Trade the Angle, Not the Chop: Angle of MA ExplainedNot all moving averages are created equal. While most traders rely on the slope of a moving average to gauge trend direction, the Angle of Moving Average script by Mango2Juice takes it a step further—literally measuring the angle of the MA to help filter out sideways markets and highlight trending conditions.
Let’s explore how this tool works, how we use it at Xuantify, and how it can sharpen your trend-following strategy.
🔍 What Is the Angle of Moving Average?
This indicator calculates the angle of a moving average (default: EMA 20) to determine whether the market is trending or ranging. It introduces a No Trade Zone , visually marked in gray, to signal when the angle is too flat—suggesting the market is consolidating.
Key Features:
Measures the slope of the moving average
Highlights ranging zones with a gray color
Helps filter out low-momentum conditions
Customizable MA type and length
🧠 How We Use It at Xuantify
We use the Angle of Moving Average as a trend filter —not a signal generator.
1. Trend Confirmation
We only take trades in the direction of a steep enough angle. If the MA is flat or in the gray zone, we stay out.
2. Entry Timing
We combine this with structure tools (like BOS/CHOCH) to time entries after the angle confirms a trend is underway.
🎨 Visual Cues That Matter
The script uses color to show when the market is:
Trending : Clear slope, colored line
Ranging : Flat slope, gray line (No Trade Zone)
This makes it easy to:
Avoid choppy markets
Focus on momentum-driven setups
Stay aligned with the dominant trend
⚙️ Settings That Matter
You can customize:
MA Type : EMA, SMA, etc.
MA Length : Default is 20
Angle Sensitivity : Adjust to define what counts as “flat”
⚙️ Higher timeframe alignment
You can look at HTFs for better and stronger entry and exit points.
Below a 1H and 4H chart where the 4H clearly adds strong buying power for a good long entry point.
🔗 Best Combinations with This Indicator
We pair the Angle of MA with:
Structure Tools – BOS/CHOCH for trend context
MACD 4C – For momentum confirmation
Volume Profile – To validate breakout strength
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) – For sniper entries
⚠️ What to Watch Out For
This is a filter , not a signal. It won’t tell you when to enter or exit—it tells you when not to trade . Use it with price action and structure for best results.
🚀 Final Thoughts
If you’re tired of getting chopped up in sideways markets, the Angle of Moving Average is a simple but powerful filter. It helps you stay out of low-probability trades and focus on trending opportunities.
Try it, tweak it, and see how it fits into your system.
Angles
Utilizing Angles W/ GeometryNote:
The angle spanning from .7242 Mon 06 Marc '23 21:30 and .7547 Tue 07 Mar '23 3:00
- It is about 19 on this scaling
The next angle below it is 1/2 of that; 19/2 = 9.5
These intersect the price at .7547 and create time objectives; these time objectives were used concurrently with price to note times of major change.
Geometry: 90 Degree AnglesHey! Good day to you!
In this chart, the resolution is not matched; the native is this chart.
There is a 90 degree angle going down from the first impulse, and the intersection of the angle and the zero angle time the top.
There is a 90 degree angle going down from the next impulse, and the intersection of the angle and zero time the next bottom.
Enjoy!
Suggested Reading:
Law of Vibration - Tony Plummer
Michael Jenkins - Geometry of Stock Market Profits, Chart Reading for Professional Traders, Complete Stock Market Forecasting Course
Scott M. Carney - The Harmonic Trader, Harmonic Trading Volume I, Harmonic Trading Volume II, Harmonic Trading Volume III
H.M. Gartley - Profits in the Stock Market
Bill Wiliams - Trading Chaos, New Trading Dimensions, Trading Chaos 2nd Edition
J.M. Hurst - The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing, Cyclic Analysis: A Dynamic Approach
Fabio Dreste - Quantum Trading
Michael Jardine - New Frontiers in Fibonacci Trading
The Wave Principle, Nature's Law
Ralph Nelson Elliot
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
John J. Murphy
A Complete Guide to Volume Price Analysis
Anna Coulling
Mastering The Elliot Wave
Glenn Neely
Geometry: Adjusted Axis with Adjusted Axis AnglesThe area that is enclosed in the ellipse can be further magnified on this fitting one hour chart.
The angles are derived from the fractions - the division- of the adjusted axis square.
Suggested Reading:
Law of Vibration - Tony Plummer
Michael Jenkins - Geometry of Stock Market Profits, Chart Reading for Professional Traders, Complete Stock Market Forecasting Course
Scott M. Carney - The Harmonic Trader, Harmonic Trading Volume I, Harmonic Trading Volume II, Harmonic Trading Volume III
H.M. Gartley - Profits in the Stock Market
Bill Wiliams - Trading Chaos, New Trading Dimensions, Trading Chaos 2nd Edition
J.M. Hurst - The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing, Cyclic Analysis: A Dynamic Approach
Fabio Dreste - Quantum Trading
Michael Jardine - New Frontiers in Fibonacci Trading
The Wave Principle, Nature's Law
Ralph Nelson Elliot
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
John J. Murphy
A Complete Guide to Volume Price Analysis
Anna Coulling
Mastering The Elliot Wave
Glenn Neely
Geometry: Adjusted Axis, Gann Fann, and ArcsNative chart:
The adjusted axis is gathered from the perpendicular to an axis of price, and the gann fann was gathered using the same slope as the previous descent axis. The arcs were gathered from the vector movement of the previous decline axis.
Suggested Reading:
Law of Vibration - Tony Plummer
Michael Jenkins - Geometry of Stock Market Profits, Chart Reading for Professional Traders, Complete Stock Market Forecasting Course
Scott M. Carney - The Harmonic Trader, Harmonic Trading Volume I, Harmonic Trading Volume II, Harmonic Trading Volume III
H.M. Gartley - Profits in the Stock Market
Bill Wiliams - Trading Chaos, New Trading Dimensions, Trading Chaos 2nd Edition
J.M. Hurst - The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing, Cyclic Analysis: A Dynamic Approach
Fabio Dreste - Quantum Trading
Michael Jardine - New Frontiers in Fibonacci Trading
The Wave Principle, Nature's Law
Ralph Nelson Elliot
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets
John J. Murphy
A Complete Guide to Volume Price Analysis
Anna Coulling
Mastering The Elliot Wave
Glenn Neely
Geometry: Chart ExhibitFirst and forever reminder: expand into your own, continually evolve and grow.
Press share "Make it Mine" to view the full interactive chart
Note: Relationship of numbers to each other
Note: The sequence of the various shapes
Note: Geometric Angles
Note: "45" angles up and down various intersection points
In-exhaustive book list
Law of Vibration - Tony Plummer
Michael Jenkins - Geometry of Stock Market Profits, Chart Reading for Professional Traders, Complete Stock Market Forecasting Course
Scott M. Carney - The Harmonic Trader, Harmonic Trading Volume I, Harmonic Trading Volume II, Harmonic Trading Volume III
H.M. Gartley - Profits in the Stock Market
Bill Wiliams - Trading Chaos, New Trading Dimensions, Trading Chaos 2nd Edition
J.M. Hurst - The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing, Cyclic Analysis: A Dynamic Approach
Disclaimer: Not financial advice, no recommendations to buy or sell, no warranties of merchantability, profitability, or probabilities.
Forum:
blackcryptolink.com
How to Capture more Profit through Trend Line AnglesTheory:
When I'm trading trending markets above the 4hr and daily timeframes, I often use trend angles to understand the rate of change as the market gets faster and steeper.
Today I'm going to use Gold as an example.
I have been trading this asset for a while as it has been trending well on a casual upward slope of approx 14 degrees.
Around July 20, the angle changed to 30 degrees... This is twice as steep, indicating stronger momentum.
Around the July 23, again the angle increased and this time to 52 degrees - almost double again.
On July 27 (today at time of publishing) the angle changed again to 76 degrees.
Using the trend angle tool, I can see the rate of change and how steep the trade has become.
Trading Tactics:
Each time the angle changes, I draw a new trend line and add an alert to the most recent inner trend line. This is now my priority.
As the trade develops, I can review the progress.
If the most recent inner trend is broken, that's the first red flag for me.
I can choose to sell a few contracts/shares/units and begin to scale out.
At the break of the most recent support directly below the inner trend line, I will scale out even further.
If a second trend line or a major channel is broken in addition to the inner trend and support, I will scale out completely.
Summary:
This tactic has allowed me to capture maximum profit without having to set up a trailing stop loss. Although a trailing stop can work exceptionally well in some circumstances, this is an alternative option.
Hope this helps!
Have you used similar tactics or a similar strategy?
NOTE - This is purely educational content and none of it should be taken as financial advice. I am sharing a tactic that works for me personally, with no guarantee of results being replicated.
Excerpt of Mr. W.D. Gann methodsHey
Probably many of you already know that most important part of analysis by W.D. Gann methods is scaling. In other words how many pips are in one unit of time. This parameter is used in Gann fan (set of angles) and Gann Boxes (chart overlays).
The correct way to find out the scale factor is to calculate it from price swings.
Here us the rule: Each swing or impulse follows one of the angles. No exceptions!
I am posting here the monthly chart of GBP/USD with the scale I've calculated. My intention is to show how working angles and boxes look like, so you can verify you have found the scaling factor correctly.
Pay attention that intersection of angles gives points when we can expect reactions.







