Volume Aggregated Spot & Futures -- Crypto (by plyst & more)📊 Volume Aggregated Spot & Futures - Enhanced Edition
🎯 Overview
Advanced volume aggregation indicator that combines spot and perpetual futures volume across the top 10 cryptocurrency exchanges. This enhanced version builds upon the original work by @HALDRO Project with optimized calculations and expanded functionality.
✨ Key Features
- 📈 Real-time aggregated volume from 10 major exchanges (Binance, Bybit, OKX, Coinbase, Bitget, KuCoin, Kraken, MEXC, Gate.io, HTX)
- 🔄 Multiple visualization modes: Volume, Delta, Cumulative Delta, Spot vs Perp analysis, Liquidations, OBV, and MFI
- 💱 Multi-currency support: Display volume in COIN, USD, or EUR
- 🎨 Clean, single-color bar chart showing total cumulative volume
- 📊 Multiple calculation methods: SUM, AVG, MEDIAN, VARIANCE
- 🎯 Separate spot (USDT, USD, USDC, etc.) and perpetual futures (.P contracts) tracking
🔧 Technical Improvements
✓ Corrected MFI formula for accurate money flow calculations
✓ Optimized volume aggregation logic with proper NA handling
✓ Support for 10 exchanges (up from 9)
✓ Streamlined codebase for better performance
✓ Updated perpetual contract naming conventions (.P format)
📖 Usage
Perfect for analyzing total market volume, identifying liquidation events, tracking buyer/seller pressure through delta analysis, and understanding the spot vs futures market dynamics.
🙏 Credits
Original concept and framework by @HALDRO Project. This version includes mathematical corrections, code optimizations, and expanded exchange support.
⚠️ Note
Aggregated volume is calculated from external exchange data using request.security(). Ensure your plan supports the necessary security calls for optimal performance.
Volum
VIP PRO Pulse – Liquidity • Momentum • OI • RSI💠 VipPro Pulse – Liquidity • Momentum • OI
“Catch the heartbeat of market momentum.”
Developed exclusively for members of Crypto Arab Academy, VipPro Pulse is the first Arabic-engineered professional indicator that merges liquidity, momentum, and open interest into one intelligent real-time system — designed for traders who want clarity, precision, and confidence in every decision.
At the top, a dynamic color-coded dashboard clearly shows the market’s bias:
🟢 Green = Bullish momentum
🔴 Red = Bearish pressure
⚫ Gray = Neutral or corrective phase
Below, the wave engine automatically paints the cycles — green during bullish trends and red during bearish moves — so you can understand the market’s direction at a glance.
For scalpers, an orange line has been added — a precision tool built for Forex and Gold traders.
Buy when price moves above the orange line.
Sell when price moves below it.
This line alone can turn short-term volatility into smart, consistent profits.
💡 What you’ll find inside this indicator represents years of trading experience, countless hours of chart watching, and massive research and cost — all distilled into one masterpiece, now delivered to you on a golden plate.
No more need for multiple indicators:
✅ Supports all markets: Crypto (Spot & Futures), Forex, Stocks, Gold, Oil.
✅ Real-time liquidity flow analysis
✅ Momentum + OI confirmation
✅ Smart overbought/oversold alerts
✅ VWAP and Fibonacci integration (1.27 / 1.61 / 2.61 targets)
📸 Bonus AI Integration:
Take a screenshot of your chart showing the VipPro Pulse dashboard and wave section, then send it to our AI bot 👇
👉 VipPro Realtime AI Bot
The bot will instantly generate:
Full technical, wave & time analysis
Entry and retracement levels for safe liquidity management
Fibonacci-based targets ready for execution
VipPro Pulse isn’t just an indicator — it’s your silent partner that transforms complex market data into confident, profitable action.
Rejects unsafe trades when sell signals or weak momentum appear.
🔒 This indicator is invite-only. Its code cannot be accessed or copied.
📩 To get your copy or request a free trial, contact us:
👉 t.me
👨💻 Developer: Amr El Mehrezy
🔗 linktr.ee
📊 More info:
chatgpt.com
x.com
📊 Availability
VipPro Realtime is available exclusively to members of Crypto Arab Academy, the largest Arabic community specialized in intelligent trading.
💎 Annual membership: $1000
🎁 Good news! Exclusive offers and limited-time discounts are always available here:
👉 t.me
Yen Carry Composite Index + Macro Flow GaugeWhat This Indicator Does
This chart visualizes the strength, trend, and macro conditions supporting or weakening the yen carry trade a strategy where investors borrow in low yielding yen to invest in higher yielding assets
How It Works: Core Components
Composite Index (Blue Line):
A weighted blend of z-scores from:
USD/JPY (strength of USD vs JPY)
10Y yield spread (US – Japan)
AUD/JPY (risk proxy for carry appetite)
VIX (global risk sentiment, inverted)
Z-scores normalize each input to show how far it deviates from recent history (not raw values).
Positive composite trend ⬅️ strong carry environment
Negative composite trend ➡️ signs of unwind or stress
Individual Z-Score Lines:
🟥 USD/JPY
🟩 Yield Spread (US10Y − JP10Y)
🟪 FX Proxy (AUD/JPY)
🟦 VIX (risk sentiment)
Threshold Lines & Signal Markers:
Green 🟢⬅️🟢🟢 “carry active” threshold (+1.5 std dev)
Red dashed line 🔴➡️🔴🔴→ “carry unwind risk” (−1.5 std dev)
Carry Trade Strength Gauge (Horizontal Bar, Bottom-Right) www.tradingview.com
Slots:
🟢 = strong carry inflow conditions
⚪ = neutral midpoint
🔴 = outflow / unwind pressure
A directional arrow (⬅️ or ➡️) shows momentum:
➡️ = composite rising → improving carry environment
⬅️ = composite falling → deteriorating carry conditions
Arrow is placed at the current strength level, visually combining position + momentum
Labels “Inflows” and “Outflows” flank the bar for clarity
Use Case Summary
Macro risk overlay for JPY pairs, EM FX, bond carry strategies
Detect early unwind phases (e.g. if arrow ⬅️ appears in red zone)
Confirm entry/exit in directional JPY trades or expected liquidity to enter the markets
Ultra Liquidity Heatmap v2 [JopAlgo]Ultra Liquidity Heatmap v2 — map where price is likely to pause, ping, or pivot
Core idea
This study paints “liquidity shelves” on your chart—zones where unusually high traded volume likely clustered. In practice, those zones behave like magnets and barriers:
Magnets → price tends to revisit them.
Barriers → price often stalls / wicks there, or breaks only when there’s real pressure.
Think of each colored box as a footprint from prior transactions: “a lot of business got done here.” Price frequently checks back to these footprints to find counterparties again.
What you’ll see
Colored boxes that extend to the right from a bar’s range (high→low).
The color shows how extreme that bar’s volume was versus a long baseline.
Two streams of boxes:
High-side maintenance (built off highs)
Low-side maintenance (built off lows)
Both extend forward and update as price interacts.
Transparency control so you can keep price visible under the heatmap.
Read it fast → Where are the densest clusters of boxes? Are we approaching one from above/below? Did we wick into a box and snap back, or accept inside it?
What “liquidity” means here (plain language)
In order to move, price needs counterparties.
Areas that printed unusually high volume in the past are places where both sides engaged.
Those areas often become future decision spots: either absorb incoming orders (hold) or reject them (wick/reverse) or, if overwhelmed, price pushes through and trends.
This indicator does not show the live order book. It uses a robust proxy: statistical outliers in completed volume to infer where the book tended to be deep (and may be again).
Color scale (how extremes are decided)
We compute a Z-score for the previous bar’s volume against a 610-bar baseline:
Z > 4.0 → Extra High (default yellow) → major shelf
Z > 2.5 → High (default orange) → strong shelf
Z > 1.0 → Medium (default white)
Z > −0.5 → Normal (default lime)
else → Low (default aqua)
You can toggle which tiers to show and use gradient coloring to see intensity inside a tier.
Practical tip → For a clean map, start with Extra High and High only. Add Medium on thin markets or higher timeframes.
How the boxes behave
Each detected bar spawns a box from that bar’s high to low and extends it right.
As new bars print:
If price pushes above a high-based box, that box is retired (it didn’t hold).
If price pushes below a low-based box, that box is retired.
Otherwise, the box can adjust to the latest interaction so it stays relevant to the current range.
Meaning → The map evolves with price. You always see the still-relevant shelves, not stale ones.
The three main behaviors at a shelf
Magnet → price drifts into the box (fills in), then decides: continue or reverse.
Reject → sharp wick into the box and immediate reversal → great location to fade if other signals agree.
Accept → clean close inside/through the box and follow-through → look for break-and-retest to trade with the move.
Decide with arrows →
Approach from above → watch for reject ↘ or accept ↘
Approach from below → watch for reject ↗ or accept ↗
How to trade it (simple playbook)
1) Frame the day / swing
Map Extra High / High shelves on your higher TF (e.g., 4H / 1D).
Note clusters (multiple boxes overlapping) → stronger magnets.
2) Execute at the shelf, not mid-air
Continuation
→ Price accepts ↗ through a shelf, then retests from above and holds → long toward the next shelf.
→ Mirror ↘ for shorts.
Reversion
→ Price tags a shelf and rejects ↘ (coming from above) or rejects ↗ (from below) with confirmation → fade back to the prior range node.
3) Confirm the decision
CVDv1 (optional) →
Accept = taker flow with the break (Alignment OK).
Reject = taker attempts absorbed at the shelf (Absorption).
Volume Profile v3.2 →
Prefer trades when shelves align with VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs (location first).
Anchored VWAP →
Reclaim/reject at AVWAP that sits inside or on the edge of a shelf is high-quality timing.
4) Risk & targets
Stops → just beyond the shelf extreme you used for entry (if it’s a reject) or under/over the retest (if it’s an accept).
Targets → the next shelf; partials at intermediate VP nodes; trail if shelves are stair-stepping.
Settings that matter (and how to tune)
BG Transparency → make boxes readable without hiding price.
Box Index → where a box begins on the x-axis.
Set to 501 to anchor boxes exactly at their creation bar.
Lower values shift the start to keep the chart tidy on fast TFs.
Show tiers → start with Extra High / High; add Medium only if the map looks sparse.
Gradient coloring → keep on to see intensity; turn off for a flatter, cleaner palette.
Reading examples (quick arrow notes)
Approach from below → accept ↗ → retest holds ↗ → continuation long to next shelf.
Approach from above → wick inside → reject ↘ → rotation back toward prior node.
Multiple shelves stacked tight → expect pause / chop; wait for clear accept ↗/↘ plus retest.
Common mistakes this helps you avoid
Trading mid-range with no shelf in play.
Fading a shelf without a reject ↘ / ↗ confirmation.
Chasing a break without an accept ↗/↘ + retest.
Treating any colored box as equal—Extra High matters more than Normal/Low.
Best combos (kept simple)
Volume Profile v3.2 → shelves that coincide with VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs are higher-probability decision spots.
Anchored VWAP → reclaimed/rejected AVWAP inside a shelf = strong confirmation.
CVDv1 (optional) → confirms accept ↗/↘ (with flow) or reject (absorption).
FAQ (quick clarity)
Is this the live order book? → No. It’s a volume-based proxy for likely liquidity.
Why do boxes disappear? → When price invalidates them (pushes past their boundary), they’re retired—keeps the map current.
Which timeframe? → Build the map on your execution TF (e.g., 4H/1H) and confirm with one higher (1D/4H). Thin markets may benefit from adding Medium tiers.
Disclaimer
This indicator and description are for education only, not financial advice. Trading involves risk; results vary by market, venue, and settings. Test first, act at defined levels, and manage risk. No guarantees or warranties are provided.
Project Pegasus ChronosDescription
Project Pegasus Chronos is the flagship volume-intelligence overlay of the Pegasus suite, built for traders who read the tape. It spots where the tape gets hit, where moves get absorbed, and when pressure flips — in real time, without repainting. Chronos blends high-signal volume spikes, absorption, pure-delta mismatches, and two crisp market-pressure HUDs into one surgical visualization that stays readable even on noisy charts.
What’s unique
Layered volume intelligence that cuts through noise: spikes, absorption, delta traps, trend bias, and pressure — at a glance.
Absorption Engine – Proprietary scoring of wick/body/delta context to flag “hit & hold” moments where moves stall.
Pure-Delta Mismatch Bubbles – Instantly reveal fake strength or weakness when the candle fights the tape.
Mirage Filters (Add-on) – Smart VolSpike & PriceClamp regime tags (squeeze vs. burst) for clean entries and exits.
Pegasus TrendDynamic – Adaptive bias band with one-look flips and optional shadow fill for context.
Dual HUDs – Buy/Sell Volume HUD and Market Pressure HUD with a Shock badge for sudden impulses.
Readable by Design – Color presets, clustering, absolute filters, and performance scopes (12/24/48/72H) keep charts fast & clean.
Non-repainting – Signals are produced only on confirmed bars; no lookahead.
How it works
Chronos aggregates recent market behavior into simple, decisive visuals:
Bubbles scale by spike tier and direction to highlight initiative participation.
Absorption marks flag bars where flow hits and fails to push through.
Pure-delta markers expose liquidity traps (delta vs. candle color).
TrendDynamic provides a smooth, adaptive bias rail.
HUDs quantify who’s pressing harder and when a shock event fires.
How to use
Stalk large bubbles near key levels; pair them with absorption marks to time fades or continuations.
Treat pure-delta mismatches as early trap signals — especially near session highs/lows or FVGs.
Trade in alignment with the TrendDynamic bias; use Market Pressure HUD & Shock to time adds or cuts.
Refine visuals via clustering and absolute-volume filters on fast instruments.
Notes & limitations
Built for intraday futures, crypto, and FX — but works across assets and timeframes.
If visuals get heavy, use scope, clustering, and filters to keep it buttery smooth.
Analysis and visualization tool — not a signal service.
Disclaimer
For educational and informational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Anchored Session Volume Profile • Heatmap Profiles • Asia/EU/US Description
This indicator builds Anchored Session Volume Profiles for Asia, EU, and US sessions on intraday charts and renders them as right-docked line histograms (heatmap or classic style). Each session computes its own POC, VAH, VAL and optional Session High/Low lines. An optional per-price-bin Delta overlay estimates buy/sell pressure inside the profile rows for quick order-flow context.
What’s unique
Three independent session anchors (Asia/EU/US) with custom start/end times, bin size in ticks, and Value Area %.
Right-fixed live rendering or post-close persistence (draw levels only after the session closes).
Adaptive width: profile width scales with elapsed session length (anchor → now/end) within user limits.
Heatmap profile: row tint scales by relative volume; or Classic single-color with optional gradient.
Per-row Delta ticks (outside/inside, configurable direction) derived from bar delta and overlap with each price bin.
Clean POC/VAH/VAL line styling, optional ray extension, and Session High/Low rays per session.
How it works (technical)
Binning: Rows are built with a user-defined bin height in ticks. Arrays expand/shrink as price extends; the base is shifted when new lows appear to keep bins aligned.
Accumulation: For each bar within the active session window, traded volume is distributed to intersecting bins proportionally to the price overlap with that bin.
Value Area: POC is the highest-volume bin. VA is grown symmetrically around the POC until the selected coverage (VA%) is reached.
Delta per bin (optional): A bar-level delta proxy volume * (close − open) / range (clamped) is split into buy/sell and allocated to bins proportionally to the same overlap share, producing a per-row delta magnitude for rendering ticks.
Rendering modes:
Right fixed: refreshes each bar; lines/histogram are docked at the anchor X-position.
Draw Levels after Session Close: on close, only POC/VAH/VAL (and optional Session High/Low) are persisted.
No lookahead: All computations use confirmed bars; levels are deterministic on close.
How to use
Use the Asia/EU/US profiles to read participation hand-offs and session-driven rotations.
Trade off POC/VAH/VAL as acceptance/rejection references; confluence with session High/Low often marks responsive flows.
Employ Delta ticks per row to spot absorption, one-sided stacking, or fading participation inside the profile without leaving TradingView.
Prefer right-fixed during live trading and post-close when you want persistent session levels.
Key settings
General per session: Start/End (hh:mm), Bin size (ticks), Value Area %, toggle POC/VAH/VAL lines.
Rendering: Heatmap vs. Classic, orientation (Left/Right), gradient on/off, row thickness, right offset, adaptive width limits.
Delta (per price bin): global on/off, per-session on/off, tick width, max tick length (bars), outside/inside placement, direction (sign-based / always left / always right), colors.
Levels: POC/VAH/VAL styles (solid/dashed/dotted), widths, colors, extend right (ray).
Session High/Low: per-session on/off, style, width, colors, optional right-ray extension.
Notes & limitations
Designed for intraday data; accuracy depends on the feed’s volume granularity.
Large histories + small bins + delta ticks can be heavy; tune bin size, adaptive width, and delta max length for performance.
Timezone for anchors is set internally to Europe/Berlin.
Educational tool — not a signal generator.
Disclaimer
For educational and informational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Volume Pivot ZoneOverview
This indicator automatically draws boxes on your chart to show important price levels based on high trading volume.
What It Does:
Finds High Volume Spots: It detects bars where the trading volume hits a peak (a "pivot").
Draws Zones: It draws a box around the high and low of that high-volume bar and extends it to the right.
Shows Different Timeframes: You can see zones from your current chart's timeframe (CTF) and a higher timeframe (HTF) at the same time. HTF zones are usually more significant.
Manages Old Zones: Once the price touches or breaks through a zone, the indicator can automatically hide or remove it, keeping your chart clean.
Settings:
Higher Timeframe Section
- CTF Show / HTF Show: Turn the zones for the current (CTF) or higher (HTF) timeframe on or off.
- 1Min:, 5Min:, etc.: Set which higher timeframe to use for your current chart. For example, you can tell it to show 1-hour zones on your 5-minute chart.
Volume Pivot Zone Section
- Show High: Draws zones based on volume peaks. (Most common)
- Show Low: Draws zones based on volume valleys.
- Lookback Length: How many bars to the left and right to check for a volume peak. A higher number finds only the most significant peaks.
- Invalidation Condition: When to consider a zone "used up." For example, Touch means the zone is invalidated as soon as the price touches it.
- Action: What to do with an invalidated zone. Remove deletes it, while Hide just makes it disappear.
- Color Settings: Customize the colors of the zones to your liking.
Liquidity Zones - Joe v1This script lets you plot liquidity/order levels (similar to what you see on Bookmap) directly on your TradingView chart.
It is designed to help traders spot support/resistance levels where large limit orders sit and to visualize whether those liquidity pools are still active, already taken, or being replenished.
Key Features
Session-based
Works during a defined trading session.
Resets automatically at the first bar of the session.
Up to 8 Liquidity Zones, each of which includes:
Price level
Size (affects line thickness)
Status (Active, Taken, Re-Stocking, or Automatic).
Zone Statuses
Active → Untouched liquidity (potential support/resistance).
Taken → Liquidity consumed after price trades through it.
Re-Stocking → Level is being reloaded with fresh orders.
Automatic → Updates dynamically (switches to Taken when crossed, otherwise stays Active).
Visual Representation
Zones are drawn as horizontal lines.
Labels show price + size (e.g., 4010 (200k)).
Customizable line styles and colors:
Active = solid red
Taken = gray dashed
Re-Stocking = purple dotted
Dynamic Updates
Levels automatically update during the session.
If price crosses a zone → it’s marked as Taken.
Labels, line styles, and colors adjust live.
Line thickness = zone size ÷ 10 → visually represents liquidity strength.
How this indicator is Used
Upon market open, the order book tends to fill with limit orders. Using Bookmap, you can see where these orders are placed at each relative price point, along with their sizes. The most important ones to focus on are the larger levels, which are typically highlighted in reddish tones (depending on your Bookmap settings).
I then manually enter these levels into this indicator. It only takes a few seconds, and since there’s no direct way to connect TradingView to Bookmap, this method works as an effective workaround. Once entered, the levels will stay visible on your TradingView chart.
This seemingly simple script is very powerful and provides a strong edge. More often than not, price action gravitates toward these larger liquidity levels. Remember, the price of a security is influenced by market makers whose role is to fill orders and earn commissions on transactions. They have little interest in arbitrarily pushing price higher or lower; instead, their primary function is to guide price toward liquidity—where the large orders sit.
Of course, this is a general principle, and many other variables can affect price movement. Still, by keeping this concept in mind, you’ll often find yourself on the right side of the market.
Triple VWAP [JopAlgo]Triple VWAP — three volume-weighted rails for trend, pullback, and reversion
Core idea
This is three rolling VWAPs (VWMA-style) with user-set lengths. Together they show:
Trend structure → stack & slope of the three lines
Pullback zones → dynamic VWAP supports/resistances
Reversion risk → distance from the fastest VWAP
Use the stack (fast/medium/slow) for bias, slope for momentum, and distance to avoid chasing.
What you’ll see
VWAP 1 (fast), VWAP 2 (medium), VWAP 3 (slow)
Colors match inputs; each line can be toggled on/off
No bands or extras—just three clean volume-weighted rails
Read it fast → Which line is on top? Are they fanning out or braiding? How far is price from the fast VWAP?
How to use it (simple playbook)
Direction filter
Bullish bias → fast above medium above slow and slopes ↗
Bearish bias → fast below medium below slow and slopes ↘
Entry timing
Trend pullback (with level): In a bullish stack, wait for price to retest fast/medium VWAP at a real level → look for the first higher-low and continuation.
Reclaim / reject: Long when price reclaims fast → medium with holds (mirror for shorts on rejects).
Don’t chase: If price is far above the fast VWAP, wait for a revert toward fast before engaging.
Location first (always)
Act at real references → Volume Profile v3.2 (VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs) and Anchored VWAP
No level → no trade
Quality check (optional)
CVDv1 → prefer Alignment OK, avoid entries when Absorption reads against your side
Entries, exits, risk
Continuation long: Bullish stack ↗, pullback into fast/medium at VAL / AVWAP / LVN, hold → enter
Stop → below structure/last swing • Targets → POC/HVNs or prior swing
Break + retest: Price crosses medium and holds above it, lines begin to fan out ↗ → enter on the retest
Fade to value (advanced): Extended move into VAH with price stretched far from fast VWAP → look for reject and revert toward POC/fast
Trim/Avoid: Into HVNs with lines flattening or braiding → take profits / stand down
Settings that matter (and how to tune)
VWAP Length 1 / 2 / 3 → choose a fast / medium / slow ladder
Shorter = more reactive, more noise
Longer = steadier bias, more lag
Visibility toggles → hide one line if cluttered; many traders keep fast & slow only
Starter presets
Scalp (1–5m) → 20 / 50 / 100
Intraday (15m–1H) → 50 / 100 / 200
Swing (2H–4H) → 50 / 150 / 300
High-vol pairs → 30 / 60 / 120
Pattern cheat sheet
Stack flip: Fast crosses medium, then slow, and all slopes turn ↗ / ↘ → regime change
Triple pinch → expansion: Lines braid tight, then fan out with price holding a level → expansion leg
Kiss & go: Pullback tags fast VWAP in trend and bounces → add/enter with structure
Mean-revert tag: Stretch away from fast into VP edge → revert toward fast/POC
Best combos (kept simple)
Volume Profile v3.2 → entries at VAH/VAL/LVNs, targets at POC/HVNs
Anchored VWAP → session/weekly/event anchors for major reclaims/rejections; use Triple VWAP for day-to-day timing
CVDv1 (optional) → take VWAP-aligned setups with flow; skip when Absorption is against you
Common mistakes this helps you avoid
Trading against the VWAP stack
Chasing far from the fast VWAP
Acting mid-range while lines braid (do less; wait for expansion or edges)
Disclaimer
This indicator and write-up are for education only, not financial advice. Trading involves risk; results vary by market, venue, and settings. Test first, trade at defined levels, and manage risk. No guarantees or warranties are provided.
Rate of Change Indicator [JopAlgo] (ROCI)Rate of Change Indicator (ROCI) — see impulse early, skip the dead moves
What it is (one line):
ROCI tells you how fast price changed vs N bars ago , in percent. It’s a clean momentum gauge:
Above 0 → price is higher than N bars ago (bullish momentum).
Below 0 → price is lower than N bars ago (bearish momentum).
Further from 0 → stronger impulse.
The default +5 / −5 bands highlight strong thrust . Zero-line crosses flag momentum shifts.
What you’ll see
Blue line = ROCI.
Orange dotted line = 0 (bull/bear divider).
White dotted lines = ±Strong Momentum levels (default ±5).
Green/red panel tint when ROCI lives above +5 or below −5.
Read in 3 seconds: Which side of 0? How far? Growing or fading vs last bar?
How to use it (simple playbook)
Direction filter
Trade longs only while ROCI > 0.
Trade shorts only while ROCI < 0.
Timing
Breakouts: prefer breaks where ROCI pushes through +5/−5 and holds on the first retest.
Pullbacks in trend: in an uptrend, let ROCI dip toward 0 and then turn back up → entry. (Mirror for downtrends.)
Do less in chop
If ROCI whips around near 0, you’re in balance. Only act at objective levels.
Rule of thumb: Zero cross = heads-up. ±5 hold = go-with.
Entries, exits, risk (use this, keep it tight)
Continuation entry (trend):
Bias up at your level (e.g., VAL/AVWAP). ROCI stays > 0 and turns up from a shallow dip → enter long.
Stop: under structure/level. Targets: POC/HVNs or next swing.
Breakout entry:
Break through a level with ROCI > +5 (or < −5 for shorts). Enter on the retest that holds while ROCI remains outside the band.
Invalidation: quick fall back inside the band and under 0 → stand down.
Exit/trim:
On longs, repeated lower ROCI peaks into your target (momentum fading) → take profits or tighten.
Timeframe guide
1–5m (scalps) : ROC Period 10–20, Strong 6–10. Many signals; require level + confirmation.
15m–1H (intraday): ROC Period 14–34, Strong 4–7. Sweet spot.
2H–4H (swing): ROC Period 20–50, Strong 3–6. Cleaner legs, fewer flips.
1D+ (position): ROC Period 50–100, Strong 2–5. Use for backdrop; trigger on lower TF.
Settings that actually matter (and how to tune)
ROC Period (default 32) : lookback for comparison.
Shorter = earlier signals, more noise.
Longer = steadier bias, slower turns.
Strong Momentum Threshold (default 5) : where you say “this is real thrust.”
Pick it by history: scroll back, mark thrusts that ran, and note their typical ROCI. Set the band slightly inside that value so you see the start of good moves.
Pattern cheatsheet
Impulse leg : ROCI above 0 making higher peaks → trend leg in progress.
Healthy pullback : ROCI dips toward 0 but doesn’t flip negative, then turns up → add/entry with trend.
Weak breakout / likely fail: Price pokes level but ROCI stays near 0 or rolls over quickly.
Divergence (lightweight): Price makes a higher high, ROCI peaks lower → momentum thinning; trail tight into HVNs.
Best combos (kept simple)
Volume Profile v3.2 : Use VAH/VAL/LVNs/POC for where. ROCI tells you if the break has juice.
Anchored VWAP : Reclaim/reject AVWAP with ROCI on the correct side of 0 for higher quality.
CVDv1 :
Yes: ROCI thrust + CVD Alignment OK + no Absorption → higher odds the move sticks.
No: ROCI thrust but Absorption red → don’t chase; wait for the fail/reclaim.
(Optional add: RVOL—high participation + strong ROCI is the A+ combo for breaks.)
Common mistakes this avoids
Buying a breakout while ROCI sits near 0 (no impulse).
Shorting a strong trend when ROCI is firmly > 0 (or > +5).
Treating every zero cross as a trade (it’s a heads-up, not an entry by itself).
Quick defaults to start
ROC Period: 32
Strong Threshold: 5
Process: Level → ROCI side/strength → (optionally) CVD quality → Execute with structure-based risk
Screenshots tip: show a level break where ROCI pushes through +5 and a pullback where ROCI turns up from ~0.
Mini-disclaimer
Educational tool, not financial advice. Test first, size sensibly, and always anchor decisions to levels, flow, and risk.
Elite Entries VWAP Fibonacci Bands PremiumElite Entries VWAP Fibonacci Bands
Precision pullbacks. Cleaner trends. External filter ready.
What it is
A professional-grade VWAP/MIDAS-based band system with optional TRAMA or EMA central lines, Fibonacci expansion zones (0.236/0.382/0.5/0.618/0.786), reversal/pullback signals, and an ATR trailing stop. The latest update adds an Open-Source Filter that lets you gate entries using any other indicator’s plot on your chart. That means fewer false signals and cleaner alignment with your personal edge.
Why traders love it
Dialed pullbacks & trend breaks at 0.236 / 0.382 / 0.618
Clean reversal reads at 0.382 / 0.618 / 0.786
External filter integration (choose Source A/B from any indicator)
Stackable filters: Volume > SMA(20) + RSI threshold
ATR trailing stop included for exits
Flexible midline: MIDAS (anchored VWAP), TRAMA, or EMA
Fib bands you can color & label individually
What’s new (vX.X)
Open-Source Filter (External Indicator Gating)
Pick Source A (and optional B) from other indicators on your chart.
Comparators for entries: Close > A, A > B, A crosses up B, A > Threshold, A rising (and mirrored sell rules).
Apply to Pullback/Trend only (236/382/618) or All Signals (adds reversals, retests, rejections).
Built-in SMA smoothing for A/B to tame noisy externals.
Stability fix: valid input.source defaults to avoid compile errors.
Signals included
Reversals: 0.786, 0.618, 0.382
Pullback/Trend breaks: 0.236 / 0.382 / 0.618 (above/below central line)
Centerline retests (bounce confirmation)
0.618 rejections (directional candle logic)
ATR Trailing Stop (long/short)
All signals honor active filters (Volume/RSI + Open-Source Filter if enabled).
Quick start
Choose your Central Line: MIDAS (anchored VWAP), TRAMA, or EMA.
Set anchor (Timeframe or Date) and Std Dev Multiplier to size the bands.
Enable the pullback/trend signals you want (236/382/618) + any reversals.
Optional filters: Volume > SMA(20) and RSI threshold.
To gate with another indicator: turn on Open-Source Filter, pick Source A (and B), choose comparators, and select scope (Pullback/Trend Only or All Signals).
(Optional) Enable ATR trailing stop for dynamic exits.
Turn on alerts—you’re live.
Best-use ideas
Trend alignment: Gate buys with A rising where A = your HTF MA/VWAP; gate sells with A falling.
Momentum cross: A crosses up B (A=fast, B=slow) to allow only momentum-supported pullbacks.
Level validation: Close > A to ensure price is reclaiming your external baseline before entries.
Alerts
Alerts are available for every signal (reversal, pullback/trend break, retest, rejection). They only fire when all enabled filters pass.
Works on
Any symbol/any timeframe. Day trading, scalping, swing trading—especially useful during NY session volatility and post-anchor resets.
Notes & disclaimer
External filter dropdowns list plots exposed by other indicators.
Trading involves risk. This tool is for education/information—not financial advice.
ZTCRYPTOLAB - Liquidity (v1.8.4)ZTCRYPTOLAB — Liquidation
See the market’s likely liquidation pockets as clean, readable “heat bars.”
The script groups nearby levels into a single bar, sizes the bar by strength, shows a compact value label (K/M/B/T) inside the bar, and automatically fades levels once price takes them out.
What it does (plain-English)
Finds likely liquidation zones above and below current price at three “tiers” (roughly like 25× / 50× / 100×).
Groups nearby levels into one clear bar so your chart doesn’t turn into spaghetti.
Makes stronger zones look wider (more eye-catching) and prints a value pill in K/M/B/T so you can compare strength at a glance.
Fades levels once they’re hit so you instantly see what’s still in play vs. what was already taken.
Quick start (how to use)
Add to chart on the symbol/timeframe you trade.
In the settings, the only control most traders touch is “Max live levels (Top-N)”.
Lower = cleaner, only the best zones.
Higher = more detail.
Zoom out to view big cluster magnets. Zoom in to see them split into more precise lines.
Use wide, nearby bars as targets, magnets, or caution zones. Combine with your entries, stop placement, and risk rules.
Tip: For very busy charts, start with Top-N around 80–100 on intraday, 40–80 on swing. Raise only if you need more context.
Inputs you’ll actually use
Max live levels (Top-N): Caps how many live bars can appear after pruning. Everything else is tuned for clarity out-of-the-box.
(Pre-tuned so you don’t have to fiddle)
Reference price: HLCC4 (balanced)
Density: Fine (crisper separation)
Tier-1 (25×) sensitivity slightly boosted so you see more actionable near-term zones
How to read the chart
Bar color = Tier (25× / 50× / 100×).
Bar width = Relative strength (wider = stronger).
Value pill = Strength in K/M/B/T.
Faded bar = That pocket was taken by price—left for context, no longer active.
Suggested setups by timeframe
Scalping (1–5m): Top-N 80–120. Expect bars to merge more when zoomed out; zoom in for fine detail.
Intraday (15–60m): Top-N 80–100. Balanced view of magnets around current session.
Swing (4H–1D): Top-N 40–80. Use the longest-standing wide clusters as swing targets/areas of interest.
Best practices
Treat bars as areas, not razor-thin lines.
Look for confluence (e.g., HTF levels, fair value gaps, session highs/lows).
Use wide nearby bars to scale out or tighten risk, not as the only reason to trade.
FOR MORE PREMIUM INDICATORS VISIT OUR WHOP : whop.com
Basic Odds Enhancer: Supply Zone for ShortsHow to Use/Adjust:
On your chart, it marks bars where a 20-bar high coincides with high volume and bearish divergence—flag these as supply zones.
Tweak supply_threshold to 2.0 for stricter volume (fewer but stronger signals).
For zones, manually draw rectangles around the flagged area (use Drawing Tools > Rectangle).
Backtest: Apply to historical data (e.g., EUR/USD 4H) and check win rate with shorts on retests.
This setup typically yields 2-5 signals per week on major pairs, depending on volatility. Test on a demo account, and combine with market context (e.g., avoid shorts in strong uptrends).
Odds Enhancer: Volume + RSI DivHow it Works: This flags potential demand zones where price hits a 20-bar low with a volume spike and bullish RSI divergence. Customize for supply zones by flipping logic.
Blizzard TradingBlizzard Trading is an advanced technical indicator designed to identify trends, structural changes, and potential entry zones in the market. It combines multiple layers of analysis — such as overall trend direction, momentum, and price structure — to provide a clear view of market behavior.
Visually, it highlights bullish and bearish phases through colors and shaded areas, making the chart easier to interpret. It also generates automatic alerts when significant changes in trend or price structure are detected. The indicator is mainly aimed at scalping and intraday trading, helping traders spot quick opportunities with precise visual confirmations.
Relative Volume (RVOL) [JopAlgo]Relative Volume (RVOL) — “Filter Fakes, Ride Real Moves”
What it does:
Shows how today’s volume compares to its own average.
RVOL = current volume ÷ SMA(volume, length)
RVOL > cutoff → participation above normal (green)
RVOL < cutoff → participation below normal (red)
Use it to confirm breaks, filter entries, and avoid chasing moves fueled by thin volume.
Read it in 5 seconds
Above/Below the cutoff line (white) = high/low participation now.
Spikes through the cutoff on a break = real interest.
Dry-ups (well below cutoff) into support/resistance = good risk for mean-revert or pullback entries.
If you remember one rule: don’t chase a breakout with RVOL under the cutoff.
Simple playbook (copy this)
Breakout confirmation
Break at VAH/LVN/structure and RVOL > cutoff → take the retest that holds.
If RVOL stays below cutoff on the break → likely fake; wait for reclaim.
Pullback in trend
Trend up, price pulls to AVWAP / VAL / MA cluster with RVOL below cutoff → take the bounce when price turns; add if RVOL rises on the resume.
Fade the exhaustion
Into resistance, huge RVOL spike but no follow-through (long wick, CVD Absorption) → look for the fail back inside value.
Do less in chop
When RVOL hugs below cutoff all session, expect range; trade edges only.
Timeframe guide
1–5m (scalps): Signals are frequent. Keep cutoff ≥ 1.5; demand RVOL on breaks.
15m–1H (intraday): Sweet spot. cutoff 1.5–2.0 is a solid filter.
2H–4H (swing): Look for clustered bars > cutoff during expansions; dry-ups flag pullback entries.
1D+: Use RVOL to separate true trend days from drift.
Settings that matter
Length (default 14):
Shorter = reacts faster; Longer = smoother baseline.
Intraday: 14–20
Swing/Daily: 20–30
Cutoff (default 1.0):
Set the bar for “real” volume.
Conservative confirmation: 1.5–2.0
For slower pairs/timeframes: 1.2–1.5
Tune by scrolling back and marking where good breaks happened.
Color logic: green above cutoff, red below—no surprises.
Best combos (kept simple)
Volume Profile v3.2 : Confirm breaks of VAH/VAL/LVNs with RVOL > cutoff; target POC/HVNs.
Anchored VWAP : Reclaims/rejections with RVOL > cutoff stick more often.
CVDv1 :
Yes: RVOL high and CVD Alignment OK and no Absorption → higher-quality move.
No: RVOL high but Absorption red → don’t chase; look for fail/reclaim.
Pattern cheat sheet
Trend day: RVOL stays > cutoff on pushes; pullbacks show RVOL dip, then re-expand.
False break: Price pokes level, RVOL < cutoff, quick give-back.
Accumulation: Series of low-RVOL bars compressing under a level → watch for the first RVOL pop to go.
Exhaustion wick: RVOL spike + long wick into resistance/support → likely trap unless next bar accepts.
Notes & pitfalls
Exchange volume varies (crypto): use the same feed you trade and calibrate cutoff there.
RVOL ≠ direction: it’s participation. Always pair with location, structure, and flow.
Quick defaults to start
Length: 20
Cutoff: 1.5 (intraday) / 1.8–2.0 (for stricter confirmation)
Process: Level → RVOL above/below cutoff → CVD quality → Execute with structure-based risk
Mini-disclaimer
Educational tool, not financial advice. Test first, size sensibly, and always anchor decisions to levels, flow, and risk.
Elliott Wave Oscillator [JopAlgo]Elliott Wave Oscillator — a simple impulse meter that tells you when the move has “real push”
If price is the story, impulse is the emotion behind each chapter. The Elliott Wave Oscillator (EWO) is a clean way to see that emotion: it’s just the difference between a fast and a slow moving average. When the fast MA pulls away from the slow MA, the histogram grows; when they come back together, it shrinks. Above zero = bullish impulse; below zero = bearish impulse.
EWO keeps the math honest and the read effortless:
Choose SMA, EMA, or a volume-weighted average for each side (the “VWAP” option here uses a rolling VWMA over the chosen length).
A zero line anchors the read (bull vs bear).
Bars color by slope: rising = building momentum, falling = momentum fading.
(For screenshots: image #1 label the zero line, rising/falling bars, and a zero cross. Image #2 show a strong impulse leg hugging one side of zero, then fading into a pullback.)
What you’re seeing (and how it’s built)
Short MA (default 5) and Long MA (default 35) are computed using your selected MA Type (SMA, EMA, or rolling volume-weighted).
EWO = Short MA − Long MA.
EWO > 0: fast MA above slow → bullish impulse.
EWO < 0: fast MA below slow → bearish impulse.
Histogram colors:
Green bar: EWO increasing vs previous bar (momentum building).
Red bar: EWO decreasing (momentum waning).
Alerts: fire when EWO crosses the zero line (bullish or bearish “trend shift” heads-up).
New to this? Think of EWO as a throttle: above zero the engine is pushing forward; below zero it’s pushing backward. The height shows how hard it’s pushing; the color shows if that push is growing or fading right now.
How to use EWO on any timeframe
Same framework everywhere—what changes is your location and targets (from your other tools).
Scalping (1–5m)
Breakout confirmation: Only chase a micro-break if EWO flips above zero and grows green as price leaves a level (VAL/LVN/AVWAP). If it flips then immediately shrinks red, that’s your “don’t chase” warning.
Pullback timing: In a quick trend, wait for EWO to dip but stay above zero, then turn green again. That flip is often your pullback end.
Intraday (15m–1H)
Continuation filter: After a level break, ride as long as EWO stays on your side of zero. The first red bar while still above zero is a cue to partial or tighten stops.
Failed break tell: A poke through VAH/VAL with EWO still near zero (no expansion) is often a trap. Prefer retest/reclaim trades.
Swing (2H–4H)
Impulse leg ID: Strong trends show an EWO “bulge” (wide, mostly green bars above zero for longs). When that bulge shrinks back toward zero, look for mean-reversion to AVWAP/POC before the next leg.
Divergence (lightweight): Price makes a higher high, but EWO tops at a lower peak → impulse is weaker; plan for retrace to value.
Position (1D–1W)
Regime bias: Weeks where EWO lives above zero are net constructive; below zero are net distributive. Use that as a backdrop for adds/reductions at your higher-TF levels (Weekly AVWAP, composite VAL/VAH).
Entries, exits, and risk (simple rules)
Entry: At your level (from VP/AVWAP), take the side where EWO is on the correct side of zero and turning green (for longs) or red→green below zero for shorts? Careful—below zero, red means waning bear impulse. For shorts, you want EWO < 0 and increasing in magnitude (i.e., more negative) which still paints red in this script? Here’s the practical translation:
Longs: EWO > 0 and rising (green bar).
Shorts: EWO < 0 and falling (more negative vs prior bar). In this script, that also paints red—which is correct for building bearish impulse.
Manage: If your long was driven by EWO above zero, consider reducing when bars turn red repeatedly or EWO rolls back toward zero at your target node.
Invalidation: A zero cross against you after entry is a hard warning—tighten or exit unless higher-TF context strongly favors holding.
Stops: Place beyond the price level/structure you used, not on an EWO flip alone.
Settings that actually matter (and how to tune them)
MA Type (SMA / EMA / VWAP):
EMA: most responsive; great for scalping/fast intraday.
SMA: smoother; better for swings where you want fewer false wiggles.
VWAP (rolling VWMA): weights price by volume over your length—nice on pairs where volume behavior matters. (Note: this is a rolling VWMA, not an anchored session VWAP.)
Short/Long Lengths (default 5/35):
Shorter/faster (e.g., 4/20) → earlier flips, more noise.
Longer/slower (e.g., 8/50) → fewer but stronger signals.
Keep the ratio—something like 1:4 to 1:6—so the “bulge” is meaningful.
Zero-cross alerts: leave them on but treat as heads-up, not entries in isolation. You still want location + flow.
What to look for (pattern cheatsheet)
Impulse bulge: Wide, consecutive bars above zero (mostly green) → trend leg in progress. Expect shallow pullbacks only.
Pullback reset: After a leg, EWO shrinks but stays above zero, then flips green again → pullback likely done.
No-juice breakout: Price pokes the level but EWO stays near zero / flips red quickly → skip the chase; look for reclaim setups.
Divergence at extremes: New price high with lower EWO peak → risk of fade to value (POC/AVWAP).
Combining EWO with other tools
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 (CVDv1):
Use EWO for impulse, CVDv1 for quality. Best trades line up as:
EWO > 0 and increasing + CVDv1 ALIGN = OK + Imbalance strong + Absorption ≠ red → take the breakout/retest.
If EWO says “go” but CVDv1 flags Absorption, don’t chase.
Volume Profile v3.2:
Use VAH/VAL/LVNs/POC as where. EWO tells you if the push has fuel to leave/enter value.
Example: VAL retest with EWO turning up → rotate to POC/HVN.
Anchored VWAP:
Reclaims are higher quality when EWO flips above zero on the reclaim bar and holds green on the first pullback.
(Optional mention in screenshots: show a VAH break where EWO bulges and CVDv1 shows Alignment OK—clean continuation.)
Common pitfalls EWO helps you avoid
Buying a break with no impulse: Zero-line hugs and shrinking bars tell you the fast MA isn’t pulling away—skip.
Fading a real leg: Wide, persistent bars on one side of zero = don’t fight; use pullbacks to value instead.
Confusing volume-weighted vs anchored VWAP: The “VWAP” choice here is a rolling VWMA over the lookback, not a session/event AVWAP. Use Anchored VWAP when you need the true event-anchored line.
Practical defaults to start with
MA Type: EMA
Short/Long: 5 / 35
Timeframes: works out of the box on 15m–4H; for 1–5m try 4/20; for daily swings try 8/50.
Keep zero-cross alerts on as an attention ping; still require location + flow.
Alerts (what they mean)
Bullish EWO Signal: EWO crossed above zero → bullish impulse engaged. Look for a retest at your level with CVDv1 quality before entry.
Bearish EWO Signal: EWO crossed below zero → bearish impulse.
Open source & disclaimer
This indicator is published open source so traders can study it, tweak it, and build rules they trust. Tools inform decisions, but risk management decides outcomes.
Disclaimer — Not Financial Advice.
The “Elliott Wave Oscillator ” indicator and this description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Trading involves risk, including possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any trading decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Use EWO to judge when there’s real push, Volume Profile v3.2 and Anchored VWAP for where to act, and CVDv1 to verify who’s actually pushing. That trio keeps you selective on any timeframe.
Footprint Bubble VolumeIndicator Name: Footprint Bubble Volume (Shapes + Numbers, Filters)
Description:
This indicator visualizes buy and sell volume as bubbles above or below candles, helping traders see where significant buying or selling activity occurs. Bubble sizes scale with volume, and numbers can optionally display the exact volume in K / M / B format for readability.
Features:
Buy/Sell Bubbles: Green bubbles above bars for buy volume, red bubbles below bars for sell volume. Size grows with higher volume.
Volume Numbers: Optional numeric labels showing scaled volume.
Volume Filters: Only display bubbles when volume is significant:
None: absolute minimum volume.
PctAboveAvg: X% above average volume over a lookback period.
ATRBased: volume exceeds ATR * multiplier over a lookback period.
Split Volume: Optionally estimate buy/sell split within a bar based on close position relative to high/low.
Scaling: Bubble sizes and number formatting adjust dynamically for easier visualization on high-volume instruments.
Inputs:
Absolute Min Volume: Minimum raw volume to show bubbles.
Bubble Size Scale: Controls bubble growth with volume.
Show Volume Numbers: Toggle numeric labels on/off.
Split Volume Proportionally: Approximate buy/sell split inside bar.
Filter Type: None / Percent Above Avg / ATR-Based.
Lookback Period: For volume or ATR calculations.
Percent Above Avg Vol: Threshold for percentage-above-average filter.
ATR Multiplier: Threshold multiplier for ATR-based filter.
Use Case:
Ideal for spotting footprint-like volume clusters and identifying high activity areas without relying on DOM data. Works on stocks, futures, and crypto charts.
RSI MACD CLOCKWORK TABLEWhat you get, at a glance:
• MACD Cell — Shows the current MACD value and a small direction icon (▲ rising, ▼ falling, ⏺ flat). The background color adapts to regime: green above zero, red below zero, gray near the line. Lengths are configurable (fast/slow/signal).
• RSI Cell — Plots the latest RSI with an identical direction icon and background logic (green above 50, red below 50, gray around 50). RSI length is configurable.
• Clockwork Row — This is the structure check. The script computes the slope (in degrees) of EMA(5), EMA(8), and EMA(13). If all three exceed your bullish threshold, you’ll see “Clockwork: Bullish” (lime). If all three are below your bearish threshold, you’ll see “Clockwork: Bearish” (red). Otherwise, it’s “Neutral” (gray). Thresholds are fully user-tunable.
Smart right-hand cell (choose your readout):
• Duplicate — Mirrors the Clockwork label.
• Time to Close — A clean mm:ss countdown for the current timeframe (with safe defaults on unusual timeframes).
• Slope Degrees — Prints the 5/8/13 EMA slopes in degrees (e.g., +12.3°).
• Slope Pack ▲▼ — Only the direction of each slope (less noise, more speed).
• EMA Spread (5↔13) — Shows the slope differential (degrees) between short and long EMAs.
• Volume Pace — Projects end-of-bar volume from live progress, compares it to your N-bar average, and renders a tiny text progress bar (██░░…) with a neutral “thermo” palette: black = hot (> high threshold), light blue = cold (< low threshold), silver = typical. All inputs (length, bar width, thresholds) are configurable.
• ATR — Current ATR with direction vs previous bar (▲/▼/⏺).
Quality-of-life:
• Optional top padding (~20px) to keep the table visually separated from other overlays.
• Lightweight string/emoji UI for clarity without heavy graphics.
• Defensive guards around timeframe math so the TTC keeps working smoothly.
How to use:
Add to any symbol/timeframe.
Set your MACD/RSI lengths and Clockwork slope thresholds to match your system’s sensitivity.
Pick a right-cell mode that complements your workflow (TTC for day trading, Volume Pace for intrabar context, ATR for volatility).
Note: This tool is informational, not a standalone signal generator. Combine the Clockwork alignment with your entries/exits and risk management.
Anchored VWAP Bands v3.3 [JopAlgo]Anchored VWAP — a fair-value compass you can trust on any timeframe
If Volume Profile shows where business concentrated, Anchored VWAP (AVWAP) shows what the crowd has paid on average since a moment that matters. It’s a running average of price weighted by traded volume, reset at a point you choose (the “anchor”). That makes AVWAP a reliable fair-value line: above it, the average participant since the anchor is in profit; below it, they’re under water. Markets naturally react around that line.
This version focuses on the parts that make AVWAP practical for real trading:
Clear, event-anchored VWAP so you can ask “since this moment, where is fair value?”
Optional higher-timeframe anchors (e.g., Weekly AVWAP) to define regime
Simple visuals so newer traders can read it instantly, and advanced traders can layer multiple anchors without clutter
(When you add screenshots: image #1 should point to the main AVWAP line with a label “fair value since anchor”, and show a bounce/reject. Image #2 can show confluence: AVWAP kissing VAL/VAH from Volume Profile v3.2 or a clean reclaim through AVWAP.)
What you’re seeing (and why price cares)
The AVWAP line: the volume-weighted average price since your anchor time.
Price above AVWAP → average long (since anchor) is in profit → pullbacks to AVWAP tend to support.
Price below AVWAP → average long is losing → rallies to AVWAP tend to resist.
Multiple anchors (optional): you can plot more than one AVWAP (e.g., Weekly AVWAP and an Event AVWAP) to separate regime (weekly) from tactical timing (event/session).
AVWAP works because it ties “fair value” to time and participation, not just price. When price departs far from AVWAP and then returns, participants frequently defend the line. When price accepts on the other side (closes and holds), that’s often a regime change relative to the anchor.
Anchors: how to pick them (and what changes when you do)
An anchor is simply the timestamp where you start the calculation. Changing it changes both context and expectations:
Session anchors (intraday) — e.g., session open, London/NY open.
Use: scalps/intraday plays.
Behavior: frequent tests; strong for fade-to-mean trades and quick reclaims.
Event anchors — listing, major news, ETF approval, earnings, a swing high/low.
Use: track how price behaves since the catalyst.
Behavior: excellent for measured pullbacks and “is the market digesting this event yet?”
Weekly/Monthly anchors — the Weekly AVWAP is a regime line.
Use: swing/position bias.
Behavior: clean “reclaim” and “rejection” signals; great with Volume Profile’s VAH/VAL.
Rule of thumb:
Choose the slowest anchor that defines your bias (e.g., Weekly AVWAP for swings) and one faster anchor for timing (e.g., Session/Event AVWAP). Too many lines → hesitation.
How to use AVWAP on any timeframe
The framework doesn’t change—only your anchor choices and expectations do.
Scalping (1–5m charts)
Anchors: Session open, London/NY open, or the prior swing low/high.
Setup: If price trends away from the session AVWAP, fade back to AVWAP only when flow isn’t showing absorption against you (pair with CVDv1). If price reclaims AVWAP after a push below, look for inside-back retests at the line.
Intraday (15m–1H)
Anchors: Session open + important event AVWAP (FOMC-like news, ETF day, etc.).
Setup: Use pullbacks to AVWAP to join trend; require acceptance above/below (close and hold) before flipping bias. Confluence of AVWAP with VP v3.2’s VAH/VAL = high-quality location.
Swing (2H–4H)
Anchors: Weekly AVWAP for regime + event AVWAP for timing.
Setup: Reclaim of Weekly AVWAP → prefer longs on pullbacks to that line; rejection → fade rallies into Weekly AVWAP (target POC/HVNs from VP). The best entries are AVWAP + VP edge with CVDv1 not flashing Absorption.
Position (1D–1W)
Anchors: Monthly/Quarterly/Cycle AVWAP.
Setup: Treat the higher-timeframe AVWAP as the mean. Acceptance through it (and hold) often marks cycle transitions. Add on pullbacks to the line that hold.
Reading reclaims, rejections, and “acceptance”
Reclaim: price trades below AVWAP, then closes back above and holds on a retest → bullish signal since the anchor.
Rejection: price pops above AVWAP, prints rejection wick and closes back under → bearish.
Acceptance: multiple bars closing and holding beyond AVWAP, ideally with CVDv1 Alignment OK and no Absorption → higher odds the move persists.
With Volume Profile v3.2, treat AVWAP at VAL/VAH as A-tier locations:
VAL + AVWAP reclaim → mean-reversion long to POC is common.
VAH + AVWAP rejection → fade back to POC or to the next HVN.
Settings that matter (and simple defaults)
Names may vary by version, but these are the ideas you’ll see.
Anchor Time — pick a timestamp (session open, event, week start). Newer traders: start with Session AVWAP intraday; add Weekly AVWAP for swings.
Multiple anchors — if enabled, you can show Weekly AVWAP alongside your custom anchor. Keep it to two lines to stay decisive.
Smoothing / Display — most traders use raw AVWAP (no smoothing). Make sure the line is visible across zoom levels.
Theme & Colors — use distinct colors for each anchor (e.g., white for Weekly, aqua for Session/Event) so you don’t mix them up.
How AVWAP pairs with other tools
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 (CVDv1) — confirms flow quality at AVWAP.
Don’t chase a tag through AVWAP if CVD Absorption is red (typical failed break conditions).
Do prefer reclaims when Alignment = OK and Imbalance % is strong for your anchor.
Volume Profile v3.2 — gives you objective levels (POC/VAH/VAL/HVNs).
AVWAP + VAH/VAL confluence is where you plan trades.
Passing through an LVN toward AVWAP often travels fast; use that to manage risk.
(Add a screenshot that highlights AVWAP touching VAL with CVDv1 “Efficient” → clean bounce to POC.)
A simple, durable playbook
Pick one slow anchor (e.g., Weekly) for bias and one fast anchor (Session/Event) for timing.
Trade at the line, not mid-air: reclaims and rejections at AVWAP are your signals.
Require confirmation from flow: CVDv1 Alignment OK, Imbalance strong, Absorption ≠ red on the trigger bar.
Add Volume Profile v3.2 for targets (POC/HVNs) and edges (VAH/VAL).
If price accepts beyond AVWAP (closes and holds), stop fading and instead join pullbacks to the line.
Common mistakes AVWAP solves
“Mean keeps moving, my MA lies.” AVWAP weights actual traded volume, so fair value adapts to where business was done, not just where price wandered.
“It broke the line and reversed.” That’s no acceptance (or CVDv1 flagged Absorption). Wait for the retest/hold.
“Too many lines, can’t decide.” Keep two anchors max: one for bias, one for timing.
Practical defaults to start with
Intraday: Session AVWAP only. Add an Event AVWAP on special days.
Swing: Weekly AVWAP + one Event AVWAP (start of move or weekly open).
Colors: Distinct but readable (e.g., white for Weekly, aqua for Session/Event).
No smoothing. Let the line be honest—your eyes adjust quickly.
Open source & disclaimer
This indicator is provided open source so you can learn, test, and adapt it to your workflow. Trading involves risk; tools guide decisions but don’t remove uncertainty.
Disclaimer — Not Financial Advice.
The “Anchored VWAP ” indicator and this description are for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Markets involve risk, including possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any trading decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Use Anchored VWAP for the where and when around fair value; let CVDv1 judge who’s pushing, and let Volume Profile v3.2 define targets and edges. That trio stays reliable across any timeframe.
Volume Profile v3.2 [JopAlgo]Volume Profile v3.2 — where the market actually traded, and why that matters
Price shows you where bids and offers met. Volume Profile shows you how much business was done at each price. Put simply: it maps the market’s preference. In any auction, price tends to accept and revisit heavy-traded areas and reject low-participation areas. VP v3.2 turns that logic into a clear picture you can use on any timeframe—from scalps to multi-week swings.
This version focuses on three things that matter in real trading:
a clean, configurable price–volume distribution (your profile),
key levels derived from that distribution (POC, VAH, VAL), and
a POC Shift detector that highlights structural change when the market’s center of mass moves.
If you attach screenshots to your script page, one image should label POC/VAH/VAL and the histogram shape; a second should show a POC Shift during a trend transition.
What you’re seeing (and how to read it)
The histogram you see beside price is the profile: each horizontal bar measures traded volume at that price within a chosen range. It reveals:
POC (Point of Control): the single most-traded price in your range (the market’s center of gravity).
Value Area (VA): the price band where a chosen percentage of all volume traded (default 70%). Its boundaries are the VAH (top) and VAL (bottom).
HVNs / LVNs: High-Volume Nodes (bulges) tend to attract price; Low-Volume Nodes (gaps/voids) tend to repel price and act like funnels—price often moves quickly through them, then pauses at the next HVN.
In practice: trade from value edges back to POC in balance, or trade breakouts through LVNs toward the next HVN when the auction is trending.
Choosing the range: Anchored vs Visible
Your range defines the story. VP v3.2 lets you pick it two ways:
Visible Range (default): the profile is built from the bars currently on screen. This adapts as you pan/zoom and is ideal for quick reads and intraday work.
Anchored Range: toggle “Anchored Range” and pick an Anchor Time. Now the profile starts at that timestamp and extends to the most recent bar. Use this for event-based composites (e.g., listing day, policy announcement, ETF approval), weekly/monthly composites, or to study a trend leg in isolation.
Tip: for scalping, a visible range that covers the current session is enough. For swings, anchor to the start of the move, start of the week/month, or the event that changed regime.
Important settings (why they exist, and simple defaults)
Rows: how many price buckets form the histogram. More rows = finer detail, more CPU. Start around 120; go higher when zoomed in.
Value Area %: how much volume should sit inside the VA band. 70% is standard; lower it (e.g., 60–65%) in strong trends to keep VA tight, raise it in dull balance to widen the area you consider “fair.”
Max Width, Horizontal Offset, Row Height %: purely visual—how wide the histogram can draw, how far it sits from the last bar, and how thick each row appears.
Histogram Emphasis: a gentle power curve that makes big nodes pop and tiny nodes fade. Leave at 1.0 until you know why you want more/less contrast.
FAST vs ACCURATE:
FAST puts each bar’s volume into its mid-price bucket. It’s very fast and stable for live trading.
ACCURATE spreads each bar’s volume across its full high-low range. This gives a smoother profile (especially on wide candles) at the cost of more computation.
If your machine lags, use FAST for intraday and ACCURATE when you’re doing end-of-day review.
Plot POC/VA series / Extend Left: draws POC/VAH/VAL as dotted lines and (optionally) extends them left across your chart. Extending is useful when you want those levels to act as “attractors/repellers” beyond the immediate profile.
Theme & Colors: there’s a dark/light toggle so the profile remains readable on any chart theme.
POC Shift — when “fair value” moves
Markets rotate around “fair value.” When that value shifts by a meaningful amount and sticks, the auction has changed. VP v3.2 detects this with three parameters:
Shift Min Ticks: the minimum distance POC must move to count as a new candidate.
Shift Confirm Bars: how many consecutive bars must hold that new area for the shift to be confirmed.
Shift Cooldown: how long to ignore re-triggers after a confirmed shift (avoids spamming in chop).
A POC Shift Up says buyers migrated the center of business higher (typical of an acceptance above prior value). POC Shift Down says the opposite. These are structure events: combine them with your directional tools (e.g., CVDv1’s Absorption/Efficiency read) to avoid chasing when the shift is fragile.
Using Volume Profile on any timeframe
The logic is the same everywhere: trade at value boundaries, target the POC or the next HVN, and respect LVNs as fast-pass corridors.
Scalping (1–5m charts)
Range: Visible; cover the current session or the last 2–4 hours.
Use: Fade VAH→POC and VAL→POC only when the tape supports it (e.g., CVDv1 not showing absorption against you). If price pushes into an LVN, expect fast movement to the other side—don’t fight mid-void.
Intraday (15m–1H)
Range: Visible covering the day, or Anchored to the day’s open.
Use: First seek balance trades (VAL/VAH to POC). When a real POC Shift confirms after a break, switch to trend-following: use pullbacks to prior VA boundaries as entries.
Swing (2H–4H)
Range: Anchored to start of week, start of trend leg, or major event.
Use: Enter on retests of VAL/VAH that hold, target the composite POC/HVNs. If you see sequential POC Shifts in trend direction, it’s a sign to trail rather than constantly fade back to POC.
Position (1D–1W)
Range: Anchored to YTD, quarter, or cycle low/high.
Use: Treat LVNs as structural gaps; acceptance through an LVN often leads to the next HVN. Weekly VA boundaries are strong reference levels; a weekly POC Shift is notable regime information.
How to act at the levels (a simple, durable playbook)
In balance: fade VAL/VAH back to POC—but only if your flow read doesn’t scream “absorption against you.”
In trend: ignore the first touch fade. Wait for acceptance (close outside), then use pullbacks to the broken VA boundary to join.
At LVNs: don’t expect chop. Plan for quick travel to the next HVN, place stops accordingly, and avoid mid-void entries.
Alerts (what they mean, what you do)
Cross POC / VAH / VAL: price just interacted with a key reference. Use your secondary signal (e.g., CVDv1 alignment/absorption) to decide fade vs follow.
POC Shift Up/Down: a structure change just confirmed. In balance, you may flip your bias. In trend, you can add on pullbacks toward the shifted area.
Compatible tools (optional, but powerful)
Volume Profile v3.2 is designed to work cleanly with other tools:
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 (CVDv1): lets you judge flow quality at VP levels. For example, a poke above VAH with CVD Absorption is a veto to chase—look for a failed breakout or reclaim. A retest of VAL with Imbalance strong and Alignment OK is a higher-quality bounce back to POC.
Weekly AVWAP v3 : the market’s mean/anchor. Confluence of Weekly AVWAP with VA boundaries or HVNs creates A-tier levels. Reclaims of Weekly AVWAP near VAL are excellent swing entries; rejections at Weekly AVWAP into VAH are high-quality fades in balance.
(If you post images, one good example is a VAL retest at Weekly AVWAP with CVDv1 showing “Efficient”—that story clicks instantly.)
Practical defaults
Rows: 120
Value Area: 70%
FAST mode for live work; ACCURATE for deep review or wide-range composites
Anchored Range: off (Visible) for intraday; on for weekly/monthly/“since event” studies
POC Shift: start with 10 ticks, 2 confirm bars, 10 cooldown; tighten for very small-tick futures, loosen in highly volatile regimes
Common pitfalls this solves
“Why did it stall here?” Check the profile: you hit an HVN. That’s where business likes to be done. Expect chop or mean-reversion to POC.
“Breakout straight back in.” You broke into an LVN without acceptance; or CVDv1 flagged Absorption. Wait for acceptance, then take the retest.
“Levels feel arbitrary.” POC/VAH/VAL come from where traders actually transacted, not where a simple moving average happens to sit.
Open source & disclaimer
This indicator is published open source so you can learn from it, tune it, and build rules you trust. Trading is risky; no tool eliminates that risk.
Disclaimer — Not Financial Advice.
The “Volume Profile v3.2 ” indicator and this description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Markets involve risk, including possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any trading decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Use VP v3.2 to decide where the market is likely to accept or reject. Then use your flow read (e.g., CVDv1) to decide when to act. That combination—location + flow—is what keeps you on the right side of the auction across any timeframe.
VIP PRO Realtime with VWAP + TP Labels + AlertsVipPro Realtime is a professional indicator that combines liquidity analysis, momentum, VWAP, and overbought/oversold signals into one simple, easy-to-use tool.
It was designed to give traders a clear view of when liquidity flows in or out of the market, providing real-time signals that help you make smarter decisions without relying on emotions.
✅ Spot whale moves before they even show on the chart
✅ Identify market direction instantly (bullish / bearish / corrective)
✅ Get precise entry and exit signals backed by liquidity and momentum
✅ Reduce false signals with built-in Open Interest (OI) analysis
🎯 The goal of VipPro Realtime is simple: trade with confidence, protect your capital, and capture the best opportunities—without juggling dozens of separate indicators.
📊 VipPro Realtime
The only indicator that combines AI, classical technical analysis, and Elliott Wave theory into a single powerful tool.
VipPro Realtime is a fully integrated indicator on TradingView, designed to deliver real-time signals and smart trading decisions directly from one chart—without the need for multiple indicators or a premium subscription.
✅ Key Features:
✅ Perfect for both beginners and professionals — one glance is enough to decide.
✅ Supports all markets: Crypto (Spot & Futures), Forex, Stocks, Gold, Oil.
✅ Multiple built-in strategies to confirm signals and avoid random trades.
✅ Accurately identifies real-time market trends (bullish, bearish, corrective).
✅ Shows balance of power between buyers and sellers.
✅ Alerts you to overbought/oversold zones and possible reversals.
✅ Unique OI (Open Interest) analysis to confirm trades and filter fake signals.
✅ Protects you from false breakouts and fake pumps/dumps.
✅ Real-time liquidity and momentum analysis to validate signals.
✅ Dynamic status box that changes color with the current market wave.
✅ Monitors Bitcoin Dominance (BTC.D) to give early alerts when liquidity shifts between BTC and altcoins.
✅ Smart entry signals with retracement percentages to protect portfolio liquidity.
✅ Advanced Elliott Wave analysis to forecast impulse/corrective moves.
✅ Precise Price Action patterns for reversal zones.
✅ Full MACD integration for signal filtering.
✅ Perfect synergy of VWAP + Fibonacci + Divergence.
✅ Developed since 2009, updated daily for scalping, swing, and long-term trading.
📈 All you need is the integrated bot:
Simply send a chart, and the bot gives you a ready-to-trade signal with analysis and targets.
🚀 Officially adopted by the largest Arabic VIP trading community for consistent profits and professional crypto trading.
💡 With your purchase, you also get 3 months of VIP membership for free, where you’ll learn how to trade profitably with experts.
🤖 The integrated Telegram bot:
chatgpt.com
Analyzes any chart automatically.
chatgpt.com
Issues a trade signal if conditions are met.
Rejects unsafe trades when sell signals or weak momentum appear.
🔒 This indicator is invite-only. Its code cannot be accessed or copied.
📩 To get your copy or request a free trial, contact us:
👉 t.me
👨💻 Developer: Amr El Mehrezy
🔗 linktr.ee
📊 More info:
chatgpt.com
x.com
🔥 Meme coin trading mastery:
bit.ly
t.me
📊 Availability
VipPro Realtime is offered exclusively to members of the Crypto Arab Academy, the largest Arabic trading community.
💎 Annual subscription: $1000
🎁 Exclusive offers and discounts are always available:
👉 t.me
Cumulative Volume Delta v1 [JopAlgo]anchor that represents the larger auction you respect, pair a faster anchor to police timing, and only act when the flow agrees at a meaningful level.
Scalping (chart: 1–5m)
A: 4H or 1H (defines the session you respect)
B: 30m or 15m
Use: only chase micro-breakouts when ALIGN OK, Imb% strong for the anchor, and Absorption ≠ red—at a level (POC/VA boundary/LVN or Weekly AVWAP test). Otherwise focus on reclaims after failed pushes.
Intraday (chart: 15m–1H)
A: 1D (default)
B: 8H or 4H
Use: bread-and-butter continuation/retest trades: ALIGN OK + Imb% ≥ strong + Absorption not red at VAH/VAL/POC or Weekly AVWAP.
Swing (chart: 2H–4H)
A: 1D or 2D
B: 8H–12H
Use: fewer trades, higher selectivity. CVD divergences at LVNs or Weekly AVWAP matter more; require ALIGN OK on the close that confirms the reclaim.
Position (chart: 1D–1W)
A: 1W
B: 1D or 12H
Use: ride weekly bias; only add on pullback→retest when Daily agrees. Lower the “strong” Imb% threshold (e.g., ~1–1.5%), increase warm-up.
No matter the timeframe, the decision rule doesn’t change:
Location first (trade at a level, not mid-air),
Alignment OK,
Imb% strong for your anchor,
Absorption not red on the trigger bar.
(If any of the four fail, wait for the next clean retest or a reclaim setup.)
Divergences and reclaims (the allowed exception)
CVD divergences matter at a level. A sweep below VAL/LVN or Weekly AVWAP where price makes a lower low but CVD makes a higher low is a classic bullish divergence. If Alignment isn’t red, you can take the reclaim on the close back inside the range—even if Imb% is only moderate—because location and flow structure are doing the heavy lifting. Mirror the logic for bearish at highs.
Pairing CVDv1 with other tools (optional, but powerful)
CVDv1 is fully compatible with:
Volume Profile v3.2 — objective where (POC, VAH/VAL, LVNs). These are your staging areas; let CVDv1 confirm when the push has quality.
Weekly AVWAP v3 — regime and mean-reversion anchor. Reclaims and divergences at Weekly AVWAP are some of the cleanest entries you’ll see.
If you use these: decide at the level, then consult CVDv1. ALIGN OK + Imb strong + no Absorption turns a good level into a high-probability timing signal. If Absorption is red at the level, that’s often your first hint to look for the failed breakout or reclaim instead.
Defaults that work out of the box
Keep Anchor A = 1D, Anchor B = 8H (or 480 minutes) to start. Imbalance “strong” around 2% (BTC/ETH), “neutral band” around 0.8%. Use the Color direction method first (simple and robust); switch to SlopeEMA if you want a smoother alignment on choppy symbols. Wick check on. Warm-up 15–30 minutes on daily; longer if you move to weekly anchors.
Common pitfalls this solves
Chasing a breakout into hidden sellers. Absorption turns red even while price pokes the level. That’s your cue to wait; many of those go on to become sharp fails.
Over-trusting a big raw delta. Imb% normalizes it. A huge raw delta on a huge-volume day can be mediocre quality.
Fighting the fast flow. ALIGN CONFLICT means the faster anchor disagrees with your main bias; don’t force it.
Open source & disclaimer
This indicator is intentionally open source so traders can learn, tweak, and build rules they trust. Markets involve risk; no single tool eliminates it.
Disclaimer — Not Financial Advice.
The “Cumulative Volume Delta v1 ” indicator and this description are provided for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial or investment advice. Trading involves risk, including the possible loss of capital. makes no warranties and assumes no responsibility for any trading decisions or outcomes resulting from the use of this script. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Use CVDv1 to filter and time; let your levels decide where, and let risk management decide how much.