PROTECTED SOURCE SCRIPT
Updated TradeUniv.com Expected Moves

TradeUniv.com Expected Moves
See where the market expects stocks to move based on options pricing data. This indicator shows you upper and lower price levels that help identify potential support, resistance, and overextended moves.
What Are Expected Moves?
Expected moves are calculated from option prices and show where the market thinks a stock is likely to trade by the end of the day or week. Think of them as probability zones - when price reaches or crosses these levels, it may signal an unusual
move or potential reversal opportunity.
What You'll See on Your Chart:
• Upper Level (Green) - Expected high for the period
• Lower Level (Red) - Expected low for the period• Midpoint (Gray) - Previous day's closing price (your reference point)
• Shaded Area - The expected trading range between levels
How to Use:
1. Visit tradeuniv.com/expected-moves
2. Select your favorite tickers
3. Click "Generate Script" and copy the TradingView input
4. Paste it into this indicator's settings
5. The indicator automatically shows the expected moves for whatever chart you're viewing
Perfect For:
• Day traders planning entry and exit zones
• Identifying when price has moved "too far too fast"
• Spotting potential reversal areas
• Understanding daily volatility expectations
• Planning option strategies around expected ranges
Features:
• Automatically detects daily vs weekly expirations (SPY, IWM, QQQ use daily; others use weekly)
• Customizable colors and line styles
• Price crossing alerts (get notified when price breaks above/below expected levels)
• Works on any timeframe
• Clean, minimal chart display
Important:
• Requires TradeUniv.com free account to generate data
• Refresh your data daily for accurate calculations
• Only shows levels for tickers you selected when generating
See where the market expects stocks to move based on options pricing data. This indicator shows you upper and lower price levels that help identify potential support, resistance, and overextended moves.
What Are Expected Moves?
Expected moves are calculated from option prices and show where the market thinks a stock is likely to trade by the end of the day or week. Think of them as probability zones - when price reaches or crosses these levels, it may signal an unusual
move or potential reversal opportunity.
What You'll See on Your Chart:
• Upper Level (Green) - Expected high for the period
• Lower Level (Red) - Expected low for the period• Midpoint (Gray) - Previous day's closing price (your reference point)
• Shaded Area - The expected trading range between levels
How to Use:
1. Visit tradeuniv.com/expected-moves
2. Select your favorite tickers
3. Click "Generate Script" and copy the TradingView input
4. Paste it into this indicator's settings
5. The indicator automatically shows the expected moves for whatever chart you're viewing
Perfect For:
• Day traders planning entry and exit zones
• Identifying when price has moved "too far too fast"
• Spotting potential reversal areas
• Understanding daily volatility expectations
• Planning option strategies around expected ranges
Features:
• Automatically detects daily vs weekly expirations (SPY, IWM, QQQ use daily; others use weekly)
• Customizable colors and line styles
• Price crossing alerts (get notified when price breaks above/below expected levels)
• Works on any timeframe
• Clean, minimal chart display
Important:
• Requires TradeUniv.com free account to generate data
• Refresh your data daily for accurate calculations
• Only shows levels for tickers you selected when generating
Release Notes
- cosmeticsRelease Notes
- better visualizationsRelease Notes
- cosmeticsProtected script
This script is published as closed-source. However, you can use it freely and without any limitations – learn more here.
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.
Protected script
This script is published as closed-source. However, you can use it freely and without any limitations – learn more here.
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.