Rolling Midpoints of Price vs 50% FibThis script overlays two complementary midpoint lines on your chart to reveal evolving bias, structural imbalances, and zones of mean reversion:
🔸 The Price Midpoint tracks a dynamic center based on the raw price range over a user-defined lookback.
🔸 The Fib Midpoint is calculated from the most recent confirmed swing high and low, forming a live 50% Fibonacci retracement — then smoothed for trend stability.
📘 What Is Mean Reversion, and Why Midpoints Matter?
Markets often oscillate between periods of trend and consolidation. Mean reversion refers to the tendency of price to return to a “fair value” after stretching too far in one direction. The Price Midpoint captures this range-based balance, while the Fib Midpoint anchors to structural swing levels. When price strays far from both, it may be overextended — setting the stage for pullbacks or reversion. When price hovers between or tests both midlines, it reflects balance or indecision. EquiZone helps visualize this dynamic, offering traders real-time insight into whether price is moving with strength, fading, or snapping back to equilibrium.
🔍 Concept Breakdown
➖Price Midpoint – A rolling midpoint between the highest high and lowest low over a user-defined lookback. Think of it as a range-weighted equilibrium.
➖Fib Midpoint – A dynamic 50% Fibonacci retracement between the most recent confirmed swing high and swing low (based on pivot logic), smoothed over time for stability.
➖Color-coded Fills & Bar Colors – Highlight confluence and divergence between the two midpoints, offering intuitive visual cues on trend alignment or structural disagreement.
🎯 Why It’s Useful
➖Spot consolidation zones and structural inflection points
➖Detect hidden divergence between price action and swing structure
➖Use midpoint alignment as a trend confirmation filter
➖Identify mean reversion setups when price strays too far from both midlines
➖Visualize market equilibrium across two complementary perspectives
⚙️ Customizable Features
➖Independent lookbacks for both midpoints
➖Toggle fill shading and adjust color schemes
➖Choose from multiple bar color modes (Close, HL2, OHLC3, OHLC4)
➖Control pivot sensitivity via left/right bar windows
➖Select pivot source: high, low, or close
🧠 How to Use
➖When Price Mid > Fib Mid, momentum may be outrunning structure → bullish extension
➖When Fib Mid > Price Mid, structure leads but price lags → bearish potential or fading momentum
➖When the two lines converge, it signals a zone of balance or potential breakout setup
➖Use bar colors to confirm whether price is leading or following structure
🔧 This isn’t just a visual overlay — it’s a structure-aware bias engine.
Best For:
📈 Trend-followers seeking confirmation between price action and structure
🔄 Reversal traders watching for midpoint divergence
📊 Range traders identifying dynamic fair-value zones
🔍 Price-action analysts who want a clean, non-lagging context layer
➡️ Built for clarity and speed, EquiZone adds zero clutter and works seamlessly across all timeframes and asset types. It pairs especially well with support/resistance zones, trendlines, Fibonacci ladders, and price action patterns.
📌 Final Note:
While Rolling Midpoints provides insight into market balance and directional bias, no single indicator should be traded in isolation. For best results, combine it with contextual tools such as trend structure, volume analysis, higher-timeframe mapping, and clear entry/exit frameworks. Use this as a bias confirmation tool, not a trigger by itself.
Trend Analysis
RS Alpha by The Noiseless TraderRS Alpha by The Noiseless Trader plots a clean, benchmark‑relative strength line for any symbol and (optionally) a mean line to assess trend and momentum in relative performance. It’s designed for uncluttered, professional RS analysis and works across any timeframe.
Compare any symbol vs a benchmark (default: NSE:NIFTY).
Optional log‑normalized RS for return‑aware comparisons.
Optional RS Mean with trend coloring (rising/falling).
Optional RS Trend zero‑line coloring based on short‑range slope.
Lightweight alerts for rising/falling RS mean.
Tip: Use RS to identify leaders (RS > 0 with rising mean) and laggards (RS < 0 with falling mean), then align setups with your price action rules.
Reading the indicator
Leadership: RS > 0 and RS Mean rising → outperformance vs benchmark.
Weakness: RS < 0 and RS Mean falling → underperformance vs benchmark.
Inflections: Watch RS crossing above/below its Mean for early shifts.
Zero‑line context: With RS Trend on, the zero line subtly reflects short‑term slope (green for positive, maroon for negative).
Alerts
Rising Strength – RS Mean turning/remaining upward.
Declining Strength – RS Mean turning/remaining downward.
(Use these as context; execute entries on your price‑action rules.)
Best practices
Pair RS with your trend/structure rules (e.g., higher highs + RS leadership).
For sectors/baskets, keep the Comparative Symbol consistent to rank peers.
Log‑normalized RS helps when comparing assets with very different volatilities or large base effects.
Test multiple length and Mean settings; 60 is a balanced default for swing/positional work.
Credits
Original concept & code: © bharatTrader
Modifications & refinements: The Noiseless Trader
Market Structures by The Noiseless TraderMarket Structure by The Noiseless Trader is an indicator that highlights simple candle-based market structure patterns: Market Structure Low (MSL) and Market Structure High (MSH) . It is designed to make these shifts visible directly on the chart.
Pattern Logic
MSL (Market Structure Low)
Candle 2: Bearish
Candle 1: Bearish, closing below Candle 2’s close
Candle 0: Bullish, closing above Candle 1’s open
Candle 0 must also have a minimum body size (default = 2%)
MSH (Market Structure High)
Candle 2: Bullish
Candle 1: Bullish, closing above Candle 2’s close
Candle 0: Bearish, closing below Candle 1’s open
Candle 0 must also have a minimum body size (default = 2%)
Features
Label plotting: When a pattern forms, the script places an “MSL” or “MSH” label slightly offset from Candle 0 so that the signal is visible but does not overlap the bar.
Bar coloring: Optionally, the script colors the signal candles for faster visual recognition (green for MSL, red for MSH).
Repaint protection : A setting allows the user to confirm signals only on bar close. This ensures the label does not disappear once plotted, though it delays the signal until the candle closes.
Customizable inputs: Users can set the minimum body size threshold (in % of price) and adjust the label offset distance to their preference.
Alerts: TradingView alerts can be created for both MSL and MSH events, making it possible to receive notifications when patterns appear.
How to Use
MSL labels mark potential swing lows where bearish pressure is followed by a bullish reversal.
MSH labels mark potential swing highs where bullish pressure is followed by a bearish reversal.
These patterns are most useful for studying shifts in short-term trend structure. Traders can monitor them as potential areas of interest, but they are not standalone entry or exit signals.
This indicator should be used as part of a broader trading framework. For example, some traders may combine MSL/MSH with trend filters, higher-timeframe analysis, or support/resistance zones or even classical pattern clubbed with MSL/MSH.
Notes
This tool highlights specific three-candle formations. It does not generate buy/sell recommendations.
It is intended for educational and analytical purposes only.
Past appearances of MSL or MSH patterns do not guarantee future performance.
Always confirm with your own market analysis before taking trading decisions.
Developed by The Noiseless Trader .
50% of Previous 1H Candle (Color Logic)📌 Script Title: 50% Midpoint of Previous 1H Candle (Color Coded)
📝 Description:
This indicator draws a horizontal line at the 50% (midpoint) of the most recently closed 1-hour candle, helping traders visualize intraday support/resistance and sentiment bias.
🔹 Key Features:
Plots the midpoint of the last 1H candle as a horizontal line.
Color-coded line and label:
🟢 Green: Previous candle was bullish
🔴 Red: Previous candle was bearish
⚪ Gray: Neutral (doji or equal open/close)
Displays the exact price level with a floating label.
Works on any lower timeframe chart (e.g., 5m, 15m, 30m).
Automatically updates every hour after the 1H candle closes.
📈 Use Cases:
Trade around the 1H midpoint as a dynamic pivot zone.
Confirm or fade price breakouts/rejections at this level.
Use it with trendlines, supply/demand zones, or VWAP.
🔍 Technical Notes:
The midpoint is calculated using:
Midpoint = (High + Low) / 2
from the most recent closed 1H candle.
Color logic is based on whether the 1H candle closed above or below its open.
🚀 Enhancement Ideas (future updates):
Add optional alerts on cross of the midpoint.
Show multiple historical midpoint levels.
Input toggle to enable/disable color coding.
Whether you’re scalping intraday or watching for reaction zones, this tool gives you a clean, real-time level to anchor your trades around.
Happy trading! 💹
— Built with ❤️ in Pine Script v6
Triple Tap Sniper Triple Tap Sniper v3 – EMA Retest Precision System
Triple Tap Sniper is a precision trading tool built around the 21, 34, and 55 EMAs, designed to capture high-probability retests after EMA crosses. Instead of chasing the first breakout candle, the system waits for the first pullback into the EMA21 after a trend-confirming cross — the spot where professional traders often enter.
🔑 Core Logic
EMA Alignment → Trend defined by EMA21 > EMA34 > EMA55 (bullish) or EMA21 < EMA34 < EMA55 (bearish).
Cross Detection → Signals are only armed after a fresh EMA cross.
Retest Entry → Buy/Sell signals fire only on the first retest of EMA21, with trend still intact.
Pro Filters →
📊 Higher Timeframe Confirmation: Aligns signals with larger trend.
📈 ATR Volatility Filter: Blocks weak signals in low-vol chop.
📏 EMA Spread Filter: Ignores tiny “fake crosses.”
🕯️ Price Action Filter: Requires a proper wick rejection for valid entries.
🚀 Why Use Triple Tap Sniper?
✅ Filters out most false signals from sideways markets.
✅ Focuses only on clean trend continuations after pullbacks.
✅ Beginner-friendly visuals (Buy/Sell labels) + alert-ready for automation.
✅ Flexible: works across multiple timeframes & asset classes (stocks, crypto, forex).
⚠️ Notes
This is a signal indicator, not a full strategy. For backtesting and optimization, convert to a strategy and adjust filters per market/timeframe.
No indicator guarantees profits — use with sound risk management.
MA Median Crossover | MisinkoMasterThe MA Median Crossover is a new trend analysis tool designed to help traders catch trends with less noisy, more accuracy and speed.
While simple, this effective indicator can improve your strategy more than you might think.
How does it work?
1. Get user defined input
=> set up your indicator to your likings, and make it capture what you want it to
2. Calculate the Moving Average and Median Base
=> this is the foundation of the indicator
3. Smooth the median
=> less noise, more accuracy, just like that!
4. Compare the MA to the smoothed Median
=> If the MA > smoothed Median, it signals an uptrend, if the MA < smoothed Median,
it signals a downtrend.
Yep, that is how simple it is.
Final note:
Changing the MA type is very influencial, so watch out when changing them.
Enjoy G´s!
Sentinel 5 — OHL daybreak signals [KedArc Quant]Overview
Sentinel 5 plots the first-bar high/low of each trading session and gives clean, rules-based signals in two ways:
1) OHL Setups at the close of the first bar (Open equals/near High for potential short; Open equals/near Low for potential long).
2) Breakout Signals later in the session when price breaks the first-bar High/Low, with optional body/penetration filters.
Basic workflow
1. Wait for the first session bar to finish.
*If O≈H (optionally by proximity) → short setup. •
*If O≈L → long setup. • If neither happens, optionally allow later breakouts.
2. Optional: Act only on breakouts that penetrate a minimum % of that bar’s range/body.
3. Skip the day automatically if the first bar is abnormally large (marubozu-like / extreme ATR / outsized vs yesterday).
Signals & Markers
Markers on the chart:
▲ O=L (exact) / O near L (proximity) – long setup at first-bar close.
▼ O=H (exact) / O near H (proximity) – short setup at first-bar close.
▲ Breakout Long – later bar breaks above first-bar High meeting your penetration rule.
▼ Breakout Short – later bar breaks below first-bar Low meeting your penetration rule.
Martingale Strategy Simulator [BackQuant]Martingale Strategy Simulator
Purpose
This indicator lets you study how a martingale-style position sizing rule interacts with a simple long or short trading signal. It computes an equity curve from bar-to-bar returns, adapts position size after losing streaks, caps exposure at a user limit, and summarizes risk with portfolio metrics. An optional Monte Carlo module projects possible future equity paths from your realized daily returns.
What a martingale is
A martingale sizing rule increases stake after losses and resets after a win. In its classical form from gambling, you double the bet after each loss so that a single win recovers all prior losses plus one unit of profit. In markets there is no fixed “even-money” payout and returns are multiplicative, so an exact recovery guarantee does not exist. The core idea is unchanged:
Lose one leg → increase next position size
Lose again → increase again
Win → reset to the base size
The expectation of your strategy still depends on the signal’s edge. Sizing does not create positive expectancy on its own. A martingale raises variance and tail risk by concentrating more capital as a losing streak develops.
What it plots
Equity – simulated portfolio equity including compounding
Buy & Hold – equity from holding the chart symbol for context
Optional helpers – last trade outcome, current streak length, current allocation fraction
Optional diagnostics – daily portfolio return, rolling drawdown, metrics table
Optional Monte Carlo probability cone – p5, p16, p50, p84, p95 aggregate bands
Model assumptions
Bar-close execution with no slippage or commissions
Shorting allowed and frictionless
No margin interest, borrow fees, or position limits
No intrabar moves or gaps within a bar (returns are close-to-close)
Sizing applies to equity fraction only and is capped by your setting
All results are hypothetical and for education only.
How the simulator applies it
1) Directional signal
You pick a simple directional rule that produces +1 for long or −1 for short each bar. Options include 100 HMA slope, RSI above or below 50, EMA or SMA crosses, CCI and other oscillators, ATR move, BB basis, and more. The stance is evaluated bar by bar. When the stance flips, the current trade ends and the next one starts.
2) Sizing after losses and wins
Position size is a fraction of equity:
Initial allocation – the starting fraction, for example 0.15 means 15 percent of equity
Increase after loss – multiply the next allocation by your factor after a losing leg, for example 2.00 to double
Reset after win – return to the initial allocation
Max allocation cap – hard ceiling to prevent runaway growth
At a high level the size after k consecutive losses is
alloc(k) = min( cap , base × factor^k ) .
In practice the simulator changes size only when a leg ends and its PnL is known.
3) Equity update
Let r_t = close_t / close_{t-1} − 1 be the symbol’s bar return, d_{t−1} ∈ {+1, −1} the prior bar stance, and a_{t−1} the prior bar allocation fraction. The simulator compounds:
eq_t = eq_{t−1} × (1 + a_{t−1} × d_{t−1} × r_t) .
This is bar-based and avoids intrabar lookahead. Costs, slippage, and borrowing costs are not modeled.
Why traders experiment with martingale sizing
Mean-reversion contexts – if the signal often snaps back after a string of losses, adding size near the tail of a move can pull the average entry closer to the turn
Behavioral or microstructure edges – some rules have modest edge but frequent small whipsaws; size escalation may shorten time-to-recovery when the edge manifests
Exploration and stress testing – studying the relationship between streaks, caps, and drawdowns is instructive even if you do not deploy martingale sizing live
Why martingale is dangerous
Martingale concentrates capital when the strategy is performing worst. The main risks are structural, not cosmetic:
Loss streaks are inevitable – even with a 55 percent win rate you should expect multi-loss runs. The probability of at least one k-loss streak in N trades rises quickly with N.
Size explodes geometrically – with factor 2.0 and base 10 percent, the sequence is 10, 20, 40, 80, 100 (capped) after five losses. Without a strict cap, required size becomes infeasible.
No fixed payout – in gambling, one win at even odds resets PnL. In markets, there is no guaranteed bounce nor fixed profit multiple. Trends can extend and gaps can skip levels.
Correlation of losses – losses cluster in trends and in volatility bursts. A martingale tends to be largest just when volatility is highest.
Margin and liquidity constraints – leverage limits, margin calls, position limits, and widening spreads can force liquidation before a mean reversion occurs.
Fat tails and regime shifts – assumptions of independent, Gaussian returns can understate tail risk. Structural breaks can keep the signal wrong for much longer than expected.
The simulator exposes these dynamics in the equity curve, Max Drawdown, VaR and CVaR, and via Monte Carlo sketches of forward uncertainty.
Interpreting losing streaks with numbers
A rough intuition: if your per-trade win probability is p and loss probability is q=1−p , the chance of a specific run of k consecutive losses is q^k . Over many trades, the chance that at least one k-loss run occurs grows with the number of opportunities. As a sanity check:
If p=0.55 , then q=0.45 . A 6-loss run has probability q^6 ≈ 0.008 on any six-trade window. Across hundreds of trades, a 6 to 8-loss run is not rare.
If your size factor is 1.5 and your base is 10 percent, after 8 losses the requested size is 10% × 1.5^8 ≈ 25.6% . With factor 2.0 it would try to be 10% × 2^8 = 256% but your cap will stop it. The equity curve will still wear the compounded drawdown from the sequence that led to the cap.
This is why the cap setting is central. It does not remove tail risk, but it prevents the sizing rule from demanding impossible positions
Note: The p and q math is illustrative. In live data the win rate and distribution can drift over time, so real streaks can be longer or shorter than the simple q^k intuition suggests..
Using the simulator productively
Parameter studies
Start with conservative settings. Increase one element at a time and watch how the equity, Max Drawdown, and CVaR respond.
Initial allocation – lower base reduces volatility and drawdowns across the board
Increase factor – set modestly above 1.0 if you want the effect at all; doubling is aggressive
Max cap – the most important brake; many users keep it between 20 and 50 percent
Signal selection
Keep sizing fixed and rotate signals to see how streak patterns differ. Trend-following signals tend to produce long wrong-way streaks in choppy ranges. Mean-reversion signals do the opposite. Martingale sizing interacts very differently with each.
Diagnostics to watch
Use the built-in metrics to quantify risk:
Max Drawdown – worst peak-to-trough equity loss
Sharpe and Sortino – volatility and downside-adjusted return
VaR 95 percent and CVaR – tail risk measures from the realized distribution
Alpha and Beta – relationship to your chosen benchmark
If you would like to check out the original performance metrics script with multiple assets with a better explanation on all metrics please see
Monte Carlo exploration
When enabled, the forecast draws many synthetic paths from your realized daily returns:
Choose a horizon and a number of runs
Review the bands: p5 to p95 for a wide risk envelope; p16 to p84 for a narrower range; p50 as the median path
Use the table to read the expected return over the horizon and the tail outcomes
Remember it is a sketch based on your recent distribution, not a predictor
Concrete examples
Example A: Modest martingale
Base 10 percent, factor 1.25, cap 40 percent, RSI>50 signal. You will see small escalations on 2 to 4 loss runs and frequent resets. The equity curve usually remains smooth unless the signal enters a prolonged wrong-way regime. Max DD may rise moderately versus fixed sizing.
Example B: Aggressive martingale
Base 15 percent, factor 2.0, cap 60 percent, EMA cross signal. The curve can look stellar during favorable regimes, then a single extended streak pushes allocation to the cap, and a few more losses drive deep drawdown. CVaR and Max DD jump sharply. This is a textbook case of high tail risk.
Strengths
Bar-by-bar, transparent computation of equity from stance and size
Explicit handling of wins, losses, streaks, and caps
Portable signal inputs so you can A–B test ideas quickly
Risk diagnostics and forward uncertainty visualization in one place
Example, Rolling Max Drawdown
Limitations and important notes
Martingale sizing can escalate drawdowns rapidly. The cap limits position size but not the possibility of extended adverse runs.
No commissions, slippage, margin interest, borrow costs, or liquidity limits are modeled.
Signals are evaluated on closes. Real execution and fills will differ.
Monte Carlo assumes independent draws from your recent return distribution. Markets often have serial correlation, fat tails, and regime changes.
All results are hypothetical. Use this as an educational tool, not a production risk engine.
Practical tips
Prefer gentle factors such as 1.1 to 1.3. Doubling is usually excessive outside of toy examples.
Keep a strict cap. Many users cap between 20 and 40 percent of equity per leg.
Stress test with different start dates and subperiods. Long flat or trending regimes are where martingale weaknesses appear.
Compare to an anti-martingale (increase after wins, cut after losses) to understand the other side of the trade-off.
If you deploy sizing live, add external guardrails such as a daily loss cut, volatility filters, and a global max drawdown stop.
Settings recap
Backtest start date and initial capital
Initial allocation, increase-after-loss factor, max allocation cap
Signal source selector
Trading days per year and risk-free rate
Benchmark symbol for Alpha and Beta
UI toggles for equity, buy and hold, labels, metrics, PnL, and drawdown
Monte Carlo controls for enable, runs, horizon, and result table
Final thoughts
A martingale is not a free lunch. It is a way to tilt capital allocation toward losing streaks. If the signal has a real edge and mean reversion is common, careful and capped escalation can reduce time-to-recovery. If the signal lacks edge or regimes shift, the same rule can magnify losses at the worst possible moment. This simulator makes those trade-offs visible so you can calibrate parameters, understand tail risk, and decide whether the approach belongs anywhere in your research workflow.
ADX Tide ZonesADX Tide Zones – Adaptive Momentum & Trend Strength Framework
Overview
ADX Tide Zones – Professional is a dynamic trend-strength visualizer designed for traders who want to interpret momentum with precision and context. By combining the Average Directional Index (ADX) with adaptive threshold logic, the indicator segments price action into distinct “tide zones” that reflect varying levels of market strength: Calm, Rising, Strong, and Falling Tides. These zones transform raw ADX readings into an interpretable framework that highlights when markets are consolidating, building momentum, trending strongly, or losing strength.
Unlike standard ADX readings, which can be difficult to interpret in real time, ADX Tide Zones translate momentum shifts into a continuous, color-coded system that traders can instantly read. Whether applied to scalping, intraday, or swing trading, the indicator offers a consistent methodology for identifying actionable opportunities across assets and timeframes.
How It Works
The foundation of ADX Tide Zones lies in momentum analysis via the ADX. By measuring the strength (not direction) of a trend, ADX provides an objective read on when markets are gaining or losing energy. ADX Tide Zones enhances this by applying threshold logic to classify ADX values into four distinct states:
Calm Tide : Low ADX values indicate sideways or consolidating conditions.
Rising Tide : ADX increases past a threshold, signaling momentum building.
Strong Tide : ADX remains elevated, confirming robust and sustained trend strength.
Falling Tide : ADX declines after strength, hinting at exhaustion or early reversal setups.
These states are displayed on the chart through adaptive visualizations (zones, bar colors, or overlays), offering real-time clarity on when to expect expansion, continuation, or contraction in price action.
Interpretation
Trend Analysis : By mapping transitions between tides, traders can instantly gauge whether markets are in accumulation, expansion, or exhaustion phases. Rising/Strong Tides reinforce trend continuation, while Falling Tides highlight weakening conditions.
Volatility & Risk Assessment : Shifts between Calm → Rising Tide often precede volatility expansions. Falling Tides can signal a period of compression or corrective moves, warning traders to manage risk proactively.
Market Context : The indicator does not dictate direction; instead, it overlays strength on top of price action, allowing traders to combine it with directional tools such as moving averages, order blocks, or liquidity zones for confirmation.
Strategy Integration
ADX Tide Zones adapts seamlessly to a wide range of trading strategies by translating momentum dynamics into actionable frameworks:
Trend Following : Traders can align with dominant flows by entering positions when the indicator confirms a Rising Tide or Strong Tide. These conditions signal persistent directional strength, making them ideal for continuation setups. Combining directional bias with ADX confirmation reduces the risk of trading against prevailing momentum.
Breakout Trading : When the market transitions from Calm Tide into a Rising Tide, it often precedes a volatility expansion. This shift highlights breakout conditions where accumulation gives way to impulsive price movement. Traders can use this transition as a timing tool to catch early entries into new momentum phases.
Exhaustion Reversals : Strong Tide phases don’t last forever—when they begin to fade into Falling Tide, it can mark trend fatigue or liquidity exhaustion. This offers contrarian traders an early edge in spotting overextended moves and positioning for corrective pullbacks or full reversals.
Multi-Timeframe Analysis : By overlaying higher timeframe tide zones on intraday or scalping charts, traders can filter noise and trade in alignment with larger flows. For example, combining a daily Rising Tide bias with a 15-minute breakout confirmation can significantly improve entry precision while reducing exposure to false signals.
Advanced Techniques
For traders seeking an extra edge, ADX Tide Zones can be pushed further with advanced methods:
Volume & Liquidity Confirmation : Pair the tide transitions with volume spikes, order flow, or liquidity sweep tools. When directional strength confirmed by the ADX coincides with institutional activity, it validates setups and increases probability of follow-through.
Cross-Asset Synchronization : Momentum rarely exists in isolation. Monitoring tide shifts across correlated instruments (e.g., majors vs. USD, or indices vs. risk assets) can uncover synchronized volatility events. These correlations help traders identify whether a move is isolated noise or part of a broader systemic trend.
Threshold Optimization : The sensitivity of ADX Tide Zones can be fine-tuned for different trading objectives. Lower thresholds heighten responsiveness, capturing micro-moves suitable for scalpers. Higher thresholds filter minor fluctuations, isolating major structural swings that align with swing or position trading.
Contextual Trade Management : Instead of using static stops or targets, traders can adapt risk management dynamically by tracking tide progression. For example, a trade initiated during Rising Tide may remain valid as long as conditions sustain, but partial profits or tighter stops can be applied once the zone shifts to Calm Tide.
Inputs & Customization
ADX Length : Define the lookback period for ADX calculation.
Threshold Levels : Adjust sensitivity for Calm, Rising, Strong, and Falling Tides.
Zone Visualization : Choose between bar coloring, background shading, or overlays.
Color Customization : Configure bullish, bearish, neutral, and tide-specific colors.
Multi-Timeframe Options : Enable tide readings from higher timeframes for confirmation.
Why Use ADX Tide Zones
ADX Tide Zones turns the complexity of momentum analysis into a visual system that highlights when markets are gearing up for moves, trending with conviction, or running out of steam. By combining adaptive ADX interpretation with customizable thresholds, traders can:
Anticipate breakouts before volatility expands.
Confirm the strength behind price trends.
Spot exhaustion phases early to secure profits or prepare for reversals.
Adapt strategies seamlessly between scalping, intraday, and swing trading.
With its balance of simplicity and depth, ADX Tide Zones provides a structured lens for reading market momentum, equipping traders with the clarity needed to execute with discipline and confidence.
Options Greeks AnalyzerOptions Greeks Analyzer (Training & Learning Guide)
________________________________________
1. Introduction
Options trading is advanced compared to regular stock trading, and one of the most important aspects is Options Greeks. Greeks are mathematical values that measure how the price of an option will react to changes in various factors such as the underlying asset’s price, volatility, interest rates, and time to expiry.
This Options Greeks Analyzer tool is built using TradingView Pine Script v5. It serves as a real time training and analysis dashboard that helps learners visualize how options greeks behave, how option prices change, and how traders can make informed decisions.
📌 Educational Disclaimer:
This tool is only for training and learning purposes. It is not a financial advice tool nor to be used for live trading decisions. The data shown is theoretical Black Scholes model calculations, which may differ from actual option market prices.
________________________________________
2. How the Tool Works
The Options Greeks Analyzer is divided into different modules. Below is a step by step walkthrough:
________________________________________
Step 1: User Inputs
• Implied Volatility (IV%) — You can manually enter volatility, which is the most important factor in option pricing. Higher IV = higher option premium.
• Expiry Selection — Choose from preset durations like 7D, 14D, 30D etc. Days to expiry directly affect time decay (Theta).
• Strike Price Mode — You can select either:
o ATM (At-the-Money = Current price of stock/index)
o Custom strike (Enter your own strike price)
• Risk-Free Rate (%) — A small interest rate factor (like government bond yield) used for theoretical valuation.
• Table Customization — Choose table size, position, and whether to show price lines for easy visibility.
________________________________________
Step 2: Market Data & Volatility
• The tool takes the current market price (Spot Price) as input.
• It calculates realized volatility from historical price fluctuations (using past 30 bars/log returns).
• Implied Volatility (manual input) is then compared to realized vol:
o If IV > Historical Volatility → Market pricing is “expensive” (HIGH IV RANK).
o If IV < Historical Volatility → Market is “cheap” (LOW IV RANK).
o Otherwise, it’s MEDIUM.
📌 Why it matters?
Traders can decide whether buying or selling options is favorable. Beginners learn that timing entry with volatility is more critical than just looking at market direction.
________________________________________
Step 3: Black-Scholes Formula
The core engine uses the Black-Scholes model, a mathematical formula widely used to compute option fair prices.
It uses the following inputs:
• Current price (Spot)
• Strike Price
• Time to Expiry (T)
• Risk Free Rate (r)
• Implied Volatility (σ)
This produces:
• Call Option Price
• Put Option Price
📌 This teaches learners how premiums are derived theoretically and why the same strike can have different values depending on IV and time.
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Step 4: Option Greeks Calculation
The tool computes the first order Greeks:
• Delta → Measures how much the option price changes when the underlying stock moves by 1 point.
(Call Delta ranges 0–1, Put Delta ranges -1 to 0).
• Gamma → Sensitivity of Delta to price change. A measure of volatility risk.
• Theta → Time decay. Shows how much value option loses as each day passes. Calls and Puts have negative Theta (decay).
• Vega → Measures how sensitive option price is to volatility changes.
• Rho → Interest rate sensitivity. Mostly minor in equity options but important for training.
📌 New traders learn how each factor impacts profits/losses. Instead of random guessing, they see mathematical impact in numbers.
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Step 5: Dashboard & Visualization
The tool builds a professional dashboard table on the chart.
It shows categories such as:
1. Asset Info — Spot, Strike, DTE (days to expiry), IV%, IV Rank, 1-Day Trend, Moneyness (ATM/OTM/ITM).
2. Option Prices — Call, Put, Break-even levels, Time Value, Expected Move (%), Realized vs Implied Vol.
3. Greeks with Visual Progress Bars — Easily shows Delta, Gamma, Vega, Theta, Rho in intuitive graphical representations.
4. Status Bar — Suggests theoretical bias like:
o HIGH IV → Favor Option Selling
o LOW IV → Favor Option Buying
o MEDIUM → Neutral observation
5. Recommendation Line — Offers training-based suggestions like “Buy Straddles”, “Sell Call Spreads”, etc. These are not signals, but scenarios to learn strategies.
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3. How It Helps Beginners
1. Learn Greeks in Action:
Beginners often memorize formulas but never see real-time changes. This dashboard updates every bar to show how Greeks change dynamically.
2. Compare Volatilities:
Traders understand difference between historical vs implied volatility and why option premiums behave differently.
3. Understand Risk Levels:
The tool highlights when Gamma risk is high (danger for sellers) or when Theta is most favorable.
4. Training Mode for Strategies:
Helps beginners experiment by changing IV, strike, expiry and seeing how straddles, spreads, naked options would behave theoretically.
5. Prepares Before Live Trading:
Safe environment to practice option analysis without risking capital.
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4. Educational Use Cases
• Scenario 1: Change expiry from 7D to 30D — see how Theta becomes slower for longer expiries.
• Scenario 2: Increase IV from 25% to 80% — watch how option premiums inflate, and recommendation changes from “Buy” to “Sell”.
• Scenario 3: Select OTM vs ITM strikes — check how delta moves from near 0 to near 1.
By running these scenarios, learners understand why professional traders hedge Greeks instead of directional gambling.
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5. Disclaimer
This Options Greeks Analyzer is built strictly for educational and training purposes.
• It uses theoretical formulas (Black-Scholes) that may not match actual option market prices.
• The recommendations are for learning strategy logic only, not real-world execution signals.
• Trading in options carries significant risks and may result in capital loss.
📌 Always consult with a financial advisor before applying real strategies.
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✅ Summary
This Options Greeks Analyzer:
• Teaches how Greeks, IV, and premiums work.
• Provides a real-time interactive dashboard for training.
• Helps beginners practice option scenarios safely.
• Is meant strictly for learning and not live trading execution.
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Disclaimer from aiTrendview
This script and its trading signals are provided for training and educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice or a guaranteed trading system. Trading involves substantial risk, and there is the potential to lose all invested capital. Users should perform their own analysis and consult with qualified financial professionals before making any trading decisions. aiTrendview disclaims any liability for losses incurred from using this code or trading based on its signals. Use this tool responsibly, and trade only with risk capital.
VWMA CandlesVWMA Candles – Smarter Candle Coloring with Volume Awareness
This indicator enhances your chart candles by showing their relationship to the Volume-Weighted Moving Average (VWMA). It visually integrates the VWMA and price action, making it easier to spot momentum shifts, value zones, and price interaction with volume-weighted levels. I saw this indicator idea from TrendSpider on threads and decided to try and make my own. This is my first publicly shared script so go easy on me!
IN ORDER FOR THE COLOR CODING TO WORK PROPERLY, YOU MUST:
GO TO -> CHART SETTINGS -> SYMBOLS AND DISABLE BODIES, BORDERS, AND WICKS.
How it works:
The VWMA is plotted on your chart with a customizable band around it.
Candles change color depending on their position relative to the VWMA and its band:
Green → Price is above the VWMA (bullish bias).
Orange → Price is near or touching the VWMA/band (potential reaction zone).
Red → Price is below the VWMA (bearish bias).
You can choose between custom candles (full plotcandle styling) or simply recolor your existing chart candles with barcolor.
Customization options:
Select how the band is calculated: by % of VWMA, ATR multiple, or Ticks/Points.
Adjust colors separately for candle body, wick, and border.
Choose to show/hide the VWMA line and the band fill.
Fine-tune transparency for a clean look on any chart background.
Why traders use it:
Quickly spot when price is stretched away from the VWMA (overextended conditions).
Identify when candles are interacting with the VWMA (potential support/resistance).
Add volume-sensitivity to your trend analysis compared to standard moving averages.
Authors Note: The default settings work well with stocks on the weekly timeframe, although this can be used on any timeframe. The settings are highly adjustable for you to tune it to your liking.
POC Migration Velocity (POC-MV) [PhenLabs]📊POC Migration Velocity (POC-MV)
Version: PineScript™v6
📌Description
The POC Migration Velocity indicator revolutionizes market structure analysis by tracking the movement, speed, and acceleration of Point of Control (POC) levels in real-time. This tool combines sophisticated volume distribution estimation with velocity calculations to reveal hidden market dynamics that conventional indicators miss.
POC-MV provides traders with unprecedented insight into volume-based price movement patterns, enabling the early identification of continuation and exhaustion signals before they become apparent to the broader market. By measuring how quickly and consistently the POC migrates across price levels, traders gain early warning signals for significant market shifts and can position themselves advantageously.
The indicator employs advanced algorithms to estimate intra-bar volume distribution without requiring lower timeframe data, making it accessible across all chart timeframes while maintaining sophisticated analytical capabilities.
🚀Points of Innovation
Micro-POC calculation using advanced OHLC-based volume distribution estimation
Real-time velocity and acceleration tracking normalized by ATR for cross-market consistency
Persistence scoring system that quantifies directional consistency over multiple periods
Multi-signal detection combining continuation patterns, exhaustion signals, and gap alerts
Dynamic color-coded visualization system with intensity-based feedback
Comprehensive customization options for resolution, periods, and thresholds
🔧Core Components
POC Calculation Engine: Estimates volume distribution within each bar using configurable price bands and sophisticated weighting algorithms
Velocity Measurement System: Tracks the rate of POC movement over customizable lookback periods with ATR normalization
Acceleration Calculator: Measures the rate of change of velocity to identify momentum shifts in POC migration
Persistence Analyzer: Quantifies how consistently POC moves in the same direction using exponential weighting
Signal Detection Framework: Combines trend analysis, velocity thresholds, and persistence requirements for signal generation
Visual Rendering System: Provides dynamic color-coded lines and heat ribbons based on velocity and price-POC relationships
🔥Key Features
Real-time POC calculation with 10-100 configurable price bands for optimal precision
Velocity tracking with customizable lookback periods from 5 to 50 bars
Acceleration measurement for detecting momentum changes in POC movement
Persistence scoring to validate signal strength and filter false signals
Dynamic visual feedback with blue/orange color scheme indicating bullish/bearish conditions
Comprehensive alert system for continuation patterns, exhaustion signals, and POC gaps
Adjustable information table displaying real-time metrics and current signals
Heat ribbon visualization showing price-POC relationship intensity
Multiple threshold settings for customizing signal sensitivity
Export capability for use with separate panel indicators
🎨Visualization
POC Connecting Lines: Color-coded lines showing POC levels with intensity based on velocity magnitude
Heat Ribbon: Dynamic colored ribbon around price showing POC-price basis intensity
Signal Markers: Clear exhaustion top/bottom signals with labeled shapes
Information Table: Real-time display of POC value, velocity, acceleration, basis, persistence, and current signal status
Color Gradients: Blue gradients for bullish conditions, orange gradients for bearish conditions
📖Usage Guidelines
POC Calculation Settings
POC Resolution (Price Bands): Default 20, Range 10-100. Controls the number of price bands used to estimate volume distribution within each bar
Volume Weight Factor: Default 0.7, Range 0.1-1.0. Adjusts the influence of volume in POC calculation
POC Smoothing: Default 3, Range 1-10. EMA smoothing period applied to the calculated POC to reduce noise
Velocity Settings
Velocity Lookback Period: Default 14, Range 5-50. Number of bars used to calculate POC velocity
Acceleration Period: Default 7, Range 3-20. Period for calculating POC acceleration
Velocity Significance Threshold: Default 0.5, Range 0.1-2.0. Minimum normalized velocity for continuation signals
Persistence Settings
Persistence Lookback: Default 5, Range 3-20. Number of bars examined for persistence score calculation
Persistence Threshold: Default 0.7, Range 0.5-1.0. Minimum persistence score required for continuation signals
Visual Settings
Show POC Connecting Lines: Toggle display of colored lines connecting POC levels
Show Heat Ribbon: Toggle display of colored ribbon showing POC-price relationship
Ribbon Transparency: Default 70, Range 0-100. Controls transparency level of heat ribbon
Alert Settings
Enable Continuation Alerts: Toggle alerts for continuation pattern detection
Enable Exhaustion Alerts: Toggle alerts for exhaustion pattern detection
Enable POC Gap Alerts: Toggle alerts for significant POC gaps
Gap Threshold: Default 2.0 ATR, Range 0.5-5.0. Minimum gap size to trigger alerts
✅Best Use Cases
Identifying trend continuation opportunities when POC velocity aligns with price direction
Spotting potential reversal points through exhaustion pattern detection
Confirming breakout validity by monitoring POC gap behavior
Adding volume-based context to traditional technical analysis
Managing position sizing based on POC-price basis strength
⚠️Limitations
POC calculations are estimations based on OHLC data, not true tick-by-tick volume distribution
Effectiveness may vary in low-volume or highly volatile market conditions
Requires complementary analysis tools for complete trading decisions
Signal frequency may be lower in ranging markets compared to trending conditions
Performance optimization needed for very short timeframes below 1-minute
💡What Makes This Unique
Advanced Estimation Algorithm: Sophisticated method for calculating POC without requiring lower timeframe data
Velocity-Based Analysis: Focus on POC movement dynamics rather than static levels
Comprehensive Signal Framework: Integration of continuation, exhaustion, and gap detection in one indicator
Dynamic Visual Feedback: Intensity-based color coding that adapts to market conditions
Persistence Validation: Unique scoring system to filter signals based on directional consistency
🔬How It Works
Volume Distribution Estimation:
Divides each bar into configurable price bands for volume analysis
Applies sophisticated weighting based on OHLC relationships and proximity to close
Identifies the price level with maximum estimated volume as the POC
Velocity and Acceleration Calculation:
Measures POC rate of change over specified lookback periods
Normalizes values using ATR for consistent cross-market performance
Calculates acceleration as the rate of change of velocity
Signal Generation Process:
Combines trend direction analysis using EMA crossovers
Applies velocity and persistence thresholds to filter signals
Generates continuation, exhaustion, and gap alerts based on specific criteria
💡Note:
This indicator provides estimated POC calculations based on available OHLC data and should be used in conjunction with other analysis methods. The velocity-based approach offers unique insights into market structure dynamics but requires proper risk management and complementary analysis for optimal trading decisions.
Machine Learning-Inspired Supply & Demand Zones [AlgoPoint]This indicator is a Smart Supply & Demand Zone tool, developed with principles inspired by Machine Learning (ML). It intelligently filters out market noise, allowing you to focus only on the most significant zones where institutional order flow is likely present.
💡 How It Works: Why Is This Indicator "Smart"?
Unlike traditional indicators that only measure simple price movements, this script uses an algorithm that asks the same critical questions an experienced market analyst would to qualify a zone:
- 1. Price Imbalance: How fast and aggressively did the price leave the zone? Our algorithm measures the body size of the "departure candle" relative to the current market volatility (ATR). A zone is only considered if it was formed by an explosive move that is statistically significant, indicating a major imbalance between buyers and sellers.
- 2. Volume Confirmation: Did the "smart money" participate in this move? The script checks if the volume on the departure candle was significantly higher than the recent average volume. A spike in volume confirms that the move was backed by institutional interest, adding strength and validity to the zone.
- 3. Valid Pivot Structure: Did the zone originate from a meaningful swing high or low? The algorithm first identifies a valid pivot structure, ensuring that zones are not drawn from insignificant or random price fluctuations.
Only when a potential zone passes these three critical tests—our "quality filter"—is it drawn on your chart.
🚀 Features & How to Use
Using the indicator is straightforward. You will see two primary types of boxes on your chart:
* 🟥 Red Box (Supply Zone): An area of potential resistance where selling pressure is likely to be strong. Look for potential shorting opportunities as the price approaches this zone.
* 🟩 Green Box (Demand Zone): An area of potential support where buying pressure is likely to be strong. Look for potential long opportunities as the price pulls back into this zone.
Dynamic Zone Management
This indicator is not static; it lives and breathes with the market:
- Fresh Zone: A newly formed zone appears in its full, vibrant color. These are the highest-probability zones as they have not yet been re-tested.
- Broken / Flipped Zone: You have full control over what happens when a zone is broken! In the settings, you can choose:
- Delete Zone: The zone will be removed completely when the price closes through it.
- Show as Broken (Flip): When broken, the zone will turn gray, stop extending, and remain on your chart. This is extremely useful for identifying Support/Resistance Flips, where a broken demand zone becomes new resistance, or a broken supply zone becomes new support.
⚙️ Settings & Customization
Fine-tune the indicator to match your personal trading style via the settings menu:
- Breakout Behavior: The most powerful feature. Choose between Delete Zone and Show as Broken (Flip) to customize your chart.
- Zone Finding Logic: Control the indicator's sensitivity.
- Selective: Requires both strong imbalance and high volume. Finds fewer, but higher-quality, zones.
- Moderate: Requires either strong imbalance or high volume. Finds more potential zones.
- Sensitivity Settings: Adjust the ATR Multiplier and Volume Multiplier to make the criteria for a "strong" zone stricter or looser.
BE-Fib Channel 2 Sided Trading█ Overview:
"BE-Fib Channel 2 Sided Trading" indicator is built with the thought of 2 profound setups named "Cup & Handle (C&H)" and "Fibonacci Channel Trading (FCT)" with the context of "day trading" or with a minimum holding period.
█ Similarities, Day Trading Context & Error Patterns:
While the known fact is that both C&H and FCT provide setups with lesser risk with bigger returns, they both share the similar "Base Pattern".
Note: Inverse of the above Image shall switch the setups between long vs short.
Since the indicator is designed for smaller time-frame candles, there may be instances where the "base pattern" does not visually resemble a Cup & Handle (C&H) pattern. However, patterns are validated using pivot points. The points labeled "A" and "C" can be equal or slightly slanted. Settings of the Indicator allows traders a flexibility to control the angle of these points to spot the strategies according to set conditions. Therefore, understanding the nuances of these patterns is crucial for effective decision-making.
█ 2 Sided Edge: FCT suggests to take trade closer to the yellow line to get better RR ratio. this leaves a small chance of doubt as to; what if price is intended to break the Yellow line thereby activating the C&H.
Wait for the confirmation is a Big FOMO with a compromised RR.
Hence, This indicator is designed to handle both the patterns based on the strength, FIFO and pattern occurring delay.
█ How to Use this Indicator:
Step 1: Enable the Show Sample Sensitivity option to understand the angle of yellow line shown in the sample image. By enabling this option, On the last bar you shall see 4 lines being plotted depicting the max angle which is acceptable for both long and short trades.
Note: Angle can be controlled via setting "Sensitivity".
Higher Sensitivity --> Higher Setup identification --> can lead to failed setups due to 2 sided trading.
Lower Sensitivity --> Lower Setup identification --> can increase the changes of being right.
Step 2: Adjust the look back & look forward periods which shall be used for identifying patterns.
Note: Smaller values can lead to more setups being identified but can hamper the performance of the indicator while increasing the chances of failures. larger values identifies more significant setup but leads to more waiting period thereby compromising on the RR.
Step 3: Adjust the Base Range.
Note: Smaller values can lead to more setups being identified but can hamper the performance of the indicator while increasing the chances of failures. larger values identifies more significant setup but leads to more Risk on play.
Step 4: set the Entry level for FCT & Set the SL for Both FCT & C&H and Target Reward ratio for C&H.
█ Features of Indicator & How it works:
1. Patterns are being identified using Pivot Points method.
2. Tracks & validates both the setups simultaneously on every candle and traded one at a time based on FIFO, New setups found in-between, Defined Entry Levels while on wait for the other pattern to get activated.
3. Alerts added for trade events.
4. FCT setups are generally traded with trailed SL level and increasing Target level on every completed bar. while C&H has the standard SL & TP level with no Trail SL option.
DISCLAIMER: No sharing, copying, reselling, modifying, or any other forms of use are authorized for our documents, script / strategy, and the information published with them. This informational planning script / strategy is strictly for individual use and educational purposes only. This is not financial or investment advice. Investments are always made at your own risk and are based on your personal judgement. I am not responsible for any losses you may incur. Please invest wisely.
Happy to receive suggestions and feedback in order to improve the performance of the indicator better.
Support and Resistance levels from Options DataINTRODUCTION
This script is designed to visualize key support and resistance levels derived from options data on TradingView charts. It overlays lines, labels, and boxes to highlight levels such as Put Walls (gamma support), Call Walls (gamma resistance), Gamma Flip points, Vanna levels, and more.
These levels are intended to help traders identify potential areas of price magnetism, reversal, or breakout based on options market dynamics. All calculations and visualizations are based on user-provided data pasted into the input field, as Pine Script cannot directly fetch external options data due to platform limitations (explained below).
For convenience, my website allows users to interact with a bot that will generate the string for up to 30 tickers at once getting nearly real-time data on demand (data is cached for 15min). With the output string pasted into this indicator, it's a bliss to shuffle through your portfolio and see those levels for each ticker.
The script is open-source under TradingView's terms, allowing users to study, modify, and improve it. It draws inspiration from common options-derived metrics like gamma exposure and vanna, which are widely discussed in financial literature. No external code is copied without rights; all logic is original or based on standard mathematical formulas.
How the Options Levels Are Calculated
The levels displayed by this script are not computed within Pine Script itself—instead, they rely on pre-calculated values provided by the user (via a pasted data string). These values are derived from options chain data fetched from financial APIs (e.g., using libraries like yfinance in Python). Here's a step-by-step overview of how these levels are generally calculated externally before being input into the script:
Fetching Options Data:
Historical and current options chain data for a ticker (e.g., strikes, open interest, volume, implied volatility, expirations) is retrieved for near-term expirations (e.g., up to 90 days).
Current stock price is obtained from recent history.
Gamma Support (Put Wall) and Resistance (Call Wall):
Gamma Calculation: For each option, gamma (the rate of change of delta) is computed using the Black-Scholes formula:
gamma = N'(d1) / (S * sigma * sqrt(T))
where S is the stock price, K is the strike, T is time to expiration (in years), sigma is implied volatility, r is the risk-free rate (e.g., 0.0445), and N'(d1) is the normal probability density function.
Weighted gamma is multiplied by open interest and aggregated by strike.
The Put Wall is the strike below the current price with the highest weighted gamma from puts (acting as support).
The Call Wall is the strike above the current price with the highest weighted gamma from calls (acting as resistance).
Short-term versions focus on strikes closer to the money (e.g., within 10-15% of the price).
Gamma Flip Level:
Net dealer gamma exposure (GEX) is calculated across all strikes:
GEX = sum (gamma * OI * 100 * S^2 * sign * decay)
where sign is +1 for calls/-1 for puts, and decay is 1 / sqrt(T).
The flip point is the price where net GEX changes sign (from positive to negative or vice versa), interpolated between strikes.
Vanna Levels:
Vanna (sensitivity of delta to volatility) is calculated:
vanna = -N'(d1) * d2 / sigma
where d2 = d1 - sigma * sqrt(T).
Weighted by open interest, the highest positive and negative vanna strikes are identified.
Other Levels:
S1/R1: Significant strikes with high combined open interest and volume (80% OI + 20% volume), below/above price for support/resistance.
Implied Move: ATM implied volatility scaled by S * sigma * sqrt(d/365) (e.g., for 7 days).
Call/Put Ratio: Total call contracts divided by put contracts (OI + volume).
IV Percentage: Average ATM implied volatility.
Options Activity Level: Average contracts per unique strike, binned into levels (0-4).
Stop Loss: Dynamically set below the lowest support (e.g., Put Wall, Gamma Flip), adjusted by IV (tighter in low IV).
Fib Target: 1.618 extension from Put Wall to Call Wall range.
Previous day levels are stored for comparison (e.g., to detect Call Wall movement >2.5% for alerts).
Effect as Support and Resistance in Technical Trading
Options levels like gamma walls influence price action due to market maker hedging:
Put Wall (Gamma Support): High put gamma below price creates a "magnet" effect—market makers buy stock as price falls, providing support. Traders might look for bounces here as entry points for longs.
Call Wall (Gamma Resistance): High call gamma above price leads to selling pressure from hedging, acting as resistance. Rejections here could signal trims, sells or even shorts.
Gamma Flip: Where gamma exposure flips sign, often a volatility pivot—crossing it can accelerate moves (bullish above, bearish below).
Vanna Levels: Positive/negative vanna indicate volatility sensitivity; crosses may signal regime shifts.
Implied Move: Shows expected range; prices outside suggest overextension.
S1/R1 and Fib Target: Volume/OI clusters act as classic S/R; Fib extensions project upside targets post-breakout.
In trading, these are not guarantees—combine with TA (e.g., volume, trends). High activity levels imply stronger effects; low CP ratio suggests bearish sentiment. Alerts trigger on proximities/crosses for awareness, not advice.
Limitations of the TradingView Platform for Data Pulling
TradingView's Pine Script is sandboxed for security and performance:
No direct internet access or API calls (e.g., can't fetch yfinance data in-script).
Limited to chart data/symbol info; no real-time options chains.
Inputs are static per load; updates require manual pasting.
Caching isn't persistent across sessions.
This prevents dynamic data pulling, ensuring scripts remain lightweight but requiring external tools for fresh data.
Creative Solution for On-Demand Data Pulling
To overcome these limitations, users can use external tools or scripts (e.g., Python-based) to fetch and compute levels on demand. The tool processes tickers, generates a formatted string (e.g., "TICKER:level1,level2,...;TIMESTAMP:unix;"), and users paste it into the script's input. This keeps data fresh without violating platform rules, as computation happens off-platform. For example, run a local script to query APIs and output the string—adaptable for any ticker.
Script Functionality Breakdown
Inputs: Custom data string (parsed for levels/timestamp); toggles for short-term/previous/Vanna/stop loss; style options (colors, transparency).
Parsing: Extracts levels for the chart symbol; gets timestamp for "updated ago" display.
Drawing: Lines/labels for levels; boxes for gamma zones/implied move; clears old elements on updates.
Info Panel: Top-right summary with metrics (CP ratio, IV, distances, activity); emojis for quick status.
Alerts: Conditions for proximities, crosses, bounces (e.g., 0.5% bounce from Put Wall).
Performance: Uses vars for persistence; efficient for real-time.
This script is educational—test thoroughly. Not financial advice; past performance isn't indicative of future results. Feedback welcome via TradingView comments.
Draw Trend LinesSometimes the simplest indicators help traders make better decisions. This indicator draws simple trend lines, the same lines you would draw manually.
To trade with an edge, traders need to interpret the recent price action, whether it's noisy or choppy, or it's trending. Trend Lines will help traders with that interpretation.
The lines drawn are:
1. lower tops
2. higher bottoms
Because trends are defined as higher lows, or lower highs.
When you see "Wedges", formed by prices chopping between top and bottom trend lines, that's noisy environment not to be traded. When you learn to "stop yourself", you already have an edge.
Often when you see a trend, it's still not too late. Trend will continue until it doesn't. But the caveat is a very steep trend is unlikely to continue, because buying volume is extremely unbalanced to cause the steep trend, and that volume will run out of energy. (Same on the sell side of course)
Trends can reverse, and when price action breaks the trend line, Breakout/Breakdown traders can take this as an entry signal.
Enjoy, and good trading!
Volume Profile + Pivot Levels [ChartPrime]⯁ OVERVIEW
Volume Profile + Pivot Levels combines a rolling volume profile with price pivots to surface the most meaningful levels in your selected lookback window. It builds a left-side profile from traded volume, highlights the session’s Point of Control (PoC) , and then filters pivot highs/lows so only those aligned with significant profile volume are promoted to chart levels. Each promoted level extends forward until price retests it—so your chart stays focused on levels that actually matter.
⯁ KEY FEATURES
Rolling Volume Profile (Period & Resolution)
Calculates a profile over the last Period bars (default 200). The profile is discretized into Volume Profile Resolution bins (default 50) between the highest high and lowest low inside the window. Each bin accumulates traded volume and is drawn as a smooth left-side polyline for compact, lightweight rendering.
HL = array.new()
// collect highs/lows over 'start' bars to define profile range
for i = 0 to start - 1
HL.push(high ), HL.push(low )
H = HL.max(), L = HL.min()
bin_size = (H - L) / bins
// accumulate per-bin volume
for i = 0 to bins - 1
for j = 0 to start - 1
if close >= (L + bin_sizei) - bin_size and close < (L + bin_size*(i+1)) + bin_size
Bins += volume
Delta-Aware Coloring
The script tracks up-minus-down volume across all period to compute a net Delta . The profile, PoC line, and PoC label adopt a teal tone when net positive, and maroon when net negative—an immediate read on buyer/seller dominance inside the window.
Point of Control (PoC) + Volume Label
Automatically marks the highest-volume bin as the PoC . A horizontal PoC line extends to the last bar, and a label shows the absolute volume at the PoC. Toggle visibility via PoC input.
Pivot Detection with Volume Filter
Identifies raw pivots using Length (default 10) on both sides of the bar. Each candidate pivot is then validated against the profile: only pivots that land within their bin and meet or exceed the Filter % threshold (percentage of PoC volume) are promoted to chart levels. This removes weak, low-participation pivots.
// pivot promotion when volume% >= pivotFilter
if abs(mid - p.value) <= bin_size and volPercent >= pivotFilter
// draw labeled pivot level
line.new(p.index - pivotLength, p.value, p.index + pivotLength, p.value, width = 2)
Forward-Extending, Self-Stopping Levels
Promoted pivot levels extend forward as dotted rays. As soon as price intersects a level (high/low straddles it), that level stops extending—so your chart doesn’t clutter with stale zones.
Concise Level Labels (Volume + %)
Each promoted pivot prints a compact label at the pivot bar with its bin’s absolute volume and percentage of PoC volume (ordering flips for highs vs. lows for quick read).
Lightweight Visuals
The volume profile is rendered as a smooth polyline rather than dozens of boxes, keeping charts responsive even at higher resolutions.
⯁ SETTINGS
Volume Profile → Period : Lookback window used to compute the profile (max 500).
Volume Profile → Resolution : Number of bins; higher = finer structure.
Volume Profile → PoC : Toggle PoC line and volume label.
Pivots → Display : Show/hide volume-validated pivot levels.
Pivots → Length : Pivot detection left/right bars.
Pivots → Filter % 0–100 : Minimum bin strength (as % of PoC) required to promote a pivot level.
⯁ USAGE
Read PoC direction/color for a quick net-flow bias within your window.
Prioritize promoted pivot levels —they’re backed by meaningful participation.
Watch for first retests of promoted levels; the line will stop extending once tested.
Adjust Period / Resolution to match your timeframe (scalps → higher resolution, shorter period; swings → lower resolution, longer period).
Tighten or loosen Filter % to control how selective the level promotion is.
⯁ WHY IT’S UNIQUE
Instead of plotting every pivot or every profile bar, this tool cross-checks pivots against the profile’s internal volume weighting . You only see levels where price structure and liquidity overlap—clean, data-driven levels that self-retire after interaction, so you can focus on what the market actually defends.
PulseMA Oscillator Normalized v2█ OVERVIEW
PulseMA Oscillator Normalized v2 is a technical indicator designed for the TradingView platform, assisting traders in identifying potential trend reversal points based on price dynamics derived from moving averages. The indicator is normalized for easier interpretation across various market conditions, and its visual presentation with gradients and signals facilitates quick decision-making.
█ CONCEPTS
The core idea of the indicator is to analyze trend dynamics by calculating an oscillator based on a moving average (EMA), which is then normalized and smoothed. It provides insights into trend strength, overbought/oversold levels, and reversal signals, enhanced by gradient visualizations.
Why use it?
Identifying reversal points: The indicator detects overbought and oversold levels, generating buy/sell signals at their crossovers.
Price dynamics analysis: Based on moving averages, it measures how long the price stays above or below the EMA, incorporating trend slope.
Visual clarity: Gradients, fills, and colored lines enable quick chart analysis.
Flexibility: Configurable parameters, such as moving average lengths or normalization period, allow adaptation to various strategies and markets.
How it works?
Trend detection: Calculates a base exponential moving average (EMA with PulseMA Length) and measures how long the price stays above or below it, multiplied by the slope for the oscillator.
Normalization: The oscillator is normalized based on the minimum and maximum values over a lookback period (default 150 bars), scaling it to a range from -100 to 100: (oscillator - min) / (max - min) * 200 - 100. This ensures values are comparable across different instruments and timeframes.
Smoothing: The main line (PulseMA) is the normalized oscillator (oscillatorNorm). The PulseMA MA line is a smoothed version of PulseMA, calculated using an SMA with the PulseMA MA length. As PulseMA MA is smoothed, it reacts more slowly and can be used as a noise filter.
Signals: Generates buy signals when crossing the oversold level upward and sell signals when crossing the overbought level downward. Signals are stronger when PulseMA MA is in the overbought or oversold zone (exceeding the respective thresholds for PulseMA MA).
Visualization: Draws lines with gradients for PulseMA and PulseMA MA, levels with gradients, gradient fill to the zero line, and signals as triangles.
Alerts: Built-in alerts for buy and sell signals.
Settings and customization
PulseMA Length: Length of the base EMA (default 20).
PulseMA MA: Length of the SMA for smoothing PulseMA MA (default 20).
Normalization Lookback Period: Normalization period (default 150, minimum 10).
Overbought/Oversold Levels: Levels for the main line (default 100/-100) and thresholds for PulseMA MA, indicating zones where PulseMA MA exceeds set values (default 50/-50).
Colors and gradients: Customize colors for lines, gradients, and levels; options to enable/disable gradients and fills.
Visualizations: Show PulseMA MA, gradients for overbought/oversold/zero levels, and fills.
█ OTHER SECTIONS
Usage examples
Trend analysis: Observe PulseMA above 0 for an uptrend or below 0 for a downtrend. Use different values for PulseMA Length and PulseMA MA to gain a clearer trend picture. PulseMA MA, being smoothed, reacts more slowly and can serve as a noise filter to confirm trend direction.
Reversal signals: Look for buy triangles when PulseMA crosses the oversold level, especially when PulseMA MA is in the oversold zone. Similarly, look for sell triangles when crossing the overbought level with PulseMA MA in the overbought zone. Such confirmation increases signal reliability.
Customization: Test different values for PulseMA Length and PulseMA MA on a given instrument and timeframe to minimize false signals and tailor the indicator to market specifics.
Notes for users
Combine with other tools, such as support/resistance levels or other oscillators, for greater accuracy.
Test different settings for PulseMA Length and PulseMA MA on the chosen instrument and timeframe to find optimal values.
Day Range Breakout Strategy + Trend Structure Filter🚀 Enhanced Strategy for Breaking Previous Day’s Extremes with Market Structure-Based Trend
The strategy focuses on breakouts of previous day’s highs and lows, filtered by trend direction based on market structure.
🔑 Key Improvements
1️⃣ Solved the repainting issue.
There are similar strategies in the community, but the historical results of those algorithms do not correspond to the results of real backtesting.
2️⃣ Added a trend filter.
In most cases, this makes it possible to achieve higher profitability. It works as follows:
The script determines market structure based on a defined number of previous candles.
If there are higher highs and higher lows, this is considered an uptrend structure.
If there are lower highs and lower lows, this is considered a downtrend structure.
The trend filter is adjusted using the Lookback Period setting.
3️⃣ Choice of entry principle.
Implemented the ability to choose whether trades are opened based on closing prices or by high/low breakout, which allows finding the optimal settings for a specific instrument.
4️⃣ Improved entry/exit logic.
When an opposite signal appears, before entering a trade, the script first closes the previous position.
✅ This makes the strategy fully ready for algorithmic trading via webhook on any exchange that supports this function.
5️⃣ Better visualization.
🟥 Red and 🟩 green backgrounds indicate the trend direction.
⚙️ How It Works
The principle of the strategy as follows:
Wait for the breakout of the previous day’s high or low.
Enter long on a breakout of the high, or short on a breakout of the low in the market structure trend direction.
Exit occurs on the breakout of the opposite extreme.
📈 This allows capturing long trends.
⚠️ But, like all similar strategies, in a sideways market it produces losing trades.
⚙️ Default Settings
Breakout Confirmation:
The breakout is determined by the candle close.
You can also choose high/low, but this often gives more false signals. However, on some assets, it may show higher profitability in backtesting.
Trend Structure Period:
The default value is 15.
This means the script analyzes the last 15 candles on the selected timeframe to determine market structure as described above.
Position Size:
Fixed at $1,000, which is 1% of the initial capital of $100,000 to keep risks under control.
Commission:
Set to 0.1%, which is sufficient for most cryptocurrency exchanges.
Slippage:
Configured at 1 tick.
Funding Note:
Keep in mind that funding is not included in this strategy.
It’s impossible to predict whether it will be positive or negative, and it can vary significantly across exchanges, so it is not part of the default settings.
🕒 Recommended Settings
Timeframe: 1H and higher
On lower timeframes → significant discrepancies may occur between historical and real backtesting data.
On higher timeframes → minor differences are possible, related to slippage, sharp moves, and other unpredictable situations.
⚠️ Important Notes
Always remember: Strategy results may not repeat in the future.
The market constantly changes, so:
✅ Monitor the situation
✅ Backtest regularly
✅ Adjust settings for each asset
Also remember about possible bugs in any algorithmic trading strategy.
Even if a script is well-tested, no one knows what unpredictable events the market may bring tomorrow.
⚠️ Risk Management:
Do not risk more than 1% of your deposit per trade, otherwise you may lose your account balance, since this strategy works without stop losses.
⚠️ Disclaimer
The author of the strategy does not encourage anyone to use this algorithm and bears no responsibility for any possible financial losses resulting from its application!
Any decision to use this strategy is made personally by the owners of TradingView accounts and cryptocurrency exchange accounts.
📝 Final Notes
This is not the final version. I already have ideas on how to improve it further, so follow me to not miss updates.
🐞 Bug Reports
If you notice any bugs or inconsistencies in my algorithm,
please let me know — I will try to fix them as quickly as possible.
💬 Feedback & Suggestions
If you have any ideas on how this or any of my other strategies can be improved, feel free to write to me. I will try to implement your suggestions in the script.
Wishing everyone good luck and stable profits! 🚀💰
Session & Swing Levels + Smart AlertsMulti-Timeframe Level Tracker with Advanced Alert System
This comprehensive indicator combines session-based trading levels with multi-timeframe swing analysis, for key level identification and alert management.
Key Features:
Session Analysis:
Asia Session (7:00 PM - 4:00 AM ET) - Tracks high/low levels during Asian market hours
London Session (3:00 AM - 11:00 AM ET) - Identifies key European session levels
Previous Day Levels - Displays prior day's high and low levels
Visual session backgrounds and customizable timezone support
Multi-Timeframe Swing Detection:
Up to 5 configurable timeframes (default: 15m, 1h, 4h, 1D, 1W)
Intelligent swing high/low identification using customizable pivot strength
Each timeframe uses distinct colors for easy identification
Advanced Alert System:
Anti-repainting protection - Alerts only trigger on confirmed bars for reliable live trading
Specific alert messages for each level type (Asia High, London Low, Previous Day levels, etc.)
Individual alert toggles for each session and timeframe
Timestamps in Eastern Time for consistency
Visual Customization:
Independent color schemes for sessions and timeframes
Configurable line styles (solid, dashed, dotted) and widths
Separate styling for active vs. mitigated levels
Optional line extension past mitigation points
📊 How It Works:
Level Creation: Automatically identifies and draws key levels at session closes
Mitigation Detection: Monitors price interaction with levels in real-time
Visual Updates: Changes line appearance when levels are crossed
Smart Alerts: Sends targeted notifications with level-specific information
ZLEMA Trend Index 2.0ZTI — ZLEMA Trend Index 2.0 (0–1000)
Overview
Price Mapped ZTI v2.0 - Enhanced Zero-Lag Trend Index.
This indicator is a significant upgrade to the original ZTI v1.0, featuring enhanced resolution from 0-100 to 0-1000 levels for dramatically improved price action accuracy. The Price Mapped ZTI uses direct price-to-level mapping to eliminate statistical noise and provide true proportional representation of market movements.
Key Innovation: Instead of statistical normalization, this version maps current price position within a user-defined lookback period directly to the ZTI scale, ensuring perfect correlation with actual price movements. I believe this is the best way to capture trends instead of directly on the charts using a plethora of indicators which introduces bad signals resulting in drawdowns. The RSI-like ZTI overbought and oversold lines filter valid trends by slicing through the current trading zone. Unlike RSI that can introduce false signals, the ZTI levels 1 to 1000 is faithfully mapped to the lowest to highest price in the current trading zone (lookback period in days) which can be changed in the settings. The ZTI line will never go off the beyond the ZTI levels in case of extreme trend continuation as the trading zone is constantly updated to reflect only the most recent bars based on lookback days.
Core Features
✅ 10x Higher Resolution - 0-1000 scale provides granular movement detection
✅ Adjustable Trading Zone - Customizable lookback period from 1-50 days
✅ Price-Proportional Mapping - Direct correlation between price position and ZTI level
✅ Zero Statistical Lag - No rolling averages or standard deviation calculations
✅ Multi-Strategy Adaptability - Single parameter adjustment for different trading styles
Trading Zone Optimization
📊 Lookback Period Strategies
Short-term (1-3 days):
Ultra-responsive to recent price action
Perfect for scalping and day trading
Tight range produces more sensitive signals
Medium-term (7-14 days):
Balanced view of recent trading range
Ideal for swing trading
Captures meaningful support/resistance levels
Long-term (21-30 days):
Broader market context
Excellent for position trading
Smooths out short-term market noise
⚡ Market Condition Adaptation
Volatile Markets: Use shorter lookback (3-5 days) for tighter ranges
Trending Markets: Use longer lookback (14-21 days) for broader context
Ranging Markets: Use medium lookback (7-10 days) for clear boundaries
🎯 Timeframe Optimization
1-minute charts: 1-2 day lookback
5-minute charts: 2-5 day lookback
Hourly charts: 7-14 day lookback
Daily charts: 21-50 day lookback
Trading Applications
Scalping Setup (2-day lookback):
Super tight range for quick reversals
ZTI 800+ = immediate short opportunity
ZTI 200- = immediate long opportunity
Swing Trading Setup (10-day lookback):
Meaningful swing levels captured
ZTI extremes = high-probability reversal zones
More stable signals, reduced whipsaws
Advanced Usage
🔧 Real-Time Adaptability
Trending days: Increase to 14+ days for broader perspective
Range-bound days: Decrease to 3 days for tighter signals
High volatility: Shorter lookback for responsiveness
Low volatility: Longer lookback to avoid false signals
💡 Multi-Timeframe Approach
Entry signals: Use 7-day ZTI on main timeframe
Trend confirmation: Use 21-day ZTI on higher timeframe
Exit timing: Use 3-day ZTI for precise exits
🌐 Session Optimization
Asian session: Shorter lookback (3-5 days) for range-bound conditions
London/NY session: Longer lookback (7-14 days) for trending conditions
How It Works
The indicator maps the current price position within the specified lookback period directly to a 0-1000 scale and plots it using ZLEMA (Zero Lag Exponential Moving Average) which has the least lag of the available popular moving averages:
Price at recent high = ZTI at 1000
Price at recent low = ZTI at 1
Price at mid-range = ZTI at 500
This creates perfect proportional representation where every price movement translates directly to corresponding ZTI movement, eliminating the false signals common in traditional oscillators.
This single, versatile indicator adapts to any market condition, timeframe, or trading style through one simple parameter adjustment, making it an essential tool for traders at every level.
Credits
ZLEMA techniques widely attributed to John Ehlers.
Disclaimer
This tool is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Backtest and forward‑test before live use, and always manage risk.
Please note that I set this as closed source to prevent source code cloning by others, repackaging and republishing which results in multiple confusing choices of the same indicator.
MuLegend's Break & Retest StrategyThis strategy was produced to help traders who trade NQ: win! try it out on a demo, see how you like and happy trading!! Works well if you are a break & retest trader!!!
MuMu
@atltime2shine on IG
B@dshah Indicator🚀 Advanced Multi-Indicator Trading System
A comprehensive trading indicator that combines multiple technical analysis tools for high-probability signal generation:
📊 CORE FEATURES:
- EMA Trend Analysis (Fast/Slow crossovers)
- RSI Momentum Detection
- MACD Signal Confirmation
- Bollinger Bands (Squeeze & Mean Reversion)
- Fibonacci Retracement Levels
- Volume & ATR Filtering
- Multi-Confluence Scoring System (0-10 scale)
🎯 SIGNAL QUALITY:
- Non-repainting signals (confirmed at bar close)
- Minimum 60% strength threshold for trades
- Dynamic TP/SL based on market structure
- Real-time win rate tracking
- Signal strength percentage display
⚙️ UNIQUE FEATURES:
- BB Squeeze detection for volatility breakouts
- Fibonacci level confluence analysis
- Smart position sizing recommendations
- Visual TP/SL lines with outcome tracking
- Comprehensive statistics table
🔔 ALERTS INCLUDED:
- Buy/Sell signals with strength ratings
- TP/SL hit notifications
- BB squeeze/expansion alerts
- Fibonacci level touches
Best used on 1H+ timeframes for optimal results.
Perfect for swing trading and position entries.