Trend Pivots Profile [BigBeluga]🔵 OVERVIEW
The Trend Pivots Profile is a dynamic volume profile tool that builds profiles around pivot points to reveal where liquidity accumulates during trend shifts. When the market is in an uptrend , the indicator generates profiles at low pivots . In a downtrend , it builds them at high pivots . Each profile is constructed using lower timeframe volume data for higher resolution, making it highly precise even in limited space. A colored trendline helps traders instantly recognize the prevailing trend and anticipate which type of profile (bullish or bearish) will form.
🔵 CONCEPTS
Pivot-Driven Profiles : Profiles are only created when a new pivot forms, aligning liquidity analysis with market structure shifts.
Trend-Contextual : Profiles form at low pivots in uptrends and at high pivots in downtrends.
Lower Timeframe Data : Volume and close values are pulled from smaller timeframes to provide detailed, high-resolution profiles inside larger pivot windows.
Adaptive Bin Sizing : Bin size is automatically calculated relative to ATR, ensuring consistent precision across different markets and volatility conditions.
Point of Control (PoC) : The highest-volume level within each profile is marked with a PoC line that extends until the next pivot forms.
Trendline Visualization : A wide, semi-transparent line follows the rolling average of highs and lows, colored blue in uptrends and orange in downtrends.
🔵 FEATURES
Pivot Length Control : Adjust how far back the script looks to detect pivots (e.g., length 5 → profiles cover 10 bars after pivot).
Pivot Profile toggle :
On → draw the filled pivot profile + PoC + pivot label.
Off → hide profiles; show only PoC level (clean S/R mode).
Trend Length Filter : Smooths trendline detection to ensure reliable up/down bias.
Precise Volume Distribution : Volume is aggregated into bins, creating a smooth volume curve around the pivot range.
PoC Extension : Automatically extends the most active price level until a new pivot is confirmed.
Profile Visualization : Profiles appear as filled shapes anchored at the pivot candle, colored based on trend.
Trendline Overlay : Thick, semi-transparent trendline provides visual guidance on directional bias.
Automatic Cleanup : Old profiles are deleted once they exceed the chart’s capacity (default 25 stored profiles).
🔵 HOW TO USE
Spotting Trend Liquidity : In an uptrend, monitor profiles at low pivots to see where buyers concentrated. In downtrends, use high-pivot profiles to spot sell-side pressure.
Watch the PoC : The PoC line highlights the strongest traded level of the pivot structure—expect reactions when price retests it.
Anticipate Trend Continuation/Reversal : Use the trendline (blue = bullish, orange = bearish) together with pivot profiles to forecast directional momentum.
Combine with HTF Context : Overlay with higher timeframe structure (order blocks, liquidity zones, or FVGs) for confluence.
Fine-Tune with Inputs : Adjust Pivot Length for sensitivity and Trend Length for smoother or faster trend shifts.
🔵 CONCLUSION
The Trend Pivots Profile blends pivot-based structure with precise volume profiling. By dynamically plotting profiles on pivots aligned with the prevailing trend, highlighting PoCs, and overlaying a directional trendline, it equips traders with a clear view of liquidity clusters and directional momentum—ideal for anticipating reactions, pullbacks, or breakouts.
Indicators and strategies
Volume-Confirmed Reversal Engine [AlgoPoint]Volume-Confirmed Reversal Engine v2.0
Overview
A price pattern alone is not enough to signal a high-probability reversal. True market turning points—moments of capitulation or euphoria—are almost always confirmed by a significant spike in volume.
The Volume-Confirmed Reversal Engine is designed to identify these exact moments. It filters out low-conviction price movements and focuses only on reversal patterns that are backed by meaningful volume activity.
How It Works
The indicator's logic is based on a sequential confirmation process:
- High-Volume Anchor Candle: The engine first scans for an "Anchor Candle"—a candle that makes a new high or low over a user-defined look_back period. Critically, this candle's volume must also be significantly higher than the recent average. Low-volume breakouts are ignored.
- Setup Activation & Visualization: When a valid Anchor Candle is detected, the indicator enters a "setup" phase. It visually marks this on your chart by drawing a Setup Box around the high and low of the Anchor Candle, extending it forward for the duration of the confirm_in window.
- Confirmation & Signal: A final signal is only triggered if the price breaks out of the opposite side of the Setup Box within the confirmation window. This action, combined with the initial volume spike, confirms the reversal.
- Setup Box Visualization: See exactly which candle the indicator is watching and the key price levels (the box boundaries) that need to be broken for a signal.
Signal Strength Score (1-4): Every signal now comes with a score, providing insight into its quality based on four factors:
- The base price pattern is met.
- The initial Anchor Candle had high volume.
- The final Confirmation Candle also had high volume.
- The signal is aligned with the long-term macro trend (e.g., a BUY signal above the 200 EMA).
Status Dashboard: A simple panel on your chart tells you what the indicator is doing in real-time ("Scanning for Setups," "Watching Bullish Setup," etc.) and displays a countdown for how many bars are left for a confirmation.
How to Interpret & Use
- The Box: When a colored box appears, it's an early warning that a reversal setup is active. Watch the boundaries of the box for a potential breakout.
- The Score: Use the score to gauge the quality of a signal. A 3/4 or 4/4 score represents a very high-conviction setup where multiple technical factors are aligned.
- The Dashboard: Use the panel to understand the indicator's current state and the time-sensitivity of an active setup.
- The BUY/SELL Labels: These are the final, actionable triggers, appearing only after the full price and volume confirmation process is complete.
Ichimoku PourSamadi Signal [TradingFinder] KijunSen Magic Number🔵 Introduction
The Ichimoku Kinko Hyo system is one of the most comprehensive market analysis tools ever created. Developed by Goichi Hosoda, a Japanese journalist in the 1930s, its purpose was to allow traders to recognize the balance between price, time, and momentum at a single glance. (In Japanese, Ichimoku literally means “one look.”)
At the core of the system lie five key components: Tenkan-sen (Conversion Line), Kijun-sen (Baseline), Chikou Span (Lagging Line), and the two leading spans, Senkou Span A and Senkou Span B, which together form the well-known Kumo or cloud representing both temporal structure and equilibrium zones in the market.
Although Ichimoku is commonly used to identify trends and support/resistance levels, a deeper layer of time philosophy exists within it. Ichimoku was not designed solely for price analysis but equally for time analysis.
In the classical model, the numerical cycles 9, 26, 52 reflect the natural rhythm of the market originally based on the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s trading schedule in the 1930s.
These values repeat across the system’s calculations, forming the foundation of Ichimoku’s time symmetry where price and time ultimately seek equilibrium.
In recent years, modern analysts have explored new approaches to extract time-based turning points from Ichimoku’s structure. One such approach is the analysis of flat segments on the Kijun-sen and Senkou B lines.
Whenever one of these lines remains flat for a period, it signals temporary balance between buyers and sellers; when the flat breaks, the market exits equilibrium and a new cycle begins.
This indicator is built precisely upon that philosophy. Following the timing methodology introduced by M.A. Poursamadi, the focus shifts away from price signals and line crossovers toward identifying flat periods on Kijun-sen (period 52) as time anchors.
From the first candle that changes the line’s slope, the tool begins a temporal count using a fixed sequence of key numbers: 5, 9, 13, 17, 26, 35, 43, 52, 63, 72, 81, 90.
Derived from both classical Ichimoku cycles and empirical testing, these numbers mark potential timing nodes where a market wave may end, a correction may begin, or a new leg may form.
Thus, this method serves not merely as another Ichimoku tool but as a temporal metronome for market structure a way to visualize moments when the market is ready to change rhythm, often before candles reveal it.
🔵 How to Use
The Kijun Timing BoX is built entirely on Ichimoku’s concept of time analysis.
Its core idea is that within every flat segment of the Kijun-sen, the market enters a temporary balance between opposing forces.
When that flat breaks, a new time cycle begins. From that first breakout candle, the indicator starts counting forward through the predefined time sequence(5, 9, 13, 17, 26, 35, 43, 52, 63, 72, 81, 90).
This counting framework creates a temporal map of market behavior, where each number represents an area where meaningful price fluctuations often occur.
A “meaningful fluctuation” does not necessarily imply reversal or continuation; rather, it marks a moment when the market’s internal energy balance shifts, typically visible as noticeable reactions on lower timeframes.
🟣 Identifying the Anchor Point
The first step is recognizing a valid flat zone on the Kijun-sen.
When this line remains flat for several candles and then changes slope, the indicator marks that bar as the Anchor, initiating the time count.
From that point onward, vertical gray lines appear at each interval in the key-number sequence, visualizing the time nodes ahead.
🟣 Reading the Timing Lines
Each numbered line represents a timing node a temporal point where a change in price rhythm is statistically more likely to occur.
At these nodes, the market may :
Enter a consolidation or minor correction phase.
Develop range-bound movement.
Or simply alter the speed and intensity of its move.
These behaviors do not imply a specific direction; they only highlight zones where time-based activity tends to cluster, giving traders a clearer view of cyclical rhythm.
🟣 Applying Time Analysis
The indicator’s primary use is to observe temporal order, not to predict price direction.
By tracking the distance between Anchors and the reactions that appear near major timing lines, traders can empirically identify each market’s characteristic rhythm—its own time DNA.
For example, one asset may consistently show significant fluctuations around the 13- and 26-bar marks,while another might react closer to 9 or 52. Recognizing such patterns helps traders understand how long typical cycles last before new phases of volatility emerge.
🟣 Combining with Other Tools
The indicator does not generate buy/sell signals on its own.
Its best use is in combination with price- or structure-based methods, to see whether meaningful price reactions occur around the same timing nodes.
In practice, it helps distinguish structured time-based fluctuations from random, noise-driven moves an insight often overlooked in conventional market analysis.
🔵 Settings
🟣 Logical Settings
KijunSen Period : Defines the baseline period used for timing analysis. Default = 52. It is the main line for detecting flats and generating time anchors.
Flat Event Filter : Controls how flat segments are validated before triggering a new timing event.
All : Every flat triggers a new Timing Box.
Automatic : Only flats longer than the historical average are used (recommended).
Custom : User manually defines the minimum flat length via Custom Count.
Update Timing Analysis BoX Per Event : If enabled, a new Timing Box is drawn each time a new flat event occurs. If disabled, the box completes its 90-bar window before refreshing.
🟣 Ichimoku Settings
TenkanSen Period : Defines the period for the Conversion Line (Tenkan-sen). Default = 9.
KijunSen Period : Sets the standard Ichimoku baseline (not the timing line). Default = 26.
Span B Period : Defines the period for Senkou Span B, the slower cloud boundary. Default = 52.
Shift Lines : Offsets cloud projection into the future. Default = 26.
🟣 Display Settings
Users can show or hide all Ichimoku lines Tenkan-sen, Kijun-sen, Chikou Span, Span A, and Span B as well as the Ichimoku Cloud.
They can also customize the color of each element to match personal chart preferences and improve visibility.
🔵 Conclusion
This analytical approach transforms Ichimoku’s time philosophy into a visual and measurable framework. A flat Kijun-sen represents a moment of market equilibrium; when its slope shifts, a new temporal cycle begins.
The purpose is not to forecast price direction but to highlight periods when meaningful fluctuations are more likely to develop.
Through this perspective, traders can observe the hidden rhythm of market time and expand their analysis beyond price into a broader time-cycle dimension.
Ultimately, the method revives Ichimoku’s original principle: the market can only be truly understood through the simultaneous harmony of price, time, and balance.
Two-Part Supply & Demand Zones with Role ReversalWill show demand and supply with boxes
Once a zone is used it will be removed to keep the chart clean
Cnagda Pure Price ActionCnagda Pure Price Action (CPPA) indicator is a pure price action-based system designed to provide traders with real-time, dynamic analysis of the market. It automatically identifies key candles, support and resistance zones, and potential buy/sell signals by combining price, volume, and multiple popular trend indicators.
How Price Action & Volume Analysis Works
Silver Zone – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning
Logic & Visualization:
The Silver Zone is created when the closing price is the lowest in the chosen window and volume is the highest in that window.
Visually, a large silver-colored box/rectangle appears on the chart.
Thick horizontal lines (top and bottom) are drawn at the high and low of that candle/bar, extending to the right.
Reasoning:
This combination typically occurs at strong “accumulation” or support areas:
Sellers push the price down to the lowest point, but aggressive buyers step in with high volume, absorbing supply.
Indicates potential exhaustion of selling and likely shift in market control to buyers.
How to Plan Trades Using Silver Zone:
Watch if price returns to the Silver Zone in the future: It often acts as powerful support.
Bullish entries (buys) can be planned when price tests or slightly pierces this zone, especially if new buy signals occur (like yellow/green candle labels).
Place your stop-loss below the bottom line of the Silver Zone.
Target: Look for the nearest resistance or opposing zone, or use indicator’s bullish label as confirmation.
Extra Tip:
Multiple touches of the Silver Zone reinforce its importance, but if price closes deeply below it with high volume, that’s a caution signal—support may be breaking.
Black Zone – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (as CPPA):
Logic & Visualization:
The Black Zone is created when the closing price is the highest in the chosen window and volume is the lowest in that window.
Visually, a large black-colored box/rectangle appears on the chart, along with thick horizontal lines at the top (high) and bottom (low) of the candle, extending to the right.
Reasoning:
This combination signals a strong “distribution” or resistance area:
Buyers push the price up to a local high, but low volume means there is not much follow-through or conviction in the move.
Often marks exhaustion where uptrend may pause or reverse, as sellers can soon step in.
How to Plan Trades Using Black Zone:
If price revisits the Black Zone in the future, it often acts as major resistance.
Bearish entries (sells) are considered when price is near, testing, or slightly above the Black Zone—especially if new sell signals appear (like blue/red candle labels).
Place your stop-loss just above the top line of the Black Zone.
Target: Nearest support zone (such as a Silver Zone) or next indicator’s bearish label.
Extra Tip:
Multiple touches of the Black Zone make it stronger, but if price closes far above with rising volume, be cautious—resistance might be breaking.
Support Line – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (as Cppa):
Logic & Visualization:
The Support Line is a dynamically drawn dashed line (usually blue) that marks key price levels where the market has previously shown significant buying interest.
The line is generated whenever a candle forms a high price with high volume (orange logic).
The script checks for historical pivot lows, past support zones, and even higher timeframe (HTF) supports, and then extends a blue dashed line from that price level to the right, labeling it (sometimes as “Prev Support Orange, HTF”).
Reasoning:
This line helps you visually identify where demand has been strong enough to hold price from falling further—essentially a floor in the market used by professional traders.
If price approaches or re-tests this line, there’s a good chance buyers will defend it again.
How to Plan Trades Using Support Line:
Watch for price to approach the Support Line during down moves. If you see a bullish candlestick pattern, buy labels (yellow/green), or other indicators aligning, this can be a high-probability entry zone.
Great for planning stop-loss for long trades: place stops just below this line.
Target: Next resistance zone, Black Zone, or the top of the last swing.
Extra Tip:
Multiple confirmations (support line + Silver Zone + bullish label) provide powerful entry signals.
If price closes strongly below the Support Line with volume, be cautious—support may be breaking, and a trend reversal or deeper correction could follow.
Resistance Line – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning (from CPPA):
Logic & Visualization:
The Resistance Line is a dynamically drawn dashed line (usually purple or red) that identifies price levels where the market has previously faced significant selling pressure.
This line is created when a candle reaches a high price combined with high volume (orange logic), or from a historical pivot high/resistance,
The script also tracks higher timeframe (HTF) resistance lines, labeled as “Prev Resistance Orange, HTF,” and extends these dashed lines to the right across the chart.
Reasoning:
Resistance Lines are visual markers of “supply zones,” where buyers previously failed, and sellers took control.
If the price returns to this line later, sellers may get active again to defend this level, halting the uptrend.
How to Plan Trades Using Resistance Line:
Watch for price to approach the Resistance Line during up moves. If you see bearish candlestick patterns, sell labels (blue/red), or bearish indicator confirmation, this becomes a strong shorting opportunity.
Perfect for placing stop-loss in short trades—put your stop just above the Resistance Line.
Target: Next support zone (Silver Zone) or bottom of the last swing.
If the price breaks above with high volume, avoid shorting—resistance may be failing.
Extra Tip:
Multiple resistances (Resistance Line + Black Zone + bearish label) make short signals stronger.
Choppy movement around this line often signals indecision; wait for a clear rejection before entering trades.
Bullish / Bearish Label – Logic, Reason, and Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The indicator constantly calculates a "Bull Score" and a "Bear Score" based on several factors:
Trend direction from price slope
Confirmation by popular indicators (RSI, ADX, SAR, CMF, OBV, CCI, Bollinger Bands, TWAP)
Adaptive scoring (higher score for each bullish/bearish condition met)
If Bull Score > Bear Score, the chart displays a green "BULLISH" label (usually below the bar).
If Bear Score > Bull Score, the chart displays a red "BEARISH" label (usually above the bar).
If neither dominates, a "NEUTRAL" label appears.
Reasoning:
The labels summarize complex price action and indicator analysis into a simple, actionable sentiment cue:
Bullish: Majority of conditions indicate buying strength; trend is up.
Bearish: Majority signals show selling pressure; trend is down.
How to Use in Trade Planning:
Use the Bullish label as confirmation to enter or hold long (buy) positions, especially if near support/Silver Zone.
Use the Bearish label to enter/hold short (sell) positions, especially if near resistance/Black Zone.
For best results, combine with candle color, volume analysis, or other labels (yellow/green for buys, blue/red for sells).
Avoid trading against these labels unless you have strong confluence from zones/support levels.
Yellow Label (Buy Signal) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The yellow label appears below a candle (label.style_label_up, yloc.belowbar) and marks a potential buy signal.
Script conditions:
The candle must be a “yellow candle” (which means it’s at the local lowest close, not a high, with normal volume).
Volume is decreasing for 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous volume, previous volume < second previous).
When these conditions are met, a yellow label is plotted below the candle.
Reasoning:
This scenario often marks the end of selling pressure and start of possible accumulation—buyers may be stepping in as sellers exhaust.
Decreasing volume during a local price low means selling is slowing, possibly hinting at a reversal.
How to Trade Using Yellow Label:
Entry: Consider buying at/just above the yellow-labeled candle’s close.
Stop-loss: A bit below the candle’s low (or Silver Zone line, if present).
Target: Next resistance level, Black Zone, or chart’s bullish label.
Extra Tip:
If the yellow label is found at/near a Silver Zone or Support Line, and trend is “Bullish,” the setup gets even stronger.
Avoid trading if overall indicator shows “Bearish.”
Green Label (Buy with Increasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The green label is plotted below a candle (label.style_label_up, yloc.belowbar) and marks a strong buy signal.
Script conditions:
The candle must be a “yellow candle” (at the local lowest close, normal volume).
Volume is increasing for 2 consecutive candles (current volume > previous volume, previous volume > second previous).
When these conditions are met, a green label is plotted below the candle.
Reasoning:
This scenario signals that buyers are stepping in aggressively at a local price low—the end of a downtrend with strong, rising activity.
Increasing volume at a price low is a classic sign of accumulation, where institutions or large players may be buying.
How to Trade Using Green Label:
Entry: Consider buying at/just above the green-labeled candle’s close for a momentum-based reversal.
Stop-loss: Slightly below the candle’s low, or the Silver Zone/support line if present.
Target: Nearest resistance zone/Black Zone, indicator’s bullish label, or next swing high.
Extra Tip:
If the green label is near other supports (Silver Zone, Support Line), the setup is extra strong.
Use confirmation from Bullish labels or trend signals for best results.
Green label setups are suitable for quick, high momentum trades due to increasing volume
Blue Label (Sell Signal on Decreasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The blue label is plotted above a candle (label.style_label_down, yloc.abovebar) as a potential sell signal.
Script conditions:
The candle is a “blue candle” (local highest close, but not also lowest, and volume is neither highest nor lowest).
Volume is decreasing over 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous, previous < two ago).
When these match, a blue label appears above the candle.
Reasoning:
This typically signals buyer exhaustion at a local high: price has gone up, but volume is dropping, suggesting big players may not be buying any more at these levels.
The trend is losing strength, and a reversal or pullback is likely.
How to Trade Using Blue Label:
Entry: Look to sell at/just below the candle with the blue label.
Stop-loss: Just above the candle’s high (or above the Black Zone/resistance if present).
Target: Nearest support, Silver Zone, or a swing low.
Extra Tip:
Blue label signals are stronger if they appear near Black Zones or Resistance Lines, or when the general market label is "Bearish."
As with buy setups, always check for confirmation from trend or volume before trading aggressively.
Blue Label (Sell Signal on Decreasing Volume) – Logic, Reason & Trade Planning:
Logic & Visualization:
The blue label is plotted above a candle (label.style_label_down, yloc.abovebar) as a potential sell signal.
Script conditions:
The candle is a “blue candle” (local highest close, but not also lowest, and volume is neither highest nor lowest).
Volume is decreasing over 2 consecutive candles (current volume < previous, previous < two ago).
When these match, a blue label appears above the candle.
Reasoning:
This typically signals buyer exhaustion at a local high: price has gone up, but volume is dropping, suggesting big players may not be buying any more at these levels.
The trend is losing strength, and a reversal or pullback is likely.
How to Trade Using Blue Label:
Entry: Look to sell at/just below the candle with the blue label.
Stop-loss: Just above the candle’s high (or above the Black Zone/resistance if present).
Target: Nearest support, Silver Zone, or a swing low.
Extra Tip:
Blue label signals are stronger if they appear near Black Zones or Resistance Lines, or when the general market label is "Bearish."
As with buy setups, always check for confirmation from trend or volume before trading aggressively.
Here’s a summary of all key chart labels, zones, and trading logic of your Price Action script:
Silver Zone: Powerful support zone. Created at lowest close + highest volume. Best for buy entries near its lines.
Black Zone: Strong resistance zone. Created at highest close + lowest volume. Ideal for short trades near its levels.
Support Line: Blue dashed line at historical demand; buyers defend here. Look for bullish setups when price approaches.
Resistance Line: Purple/red dashed line at supply; sellers defend here. Great for bearish setups when price nears.
Bullish/Bearish Labels: Summarize trend direction using price action + multiple indicator confirmations. Plan buys, holds on bullish; sells, shorts on bearish.
Yellow Label: Buy signal on decreasing volume and local price low. Entry above candle, stop below, target next resistance.
Green Label: Strong buy on increasing volume at a price low. Entry for momentum trade, stop below, target next zone.
Blue Label: Sell signal on dropping volume and local price high. Entry below candle, stop above, target next support.
Best Practices:
Always combine zone/label signals for higher probability trades.
Use stop-loss near zones/lines for risk management.
Prefer trading in the trend direction (bullish/bearish label agrees with your entry).
if Any Question, Suggestion Feel free to ask
Disclaimer:
All information provided by this indicator is for educational and analysis purposes only, and should not be considered financial advice.
GEX Options Flow Pro 100% free
INTRODUCTION
This script is designed to visualize advanced options-derived metrics and levels on TradingView charts, including Gamma Exposure (GEX) walls, gamma flip points, vanna levels, delta-neutral prices (DEX), max pain, implied moves, and more. It overlays dynamic lines, labels, boxes, and an info table to highlight potential support, resistance, volatility regimes, and flow dynamics based on options data.
These visualizations aim to help users understand how options market structure might influence price action, such as areas of potential stability (positive GEX) or volatility (negative GEX). All data is user-provided via pasted strings, as Pine Script cannot fetch external options data directly due to platform limitations (detailed below).
The script is open-source under TradingView's terms, allowing study, modification, and improvement. It draws inspiration from standard options Greeks and exposure metrics (e.g., gamma, vanna, charm) discussed in financial literature like Black-Scholes models and dealer positioning analyses. No external code is copied; all logic is original or based on mathematical formulas.
Disclaimer: This is an educational tool only. It does not provide investment advice, trading signals, or guarantees of performance. Past data is not indicative of future results. Use at your own risk, and combine with your own analysis. Not intended for qualified investors only.
How the Options Levels Are Calculated
Levels are not computed in Pine Script—they rely on pre-calculated values from external tools (e.g., Python scripts using libraries like yfinance for options chains). Here's how they're typically derived externally before pasting into the script:
Fetching Options Data: Retrieve options chain for a ticker: strikes, open interest (OI), volume, implied volatility (IV), expirations (e.g., shortest: 0-7 DTE, short: 7-14 DTE, medium: ~30 DTE, long: ~90 DTE). Get current price and 5-day history for context.
Gamma Walls (Put/Call Walls): Compute gamma for each option using Black-Scholes: gamma = N'(d1) / (S * σ * √T) where S = spot price, K = strike, T = time to expiration (years), σ = IV, N'(d1) = normal PDF. Aggregate GEX at strikes: GEX = sign * gamma * OI * 100 * S^2 * 0.01 (per 1% move, with sign based on dealer positioning: typically short calls/puts = negative GEX). Put Wall: Highest absolute GEX put strike below S (support via dealer buying on dips). Call Wall: Highest absolute GEX call strike above S (resistance via dealer selling on rallies). Secondary/Tertiary: Next highest levels. Historical walls track tier-1 levels over 5 days.
Gamma Flip: Net GEX profile across prices: Sum GEX for all options at hypothetical spots. Flip point: Interpolated price where net GEX changes sign (stable above, volatile below).
Vanna Levels: Vanna = -N'(d1) * d2 / σ. Weighted by OI; highest positive/negative strikes.
DEX (Delta-Neutral Price): Net dealer delta: Sum (delta * OI * 100 * sign), with delta from Black-Scholes. DEX: Price where net delta = 0 (interpolated).
Max Pain: Strike minimizing total intrinsic value for all options holders.
Skew: 25-delta skew: IV difference between 25-delta put and call (interpolated).
Net GEX/Delta: Total signed GEX/delta at current S.
Implied Move: ATM IV * √(DTE/365) for 1σ range.
C/P Ratio: (Call OI + volume) / (Put OI + volume).
Smart Stop Loss: Below lowest support (e.g., Put Wall, gamma flip), buffered by IV * √(DTE/30).
Other Metrics: IV: ATM average. 5-day metrics: Avg volume, high/low.
External tools handle dealer assumptions (e.g., short calls/puts) and scaling (per % move).
Effect as Support and Resistance in Technical Trading
Options levels reflect dealer hedging dynamics:
Put Wall (Gamma Support): High put GEX creates buying pressure on dips (dealers hedge short puts by buying stock). Use for long entries, bounces, or stops below.
Call Wall (Gamma Resistance): High call GEX leads to selling on rallies. Good for trims, shorts, or reversals.
Gamma Flip: Pivot for volatility—above: dampened moves (positive GEX, mean reversion); below: amplified trends (negative GEX, momentum).
Vanna Levels: Sensitivity to IV changes; crosses may signal vol shifts.
DEX: Dealer delta neutral—bullish if price below with positive delta.
Max Pain: Price magnet minimizing option payouts.
Implied Move/Confidence Bands: Expected ranges (1σ/2σ/3σ); breakouts suggest extremes.
Liquidity Zones: Wall ranges as price magnets.
Smart Stop Loss: Protective level below supports, IV-adjusted.
C/P Ratio & Skew: Sentiment (high C/P = bullish; high skew = put demand).
Net GEX: Positive = low vol strategies (e.g., condors); negative = momentum trades.
Combine with TA (e.g., volume, trends). High activity strengthens effects; alerts on crosses/proximities for awareness.
Limitations of the TradingView Platform for Data Pulling
Pine Script is sandboxed:
No API calls or internet access (can't fetch options data directly).
Limited to chart/symbol data; no real-time chains.
Inputs static per load; manual updates needed.
Caching not persistent across sessions.
This ensures lightweight scripts but requires external data sourcing.
Creative Solution for On-Demand Data Pulling
Users can use external tools (e.g., Python scripts with yfinance) to fetch/compute data on demand. Generate a formatted string (ticker,timestamp|term1_data|term2_data|...), paste into inputs. Tools can process multiple tickers, cache for ~15-30 min, and output strings for quick portfolio scanning. Run locally or via custom setups for near-real-time updates without platform violations.
For convenience, a free bot is available on my website that accepts commands like !gex to generate both current data strings (for all expiration terms) and historical walls data on demand. This allows users to easily obtain fresh or cached data (refreshed every ~30 min) for pasting into the indicator—ideal for scanning portfolios without manual coding.
Script Functionality Breakdown
Inputs: Data strings (current/historical); term selector (Shortest/Short/Medium/Long); toggles (historical walls, GEX profile, secondaries, vanna, table, max pain, DEX, stop loss, implied move, liquidity, bands); colors/styles.
Parsing: Extracts term-specific data; validates ticker match; gets timestamp for freshness.
Drawing: Dynamic lines/labels (width/color by GEX strength); boxes (moves, zones, bands); clears on updates.
Info Table: Dashboard with status (freshness emoji), Greeks (GEX/delta with emojis), vol (IV/skew), levels (distances), flow (C/P, vol vs 5D).
Historical Walls: Displays past tier-1 walls on daily+ timeframes.
Alerts: 20+ conditions (e.g., near/cross walls, GEX sign change, high IV).
Performance: Efficient for real-time; smart label positioning.
Release Notes
Initial release: Full features including multi-term support, enhanced table with emojis/sentiment, dynamic visuals, smart stop loss.
Data String Format: TICKER,TIMESTAMP|TERM1_DATA|TERM2_DATA|TERM3_DATA|TERM4_DATA Where each TERM_DATA = val0,val1,...,val30 (31 floats: current_price, prev_close, call_wall_1, call_wall_1_gex, ..., low_5d). Historical: TICKER|TERM1_HIST|... where TERM_HIST = date:cw,pw;date:cw,pw;...
Feedback welcome in comments. Educational only—not advice.
First Passage Time - Distribution AnalysisThe First Passage Time (FPT) Distribution Analysis indicator is a sophisticated probabilistic tool that answers one of the most critical questions in trading: "How long will it take for price to reach my target, and what are the odds of getting there first?"
Unlike traditional technical indicators that focus on what might happen, this indicator tells you when it's likely to happen.
Mathematical Foundation: First Passage Time Theory
What is First Passage Time?
First Passage Time (FPT) is a concept in stochastic processes that measures the time it takes for a random process to reach a specific threshold for the first time. Originally developed in physics and mathematics, FPT has applications in:
Quantitative Finance: Option pricing, risk management, and algorithmic trading
Neuroscience: Modeling neural firing patterns
Biology: Population dynamics and disease spread
Engineering: Reliability analysis and failure prediction
The Mathematics Behind It
This indicator uses Geometric Brownian Motion (GBM), the same stochastic model used in the Black-Scholes option pricing formula:
dS = μS dt + σS dW
Where:
S = Asset price
μ = Drift (trend component)
σ = Volatility (uncertainty component)
dW = Wiener process (random walk)
Through Monte Carlo simulation, the indicator runs 1,000+ price path simulations to statistically determine:
When each threshold (+X% or -X%) is likely to be hit
Which threshold is hit first (directional bias)
How often each scenario occurs (probability distribution)
🎯 How This Indicator Works
Core Algorithm Workflow:
Calculate Historical Statistics
Measures recent price volatility (standard deviation of log returns)
Calculates drift (average directional movement)
Annualizes these metrics for meaningful comparison
Run Monte Carlo Simulations
Generates 1,000+ random price paths based on historical behavior
Tracks when each path hits the upside (+X%) or downside (-X%) threshold
Records which threshold was hit first in each simulation
Aggregate Statistical Results
Calculates percentile distributions (10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th)
Computes "first hit" probabilities (upside vs downside)
Determines average and median time-to-target
Visual Representation
Displays thresholds as horizontal lines
Shows gradient risk zones (purple-to-blue)
Provides comprehensive statistics table
📈 Use Cases
1. Options Trading
Selling Options: Determine if your strike price is likely to be hit before expiration
Buying Options: Estimate probability of reaching profit targets within your time window
Time Decay Management: Compare expected time-to-target vs theta decay
Example: You're considering selling a 30-day call option 5% out of the money. The indicator shows there's a 72% chance price hits +5% within 12 days. This tells you the trade has high assignment risk.
2. Swing Trading
Entry Timing: Wait for higher probability setups when directional bias is strong
Target Setting: Use median time-to-target to set realistic profit expectations
Stop Loss Placement: Understand probability of hitting your stop before target
Example: The indicator shows 85% upside probability with median time of 3.2 days. You can confidently enter long positions with appropriate position sizing.
3. Risk Management
Position Sizing: Larger positions when probability heavily favors one direction
Portfolio Allocation: Reduce exposure when probabilities are near 50/50 (high uncertainty)
Hedge Timing: Know when to add protective positions based on downside probability
Example: Indicator shows 55% upside vs 45% downside—nearly neutral. This signals high uncertainty, suggesting reduced position size or wait for better setup.
4. Market Regime Detection
Trending Markets: High directional bias (70%+ one direction)
Range-bound Markets: Balanced probabilities (45-55% both directions)
Volatility Regimes: Compare actual vs theoretical minimum time
Example: Consistent 90%+ bullish bias across multiple timeframes confirms strong uptrend—stay long and avoid counter-trend trades.
First Hit Rate (Most Important!)
Shows which threshold is likely to be hit FIRST:
Upside %: Probability of hitting upside target before downside
Downside %: Probability of hitting downside target before upside
These always sum to 100%
⚠️ Warning: If you see "Low Hit Rate" warning, increase this parameter!
Advanced Parameters
Drift Mode
Allows you to explore different scenarios:
Historical: Uses actual recent trend (default—most realistic)
Zero (Neutral): Assumes no trend, only volatility (symmetric probabilities)
50% Reduced: Dampens trend effect (conservative scenario)
Use Case: Switch to "Zero (Neutral)" to see what happens in a pure volatility environment, useful for range-bound markets.
Distribution Type
Percentile: Shows 10%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 90% levels (recommended for most users)
Sigma: Shows standard deviation levels (1σ, 2σ)—useful for statistical analysis
⚠️ Important Limitations & Best Practices
Limitations
Assumes GBM: Real markets have fat tails, jumps, and regime changes not captured by GBM
Historical Parameters: Uses recent volatility/drift—may not predict regime shifts
No Fundamental Events: Cannot predict earnings, news, or macro shocks
Computational: Runs only on last bar—doesn't give historical signals
Remember: Probabilities are not certainties. Use this indicator as part of a comprehensive trading plan with proper risk management.
Created by: Henrique Centieiro. feedback is more than welcome!
Customizable Dashboard (SIMPLE)This is a custom table where you can track any ticker and it's daily change. color coded to make things easy.
TLM HTF CandlesTLM HTF Candles
Higher timeframe candles displayed on your current chart, optimized for The Lab Model (TLM) trading methodology.
What It Does
Plots up to 6 HTF candles side-by-side on the right of your chart with automatic swing detection, expansion bias coloring, and a quick-reference info table. Watch multiple timeframes at once without switching charts.
Swing Detection - Solid lines for confirmed swings, dashed for potential swings. Detects when HTF levels get swept and rejected.
Expansion Bias - Candles colored green (bullish), red (bearish), or orange (conflicted) based on 3-candle patterns showing expected price expansion.
HTF Info Table - Compact dashboard showing time to close, active swings, and expansion direction for all timeframes. Toggle dark/light mode.
Equilibrium Lines - 50% midpoint from previous candle to current, great for mean reversion targets.
Based on "ICT HTF Candles" by @fadizeidan -
Heavily customized with swing analysis, expansion patterns, and info table for TLM trading concepts.
VWAP Deviation Oscillator [BackQuant]VWAP Deviation Oscillator
Introduction
The VWAP Deviation Oscillator turns VWAP context into a clean, tradeable oscillator that works across assets and sessions. It adapts to your workflow with four VWAP regimes plus two rolling modes, and three deviation metrics: Percent, Absolute, and Z-Score. Colored zones, optional standard deviation rails, and flexible plot styles make it fast to read for both trend following and mean reversion.
What it does
This tool measures how far price is from a chosen VWAP and expresses that gap as an oscillator. You can view the deviation as raw price units, percent, or standardized Z-Score. The plot can be a histogram or a line with optional fills and sigma bands, so you can quickly spot polarity shifts, overbought and oversold conditions, and strength of extension.
VWAP modes track a session VWAP that resets (4H, Daily, Weekly) or a rolling VWAP that updates continuously over a fixed number of bars or days.
Deviation modes let you choose the lens: Percent, Absolute, or Z-Score. Each highlights different aspects of stretch and mean pressure.
Visual encoding uses a 10-zone color palette to grade the magnitude of deviation on both sides of zero.
Volatility guards compute mode-specific sigma so thresholds are stable even when volatility compresses.
Why this works
VWAP is a high signal anchor used by institutions to gauge fair participation. Deviations around VWAP cluster in regimes: mild oscillations within a band, decisive pushes that signal imbalance, and standardized extremes that often precede either continuation or snapback. Expressing that distance as a single time series adds clarity: bias is the oscillator’s sign, risk context is its magnitude, and regime is the way it behaves around sigma lines.
How to use it
Trend following
Favor the side of the zero line. Bullish when the oscillator is above zero and making higher swing highs. Bearish when below zero and making lower swing lows. Use +1 sigma and +2 sigma in your mode as strength tiers. Pullbacks that hold above zero in uptrends, or below zero in downtrends, are often continuation entries.
Mean reversion
Fade stretched readings when structure supports it. Look for tests of +2 sigma to +3 sigma that fail to progress and roll back toward zero, or the mirror on the downside. Z-Score mode is best when you want standardized gates across assets. Percent mode is intuitive for intraday scalps where a given percent stretch tends to mean revert.
Session playbook
Use Daily or Weekly VWAP for intraday or swing context. Rolling modes help when the asset lacks clean session boundaries or when you want a continuous anchor that adapts to liquidity shifts.
Key settings
VWAP computation
VWAP Mode = 4 Hours, Daily, Weekly, Rolling (Bars), Rolling (Days). Session modes reset the VWAP when a new session begins. Rolling modes compute VWAP over a fixed trailing window.
Rolling (Lookback: Bars) controls the trailing bar count when using Rolling (Bars).
Rolling (Lookback: Days) converts days to bars at runtime and uses that trailing span.
Use Close instead of HLC3 switches the price reference. HLC3 is smoother. Close makes the anchor track settlement more tightly.
Deviation measurement
Deviation Mode
Percent : 100 * (Price / VWAP - 1). Good for uniform scaling across instruments.
Absolute : Price - VWAP. Good when price units themselves matter.
Z-Score : Standardizes the absolute residual by its own mean and standard deviation over Z/Std Window . Ideal for cross-asset comparability and regime studies.
Z/Std Window sets the mean and standard deviation window for Z-Score mode.
Volatility controls
Percent Mode Volatility Lookback estimates sigma for percent deviations.
Absolute Mode Volatility Lookback estimates sigma for absolute deviations.
Minimum Sigma Guard (pct pts) prevents the percent sigma from collapsing to near zero in extremely quiet markets.
Visualization
Plot Type = Histogram or Line. Histogram emphasizes impulse and polarity changes. Line emphasizes trend waves and divergences.
Positive Color / Negative Color define the palette for line mode. Histogram uses a 10-bucket gradient automatically.
Show Standard Deviations plots symmetric rails at ±1, ±2, ±3 sigma in the current mode’s units.
Fill Line Oscillator and Fill Opacity add a soft bias band around zero for line mode.
Line Width affects both the oscillator and the sigma rails.
Reading the zones
The oscillator’s color and height map deviation to nine graded buckets on each side of zero, with deeper greens above and deeper reds below. In Percent and Absolute modes, those buckets are scaled by their mode-specific sigma. In Z-Score mode the bucket edges are fixed at 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, and 2.8.
0 to +1 sigma weak positive bias, usually rotational.
+1 to +2 sigma constructive impulse. Pullbacks that hold above zero often continue.
+2 to +3 sigma strong expansion. Watch for either trend continuation or exhaustion tells.
Beyond +3 sigma statistical extreme. Requires structure to avoid fading too soon.
Mirror logic applies on the negative side.
Suggested workflows
Trend continuation checklist
Pick a session VWAP that matches your timeframe, for example Daily for intraday or Weekly for position trades.
Wait for the oscillator to hold the correct side of zero and for a sequence of higher swing lows in the oscillator (uptrend) or lower swing highs (downtrend).
Buy pullbacks that stabilize between zero and +1 sigma in an uptrend. Sell rallies that stabilize between zero and -1 sigma in a downtrend.
Use the next sigma band or a prior price swing as your target reference.
Mean reversion checklist
Switch to Z-Score mode for standardized thresholds.
Identify tests of ±2 sigma to ±3 sigma that fail to extend while price meets support or resistance.
Enter on a polarity change through the prior histogram bar or a small hook in line mode.
Fade back to zero or to the opposite inner band, then reassess.
Notes on the three modes
Percent is easy to reason about when you care about proportional stretch. It is well suited to intraday and multi-asset dashboards.
Absolute tracks cash distance from VWAP. This is useful when instruments have tight ticks and you plan risk in price units.
Z-Score standardizes the residual and is best for quant studies, cross-asset comparisons, and threshold research that must be scale invariant.
What the alerts can tell you
Polarity changes at zero can mark the start or end of a leg.
Crosses of ±1 sigma identify overbought or oversold in the current mode’s units.
Zone changes signal an upgrade or downgrade in deviation strength.
Troubleshooting and edge cases
If your instrument has long flat periods, keep Minimum Sigma Guard above zero in Percent mode so the rails do not vanish.
In Rolling modes, very short windows will respond quickly but can whip around. Session modes smooth this by resetting at well known boundaries.
If Z-Score looks erratic, increase Z/Std Window to stabilize the estimate of mean and sigma for the residual.
Final thoughts
VWAP is the anchor. The deviation oscillator is the narrative. By separating bias, magnitude, and regime into a simple stream you can execute faster and review cleaner. Pick the VWAP mode that matches your horizon, choose the deviation lens that matches your risk framework, and let the color graded zones guide your decisions.
StochRSI + MACD with Fixed TP ExitAutor WickDipper
Liquidity Finder: The liquidity zones are heuristic and based on volume and swing points. You may need to tweak the volumeThreshold and lookback to match the asset's volatility and timeframe.
Timeframe: This script works on any timeframe, but signals may vary in reliability (e.g., higher timeframes like 4H or 1D may reduce noise).
Customization: You can modify signal conditions (e.g., require only RSI or MACD) or add filters like trend direction using moving averages.
Backtesting: Use TradingView's strategy tester to evaluate performance by converting the indicator to a strategy (replace plotshape with strategy.entry/strategy.close).
조건 검색식//@version=5
indicator("조건 검색식", overlay=true)
// ----------------------
// 기본 입력
// ----------------------
shortEmaLen = input.int(112, "단기 EMA")
midEmaLen = input.int(224, "중기 EMA")
longEmaLen = input.int(448, "장기 EMA")
ema5Len = input.int(5, "EMA 5")
ema20Len = input.int(20, "EMA 20")
bbLen = input.int(20, "볼린저 기간")
bbMult = input.float(2.0, "볼린저 배수")
// ----------------------
// 이동평균선
// ----------------------
emaShort = ta.ema(close, shortEmaLen)
emaMid = ta.ema(close, midEmaLen)
emaLong = ta.ema(close, longEmaLen)
ema5 = ta.ema(close, ema5Len)
ema20 = ta.ema(close, ema20Len)
// ----------------------
// 거래량 / 거래대금
// ----------------------
avgVol = ta.sma(volume, 5)
cond_vol = (volume >= 50000 and volume <= 99999999)
cond_val = (avgVol * close >= 50000 and avgVol * close <= 9999999)
// ----------------------
// 캔들 비교
// ----------------------
cond_price = (close < close) // 1봉전 종가 < 현재 종가
// ----------------------
// 이평 조건
// ----------------------
cond_ma_reverse = (emaShort < emaMid and emaMid < emaLong) // 역배열
cond_ma_short = (ema5 > ema20 and ema5 > ema20 ) // 1봉 이상 지속
// ----------------------
// 체결강도 (추정치, 거래량 기준)
// ----------------------
// 체결강도 공식은 증권사마다 다르므로 근사치로 가정: (상승 거래량 비중/총거래량)
// TradingView에서 직접적인 "체결강도"는 제공하지 않음 → 임시로 100% 충족으로 세팅
cond_strength = true // 혹은 커스텀 계산 가능
// ----------------------
// 볼린저밴드 조건
// ----------------------
basis = ta.sma(close, bbLen)
dev = ta.stdev(close, bbLen)
bbUpper = basis + bbMult * dev
// 종가가 상단선 -5% ~ +5% 이내
cond_bb = (close >= bbUpper * 0.95 and close <= bbUpper * 1.05)
// ----------------------
// 일목균형표 (9,26,52)
// ----------------------
conversion = (ta.highest(high,9) + ta.lowest(low,9)) / 2
base = (ta.highest(high,26) + ta.lowest(low,26)) / 2
span1 = (conversion + base) / 2
span2 = (ta.highest(high,52) + ta.lowest(low,52)) / 2
cond_ichimoku = (close > span1 and close > span2)
// ----------------------
// 최종 조건
// ----------------------
condition = cond_vol and cond_val and cond_price and cond_ma_reverse and cond_ma_short and cond_strength and cond_bb and cond_ichimoku
plotshape(condition, title="조건 충족", style=shape.labelup, color=color.green, size=size.small, text="조건OK")
Fib Retrace + Extensions (v6– safe version) v 1🌀 Fib Extension Plus Retracement Strategy: Complete Overview
📊 Purpose and Core Idea
The Fib Extension Plus Retracement Strategy is a hybrid price-action methodology that blends Fibonacci Retracement and Fibonacci Extension tools to map high-probability entry, exit, and target zones within trending markets.
It is designed for precision timing, measured risk exposure, and trend-continuation trading.
By uniting both retracement and extension logic, traders can capture the entire lifecycle of a move — from the pullback phase to the breakout and projected expansion wave.
ICT Suspension BlocksICT Suspension Block (SB) Indicator
The ICT Suspension Block (SB) is a three-candle price action pattern that often act as support or resistance zones. A Suspension Block is a three-candle pattern showing a brief pause in price efficiency before continuation. These zones frequently serve as areas where price may later return, offering traders potential trading opportunities.
Pattern Definition
A Suspension Block forms when three consecutive candles move in the same direction but leave behind a specific body-to-body imbalance. (a gap between the bodies of consecutive candles).
Bullish Suspension Block (+SB):
All three candles are bullish (close > open).
Candle 1 close < Candle 2 open.
Candle 2 close < Candle 3 open.
Zone = from Candle 1 close to Candle 3 open.
Bearish Suspension Block (-SB):
All three candles are bearish (close < open).
Candle 1 close > Candle 2 open.
Candle 2 close > Candle 3 open.
Zone = from Candle 1 close to Candle 3 open.
These zones mark areas where price was temporarily imbalanced. Price often “respects” these levels later, either bouncing from them or breaking through them, which can provide valuable trade context.
Application
Suspension Blocks are used to mark areas where price may later react:
A Bullish SB can act as potential support.
A Bearish SB can act as potential resistance.
The significance of a block depends on market context. Blocks formed during strong, impulsive moves tend to be more meaningful than those in consolidation.
How the Indicator Works
Identifies bullish and bearish suspension blocks using body gap imbalances.
Draws colored zones (green = bullish, red = bearish) directly on the chart.
Extends zones forward until they are inversed by price action.
Once inversed, zones switch to a neutral color, allowing traders to annotate/extend them manually if desired.
Includes Consequent Encroachment (CE) lines (the 50% equilibrium of the block), which many traders use as reaction levels.
Features
Customizable colors for bullish, bearish, and inversed zones
Extend blocks indefinitely forward or limit them to a set number of bars
Adjustable maximum number of displayed blocks for performance control
Consequent Encroachment (CE) (Middle Point, 50%, Equilibrium) line feature
Configurable CE line style, color, and width
How to Use It
Trend Following: Blocks forming in the direction of trend can act as continuation zones.
Reversals: Opposite-direction blocks may signal exhaustion and potential turning points.
Liquidity Levels: CE lines (50% of block) often serve as reaction levels for entries, partials, or stop placement.
Context is Key: Suspension Blocks should not be used in isolation. Combine them with market structure, liquidity pools, or other confluence factors for best results.
Notes
This indicator is intended for technical analysis and research.
It should always be combined with proper risk management and a complete trading plan.
Past market behavior does not guarantee future results.
orderflow, moneyflow, confluence, divergence, momentumorderflow, moneyflow, confluence, divergence, momentum
CVD Pro – Smart Overlay + Signals (with Persist Mode)What this Indicator Does
CVD Pro visualizes Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) data directly on your main price chart — helping you detect real buying vs. selling pressure in real time.
Unlike most CVD scripts that run in a separate subwindow, this one overlays price-mapped CVD curves on the candles themselves for better confluence with market structure and FVG zones.
The script dynamically scales normalized CVD values to the price range and uses adaptive smoothing and deviation bands to highlight shifts in trader behavior.
It also includes automatic bullish/bearish crossover signals, displayed as on-chart labels.
⚙️ Main Features
✅ Price-mapped CVD Overlay
CVD is normalized (Z-score) and projected onto the price chart for easy visual correlation with price structure.
✅ Multi-Timeframe Presets
Three sensitivity presets optimized for different chart environments:
Strict (4H) → Best for macro trends and high-timeframe structure.
Balanced (1H / 30m) → Great for active swing setups.
Sensitive (15m) → Captures short-term intraday reversals.
✅ Dynamic Bands & Smoothing
Deviation bands visualize statistical extremes in delta pressure — helping to identify exhaustion and divergence points.
✅ Smart Buy/Sell Signal Logic
Automatic label triggers when the CVD Overlay crosses its smoothed baseline:
🟢 BULL LONG → Rising CVD above the mean (buyers in control).
🔴 BEAR SHORT → Falling CVD below the mean (sellers in control).
✅ Persist Mode
Toggle to keep the last signal visible until a new one forms — ideal for traders who prefer clean chart annotations without noise.
✅ Clean, Minimal Overlay
Everything happens directly on your chart — no extra windows, no clutter. Designed for use with Smart Money Concepts, Fair Value Gaps (FVGs), or volume imbalance setups.
🧩 Use Case
CVD Pro is designed for traders who:
Use Smart Money Concepts (SMC) or ICT-style trading
Watch for FVG reactions, breaker blocks, and liquidity sweeps
Need to confirm order flow direction or momentum strength
Trade intraday or swing setups with precision entries and clear bias confirmation
⚡ Recommended Settings
4H / 1H: Use Strict mode for major structure and confirmation.
1H / 30m: Balanced mode for clear mid-term trend alignment.
15m: Sensitive mode to catch scalps and lower-TF shifts.
🧠 Pro Tips
Combine with RSI or Market Structure Breaks (MSS) for additional confluence.
A strong CVD divergence near a key FVG or 0.5–0.705 Fibonacci zone often signals reversal.
Persistent CVD crossover + price structure break = high-probability entry.
🧩 Credits
Created by Patrick S. ("Nova Labs")
Concept inspired by professional order-flow analytics and adaptive Z-Score normalization.
Would you like me to write a shorter “public summary” paragraph (for the short description at the top of TradingView, the one-liner users see before expanding)?
It’s usually a 2–3 sentence hook like:
“Overlay-based CVD indicator that merges volume delta with price structure. Detect true buying/selling pressure using adaptive normalization, deviation bands, and clean bullish/bearish crossover signals.”
Nifty Options 3Point SL !!Results will Shock u!!OMG!!Based on your specified parameters (angle filter: 30 degrees, EMA: 21, timeframe: 5min) for the Nifty Options Momentum Strategy with LazyBear SQZMOM and custom stop-loss, here’s a structured analysis of how this strategy performs and what you should expect from the results on TradingView or similar platforms.
Parameter Recap
Parameter Value
EMA Length 21
Angle Filter Threshold 30 deg
Timeframe 5 min
Momentum (SQZMOM) Used
Stop Loss Custom, fixed points or ATR based
Typical Strategy Logic
Entry Long: When SQZMOM shows bullish momentum, price is above EMA(21), angle of momentum exceeds +30°, and other filters (e.g., volume) confirm strength.
Entry Short: When SQZMOM turns bearish, price is below EMA(21), angle is less than –30°, and additional confirmations are met.
Stop Loss: Set by custom points or dynamic ATR.
Strategy runs and alerts on all valid entries/exits.
Typical Performance Findings (Backtest Example)
1. Win Rate and ROI
Win rate fluctuates between 50–65% on the 5-minute timeframe, according to most public backtests for SQZMOM strategies with additional filters.
ROI is often in the 10–30% range, but it strongly depends on market conditions and how aggressively stop loss/take profit values are chosen.
2. Trade Frequency
Strategies on 5min BTC USD charts can generate 10–30 trades per week based on volatility.
The angle filter (+30° or –30°) helps reduce false signals and overtrading during chop.
3. Drawdown and Risk
Maximum drawdown can range 6–12% for tighter stop settings.
Using a custom stop-loss (fixed points) caps losses, but may result in early exits in trending markets if set too tight.
4. Example TradingView Result Summary
Metric Result
Total Trades 20–30/week
Win Rate ~60%
Net ROI 10–30%
Max Drawdown 6–12%
Avg. Win/Loss Ratio 1.1–1.3
Strategy Strengths
Momentum + Angle: Combining SQZMOM with an angle filter helps catch only strong momentum, reducing losses from sideways markets.
Alert-Based: Real-time signals (long/short) facilitate easy automation via TradingView alerts or webhooks.
Customizable SL/TP: Adapts to fast or slow markets.
Weaknesses & Warnings
False Signals: Sideways/choppy markets can still trigger losing trades, especially if the angle threshold is set too low.
Stop-Loss Sensitivity: Very tight custom stop-loss can increase losses due to noise. Adaptive ATR-based stop-loss is sometimes preferable.
Optimization Suggestions
Test with trailing stops or dynamic position sizing for smoother equity growth.
Overlay RSI or another momentum filter for additional confirmation.
Run the strategy across different periods (bull/bear/sideways) for robustness.
Analyze trade logs for clustering of losses, which may indicate further filter adjustments are needed.
Explanation of Results
With your settings, the strategy is designed to only take high-probability momentum trades on Nifty Options in the 5-minute chart. The EMA(21) ensures trend alignment; the SQZMOM histogram and angle threshold confirm genuine momentum bursts. Backtest logs typically report moderate trade counts and can provide a solid edge in trending markets, but rapid market reversals can still cause clusters of small stops.
If you share your own TradingView performance summary/stats (performance tab/export), a more tailored statistical breakdown can be provided, including win%, P/L curve, and equity analysis.
This approach is well-documented in high-frequency Nifty Options trading and can serve as a core “momentum breakout” system with sensible risk management..
⦁ Disclaimer: The content in this Article is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. We are not SEBI-registered advisors. Options trading is highly volatile and carries significant risk. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions.. About Us: We provide educational content on trading strategies and market analysis.
Connect With Us: For business inquiries, email us at: customercare@eamzn.in
For our trading course,
contact us on WhatsApp:
Backtesting Services: We offer strategy backtesting on TradingView.
Contact us for details.
Triple Gaussian Smoothed Ribbon [BOSWaves]Triple Gaussian Smoothed Ribbon – Adaptive Gaussian Framework
Overview
The Triple Gaussian Smoothed Ribbon is a next-generation market visualization framework built on the principles of Gaussian filtering - a mathematical model from digital signal processing designed to remove noise while preserving the integrity of the underlying trend.
Unlike conventional moving averages that suffer from phase lag and overreaction to volatility spikes, Gaussian smoothing produces a symmetrical, low-lag curve that isolates meaningful directional shifts with exceptional clarity.
Developed under the Adaptive Gaussian Framework, this indicator extends the classical Gaussian model into a multi-stage smoothing and visualization system. By layering three progressive Gaussian filters and rendering their interactions as a gradient-based ribbon field, it translates market energy into a coherent, visually structured trend environment. Each ribbon layer represents a progressively smoothed component of price motion, producing a high-fidelity gradient field that evolves in sync with real-time trend strength and momentum.
The result is a uniquely fluid trend and reversal detection system - one that feels organic, adapts seamlessly across timeframes, and reveals hidden transitions in market structure long before traditional indicators confirm them.
Theoretical Foundation
The Gaussian filter, derived from the Gaussian function developed by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1809, operates on the principle of weighted symmetry, assigning higher importance to central price data while tapering influence toward historical extremes following a bell-curve distribution. This symmetrical design minimizes phase distortion and smooths without introducing lag spikes — a stark contrast to exponential or linear filters that sacrifice temporal accuracy for responsiveness.
By cascading three Gaussian stages in sequence, the indicator creates a multi-frequency decomposition of price action:
The first stage captures immediate trend transitions.
The second absorbs mid-term volatility ripples.
The third stabilizes structural directionality.
The final composite ribbon reflects the market’s dominant frequency - a smoothed yet reactive trend spine - while an independent, heavier Gaussian smoothing serves as a reference layer to gauge whether the primary motion leads or lags relative to broader market structure.
This multi-layered Gaussian framework effectively replicates the behavior of a signal-processing filter bank: isolating meaningful cyclical movements, suppressing random noise, and revealing phase shifts with minimal delay.
How It Works
Triple Gaussian Core
Price data is passed through three successive Gaussian smoothing stages, each refining the trend further and removing higher-frequency distortions.
The result is a fluid, continuously adaptive baseline that responds naturally to directional changes without overshooting or flattening key inflection points.
Adaptive Ribbon Architecture
The indicator visualizes its internal dynamics through a five-layer gradient ribbon. Each layer represents a progressively delayed Gaussian curve, creating a color field that dynamically shifts between bullish and bearish tones.
Expanding ribbons indicate accelerating momentum and trend conviction.
Compressing ribbons reflect consolidation and volatility contraction.
The smooth color gradient provides a real-time depiction of energy buildup or dissipation within the trend, making it visually clear when the market is entering a state of expansion, transition, or exhaustion.
Momentum-Weighted Opacity
Ribbon transparency adjusts according to normalized momentum strength.
As trend force builds, colors intensify and layers become more opaque, signifying conviction.
When momentum wanes, ribbons fade - an early visual cue for potential reversals or pauses in trend continuation.
Candle Gradient Integration
Optional candle coloring ties the chart’s candles to the prevailing Gaussian gradient, allowing traders to view raw price action and smoothed wave dynamics as a unified system.
This integration produces a visually coherent chart environment that communicates directional intent instantly.
Signal Detection Logic
Directional cues emerge when the smoother, broader Gaussian curve crosses the faster-reacting Gaussian line, marking structural inflection points in the filtered trend.
Bullish shifts : short-term momentum transitions upward through the long-term baseline after a localized trough.
Bearish shifts : momentum declines through the baseline following a local peak.
To maintain integrity in choppy markets, the framework applies a trend-strength and separation filter, which blocks weak or overlapping conditions where movement lacks conviction.
Interpretation
The Triple Gaussian Smoothed Ribbon provides a layered, intuitive read on market structure:
Trend Continuation : Expanding ribbons with deep color intensity confirm directional strength.
Reversal Phases : Color gradients flip direction, indicating a phase shift or exhaustion point.
Compression Zones : Tight, pale ribbons reveal equilibrium phases often preceding breakouts.
Momentum Divergence : Fading color intensity despite continued price movement signals weakening conviction.
These transitions mirror the natural ebb and flow of market energy - captured through the Gaussian filter’s ability to represent smooth curvature without distortion.
Strategy Integration
Trend Following
Engage during strong directional expansions. When ribbons widen and color gradients intensify, the trend is accelerating with high confidence.
Reversal Identification
Monitor for full gradient inversion and fading momentum opacity. These conditions often precede transitional phases and early reversals.
Breakout Anticipation
Flat, compressed ribbons signal low volatility and energy buildup. A sudden gradient expansion with renewed opacity confirms breakout initiation.
Multi-Timeframe Alignment
Use higher timeframes to establish directional bias and lower timeframes for entry during compression-to-expansion transitions.
Technical Implementation Details
Triple Gaussian Stack : Sequential smoothing stages produce low-lag, high-purity signals.
Adaptive Ribbon Rendering : Five-layer Gaussian visualization for gradient-based trend depth.
Momentum Normalization : Opacity dynamically tied to trend strength and volatility context.
Consolidation Filter : Suppresses false signals in low-energy or range-bound conditions.
Integrated Candle Mode : Optional color synchronization with underlying gradient flow.
Alert System : Built-in notifications for bullish and bearish transitions.
This structure blends the precision of digital signal processing with the readability of visual market analysis, creating a clean but information-rich framework.
Optimal Application Parameters
Asset Recommendations
Cryptocurrency : Higher smoothing and sigma for stability under volatility.
Forex : Balanced parameters for cycle identification and reduced noise.
Equities : Moderate Gaussian length for responsive yet stable trend reads.
Indices & Futures : Longer smoothing periods for structural confirmation.
Timeframe Recommendations
Scalping (1 - 5m) : Use shorter smoothing for fast reactivity.
Intraday (15m - 1h) : Mid-length Gaussian chain for balance.
Swing (4h - 1D) : Prioritize clarity and opacity-driven trend phases.
Position (Daily - Weekly) : Longer smoothing to capture macro rhythm.
Performance Characteristics
Most Effective In :
Trending markets with recurring volatility cycles.
Transitional phases where early directional confirmation is crucial.
Less Effective In:
Ultra-low volume markets with erratic tick data.
Random, micro-chop conditions with no structural flow.
Integration Guidelines
Pair with volatility or volume expansion tools for enhanced breakout confirmation.
Use ribbon compression to anticipate volatility shifts.
Align entries with gradient expansion in the dominant color direction.
Scale position size relative to opacity strength and ribbon width.
Disclaimer
The Triple Gaussian Smoothed Ribbon – Adaptive Gaussian Framework is designed as a signal visualization and trend interpretation tool, not a standalone trading system. Its accuracy depends on appropriate parameter tuning, contextual confirmation, and disciplined risk management. It should be applied as part of a comprehensive technical or algorithmic trading strategy.
ダウ理論 Dow Theory – Slim HH/LL Labels + BOS/CHOCH + Trend (TAKA)ダウ理論の相場構造を“見える化”するインジケーター。
HH/LL(必要ならHL/LH)を自動ラベル化+ジグザグ描画、BOS/CHOCHを検出。
右上に Uptrend / Downtrend / Range を常時表示。全時間足・全銘柄対応。
■主な機能
・HH/LL(間引き可)+ジグザグ
・BOS(Break of Structure)/ CHOCH(転換)通知
・小波の自動フィルタ:変化率(%) と ATR×
・ADXフィルタでレンジ時の誤判定を抑制
・ライト/ダーク両モード視認性調整
■使い方(主要パラメータ)
・Pivot left/right:スイング感度(数値↑=ゆっくり&精度高め)
・Only HH/LL:要所だけ表示
・Min % / ATR×:小さすぎる波を間引き
・ADX 閾値:20〜25推奨(レンジ多い銘柄は上げる)
・表示ラベル上限:古いラベルを自動整理
■注意
・ピボットは right 本分が経過してから確定(確定足ベース)
・アラートは「Any alert()」で有効化
押し目買い/戻り売りの型づくり、構造学習、シナリオ共有に。
Granville × Dow Theory 併用推奨。
上位足でEMAトレンド(20/30/40)を確認、
下位足では本インジのHL/LH→HH/LLの継続サインを待って、EMA帯の押し/戻りで入る。
=グランビル#2(押し目買い)/#6(戻り売り)を“構造+平均線”の合流で狙う運用。
Dow Theory structure visualizer (indicator, not a strategy).
Auto labels HH/LL (optional HL/LH), draws a zigzag, detects BOS/CHOCH,
and shows Uptrend/Downtrend/Range at the top-right. Works on all timeframes & symbols.
■ Features
- HH/LL labels (filterable) + zigzag
- BOS (Break of Structure) / CHOCH alerts
- Noise filtering by % change and ATR multiplier
- ADX filter to suppress signals during ranges
- Optimized for light/dark modes
■ How to use (key inputs)
- Pivot left/right: swing sensitivity (higher = slower/cleaner)
- Only HH/LL: show key swings only
- Min % / ATR×: ignore tiny swings
- ADX threshold: 20–25 recommended
- Max labels: auto prune old labels
■ Notes
- Pivots confirm after ‘right’ bars (confirmed on closed bars)
- Enable alerts via “Any alert()”
Ideal for buy-the-dip / sell-the-rally planning and structure training
Granville × Dow Theory recommended.
Confirm the higher-timeframe EMA trend (20/30/40), then on the lower timeframe wait for this indicator’s continuation signal—HL→HH in uptrends or LH→LL in downtrends—and enter on pullbacks/returns to the EMA band.
In short, target Granville #2 (buy the dip) and #6 (sell the rally) at the confluence of structure + moving averages
Candle Color [AY¹]Visually highlight specific time periods with custom colors on intraday charts.
Ideal for session-based traders who want to emphasize New York, London or any custom trading hours. Developed by AY¹
Candle Color Highlighter
A simple yet powerful intraday visualization tool that colors candles or chart background during your chosen trading sessions.
Perfect for traders who rely on time-based confluences — such as ICT, SMC, or session scalping frameworks.
🔧 Key Features
✅ Highlight up to four custom time periods (e.g. London Open, NY Open, Lunch Hour, etc.)
✅ Supports multiple highlight styles:
• Bar Color only
• Background only
• Both
✅ Full timezone control (Exchange, UTC, New York, London, Tokyo, or custom UTC+3)
✅ Works on all intraday timeframes or only those you select (1m–4h).
✅ Optional labels marking session starts.
✅ Integrated alerts when any period becomes active.
✅ Informative status table showing timezone, timeframe, and active period.
🕒 Use Cases
Highlight New York Killzone (07:30–09:30) or London Open (02:00–03:00)
Separate different liquidity windows
Emphasize your backtest periods
Combine with volume, displacement, or structure indicators for time-based confluence setups
🎨 Customization
Each of the four configurable periods allows you to choose:
Start/End time
Custom color and transparency
Session label visibility
Highlight style preference
💡 Example Setup
Period Session Time Color Notes
Period 1 02:00–03:00 Magenta London Killzone
Period 2 07:30–08:30 Yellow NY Pre-market
Period 3 08:30–09:30 Blue NY Open
Period 4 09:30–10:00 Green Initial Balance
RSI VWAP v1 [JopAlgo]RSI VWAP v1 — the classic RSI, made a bit smarter and volume-aware
We know there’s nothing new under the sun and the original RSI already does a great job. But we’re always chasing small, practical improvements—so here’s our take on RSI. Same core idea, clearer visuals, and the option to make it volume-oriented via VWAP smoothing. Prefer the traditional feel? SMA and EMA are still here—pick and compare what fits your market and timeframe. We hope this version genuinely makes your decisions easier.
What you’ll see
The RSI line with 70 / 50 / 30 rails and subtle background.
A smoothing line you can choose: VWAP, SMA, or EMA (drawn over RSI).
Shading that shows RSI vs. its smoothing (above = green tone, below = red tone).
Optional OB/OS highlight (only the portion above 70 / below 30).
Optional divergence detection & alerts (off by default to keep things light).
What’s new, and why it helps
1) VWAP-based RSI smoothing
Instead of smoothing RSI with a plain MA, you can use VWAP computed on RSI. That brings participation (volume) into the picture, which often reads momentum quality better—especially in crypto or during news hours.
2) Adaptive blending for stability
Low-volume periods: gently blends VWAP → EMA so signals don’t get brittle when participation is thin.
Volume spikes (anti-auction): tempers overreactions by blending toward EMA when z-score of volume is extreme.
Reliability guard: if volume looks unreliable, the script can auto-fallback to EMA to keep readings consistent.
3) Clean, readable visuals
A quick glance tells you regime (50 line), trigger (RSI vs. its smoothing), and stretch (70/30). No clutter.
4) Divergence on demand
Regular bullish/bearish divergence detection and alerts are opt-in. If you use them, toggle on; if not, the indicator stays lightweight.
Read it fast (checklist)
Regime: RSI ≥ 50 = bullish bias; ≤ 50 = bearish bias.
Trigger: look for RSI crossing its smoothing in the direction of the regime.
Stretch: near 70/30, avoid chasing; prefer a retest/hold.
Volume context: if the panel falls back to EMA, treat the flow signal as less reliable for the moment.
Simple playbook
Trend-pullback (continuation)
RSI ≥ 50 and RSI crosses up its smoothing → long bias.
Best at real levels (see “Location first” below), not in the middle of nowhere.
Reclaim / reject at a level
Near 70, weak candles and RSI back under its smoothing → mean-revert toward the middle.
Mirror this near 30 for longs.
Divergence as a secondary check
Start with regime + trigger; use divergence only as extra confirmation, especially on 4H/D.
Location first, always
Your timing improves dramatically at objective references: Volume Profile v3.2 (VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs) and Anchored VWAP (session/weekly/event).
No level, no trade. RSI helps time, levels define edge.
Settings that actually matter
RSI Length (default 14)
Lower = faster, noisier; higher = smoother, fewer signals.
Smoothing Type
EMA: fastest trigger; good for intraday.
SMA: calmer bias; popular for swing.
VWAP: volume-weighted RSI baseline; great when participation matters.
VWAP Length & adaptive blend
Too jittery? lengthen VWAP or reduce max blend.
Too sluggish? shorten VWAP or allow a bit more blend.
Anti-auction Z-score thresholds
Higher values = intervenes less often; lower = tames spikes sooner.
Divergence toggle
Enable only if you actually want divergence markers/alerts.
Signal gating (ignore first bars)
Markets can be noisy right after sessions turn. Delay signals a few bars if you prefer clean reads.
Starter presets
Scalp (1–5m): RSI 9–12, EMA smoothing, short lengths.
Intraday (15m–1H): RSI 10–14, EMA or VWAP smoothing.
Swing (4H–1D): RSI 14–20, SMA or VWAP, modest blend.
Works even better with other tools
Volume Profile v3.2: take triggers at VAH/VAL/POC/LVNs; target HVNs or prior swing.
Anchored VWAP: clean reclaims/rejections plus RSI regime + trigger = higher-quality entries.
(Optional) CVDv1: if aggressor flow aligns with your RSI signal, conviction improves.
Common mistakes this version helps avoid
Taking every RSI cross without levels.
Chasing near 70/30 without a retest.
Over-trusting RSI during extreme volume spikes or illiquid patches (the blend/fallback guards against this).
Disclaimer
This indicator and write-up are for educational purposes only and not financial advice. Trading involves risk; results vary by market, instrument, and settings. Backtest first, act at defined levels, and manage risk. No guarantees or warranties are provided.
☸HH/LL & Support/Resistance Strategy [NHP]🔶This script finds pivot highs and pivot lows then calculates higher highs & lower lows. And also it calculates support/resistance by using HH-HL-LL-LH points.
🔶Generally HH and HL shows up-trend, LL and LH shows down-trend.
🔶If price breaks resistance levels it means the trend is up or if price breaks support level it means the trend is down, so the script changes bar color blue or black. if there is up-trend then bar color is blue, or if down-trend then bar color is black. also as you can see support and resistance levels change dynamically.
🔶If you use smaller numbers for left/right bars then it will be more sensitive.
🔶All content provided is for informational & educational purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Aggression Bulbs v3.1 (Sessions + Bias, fixed)EYLONAggression Bulbs v3.2 (Sessions + Bias + Volume Surge)
This indicator highlights aggressive buy and sell activity during the London and New York sessions, using volume spikes and candle body dominance to detect institutional momentum.
⚙️ Main Logic
Compares each candle’s volume vs average volume (Volume Surge).
Checks body size vs full candle range to detect strong directional moves.
Uses an EMA bias filter to align signals with the current trend.
Displays green bubbles for aggressive buyers and red bubbles for aggressive sellers.
🕐 Sessions
London: 08:00–12:59 UTC+1
New York: 14:00–18:59 UTC+1
(Backgrounds: Yellow = London, Orange = New York)
📊 How to Read
🟢 Green bubble below bar → Aggressive BUY candle (strong demand).
🔴 Red bubble above bar → Aggressive SELL candle (strong supply).
Bubble size = relative strength (volume × candle dominance).
Use in confluence with key POI zones, volume profile, or delta clusters.
⚠️ Tips
Use on 1m–15m charts for scalping or intraday analysis.
Combine with your session bias or FVG zones for higher accuracy.
Set alerts when score ≥ threshold to catch early momentum.