• Select 1 to 15 assets using the “Number of Assets” input
• The table expands or contracts dynamically to show only those rows
• All calculations, summaries, and layout elements adjust accordingly in real time
This keeps the interface clean, focused, and perfectly tailored to your setup — whether you’re tracking 3 coins or managing a full portfolio of 12+ tokens.
Customize Your Table to Match Your Style
The Dynamic Portfolio Tracker offers a full suite of visual customization options, allowing you to tailor the table to your charting style or stream layout. You can:
• Choose text colors for labels, values, and headers
• Set background colors for the full table and header row — or turn them off completely for a clean, transparent look
• Control border and frame settings, including color, thickness, or disabling them entirely
• Pick custom colors for Buy and Sell signals in the rebalance column
• Adjust table font size from tiny to large to match your resolution or preferences
Special Thanks
This tool wouldn’t exist without the knowledge and inspiration gained through The Real World. A sincere thank you to the Investing Master, the Guides, and Professor Adam — your frameworks and lessons brought clarity, discipline, and structure to this build.
And of course, glory to L4 — where real men are made.
Uptrick: Portfolio Allocation DiversificationIntro
The Uptrick: Portfolio Allocation Diversification script is designed to help traders and investors manage multiple assets simultaneously. It generates signals based on various trading systems, allocates capital using different diversification methods, and displays real-time metrics and performance tables on the chart. The indicator compares active trading strategies with a separate long-term holding (HODL) simulation, allowing you to see how a systematic trading approach stacks up against a simple buy-and-hold strategy.
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Trading System Selection
1. No signals (none)
In this mode, the script does not produce bullish or bearish indicators; every asset stays in a neutral stance. This setup is useful if you prefer to observe how capital might be distributed based solely on the chosen diversification method, with no influence from directional signals.
2. rsi – neutral
This mode uses an index-based measure of whether an asset appears overbought or oversold. It generates a bearish signal if market conditions point to overbought territory, and a bullish signal if they indicate oversold territory. If neither extreme surfaces, it remains neutral. Some traders apply this in sideways or range-bound conditions, where overbought and oversold levels often hint at possible turning points. It does not specifically account for divergence patterns.
3. rsi – long only
In this setting, the system watches for instances where momentum readings strengthen even if the asset’s price is still under pressure or setting new lows. It also considers oversold levels as potential signals for a bullish setup. When such conditions emerge, the script flags a possible move to the upside, ignoring indications that might otherwise suggest a bearish trend. This approach is generally favored by those who want to concentrate exclusively on identifying price recoveries.
4. rsi – short only
Here, the script focuses on spotting signs of deteriorating momentum while an asset’s price remains relatively high or attempts further gains. It also checks whether the market is drifting into overbought territory, suggesting a potential decline. Under such conditions, it issues a bearish signal. It provides no bullish alerts, making it particularly suitable for traders who look to take advantage of overvalued scenarios or protect themselves against sudden downward moves.
5. Deviation from fair value
Under this system, the script judges how far the current price may have strayed from what is considered typical, taking into account normal fluctuations. If the asset appears to be trading at an unusually low level compared to that reference, it is flagged as bullish. If it seems abnormally high, a bearish signal is issued. This can be applied in various market environments to seek opportunities that arise from perceived mispricing.
6. Percentile channel valuation
In this mode, the script determines where an asset's price stands within a historical distribution, highlighting whether it has reached unusually high or low territory compared to its recent past. When the price reaches what is deemed an extreme reading, it may indicate that a reversal is more likely. This approach is often used by traders who watch for statistical outliers and potential reversion to a more typical trading range.
7. ATH valuation
This technique involves comparing an asset's current price with its previously recorded peak values. The script then interprets whether the price is positioned so far below the all-time high that it looks discounted, or so close to that high that it could be overextended. Such perspective is favored by market participants who want to see if an asset still has ample room to climb before matching historic extremes, or if it is nearing a possible ceiling.
8. Z-score system
Here, the script measures how far above or below a standard reference average an asset's price may be, translated into standardized units. Substantial negative readings can suggest a price that might be unusually weak, prompting a bullish indication, while large positive readings could signal overextension and lead to a bearish call. This method is useful for traders watching for abrupt deviations from a norm that often invite a reversion to more balanced levels.
RSI Divergence Period
This input is particularly relevant for the RSI - Long Only and RSI - Short Only modes. The period determines how many bars in the past you compare RSI values to detect any divergences.
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Diversification Method
Once the script has determined a bullish, bearish, or neutral stance for each asset, it then calculates how to distribute capital among all included assets. The diversification method sets the weighting logic.
1. None
Gives each asset an equal weight. For example, if you have five included assets, each might get 20 percent. This is a simple baseline.
2. Risk-Adjusted Expected Return Using Volatility Clustering
Emphasizes each asset’s average returns relative to its observed risk or volatility tendencies. Assets that exhibit good risk-adjusted returns combined with moderate or lower volatility may receive higher weights than more volatile or less appealing assets. This helps steer capital toward assets that have historically provided a better ratio of return to risk.
3. Relative Strength
Allocates more capital to assets that show stronger price strength compared to a reference (for example, price above a long-term moving average plus a higher RSI). Assets in clear uptrends may be given higher allocations.
4. Trend-Following Indicators
Examines trend-based signals, like positive momentum measurements or upward-trending strength indicators, to assign more weight to assets demonstrating strong directional moves. This suits those who prefer to latch onto trending markets.
5. Volatility-Adjusted Momentum
Looks for assets that have strong price momentum but relatively subdued volatility. The script tends to reward assets that are trending well yet are not too volatile, aiming for stable upward performance rather than massive swings.
6. Correlation-Based Risk Parity
Attempts to weight assets in such a way that the overall portfolio risk is more balanced. Although it is not an advanced correlation matrix approach in a strict sense, it conceptually scales each asset’s weight so no single outlier heavily dominates.
7. Omega Ratio Maximization
Gives preference to assets with higher omega ratios. This ratio can be interpreted as the probability-weighted gains versus losses. Assets with a favorable skew are given more capital.
8. Liquidity-Weighted Valuation
Considers each asset’s average trading liquidity, such as the combination of volume and price. More liquid assets typically receive a higher allocation because they can be entered or exited with lower slippage. If the trading system signals bullishness, that can further boost the allocation, and if it signals bearishness, the allocation might be set to zero or reduced drastically.
9. Drawdown-Controlled Allocation (DCA)
Examines each asset’s maximum drawdown over a recent window. Assets experiencing lighter drawdowns (thus indicating somewhat less downside volatility) receive higher allocations, aiming for a smoother overall equity curve.
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Portfolio and Allocation Settings
Portfolio Value
Defines how much total capital is available for the strategy-based investment portion. For example, if set to 10,000, then each asset’s monetary allocation is determined by the percentage weighting times 10,000.
Use Fixed Allocation
When enabled, the script calculates the initial allocation percentages after 50 bars of data have passed. It then locks those percentages for the remainder of the backtest or real-time session. This feature allows traders to test a static weighting scenario to see how it differs from recalculating weights at each bar.
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HODL Simulator
The script has a separate simulation that accumulates positions in an asset whenever it appears to be recovering from an undervalued state. This parallel tracking is intended to contrast a simple buy-and-hold approach with the more adaptive allocation methods used elsewhere in the script.
HODL Buy Quantity
Each time an asset transitions from an undervalued state to a recovery phase, the simulator executes a purchase of a predefined quantity. For example, if set to 0.5 units, the system will accumulate this amount whenever conditions indicate a shift away from undervaluation.
HODL Buy Threshold
This parameter determines the level at which the simulation identifies an asset as transitioning out of an undervalued state. When the asset moves above this threshold after previously being classified as undervalued, a buy order is triggered. Over time, the performance of these accumulated positions is tracked, allowing for a comparison between this passive accumulation method and the more dynamic allocation strategy.
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Asset Table and Display Settings
The script displays data in multiple tables directly on your chart. You can toggle these tables on or off and position them in various corners of your TradingView screen.
Asset Info Table Position
This table provides key details for each included asset, displaying:
Symbol – Identifies the trading pair being monitored. This helps users keep track of which assets are included in the portfolio allocation process.
Current Trading Signal – Indicates whether the asset is in a bullish, bearish, or neutral state based on the selected trading system. This assists in quickly identifying which assets are showing potential trade opportunities.
Volatility Approximation – Represents the asset’s historical price fluctuations. Higher volatility suggests greater price swings, which can impact risk management and position sizing.
Liquidity Estimate – Reflects the asset’s market liquidity, often based on trading volume and price activity. More liquid assets tend to have lower transaction costs and reduced slippage, making them more favorable for active strategies.
Risk-Adjusted Return Value – Measures the asset’s returns relative to its risk level. This helps in determining whether an asset is generating efficient returns for the level of volatility it experiences, which is useful when making allocation decisions.
2. Strategy Allocation Table Position
Displays how your selected diversification method converts each asset into an allocation percentage. It also shows how much capital is being invested per asset, the cumulative return, standard performance metrics (for example, Sharpe ratio), and the separate HODL return percentage.
Symbol – Displays the asset being analyzed, ensuring clarity in allocation distribution.
Allocation Percentage – Represents the proportion of total capital assigned to each asset. This value is determined by the selected diversification method and helps traders understand how funds are distributed within the portfolio.
Investment Amount – Converts the allocation percentage into a dollar value based on the total portfolio size. This shows the exact amount being invested in each asset.
Cumulative Return – Tracks the total return of each asset over time, reflecting how well it has performed since the strategy began.
Sharpe Ratio – Evaluates the asset’s return in relation to its risk by comparing excess returns to volatility. A higher Sharpe ratio suggests a more favorable risk-adjusted performance.
Sortino Ratio – Similar to the Sharpe ratio, but focuses only on downside risk, making it more relevant for traders who prioritize minimizing losses.
Omega Ratio – Compares the probability of achieving gains versus losses, helping to assess whether an asset provides an attractive risk-reward balance.
Maximum Drawdown – Measures the largest percentage decline from an asset’s peak value to its lowest point. This metric helps traders understand the worst-case loss scenario.
HODL Return Percentage – Displays the hypothetical return if the asset had been bought and held instead of traded actively, offering a direct comparison between passive accumulation and the active strategy.
3. Profit Table
If the Profit Table is activated, it provides a summary of the actual dollar-based gains or losses for each asset and calculates the overall profit of the system. This table includes separate columns for profit excluding HODL and the combined total when HODL gains are included. As seen in the image below, this allows users to compare the performance of the active strategy against a passive buy-and-hold approach. The HODL profit percentage is derived from the Portfolio Value input, ensuring a clear comparison of accumulated returns.
4. Best Performing Asset Table
Focuses on the single highest-returning or highest-profit asset at that moment. It highlights the symbol, the asset’s cumulative returns, risk metrics, and other relevant stats. This helps identify which asset is currently outperforming the rest.
5. Most Profitable Asset
A simpler table that underscores the asset producing the highest absolute dollar profit across the portfolio.
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Multi Asset Selection
You can include up to ten different assets (such as BTCUSDT, ETHUSDT, ADAUSDT, and so on) in this script. Each asset has two inputs: one to enable or disable its inclusion, and another to select its trading pair symbol. Once you enable an asset, the script requests the relevant market data from TradingView.
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Uniqness and Features
1. Multiple Data Fetches
Each asset is pulled from the chart’s timeframe, along with various metrics such as RSI, volatility approximations, and trend indicators.
2. Various Risk and Performance Metrics
The script internally keeps track of different measures, like Sharpe ratio (a measure of average return adjusted for risk), Sortino ratio (which focuses on downside volatility), Omega ratio, and maximum drawdown. These metrics feed into the strategy allocation table, helping you quickly assess the risk-and-return profile of each asset.
3. Real-Time Tables
Instead of having to set up complex spreadsheets or external dashboards, the script updates all tables on every new bar. The color schemes in these tables are designed to draw attention to bullish or bearish signals, positive or negative returns, and so forth.
4. HODL Comparison
You can visually compare the active strategy’s results to a separate continuous buy-on-dips accumulation strategy. This allows for insight into whether your dynamic approach truly beats a simpler, more patient method.
5. Locking Allocations
The Use Fixed Allocation input is convenient for those who want to see how holding a fixed distribution of capital performs over time. It helps in distinguishing between constant rebalancing vs a fixed, set-and-forget style.
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How to use
1. Add the Script to Your Chart
Once added, open the settings panel to configure your asset list, choose a trading system, and select the diversification approach.
2. Select Assets
Pick up to ten symbols to monitor. Disable any you do not want included. Each included asset is then handled for signals, diversification, and performance metrics.
3. Choose Trading System
Decide if you prefer RSI-based signals, a fair-value approach, or a percentile-based method, among others. The script will then flag assets as bullish, bearish, or neutral according to that selection.
4. Pick a Diversification Method
For example, you might choose Trend-Following Indicators if you believe momentum stocks or cryptocurrencies will continue their trends. Or you could use the Omega Ratio approach if you want to reward assets that have had a favorable upside probability.
5. Set Portfolio Value and HODL Parameters
Enter how much capital you want to allocate in total (for the dynamic strategy) and adjust HODL buy quantities and thresholds as desired. (HODL Profit % is calculated from the Portfolio Value)
6. Inspect the Tables
On the chart, the script can display multiple tables showing your allocations, returns, risk metrics, and which assets are leading or lagging. Monitor these to make decisions about capital distribution or see how the strategy evolves.
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Additional Remarks
This script aims to simplify multi-asset portfolio management in a single tool. It emphasizes user-friendliness by color-coding the data in tables, so you do not need extra spreadsheets. The script is also flexible in letting you lock allocations or compare dynamic updates.
Always remember that no script can guarantee profitable outcomes. Real markets involve unpredictability, and real trading includes fees, slippage, and liquidity constraints not fully accounted for here. The script uses real-time and historical data for demonstration and educational purposes, providing a testing environment for various systematic strategies.
Performance Considerations
Due to the complexity of this script, users may experience longer loading times, especially when handling multiple assets or using advanced allocation methods. In some cases, calculations may time out if too many settings are adjusted simultaneously. If this occurs, removing and reapplying the indicator to the chart can help reset the process. Additionally, it is recommended to configure inputs gradually instead of adjusting all parameters at once, as excessive changes can extend the script’s loading duration beyond TradingView’s processing limits.
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Originality
This script stands out by integrating multiple asset management techniques within a single indicator, eliminating the need for multiple scripts or external portfolio tools. Unlike traditional single-asset strategies, it simultaneously evaluates multiple assets, applies systematic allocation logic, and tracks risk-adjusted performance in real time. The script is designed to function within TradingView’s script limitations while still allowing for complex portfolio simulations, making it an efficient tool for traders managing diverse holdings. Additionally, its combination of systematic trading signals with allocation-based diversification provides a structured approach to balancing exposure across different market conditions. The dynamic interplay between adaptive trading strategies and passive accumulation further differentiates it from conventional strategy indicators that focus solely on directional signals without considering capital allocation.
Conclusion
Uptrick: Portfolio Allocation Diversification pulls multiple assets into one efficient workflow, where each asset’s signal, volatility, and performance is measured, then assigned a share of capital according to your selected diversification method. The script accommodates both dynamic rebalancing and a locked allocation style, plus an ongoing HODL simulation for passive accumulation comparison. It neatly visualizes the entire process through on-chart tables that are updated every bar.
Traders and investors looking for ways to manage multiple assets under one unified framework can explore the different modules within this script to find what suits their style. Users can quickly switch among trading systems, vary the allocation approach, or review side-by-side performance metrics to see which method aligns best with their risk tolerance and market perspective.