Inertia Indicator The inertia indicator measures the market, stock or currency pair momentum and
trend by measuring the security smoothed RVI (Relative Volatility Index).
The RVI is a technical indicator that estimates the general direction of the
volatility of an asset.
The inertia indicator returns a value that is comprised between 0 and 100.
Positive inertia occurs when the indicator value is higher than 50. As long as
the inertia value is above 50, the long-term trend of the security is up. The inertia
is negative when its value is lower than 50, in this case the long-term trend is
down and should stay down if the inertia stays below 50.
Strategy
Hidden Gap`s VSA Volume If Volume is less then the previous 20 intervals, Volume is gray.
If Volume is greater then the previous 40 intervals, Volume is black.
If Volume is less then the previous 2 intervals, Volume is purple.
If Volume is less then the previous, Volume is red.
If Volume is greater then the previous, Volume is blue.
Other - white.
You can add on the indicator a 2.5 Standart Deviation of a 20 period
Bollinger Band Shifted 3 periods forward.
Gann Trend Oscillator Strategy The Gann Swing Oscillator has been adapted from Robert Krausz's book,
"A W.D. Gann Treasure Discovered". The Gann Swing Oscillator helps
define market swings.
Gann Swing Oscillator Strategy The Gann Swing Oscillator has been adapted from Robert Krausz's book,
"A W.D. Gann Treasure Discovered". The Gann Swing Oscillator helps
define market swings.
Arms Index (TRIN) Strategy The Arms index (TRIN) is a technical analysis indicator that compares advancing
and declining stock issues and trading volume as an indicator of overall market
sentiment. It measures the relationship between market supply and demand and is
used as a predictor of future price movements in the market, primarily on an
intraday basis. The Arms index seeks to provide a more dynamic explanation of
overall movements in the composite value of stock exchanges, such as the NYSE or
NASDAQ, by analyzing the strength and breadth of these movements.
Advance-Decline Volume Percent Advance-Decline Volume Percent (AD Volume Percent) is a breadth indicator
that measures the percentage of Net Advancing Volume for a particular group
of stocks, such as an index or ETF. Net Advancing Volume equals the volume
of advances less the volume of declines. AD Volume Percent equals Net Advancing
Volume divided by total volume for the group. AD Volume Percent fluctuates
between -100% and +100%.
Accelerator Oscillator (AC) Strategy The Accelerator Oscillator has been developed by Bill Williams
as the development of the Awesome Oscillator. It represents the
difference between the Awesome Oscillator and the 5-period moving
average, and as such it shows the speed of change of the Awesome
Oscillator, which can be useful to find trend reversals before the
Awesome Oscillator does.
Absolute Price Oscillator (APO) The Absolute Price Oscillator displays the difference between two exponential
moving averages of a security's price and is expressed as an absolute value.
How this indicator works
APO crossing above zero is considered bullish, while crossing below zero is bearish.
A positive indicator value indicates an upward movement, while negative readings
signal a downward trend.
Divergences form when a new high or low in price is not confirmed by the Absolute Price
Oscillator (APO). A bullish divergence forms when price make a lower low, but the APO
forms a higher low. This indicates less downward momentum that could foreshadow a bullish
reversal. A bearish divergence forms when price makes a higher high, but the APO forms a
lower high. This shows less upward momentum that could foreshadow a bearish reversal.
Recursive Moving Trend Average Strategy Taken from an article "The Yen Recused" in the December 1998 issue of TASC,
written by Dennis Meyers. He describes the Recursive MA in mathematical terms
as "recursive polynomial fit, a technique that uses a small number of past values
of the estimated price and today's price to predict tomorrows price."
Red bars color - short position. Green is long.
Indecision Candle IdentifierThis script helps identify indecision candles on for better entries into trade reversals. Note that I don't believe this signal/indicator should be used as a sole basis for entering/exiting a trade. This is simply to help you have an edge in terms of your chart/candle analysis when your brain fails to keep up with your trades.
Empirical Mode Decomposition Strategy The related article is copyrighted material from Stocks & Commodities Mar 2010
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
FX Sniper: T3-CCI Strategy With Alerts This simple indicator gives you a lot of useful information - when to enter, when to exit
and how to reduce risks by entering a trade on a double confirmed signal.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
Added Alerts when signal changes.
Dynamo Strategy In July 1996 Futures magazine, E. Marshall Wall introduces the
Dynamic Momentum Oscillator (Dynamo). Please refer to this article
for interpretation.
The Dynamo oscillator is a normalizing function which adjusts the
values of a standard oscillator for trendiness by taking the difference
between the value of the oscillator and a moving average of the oscillator
and then subtracting that value from the oscillator midpoint.
DSS Bressert (Double Smoothed Stochastic) Strategy Double Smoothed Stochastics (DSS) is designed by William Blaw.
It attempts to combine moving average methods with oscillator principles.
Detrended Price Oscillator Strategy The Detrend Price Osc indicator is similar to a moving average,
in that it filters out trends in prices to more easily identify
cycles. The indicator is an attempt to define cycles in a trend
by drawing a moving average as a horizontal straight line and
placing prices along the line according to their relation to a
moving average. It provides a means of identifying underlying
cycles not apparent when the moving average is viewed within a
price chart. Cycles of a longer duration than the Length (number
of bars used to calculate the Detrend Price Osc) are effectively
filtered or removed by the oscillator.
Directional Trend Index (DTI) Strategy This technique was described by William Blau in his book "Momentum,
Direction and Divergence" (1995). His book focuses on three key aspects
of trading: momentum, direction and divergence. Blau, who was an electrical
engineer before becoming a trader, thoroughly examines the relationship between
price and momentum in step-by-step examples. From this grounding, he then looks
at the deficiencies in other oscillators and introduces some innovative techniques,
including a fresh twist on Stochastics. On directional issues, he analyzes the
intricacies of ADX and offers a unique approach to help define trending and
non-trending periods.
Directional Trend Index is an indicator similar to DM+ developed by Welles Wilder.
The DM+ (a part of Directional Movement System which includes both DM+ and
DM- indicators) indicator helps determine if a security is "trending." William
Blau added to it a zeroline, relative to which the indicator is deemed positive or
negative. A stable uptrend is a period when the DTI value is positive and rising, a
downtrend when it is negative and falling.
D_Three Ten Osc Strategy This indicator allows the user to plot a daily 3-10 Oscillator on a Tick Bar
Chart or any intraday interval.
Walter Bressert's 3-10 Oscillator is a detrending oscillator derived
from subtracting a 10 day moving average from a 3 day moving average.
The second plot is an 16 day simple moving average of the 3-10 Oscillator.
The 16 period moving average is the slow line and the 3/10 oscillator is
the fast line.
For more information on the 3-10 Oscillator see Walter Bressert's book
"The Power of Oscillator/Cycle Combinations"
D_ELI (Ehlers Leading Indicator) Strategy This Indicator plots a single
Daily DSP (Detrended Synthetic Price) and a Daily ELI (Ehlers Leading
Indicator) using intraday data.
Detrended Synthetic Price is a function that is in phase with the dominant
cycle of real price data. This one is computed by subtracting a 3 pole Butterworth
filter from a 2 Pole Butterworth filter. Ehlers Leading Indicator gives an advanced
indication of a cyclic turning point. It is computed by subtracting the simple
moving average of the detrended synthetic price from the detrended synthetic price.
Buy and Sell signals arise when the ELI indicator crosses over or under the detrended
synthetic price.
See "MESA and Trading Market Cycles" by John Ehlers pages 64 - 70.
D_DSP (Detrended Synthetic Price) Strategy 2 Detrended Synthetic Price is a function that is in phase with the
dominant cycle of real price data. This DSP is computed by subtracting
a half-cycle exponential moving average (EMA) from the quarter cycle
exponential moving average.
See "MESA and Trading Market Cycles" by John Ehlers pages 64 - 70.
D_DSP (Detrended Synthetic Price) Strategy Detrended Synthetic Price is a function that is in phase with the
dominant cycle of real price data. This DSP is computed by subtracting
a half-cycle exponential moving average (EMA) from the quarter cycle
exponential moving average.
See "MESA and Trading Market Cycles" by John Ehlers pages 64 - 70.
Confluence Strategy This is modified version of Dale Legan's "Confluence" indicator written by Gary Fritz.
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Here is Gary`s commentary:
Since the Confluence indicator returned several "states" (bull, bear, grey, and zero),
he modified the return value a bit:
-9 to -1 = Bearish
-0.9 to 0.9 = "grey" (and zero)
1 to 9 = Bullish
The "grey" range corresponds to the "grey" values plotted by Dale's indicator, but
they're divided by 10.
Combining Exponential And Volume WeightingThe related article is copyrighted material from Stocks & Commodities 2009 Oct