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Multi Momentum 10/21/42/63 — Histogram + 2xSMA

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MY MM INDICATOR INDIRED BY KARADI
It averages four rate-of-change snapshots of price, all anchored at today’s close.

If “Show as %” is on, the value is multiplied by 100.

Each term is a simple momentum/ROC over a different lookback.

Combining 10, 21, 42, 63 bars blends short, medium, and intermediate horizons into one number.

Positive MM → average upward pressure across those horizons; negative MM → average downward pressure.

Why those lengths?

They roughly stack into ~2× progression (10→21≈2×10, 21→42=2×21, 63≈1.5×42). That creates a “multi-scale” momentum that’s less noisy than a single fast ROC but more responsive than a long ROC alone.

How to read the panel

Gray histogram = raw Multi-Momentum value each bar.

SMA Fast/Slow lines (defaults 12 & 26 over the MM values) = smoothing of the histogram to show the trend of momentum itself.

Typical signals

Zero-line context:

Above 0 → bullish momentum regime on average.

Below 0 → bearish regime.

Crosses of SMA Fast & Slow: momentum trend shifts (fast above slow = improving momentum; fast below slow = deteriorating).

Histogram vs SMA lines: widening distance suggests strengthening momentum; narrowing suggests momentum is fading.

Divergences: price makes a new high/low but MM doesn’t → potential exhaustion.

Compared to a classic ROC

A single ROC(20) is very sensitive to that one window.

MM averages several windows, smoothing idiosyncrasies (e.g., a one-off spike 21 bars ago) and reducing “lookback luck.”

Settings & customization

Lookbacks (10/21/42/63): you can tweak for your asset/timeframe; the idea is to mix short→medium horizons.

Percent vs raw ratio: percent is easier to compare across symbols.

SMA lengths: shorter = more reactive but choppier; longer = smoother but slower.

Practical tips

Use regime + signal: trade longs primarily when MM>0 and fast SMA>slow SMA; consider shorts when MM<0 and fast<slow.

Combine with trend filters (e.g., price above a 200-SMA) or risk filters (ATR, volatility regimes) to avoid whipsaws.

For intraday, the same logic applies; just remember lookbacks are in bars, not minutes.

Limitations

It’s a trend/momentum tool—expect lag around reversals.

In range-bound markets it can produce false starts.

Past performance windows can be path-dependent (big gap bars inside a lookback affect the ratio).

Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.