India VIX Based Nifty/BankNifty Range Calculator (Auto Fetch)VIX-Based Expected Daily Range (Auto Volatility Forecast)
Created by: Harshiv Symposium
📖 Purpose
This indicator automatically fetches the India VIX value and calculates the expected daily price range for major Indian indices such as Nifty and BankNifty.
It helps traders understand how much the market is likely to move today based on current volatility conditions.
Designed for educational and analytical awareness, not for signals or profit-making systems.
⚙️ Core Logic
Expected Daily Move (Range) = (India VIX × Current Index Price) ÷ Multiplier
- Multiplier for Nifty: 1000
- Multiplier for BankNifty: 700
This calculation projects the 1-standard-deviation (≈ 68% probability) and 2-standard-deviation (≈ 95% probability) movement zones for the day.
📊 Example
If India VIX = 15 and Nifty = 25,000:
Expected Move ≈ (15 × 25,000) ÷ 1000 = 375 points
Hence,
- 68% Range: 24,625 – 25,375
- 95% Range: 24,250 – 25,750
This gives traders a realistic idea of daily volatility boundaries.
🧭 Key Features
✅ Auto-Fetch India VIX
No need for manual input — automatically pulls live data from NSE:INDIAVIX.
✅ Dynamic Range Visualization
Plots upper/lower boundaries for 1σ and 2σ probability zones with shaded expected-move area.
✅ Dashboard Panel
Displays:
- Current VIX
- Expected Move (in points and %)
- Upper and Lower Ranges
✅ Smart Alerts
Alerts when price crosses upper or lower volatility range — potential breakout signal.
🎯 How It Helps
Intraday Traders:
Know the likely daily movement (e.g., ±220 pts on Nifty) and plan realistic targets or stops.
Options Traders:
Quickly assess whether it’s a seller-friendly (low VIX, small range) or buyer-friendly (high VIX, large range) session.
Risk Managers:
Use volatility context for stop-loss width and position sizing.
Breakout Traders:
If price breaks beyond the 2σ range → indicates potential volatility expansion.
💡 Interpretation Guide
Condition Market Behavior Strategy Insight
VIX ↓ ( < 14 ) Calm / Range-bound Option Selling Edge
VIX ↑ ( > 20 ) Volatile Sessions Option Buying Edge
Price within Range Stable Market Mean Reversion Setups
Price breaks Range Volatility Expansion Breakout Trades
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational and awareness purposes only.
It does not generate buy/sell signals or guarantee returns.
Always apply your own analysis and risk management.
Educational
SSMT [TakingProphets]SSMT (Sequential SMT) — multi-cycle intermarket divergence with quarter-based timing
Purpose
Informational overlay that detects intermarket SMT divergences between the chart symbol and a user-selected correlated symbol. It does not generate buy/sell signals and is not financial advice. Use it to structure analysis and alerts, not to automate trades.
What it does
Scans for SMT on five coordinated cycles: Micro, 90-Minute, Daily (Q1–Q4), Weekly, Monthly.
Draws anchored lines and labels where divergences occur and keeps them after the period ends so you can use historical SMTs as context.
Offers per-cycle alerts (high-side/bearish, low-side/bullish).
Optional session/quarter boxes for timing context.
Time base uses America/New_York to align with common session conventions (with a 17:00–18:00 ET pause guard for CME instruments).
Why these modules belong together (more than a mashup)
All cycles share a single time-partitioning framework (quarters/sessions → day → week → month). That common clock means:
Comparability: divergences on Micro/90m/D/W/M are directly comparable because they’re computed with the same boundaries for both instruments.
Sequencing: higher-cycle context can gate lower-cycle events (e.g., a Daily Q3 divergence framing how you treat a Micro divergence).
Persistence: drawings retain the cycle identity (e.g., , ) so prior signals remain interpretable as the market progresses.
This is a coherent engine—not separate indicators pasted together—because detection, labeling, alerts, and persistence are all driven by the same quarter/period state machine.
How it works (high-level mechanics)
Time partitioning
Daily quarters (ET):
Q1: 18:00–00:00
Q2: 00:00–06:00
Q3: 06:00–12:00
Q4: 12:00–18:00
90-Minute cycle: four 90-minute blocks inside the active session.
Micro cycle: finer 20–22 minute blocks inside the session for granular timing.
Weekly/Monthly: tracked by calendar periods (Mon–Fri, and calendar month).
Pause guard: 17:00–18:00 ET to avoid false transitions during CME’s daily maintenance window.
State tracking (per cycle)
Tracks previous vs. current highs/lows for the chart symbol and the correlated symbol (fetched at the same timeframe).
Maintains cycle IDs (e.g., year*100 + weekofyear for weekly) so drawings remain tied to the originating period.
Divergence condition (SMT)
High-side (bearish): one instrument makes a higher high vs. its previous period while the other does not.
Low-side (bullish): one instrument makes a lower low vs. its previous period while the other does not.
When detected, the script plots a labeled span/line (e.g., SSMT w/ES) and records it for persistence.
Alerts
Two per cycle: High-side (bearish) and Low-side (bullish).
Fire on the bar where the condition first becomes true.
Inputs & customization
Correlated symbol (default can be an index future).
Cycle toggles: Micro, 90m, Daily (Q1–Q4), Weekly, Monthly.
Styling: line color/width, label text/size.
Session/quarter boxes: on/off.
Alerts: per-cycle SMT events on/off.
How to use
Add the indicator to your chart (e.g., NQ, ES) and select a correlated symbol.
Turn on the cycles you want to monitor; optionally enable quarter/session boxes.
Interpret SMTs by side:
High-side (bearish): chart makes HH, correlated does not.
Low-side (bullish): chart makes LL, correlated does not.
Set alerts for the cycles that matter to your workflow.
Combine with your higher-timeframe narrative and risk rules.
Repainting, timing, and limitations
Uses higher-timeframe data without look-ahead; values can update intrabar until the period closes.
SMTs may form and resolve within a period; conservative users may wait for period close.
Assumes America/New_York timing; very thin markets may yield fewer or noisier signals.
SMT quality depends on the benchmark you select; correlations vary across regimes.
Educational tool only. No performance claims; not a signal generator.
Originality & scope (for protected/invite-only publications)
A multi-cycle SMT engine built on a shared quarter/period state machine (Micro → 90m → Daily Q1–Q4 → Weekly → Monthly).
Quarter-aware persistence keeps divergence drawings tied to their source cycle for durable context.
CME pause handling and stable calendar IDs make detections consistent across sessions and rollovers.
Implements SMT through extremum sequencing and cross-instrument comparison rather than wrapping generic divergence indicators.
CRT [TakingProphets]CRT (Candle Range Theory) — HTF context overlay with alerts
Purpose
Informational overlay to structure higher-timeframe (HTF) context. It does not generate buy/sell signals and is not financial advice. Use it to organize analysis and alerts—not to automate trades.
What it does
Projects HTF candles (1m → 1M) on any lower timeframe so the big picture stays on the chart.
Detects CRT transitions on the HTF (bullish/bearish “failed continuation” pattern).
Evaluates SMT divergence vs. a user-selected correlated instrument on the same HTF (historical & real-time).
Extends live HTF Open/High/Low/Close as developing reference levels.
Concepts (what it looks for)
Candle Range Theory (CRT) — a 3-bar HTF pattern where candle 2 fails to continue candle 1’s move:
Bearish CRT: candle 2 trades above candle 1’s high but closes back inside candle 1’s range and does not break its low.
Bullish CRT: candle 2 trades below candle 1’s low but closes back inside candle 1’s range and does not break its high.
SMT divergence (intermarket) — compares HTF swing extremes between the chart symbol and a correlated symbol:
Bearish SMT: one makes a higher high while the other does not.
Bullish SMT: one makes a lower low while the other does not.
Checked in two modes: historical (between the two last closed HTF bars) and real-time (last closed vs. current forming HTF bar).
How the elements work together (integration, not a mashup)
All modules share one HTF time base, so annotations describe the same segment of price action. The overlay produces an explicit context state by sequencing the modules in this order:
HTF Projection → Structural Frame
The last three HTF candles are drawn (bodies+wicks). This creates the “canvas” the rest of the logic references (ranges, highs/lows, and time boundaries).
CRT Test → Directional Bias Candidate
The script evaluates the 3-bar CRT conditions on those exact HTF candles (not lower-TF approximations).
If conditions are forming on the current HTF bar, status is CRT Forming.
If they complete on the close, status becomes CRT Confirmed (Bullish/Bearish).
SMT Check → Confirmation/Stress-Test on the Same HTF
Using the same HTF window, the tool compares swing progress with the correlated symbol.
Historical SMT comments on whether the prior HTF segment’s push had intermarket agreement.
Real-time SMT comments on the current forming push.
This lets you confirm a CRT bias (e.g., Bearish CRT + Bearish SMT) or challenge it (e.g., Bullish CRT but Bearish SMT).
Live HTF OHLC → Actionable Reference Levels
The current HTF Open/High/Low/Close are extended as levels. These are the decision rails you’ll typically use to judge follow-through, failure, mitigation, or targets in the same CRT/SMT context.
Resulting context states (what you’ll see in alerts/labels):
Neutral (no CRT; SMT may still inform context).
CRT Forming (monitor): HTF push is underway; watch real-time SMT into HTF High/Low/Close projections.
CRT Confirmed (bias): HTF failure pattern locked; use projections as reference for continuation/invalidations.
CRT + SMT Aligned (confluence): CRT direction agrees with SMT; strongest context.
CRT vs. SMT Mixed (caution): bias exists but intermarket is disagreeing; treat levels as potential fade zones.
Why this is not a mashup
Every module is computed and plotted in the same HTF coordinate system, so signals are about one thing: the current HTF segment.
CRT provides the bias hypothesis, SMT provides a cross-market test of that hypothesis in the same window, and live OHLC projections supply the exact levels used to act on or fade that hypothesis.
Alerts are tied to state transitions (e.g., CRT forming → confirmed; SMT flip), not to unrelated features.
Mechanics (high-level)
HTF Projection: pulls HTF OHLC/time for the last three HTF bars and renders body boxes + wicks; optional time labels adapt to intraday vs D/W/M.
CRT Labels: when the three-bar conditions are met, prints BULLISH CRT or BEARISH CRT on the HTF stack.
SMT Lines: draws labeled diagonals across the relevant HTF pair for historical and real-time checks using your correlated symbol.
Live Levels: extends the current HTF Open/High/Low/Close horizontally; anchors are deterministic (Open = first bar, High/Low = first occurrence, Close = current bar).
Inputs & customization
HTF timeframe: 1m–1M.
Display: candle width/opacity, borders/wicks, time labels (12h/24h).
SMT: enable/disable, correlated symbol, line style/width, optional labels.
Projections: enable/disable, left extension (bars), per-level styling and price labels.
Alerts: switches for CRT, SMT-historical, SMT-real-time.
Alerts (workflow prompts)
Bullish/Bearish CRT detected on the selected HTF.
Bullish/Bearish SMT (historical) between the two last closed HTF bars.
Bullish/Bearish SMT (real-time) between the last closed and current forming HTF bar.
Suggested text includes the HTF and current context state so you know if CRT and SMT are aligned or mixed.
Example use
Bearish scenario: A Bearish CRT confirms on the 4H; soon after, real-time SMT (bearish) appears while price probes the projected 4H High. Context = CRT + SMT Aligned → treat the projected Open/Close as near-term objectives.
Mixed scenario: A Bullish CRT forms on 1H, but historical SMT (bearish) printed in the prior segment. Context = Mixed → continue to monitor real-time SMT and projected Low for possible invalidation.
Notes & limitations
HTF values are provisional until the HTF bar closes; labels/lines can update while forming.
SMT depends on the correlated symbol you select; relationships vary by market/regime.
Session gaps/illiquid hours can distort extremes and time labels.
Educational tool: no performance claims, no entry/exit signals.
Originality & scope (for protected/invite-only publications)
A unified HTF projection → CRT test → SMT check → live level pipeline that yields explicit context states instead of separate, unrelated overlays.
Formal CRT detection performed on actual HTF bars (not lower-TF approximations).
Dual-mode SMT tied to the same HTF windows (historical + real-time), plotted as labeled span lines.
Deterministic OHLC projection (first-occurrence anchoring) to align decisions with the identified context.
Attribution: CRT/SMT concepts inspired by ICT. Design, implementation, and alert framework by TakingProphets.
Prophet Model [TakingProphets]The Prophet Model — context pipeline (HTF PDA → Sweep → CISD → EPE) with dynamic risk
Purpose
Informational overlay for organizing institutional context in real time. It does not issue buy/sell signals and is not financial advice. Use it to structure analysis and checklist-driven execution—not to automate decisions.
What it does (modules at a glance)
Projects HTF PD Arrays (FVGs) onto your current chart and maintains only the nearest active array.
Validates directional bias using Candle Range Theory (CRT) on the same HTF.
Tracks Liquidity Sweeps (BSL/SSL) on HTF-aware pivots.
Confirms Change in State of Delivery (CISD) via displacement after a sweep.
Optionally refines entries with EPE when a local (internal) imbalance forms right after CISD.
Derives dynamic TP/BE/SL from measured displacement and recent extremes (not fixed distances).
Keeps a rules checklist (PDA tap → CRT → Sweep → CISD) and a relationships table (common HTF↔LTF pairings) to enforce process.
How it works (integration, not a mashup)
The modules are sequenced on one HTF time base so each step gates the next:
HTF PD Arrays (context zone). The model identifies valid HTF FVGs, filters tiny/weekend gaps, removes arrays that are invalidated by clean trades-through, and persists only the nearest PDA. This focuses attention on the institutional zone most likely to matter now.
CRT (directional gating). CRT on the same HTF establishes a provisional bias. No entries are implied; CRT simply permits or forbids the following steps. If CRT disagrees with the PDA context, the checklist remains incomplete.
Liquidity Sweep (event). The model tracks HTF-aware BSL/SSL pivots. A sweep only “counts” if it occurs in relation to the active PDA (tap/engagement). This prevents generic swing-high/low tags from triggering downstream logic.
CISD (confirmation). After a qualified sweep, the tool looks for displacement through the sequence open (the open of the impulsive leg beginning at or immediately after the sweep). Crossing that threshold confirms CISD, which marks a structural delivery shift consistent with the CRT bias.
EPE (refinement, optional). Immediately following CISD, the model scans for a fresh internal imbalance. If found quickly, it promotes that price area as the Easiest Point of Entry (EPE) and relabels the reference. If not, the CISD level remains primary.
Dynamic risk levels. TP/BE/SL are derived from the measured displacement around the CISD leg (e.g., BE ≈ 1× leg, TP ≈ 2.25× stretch; SL aligned to nearby structural extremes rather than a fixed pip offset). Levels update with structure and can display prices.
By chaining PDA → CRT → Sweep → CISD → (EPE) → Risk on a single HTF backbone, the tool creates a coherent workflow where later signals simply do not appear without earlier context. That’s why this is not a bundle of independent features: each module’s output is another module’s input.
Concepts & operational rules (high level)
HTF PD Arrays (FVGs)
Uses a standard three-candle gap definition on the chosen HTF, with filters for weekend/tiny gaps.
Inverse mitigation: if price trades cleanly through an array, the box is removed and internal state resets.
Nearest-PDA persistence: when multiple arrays exist, only the closest remains visible to reduce clutter.
Optional right-extension draws lingering influence X bars forward.
Candle Range Theory (CRT)
Bullish CRT: candle 2 wicks below candle 1’s low but closes back inside candle 1’s range, without taking its high.
Bearish CRT: candle 2 wicks above candle 1’s high but closes back inside candle 1’s range, without taking its low.
Role: bias validation paired to CISD when alignments match the active PDA.
Liquidity Sweeps (BSL/SSL)
Tracks candidate HTF pivots as buy-/sell-side liquidity.
A sweep registers when price takes a tracked pivot in the vicinity of the active PDA.
CISD (Change in State of Delivery)
Finds the sequence open for the impulsive leg that begins at/after the sweep.
Bearish path (after BSL sweep): CISD when close < sequence-open.
Bullish path (after SSL sweep): CISD when close > sequence-open.
On confirmation, the model plots a CISD line, checks the box in the Strategy Checklist, and triggers risk calc.
EPE (Easiest Point of Entry)
Within a short window after CISD, scans for a local imbalance; if present, promotes that level as EPE.
If no imbalance forms, CISD remains the operative reference.
Dynamic TP / BE / SL
Built from the measured leg around CISD (not fixed pip steps).
Approximate geometry: BE ≈ 1× leg, TP ≈ 2.25× leg; SL respects nearby structural extremes.
Labels and price markers are optional.
Architecture notes
Maps the current chart to a higher timeframe (e.g., 15s→M5, M1→M15, M5→H1, M15→H4, H1→D, H4→W, D→M).
Retrieves HTF OHLC/time with no lookahead so structures update intrabar until the HTF bar closes.
Periodic cleanup clears obsolete lines/labels/boxes to keep charts responsive.
Inputs (summary)
FVGs/PD Arrays: show/hide, colors, borders, label size, right-extension, nearest-only toggle.
CRT: enable/disable, label style.
Sweeps/CISD/EPE: enable/disable, line/label styles, EPE window.
Risk Levels (TP/BE/SL): enable each, price labels on/off, colors.
Tables/Checklist: strategy checklist on/off; relationships table (common HTF↔LTF pairings); text sizes and header colors.
Alerts (optional)
You may add alertconditions aligned with these events in your own workspace:
HTF PDA tap (bullish/bearish box)
CRT detected (bullish/bearish)
CISD confirmed (bullish/bearish)
EPE set/updated
Example messages:
“Prophet: CISD confirmed on {{ticker}} / {{interval}}”
“Prophet: EPE refined at {{close}} ({{time}})”
Notes & limitations
HTF values are provisional until the HTF bar closes; labels/levels can update while forming.
CISD/EPE are live conditions; they can form and later invalidate within the same HTF bar.
Liquidity relationships vary by market/regime; thin sessions and large gaps can affect clarity.
Educational tool only. No performance claims; no trade signals.
Originality & scope (for protected/invite-only publications)
A single HTF-synchronized engine sequences PDA → CRT → Sweep → CISD → (EPE) and withholds later steps unless prerequisites are met.
Nearest-PDA persistence and inverse-mitigation enforce focus on the most relevant institutional zone.
Displacement-based risk math ties TP/BE/SL to structure instead of static offsets.
Checklist + relationships table promote consistent, rules-first behavior and reduce discretionary drift.
Attribution: Concepts inspired by ICT (PD arrays/FVGs, CRT, sweeps, displacement, refined entries). Design, integration logic, and risk framework by TakingProphets.
HTF Candles [TakingProphets]HTF Candles — higher-timeframe structure, SMT divergence, and live OHLC projections
Purpose
Informational overlay to keep higher-timeframe (HTF) context visible on a lower-timeframe chart. It does not generate buy/sell signals and is not financial advice. Use it to structure analysis and alerts, not to automate trading.
What it does
HTF candle visualization (up to 10 candles, optional right-side offset) with bodies, wicks, and time labels.
SMT divergence checks on the chosen HTF—both historical (last two completed HTF bars) and real-time (last closed vs. current forming bar) vs. a user-selected correlated symbol (default can be an index future).
Live HTF OHLC projections: forward-extending Open / High / Low / Close from the current HTF bar with optional price labels and styling.
HTF close timer (optional) to show when the active HTF candle ends.
Why these modules belong together (more than a mashup)
This overlay uses one HTF time base to align three lenses of the same context:
Candle projection provides the structural frame (ranges and bodies of true HTF bars).
SMT divergence provides intermarket confirmation/invalidations on that same HTF, so the divergence you see is directly comparable to the projected candles.
Live OHLC projections turn the current HTF bar’s evolving state into concrete reference levels for intraday decisions.
Because all three share the same HTF clock and data source, alerts and drawings change together when the HTF state actually changes. The intent is a coherent workflow tool where each module gates the others (structure → confirmation → actionable references), rather than separate indicators merely co-plotted.
How it works (high-level)
Timeframe mapping & data
You choose an HTF (1m–1M). The script retrieves HTF OHLC/time without look-ahead. Objects update intrabar until the HTF bar closes.
Candle rendering
Up to 10 recent HTF candles are drawn as body boxes with wicks.
A horizontal offset/spacing option places the stack right of the current price for clarity.
Visuals (colors, transparency, borders, wick width, label size/format 12h/24h) are configurable.
SMT divergence (historical & real-time)
Compares HTF highs/lows of your chart vs. a correlated symbol using the same HTF.
Bearish SMT (high-side): one makes a higher high while the other does not.
Bullish SMT (low-side): one makes a lower low while the other does not.
Historical mode compares HTF → HTF ; real-time mode compares HTF → HTF as the current HTF bar forms.
Optional lines/labels mark where the divergence is detected.
Live OHLC projections
Extends the current HTF Open / High / Low / Close forward as horizontal lines.
Anchors: Open = first bar of the HTF period; High/Low = first occurrence of each extreme inside the period; Close = current bar.
Each level has independent toggles for price labels, style, and width.
Alerts (workflow prompts)
Bullish SMT, Bearish SMT, Bullish Real-time SMT, Bearish Real-time SMT.
Fire on the bar where the condition first becomes true.
Inputs & customization
Timeframe: select HTF (1m–1M).
Display: number of candles (1–10), right-offset, candle width, transparency, time labels on/off (12h/24h), label size, HTF close timer on/off.
Visuals: bullish/bearish body colors, border color, wick color.
SMT: enable/disable, correlated symbol, line style/width, labels on/off, alerts on/off.
Projections: enable/disable, per-level toggles (Open/High/Low/Close), color/style/width, optional price labels.
Notes & limitations
HTF values are provisional until the HTF bar closes; lines/labels can update during formation.
SMT usefulness depends on the correlated symbol you select; relationships vary by market/regime.
Session gaps/low liquidity can affect extremes and time labels.
Educational tool only. No performance claims and no trade signals.
Originality & scope (for protected/invite-only publications)
A single HTF-synchronized engine: candle projection, dual-mode SMT, and live OHLC projections all computed from the same HTF series to ensure consistent timing and interpretation.
Real-time SMT explicitly ties the developing HTF bar to the prior closed bar, reducing ambiguity vs. generic divergence checks.
Projection anchoring (first-occurrence rules for H/L, period start for Open, current bar for Close) provides deterministic, reproducible reference levels.
Rupeebees Active Option Levels V4This indicator helps you understand the nature of Active options in relationship each other and helps you to predict market trend .
Rupeebees Option OHLC Levels This indicator works with the principle that Option premium calculation can help you to understand the supply and demand in a trend direction.
Rupeebees Option OHLC Levels This Indicator will help you to understand market direction and demand and supply in the active options.All the details are only made with the option premium calculation.
EMA (5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 150, 200)+VWAP+BBEMA Cluster + VWAP + Bollinger Bands + Alerts + Visual Signals (Fixed)
KP_EMA_Cross_signal KP_EMA_Cross_signal : This signal removes a lot of false signals and will help in day trading.
Quarter Levels — Auto Recentering NQ onlyQuarter Levels — Auto Recentering (PERMANENT) + Big Offset Labels
What it is
This tool paints true horizontal key levels that traders naturally anchor to: the 00 / 25 / 50 / 75 quarter levels (black), the 35 / 65 / 90 reaction levels (red), and the 10 / 80 sweep/edge levels (purple).
Lines are infinite horizontals and the grid auto-recenters ±200 points around current price each new bar. Labels on the right show the last two digits (e.g., 25, 35, 50, 65, 75, 80, 90), so you instantly know which level you’re at.
Why it helps
Markets often “snap” to simple numbers. These levels create a clean scaffold for intraday structure, pullbacks, and rotations—without clutter or lagging math.
Color Legend
Black — 00 / 25 / 50 / 75:
Core quarter levels. Expect frequent pauses, re-tests, and rotations.
Use: default S/R map; bias for mean-reversion inside ranges.
Red — 35 / 65 / 90:
“Continuation / reaction” levels. Price often accelerates through these once momentum takes.
Use: breakout guides and precise take-profit targets.
Purple — 10 / 80:
Sweep / edge levels. Price often wicks into these and rejects.
Use: fade the last push, or confirm a sweep before a reversal.
How it works
The script draws the levels as extend.both horizontals (not derived from candle points).
Every new bar, it rebuilds the grid around close ± 200 pts (editable in code: RANGE_POINTS).
Prices are snapped to tick (syminfo.mintick) so lines lock to the Y-axis.
Labels show only the offset (two-digit number) to keep the chart clean.
Setup & Customization
No inputs required.
If you want tweaks, open the code and edit at the top:
RANGE_POINTS – widen/narrow the vertical coverage.
LABEL_OFFSET – push labels further to the right.
LABEL_SIZE – size.small / normal / large.
Color & width constants (per group).
Practical Use (playbook)
Use this grid as a price map, not a signal generator. Combine it with your execution tools.
1) In Range Conditions
Fade to Black: When price rotates inside a range, look for exhaustion into black levels (00/25/50/75).
Plan: wait for rejection (wick + failed follow-through), enter back toward the mid/next quarter. Stop just beyond the level; first target the next red or black.
Purple Sweeps: Watch quick spikes into 10/80 that immediately fail.
Plan: fade the sweep with tight risk; scale out at 25/75; hold a runner to 50.
2) In Trend / Momentum
Red Rails (35/65/90): When momentum is strong, price often steps through red levels cleanly.
Plan: use them as continuation targets or trail anchors. If pullback holds above a prior red level, consider continuation with stop below that level.
Quarter-to-Quarter Ladders: In clean trends, expect quarter-to-quarter traversals (00→25→50→75→00…).
Plan: add on pullbacks to 25 or 50 with trend confirmation (e.g., 9/21 EMA stack or anchored VWAP hold).
3) Confluence (AI-logic suggestions)
Pair the grid with any two of:
VWAP / Anchored VWAP: Rejections at a quarter level + VWAP = higher quality entry.
EMAs (9/21/50/200): Use as directional filter. Only take longs at quarters when fast EMAs > slow EMAs.
Liquidity cues: Prior high/low, session O/H/L, or liquidity pools aligning with a quarter level.
Orderflow / footprint: Aggressive delta through a red level? Expect follow-through to the next black or red.
Volatility (ATR): If ATR expands, lean more on red levels (continuations). In compression, lean more on black and purple (fades).
Risk & Management Tips
Stops: Just beyond the level you’re trading against. Let the level “be wrong” to prove you wrong.
Targets: Next red or black line. Scale at the first, hold a small runner to the next.
Session awareness: Levels interact differently in Asia/EU/US. In US RTH, expect sharper responses at red and purple.
Timeframes: Works across all. Intraday (1–15m) for entries; 1h/4h daily for context.
Do not chase: If you miss the touch, wait for the next level; the map is dense by design.
Limitations
This indicator does not generate buy/sell signals; it supplies a stable structure.
In runaway trends, price can cut through multiple lines—use trend filters and risk caps.
Auto-recentering means the visible band travels with price; if you need static levels far away, increase RANGE_POINTS.
Troubleshooting
No labels? Make sure max_labels_count isn’t hit and SHOW_LABELS = true.
Labels too close to price? Increase LABEL_OFFSET.
Too many lines? Reduce RANGE_POINTS or hide a color group in code.
Credits / License
Created by: TRC — The Refuge Camp
License: Free to use on TradingView with attribution.
If you fork or embed, please credit “TRC — The Refuge Camp” and link back to the original post/profile.
Quick Start (TL;DR)
Add the script.
Trade the map:
Fade purple/black in ranges.
Target red/black in trends.
Combine with VWAP/EMAs or your orderflow tool for confirmation.
Respect stops just beyond the level; scale at the next line.
Happy trading, and welcome to the Quarter-Level grid.
Liquidity Sweeps 2nd attemptLiquidity Sweeps 2nd attempt
The Liquidity Sweeps indicator detects the presence of liquidity sweeps on the user's chart, while also providing potential areas of support/resistance or entry when Liquidity levels are taken.
In the event of a Liquidity Sweep a Sweep Area is created which may provide further areas of interest.
KCP FRAMA Trend [Dr.K.C.PRAKASH]KCP FRAMA Trend
An adaptive trend indicator based on the Fractal Adaptive Moving Average (FRAMA).
It identifies breakout zones with clear BUY (green) and SELL (red) signals, colors candles by trend direction, and includes real-time alert conditions for precise trade entries and exits.
Rupeebees OHLC Levels This indicator helps you to understand how the option premium moves the market under some calculated levels
OG Indicators - EnhancedA simple effort to combine William's % R, MACD & Stochastic into single script
KCP MMA Trend [Dr.K.C.PRAKASH]KCP MMA Trend
⚙️ Core Logic:
This indicator uses two custom Modified Moving Averages (MMAs) — named KCP 1 and KCP 2 — to track market momentum and identify trend changes.
When the faster average (KCP 1) moves above the slower one (KCP 2), it indicates upward momentum.
When KCP 1 moves below KCP 2, it signals downward momentum.
📈 Crossover Signals:
BUY Signal: Triggered when KCP 1 crosses above KCP 2, showing a possible shift to a bullish trend.
SELL Signal: Triggered when KCP 1 crosses below KCP 2, showing a possible shift to a bearish trend.
🎨 Chart Display:
KCP 1 is plotted as an orange line.
KCP 2 is plotted as a blue line.
Crossovers are visually highlighted with BUY and SELL labels on the price chart for easy interpretation.
🔔 Alerts:
Two alert conditions are included:
Buy Alert: “KCP 1 crossed ABOVE KCP 2”
Sell Alert: “KCP 1 crossed BELOW KCP 2”
These can be linked to TradingView alerts for real-time notifications.
🧩 Purpose:
The indicator is designed to identify trend direction and reversals clearly and simply, without requiring any manual settings or inputs.
It helps traders capture early entries and exits by following clean crossover-based momentum shifts.
Support and Resistance [Jamshid]📌 Support & Resistance
This indicator automatically identifies high-quality Support and Resistance zones using volume-weighted pivot levels. It visualizes price structure with adaptive volume boxes, breakout & retest signals, higher timeframe confirmation, and optional volume profile.
✅ Core Features
🔹 1. Smart Support & Resistance Zones (Volume-Based)
Detects pivot highs/lows with strong volume.
Boxes expand dynamically using ATR.
Zones display actual volume value.
Color intensity reflects volume strength.
🔹 2. Breakouts & Retests
“Break Sup / Break Res” labels on structure breaks.
Detects when old resistance becomes support (R→S).
Detects when old support becomes resistance (S→R).
Retest labels and diamond markers for holds.
🔹 3. Volume Profile (Optional)
Shows mini horizontal volume bars at each zone.
Separate bullish/bearish volume distribution.
Adjustable rows and lookback.
🔹 4. Higher Timeframe Confluence (Optional)
Check if current S/R aligns with HTF levels:
5m, 15m, 30m, 1H, 4H, Daily
Modes:
✅ Show All + HTF Labels
✅ Filter Only HTF Confirmed Levels
HTF confirmations shown directly on zone labels.
Tolerance setting for price matching.
🔹 5. Breaker Blocks (Failed S/R Reversal Zones)
Identifies bullish/bearish breaker zones.
Highlights breaker blocks on chart.
Optional labels and zone coloring.
🎯 Visual Alerts & Signals
✅ Breakouts (Support & Resistance)
✅ Retests (Hold without breakout)
✅ Role Reversal (R→S and S→R)
✅ Potential Bullish / Bearish Breakers
✅ Diamonds for hold/retest structure
✅ Labels with volume + timeframe confirmations
Every signal also has a built-in alertcondition so you can automate notifications.
⚙️ Customizable Settings
🟢 Main
Lookback period
Volume filter length
Box width multiplier
🎨 Visual
Show or hide labels, diamonds, retest labels
Label size
🟦 Breaker Blocks
Enable/disable breaker blocks
Show zones & labels
Custom colors
📊 Volume Profile
Enable/disable
Rows, lookback length
Bull/Bear color
⏳ Higher Timeframe Filtering
Turn HTF logic on/off
Select which timeframes to compare
Filter mode or label mode
Price matching tolerance (%)
✅ Why this indicator is unique
✔ Combines price structure + volume + HTF confluence
✔ Automatically adapts S/R strength using volume data
✔ Shows role reversal and breaker logic
✔ Smart visual alerts & automation support
✔ Highly customizable for any strategy or timeframe
💡 How to Use
Add the indicator to any chart or timeframe.
Look for high-volume S/R zones (darker colors = stronger).
Watch for:
Breakouts (trend continuation or reversal)
Retests (strong confirmations)
HTF confluence (higher probability)
Breaker blocks (failed level reversal)
Optionally enable alerts for automation or notifications.
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⚠️ Dangers of Trading
1️⃣ You can lose money very fast
Markets move quickly, and leverage makes losses even faster. Even experienced traders go through drawdowns.
2️⃣ Emotional decisions ruin accounts
Fear (selling too early) and greed (holding too long or overtrading) cause most losses. Trading is more psychological than technical.
3️⃣ Overconfidence after small wins
Many traders win at the beginning and believe they “mastered” the market, then take big risks and blow the account.
4️⃣ No system = gambling
If you trade without clear rules and risk management, you’re not trading—you’re gambling.
5️⃣ Market is not fair
Smart money, institutions, HFT algorithms, and stop-hunts exist. Retail traders are often the liquidity for bigger players.
6️⃣ News/Unexpected events
Unpredictable events (CPI, FOMC, war, tweets, etc.) can instantly move the market against your position.
✅ Advice for Safer & Smarter Trading
✅ 1. Protect your capital first
Your number one job is to survive.
Never risk more than 1–2% per trade.
✅ 2. Have a written trading plan
Define:
When to enter
When to exit
How much to risk
What conditions must be present
If your plan is not written, you don’t have a plan.
✅ 3. Use Stop Loss always
No stop loss = account suicide.
Even professional traders are wrong sometimes.
✅ 4. Focus on one strategy (mastery > trying everything)
Jumping from one strategy to another causes confusion. One good strategy with discipline beats five strategies with no consistency.
✅ 5. Trade with the trend and higher timeframe direction
Trading against HTF structure is fighting the market.
✅ 6. Control emotions like a machine
Biggest trader enemies:
Overtrading
Revenge trading
Fear of missing out (FOMO)
When emotions are strong → stop trading.
✅ 7. Be patient (best skill of a trader)
Sometimes the best trade is no trade.
Professional traders wait for high-probability setups.
✅ 8. Backtest and demo before using real money
If it doesn’t make money in backtesting or demo, it won’t magically work live.
✅ 9. Accept losses (they are part of the game)
Even the best traders lose. The key is small losses, big wins.
✅ 10. Keep learning forever
Market changes. What works today may not work tomorrow. Study price action, volume, psychology, risk management.
🧠 Final Truths:
✅ Trading is a business, not easy money
✅ Winning rate doesn’t matter—risk/reward matters
✅ Consistency > luck
✅ Discipline > knowledge
✅ Survival > profit
Event Marking [zidaniee]This is not a technical analysis indicator, but a visual tool designed to mark important global events using vertical lines on your chart.
By placing a single marker at the exact time an event occurred, you can compare how different assets reacted to that global event — before, during, and after it happened.
In the example provided, the marking corresponds to the moment when U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 100% tariff on goods from China, which was immediately reflected in market reactions worldwide.
The indicator includes full customization features for:
• Event label text
• Label size and position
• Line color, style, and width
Enjoy
Grandoc's MTF SeparatorsOverviewThis indicator, known as Grandoc's MTF Separators, draws vertical lines to mark key period boundaries across multiple timeframes (MTF—standing for "Multi-Timeframe," which allows visualization of higher-timeframe structures like daily or weekly pivots directly on lower-timeframe charts, such as 15-minute views). It helps traders align intraday decisions with broader market cycles. Additionally, it includes optional session open/close lines and closing price ranges for major forex sessions (Sydney, Tokyo, Frankfurt, London, New York). By combining customizable timeframe separators with session-specific visuals, it provides a comprehensive tool for multi-timeframe analysis without cluttering the chart. The script is optimized for efficiency, using arrays to manage drawings and respect TradingView's limits.© grandoc
Created: October 12, 2025
Last Modified: October 12, 2025
Version: 1.4 (Improved: Added Frankfurt session with independent toggles for open/close lines and closing range)Key FeaturesMulti-Timeframe (MTF) Separators: Configurable lines for up to four timeframes (e.g., daily, weekly, monthly), plotted as vertical lines extending across the chart. Supports periods from seconds to years—ideal for spotting MTF confluences, like a weekly open aligning with a London session start.
Session Management: Independent toggles for open/close lines and 30-minute closing ranges for five major sessions. Opens use dotted lines by default; closes use solid lines. Frankfurt session added for European traders.
Customization: Select reference points (session start or midnight day start), timezones, colors, line styles, and lookback limits to control visibility and performance.
Efficiency: Arrays limit drawings to user-defined lookback periods, preventing overload on historical data.
Originality and UsefulnessThis script extends standard timeframe detection by integrating session visuals with granular controls, including the new Frankfurt session for better European market coverage. Unlike generic separators, it uses a modular drawSeparator() function for consistent rendering across MTF and sessions, reducing code redundancy. Closing ranges highlight volatility in the final 30 minutes of each session, serving as dynamic support/resistance—unique for session-based strategies.Ideal for forex traders on instruments like EURUSD futures, where aligning intraday trades with higher-timeframe pivots and session transitions reduces noise. For instance, on a 15-minute EURUSD futures chart, daily separators mark session-aligned opens, while London closing ranges flag potential reversal zones before New York handover. The MTF aspect shines here: A weekly separator (orange solid line) crossing a NY open (blue dotted) signals a high-probability setup.How It WorksMulti-Timeframe SeparatorsDetection: Uses ta.change(time(tf, sess, tzz)) to identify period starts, where tf is the timeframe string (e.g., "1D"), sess is "0000-0000" for day-midnight or empty for session-start, and tzz is the timezone.
Drawing: On change, drawSeparator() creates a vertical line via line.new(x1=x_time, x2=x_time, y1=open, y2=open + syminfo.mintick, extend=extend.both). The mintick offset ensures it's a line, not a point. Lines extend both ways for full visibility.
Management: Pushed to dedicated arrays (e.g., sepArray1); excess trimmed with array.shift() and line.delete() based on lookback.
Visibility: Only plots if higher timeframe (timeframe.in_seconds(tf) > timeframe.in_seconds()).
Session Open and Close LinesDetection: For each session (e.g., Sydney: "2200-0700:1234567"), inSession = not na(time(timeframe.period, sessionStr, sessionTz)). Opens trigger on inSession and not inSession ; closes on not inSession and inSession .
Drawing Opens: Calls drawSeparator(true, sessionColor, sessionOpenWidth, sessionOpenStyle, sessionLookback, sessLinesArray) at time (bar open time). Uses global dotted style/width by default for easy identification of new sessions.
Drawing Closes: Similar call, but at time_close (previous bar close) for precise end-time alignment. Uses global solid style/width. All shared in one sessLinesArray for unified trimming.
Navigation Benefit: Dotted opens act as "entry gates" for session momentum; solid closes as "exit signals." Colors differentiate sessions (e.g., green for Sydney), enabling quick scans—e.g., spot Tokyo open overlaps on EURUSD futures for Asian bias.
Closing RangesDetection: For each closing window (e.g., London: "1630-1700:1234567"), inClose = not na(time(timeframe.period, closeStr, sessionTz)).
Tracking: On entry (inClose and not inClose ), initializes high/low at current bar's values and stores bar_index. During session, updates with math.max/min(nz(var, high/low), high/low).
Drawing: On exit (not inClose and inClose ), creates box.new(left=startBar, right=bar_index-1, top=high, bottom=low, border_color=sessionColor, bgcolor=color.new(sessionColor, 80)). 80% transparency for subtle shading; border matches session color.
Management: Pushed to rangeBoxesArray; trimmed like lines. Only draws if toggle enabled (defaults off to avoid clutter).
Navigation Benefit: Ranges visually encapsulate end-of-session volatility—e.g., on EURUSD futures, a tight NY range signals low-risk continuation, while wide ones warn of gaps. Ideal for range-break trades or as next-session S/R.
All session elements use the dedicated sessionTz for consistency, independent of separator timezone.Installation and UsageAdd via TradingView's Public Library (search "Grandoc's MTF Separators").
Settings Navigation: Separators (#1-4): Toggle/enable timeframes (e.g., D1 default); lookback hidden for simplicity.
Style: Per-separator colors/widths/styles (hidden widths); global open/close styles for sessions.
Preferences: "Session" vs. "Day" reference (tooltips explain EURUSD example); timezone (hidden, Day-only).
Session Settings: Unified timezone for all sessions.
Open Lines (g4): Per-session toggles (all on default).
Close Lines (g7): Per-session toggles (all on default).
Closing Ranges (g5): Per-session toggles (all off default—enable for S/R focus).
Session Times (g8): Edit strings (e.g., adjust for DST on EURUSD futures).
Colors & Lookback (g6): Session colors; shared lookback limits.
Apply to EURUSD futures (e.g., 15-min chart) with defaults: See green daily dots, orange weekly solids, session opens/closes in theme colors.
Pro Tip: On futures, set "Session" reference and exchange TZ for accurate rollover alignment; enable ranges for close-of-day liquidity plays. For MTF depth, layer #3 (monthly) over intraday for long-term bias.
LimitationsLines/ranges may cluster on low-timeframe charts; increase lookback or disable lower separators.
Session times are UTC defaults; manual DST tweaks needed for futures like EURUSD.
Time-based; avoid non-standard charts (e.g., Renko).
No built-in alerts—use TradingView's on line/box conditions.
Example Chart Open-source for community reuse (credit © grandoc). Published October 12, 2025. Questions? Comment below!
WOW Intraday Tracker by Dev🎯 WOW Intraday Tracker: Professional Trade Execution & R/R Analysis
The WOW Intraday Tracker (V1.30 Final) is an advanced, invite-only tool built for disciplined intraday trading. It transforms market signals into a fully managed trade, providing both real-time execution confidence and objective performance review.
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✨ Core Execution Features
The Tracker automates the most critical aspects of trade management:
Automatic Entry Trigger: The script uses a proprietary multi-factor scoring system to identify high-probability setups. Once a trade signal is validated and its Score meets the Activation Threshold (which is visible in the Running Trade Table), the entry order (Long or Short) is automatically triggered and monitored.
Trade Grade Qualification: Crucially, every setup is assigned a Trade Grade (A+, A, or B) before entry, based on structural confluence, allowing traders to qualify the setup quality instantly.
Initial SL & Multiple Targets (TGTs): All trades are established with risk-defined parameters from the start.
Initial Stop-Loss (SL): Automatically calculated based on user-defined ATR Multiples to align risk with current volatility.
Multiple Take-Targets (TGTs): Two distinct target levels (TGT1 and TGT2) are set based on user-defined R-Multiples (Risk-to-Reward ratios) to facilitate a partial profit-taking strategy.
Dynamic Trailing & Stop Adjustment: As the trade progresses, the script automatically manages risk, adjusting the stop-loss upon TGT hits to lock in profit.
Signal Cancellation Feature: To protect capital, the script actively monitors the signal's health. If the internal trade score drops below the configurable Cancellation Threshold before entry, the pending order is automatically invalidated and cleared.
⚖️ Trade Exit and Weighted R/R Assumptions
The script's primary function is to track and calculate a Weighted Risk-to-Reward (R/R) based on a predetermined exit plan:
Target 1 (T1): 30% of the original position. Stop is adjusted to protect profits.
Target 2 (T2): Another 30% of the original position. Trailing Stop begins based on a volatility factor.
Final Exit: Rest 40% of the original position. Exited when the Trailing Stop is hit.
Important Note: The Trailing Stop is tracked on a closing basis within the script. While you can choose to exit the trade manually on a hit basis or book profits based on your personal judgment, the script's final Weighted R/R calculation is based on the assumption that the position exits as detailed above.
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📊 Global R/R Tracker Table (Performance by Grade)
This powerful feature provides objective, actionable data for trade review. It continuously tallies your performance, broken down by the quality (Grade) of the trade setup.
The table tracks performance for A+, A, and B grade setups, plus a TOTAL row, based on your chosen lookback (Full History or Day Start)
By separating performance by Grade, you gain a clear, evidence-based understanding of which setups truly deserve your capital and focus.
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🎨 Advanced Customization & Styling
The WOW Intraday Tracker offers extensive control over the look and feel of your workspace to ensure maximum clarity and minimal chart clutter.
Table Positioning: Freely select the on-chart location (Top Right, Bottom Left, etc.) for all three tables.
Theming: Customize the background and text colors for all tables, including the dynamic green/red backgrounds of the Global R/R Tracker.
Plot Lines: Full color control over all plotted trade lines: PDH/PDL, Entry Price, Initial Stop, Trailing Stop, and Targets.
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⏱️ Usage & Recommended Timeframes
The WOW Intraday Tracker is primarily designed and optimized for high-frequency, short-term intraday trading.
Recommended Timeframes: For optimal performance, we recommend using the script on lower-to-mid-range intraday timeframes: 5-minute, 15-minute, and 25 (or 30) minutes.
Intended Use: While the script can be applied to higher timeframes, its main purpose is to capture volatility and quick moves within the trading day.
Swing Trading: In rare instances, the tracker may generate signals suitable for a short-term swing trade (1-2 days), but this is secondary to its core intraday function.
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🔑 Access Note
The WOW Intraday Tracker utilizes proprietary logic within its scoring system and is published as an invite-only script. The source code is protected to maintain the integrity and value of the intellectual property.
To inquire about access, please contact the author directly via TradingView Private Message on this profile.






















