Asia Range Breakout Table (Narrowness)
Asia Range Breakout Table (Narrowness)
Overview
The Asia Range Breakout Table (Narrowness) is a professional trading tool designed to analyze and display range characteristics across key Asian trading sessions. This indicator provides real-time visual feedback on market range narrowness, helping traders identify potential breakout opportunities based on historical range comparisons. Better to use in M5 or M15 timeframe.
Key Features
- Multi-Session Analysis : Tracks 6 crucial Asian market sessions:
- ORB Pre (Tokyo Pre-open)
- ORB First (Tokyo First)
- Sydney Box
- Tokyo Launch Box
- 2nd Session Pre-Open
- 2nd ORB (Tokyo 2nd Session)
- Historical Comparison : Compares current session ranges against 44 days of historical data
- Visual Color Coding :
- 🟢 Narrowest (<10%) - Extremely compressed ranges
- 🟢 Narrow (10-59%) - Below average ranges
- 🟣 Normal (60-79%) - Typical range behavior
- 🔴 Wide (≥80%) - Expanded range conditions
- Customizable Display : Adjustable table position and text size
- Session Toggle : Enable/disable individual sessions based on your trading focus
How It Works
The indicator calculates the high-low range for each defined session and ranks it against historical data using percentile analysis. This helps traders quickly identify:
- Unusually narrow ranges that may indicate impending breakouts
- Expanded ranges suggesting increased volatility
- Normal range behavior for context
Use Cases
- Breakout Trading : Identify sessions with compressed ranges for potential breakout setups
- Volatility Assessment : Gauge market conditions across different Asian sessions
- Session Analysis : Understand range behavior during specific market hours
- Risk Management : Adjust position sizing based on range characteristics
Input Parameters
- Session Toggles : Enable/disable individual session tracking
- Table Position : Choose from four corner positions
- Text Size : Adjust table readability (Tiny, Small, Normal, Big)
Ideal For
- Asian session traders
- Breakout strategy enthusiasts
- Volatility analysis
- Multi-timeframe analysts
- Professional and retail traders focusing on Asian markets
Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and informational purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and risk management before trading.
Analysis
Sessions Candle Colors1. Candle Display Mode
Choose how your candles are rendered:
Normal – Standard bullish/bearish candles with theme-based colors.
Normal – Single – Candles displayed in a single neutral tone.
Session – Candles colored by active trading sessions.
Session – Single – Session-based candles in a single tone.
None – Disables custom candles (useful if you prefer chart elements only).
2. Theme: Normal Candles
Includes a curated set of themes for standard candles.
Default: Light – BW
Available Themes:
Dark – Prime
Dark – Violet
Dark – Ice
Dark – Bronze
Dark – BW
Light – BW
Light – ICT (Inner Circle Trader)
Light – S&F (Set and Forget)
3. Theme: Session Candles
Custom palettes for session-based modes:
Light – AnandaDivine
Light – WealthFRX
Note: “Light” and “Dark” indicate which chart background the theme is optimized for.
4. Hide Gaps
Enables a custom gapless mode by forcing each candle’s open to match the previous close.
This option helps maintain visual continuity on charts with irregular price feeds.
Tip: For best results, disable TradingView’s built-in candles under chart settings before enabling this indicator.
AI Bot Regime Feed (v6) — stableThis indicator generates real-time, structured JSON alerts for external trading bots or automation systems.
It combines multiple technical layers to identify market regimes and high-probability buy/sell events, and sends them to any webhook endpoint (e.g., a FastAPI or Zapier listener).
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.
Profitsmaxx Constructor ProfitsMaxx Constructor is a custom-built indicator designed for traders who want a strategy tailored specifically to their preferred asset and timeframe. Unlike general-purpose tools, each version of ProfitsMaxx Constructor is uniquely optimized for one trading pair — such as ADAUSDT — and fine-tuned to deliver the most accurate buy and sell signals based on that market’s unique behavior and volatility.
Our team analyzes the asset’s historical data, price action, and momentum patterns to construct a personalized indicator that adapts perfectly to its trading rhythm. The result is a clean, precise signal system built to enhance timing, confidence, and profitability.
Each ProfitsMaxx Constructor indicator is exclusive to the client and created on request, ensuring a truly custom trading experience that aligns with your goals and style.
👉 Want your own version? Visit www.profitsmaxx.com and request a ProfitsMaxx Constructor indicator customized for your chosen coin and timeframe.
Trend CandlesThis shows candlesticks that only follow the trend. So it will make it easier to know where the trend is going.
Quick Valuation V.1.0 (Ibo)This Pine Script indicator performs a Quick Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)-style Valuation to estimate the intrinsic value of a stock.
It calculates a projected Fair Value and a Margin of Safety based on user inputs or automatically pulled financial data from TradingView (like revenue, growth, margin, and exit P/E). It also automatically computes a Discount Rate using a modified CAPM model.
Key Features
Valuation Output: Calculates a target Fair Value and the resulting Margin of Safety.
Data Flexibility: Automatically pulls essential fundamentals (Revenue, Margins, Shares Outstanding, etc.) but allows the user to override any value (revenue, growth, P/E, shares, etc.) via the settings.
Automated Discount Rate: Calculates the Discount Rate (Cost of Equity) using the current 10-Year Real Yield and a computed or user-defined Beta.
Clear Display: Presents all input metrics, calculated values, and data sources (TradingView or User Input) in a neat table on the chart.
Pairs Trading Scanner [BackQuant]Pairs Trading Scanner
What it is
This scanner analyzes the relationship between your chart symbol and a chosen pair symbol in real time. It builds a normalized “spread” between them, tracks how tightly they move together (correlation), converts the spread into a Z-Score (how far from typical it is), and then prints clear LONG / SHORT / EXIT prompts plus an at-a-glance dashboard with the numbers that matter.
Why pairs at all?
Markets co-move. When two assets are statistically related, their relationship (the spread) tends to oscillate around a mean.
Pairs trading doesn’t require calling overall market direction you trade the relative mispricing between two instruments.
This scanner gives you a robust, visual way to find those dislocations, size their significance, and structure the trade.
How it works (plain English)
Step 1 Pick a partner: Select the Pair Symbol to compare against your chart symbol. The tool fetches synchronized prices for both.
Step 2 Build a spread: Choose a Spread Method that defines “relative value” (e.g., Log Spread, Price Ratio, Return Difference, Price Difference). Each lens highlights a different flavor of divergence.
Step 3 Validate relationship: A rolling Correlation checks if the pair is moving together enough to be tradable. If correlation is weak, the scanner stands down.
Step 4 Standardize & score: The spread is normalized (mean & variability over a lookback) to form a Z-Score . Large absolute Z means “stretched,” small means “near fair.”
Step 5 Signals: When the Z-Score crosses user-defined thresholds with sufficient correlation , entries print:
LONG = long chart symbol / short pair symbol,
SHORT = short chart symbol / long pair symbol,
EXIT = mean reversion into the exit zone or correlation failure.
Core concepts (the three pillars)
Spread Method Your definition of “distance” between the two series.
Guidance:
Log Spread: Focuses on proportional differences; robust when prices live on different scales.
Price Ratio: Classic relative value; good when you care about “X per Y.”
Return Difference: Emphasizes recent performance gaps; nimble for momentum-to-mean plays.
Price Difference: Straight subtraction; intuitive for similar-scale assets (e.g., two ETFs).
Correlation A rolling score of co-movement. The scanner requires it to be above your Min Correlation before acting, so you’re not trading random divergence.
Z-Score “How abnormal is today’s spread?” Positive = chart richer than pair; negative = cheaper. Thresholds define entries/exits with transparent, statistical context.
What you’ll see on the chart
Correlation plot (blue line) with a dashed Min Correlation guide. Above the line = green zone for signals; below = hands off.
Z-Score plot (white line) with colored, dashed Entry bands and dotted Exit bands. Zero line for mean.
Normalized spread (yellow) for a quick “shape read” of recent divergence swings.
Signal markers :
LONG (green label) when Z < –Entry and corr OK,
SHORT (red label) when Z > +Entry and corr OK,
EXIT (gray label) when Z returns inside the Exit band or correlation drops below the floor.
Background tint for active state (faint green for long-spread stance, faint red for short-spread stance).
The two built-in dashboards
Statistics Table (top-right)
Pair Symbol Your chosen partner.
Correlation Live value vs. your minimum.
Z-Score How stretched the spread is now.
Current / Pair Prices Real-time anchors.
Signal State NEUTRAL / LONG / SHORT.
Price Ratio Context for ratio-style setups.
Analysis Table (bottom-right)
Avg Correlation Typical co-movement level over your window.
Max |Z| The recent extremes of dislocation.
Spread Volatility How “lively” the spread has been.
Trade Signal A human-readable prompt (e.g., “LONG A / SHORT B” or “NO TRADE” / “LOW CORRELATION”).
Risk Level LOW / MEDIUM / HIGH based on current stretch (absolute Z).
Signals logic (plain English)
Entry (LONG): The spread is unusually negative (chart cheaper vs pair) and correlation is healthy. Expect mean reversion upward in the spread: long chart, short pair.
Entry (SHORT): The spread is unusually positive (chart richer vs pair) and correlation is healthy. Expect mean reversion downward in the spread: short chart, long pair.
Exit: The spread relaxes back toward normal (inside your exit band), or correlation deteriorates (relationship no longer trusted).
A quick, repeatable workflow
1) Choose your pair in context (same sector/theme or known macro link). Think: “Do these two plausibly co-move?”
2) Pick a spread lens that matches your narrative (ratio for relative value, returns for short-term performance gaps, etc.).
3) Confirm correlation is above your floor no corr, no trade.
4) Wait for a stretch (Z beyond Entry band) and a printed LONG / SHORT .
5) Manage to the mean (EXIT band) or correlation failure; let the scanners’ state/labels keep you honest.
Settings that matter (and why)
Spread Method Defines the “mispricing” you care about.
Correlation Period Longer = steadier regime read, shorter = snappier to regime change.
Z-Score Period The window that defines “normal” for the spread; it sets the yardstick.
Use Percentage Returns Normalizes series when using return-based logic; keep on for mixed-scale assets.
Entry / Exit Thresholds Set your stretch and your target reversion zone. Wider entries = rarer but stronger signals.
Minimum Correlation The gatekeeper. Raising it favors quality over quantity.
Choosing pairs (practical cheat sheet)
Same family: two index ETFs, two oil-linked names, two gold miners, two L1 tokens.
Hedge & proxy: stock vs. sector ETF, BTC vs. BTC index, WTI vs. energy ETF.
Cross-venue or cross-listing: instruments that are functionally the same exposure but price differently intraday.
Reading the cues like a pro
Divergence shape: The yellow normalized spread helps you see rhythm fast spike and snap-back versus slow grind.
Corr-first discipline: Don’t fight the “Min Correlation” line. Good pairs trading starts with a relationship you can trust.
Exit humility: When Z re-centers, let the EXIT do its job. The edge is the journey to the mean, not overstaying it.
Frequently asked (quick answers)
“Long/Short means what exactly?”
LONG = long the chart symbol and short the pair symbol.
SHORT = short the chart symbol and long the pair symbol.
“Do I need same price scales?” No. The spread methods normalize in different ways; choose the one that fits your use case (log/ratio are great for mixed scales).
“What if correlation falls mid-trade?” The scanner will neutralize the state and print EXIT . Relationship first; trade second.
Field notes & patterns
Snap-back days: After a one-sided session, return-difference spreads often flag cleaner intraday mean reversions.
Macro rotations: Ratio spreads shine during sector re-weights (e.g., value vs. growth ETFs); look for steady corr + elevated |Z|.
Event bleed-through: If one symbol reacts to news and its partner lags, Z often flags a high-quality, short-horizon re-centering.
Display controls at a glance
Show Statistics Table Live state & key numbers, top-right.
Show Analysis Table Context/risk read, bottom-right.
Show Correlation / Spread / Z-Score Toggle the sub-charts you want visible.
Show Entry/Exit Signals Turn markers on/off as needed.
Coloring Adjust Long/Short/Neutral and correlation line colors to match your theme.
Alerts (ready to route to your workflow)
Pairs Long Entry Z falls through the long threshold with correlation above minimum.
Pairs Short Entry Z rises through the short threshold with correlation above minimum.
Pairs Trade Exit Z returns to neutral or the relationship fails your correlation floor.
Correlation Breakdown Rolling correlation crosses your minimum; relationship caution.
Final notes
The scanner is designed to keep you systematic: require relationship (correlation), quantify dislocation (Z-Score), act when stretched, stand down when it normalizes or the relationship degrades. It’s a full, visual loop for relative-value trading that stays out of your way when it should and gets loud only when the numbers line up.
Price Level Highlighter [ldlwtrades]This indicator is a minimalist and highly effective tool designed for traders who incorporate institutional concepts into their analysis. It automates the identification of key psychological price levels and adds a unique, dynamic layer of information to help you focus on the most relevant area of the market. Inspired by core principles of market structure and liquidity, it serves as a powerful visual guide for anticipating potential support and resistance.
The core idea is simple: specific price points, particularly those ending in round numbers or common increments, often act as magnets or barriers for price. While many indicators simply plot static lines, this tool goes further by intelligently highlighting the single most significant level in real-time. This dynamic feature allows you to quickly pinpoint where the market is currently engaged, offering a clear reference point for your trading decisions. It reduces chart clutter and enhances your focus on the immediate price action.
Features
Customizable Price Range: Easily define a specific Start Price and End Price to focus the indicator on the most relevant area of your chart, preventing unnecessary clutter.
Adjustable Increment: Change the interval of the lines to suit your trading style, from high-frequency increments (e.g., 10 points) for scalping to wider intervals (e.g., 50 or 100 points) for swing trading.
Intelligent Highlighting: A key feature that automatically identifies and highlights the single horizontal line closest to the current market price with a distinct color and thickness. This gives you an immediate visual cue for the most relevant price level.
Highly Customizabile: Adjust the line color, style, and width for both the main lines and the highlighted line to fit your personal chart aesthetic.
Usage
Apply the indicator to your chart.
In the settings, input your desired price range (Start Price and End Price) to match the market you are trading.
Set the Price Increment to your preferred density.
Monitor the chart for the highlighted line. This is your active price level and a key area of interest.
Combine this tool with other confirmation signals (e.g., order blocks, fair value gaps, liquidity pools) to build higher-probability trade setups.
Best Practices
Pairing: This tool is effective across all markets, including stocks, forex, indices, and crypto. It is particularly useful for volatile markets where price moves rapidly between psychological levels.
Mindful Analysis: Use the highlighted level as a reference point for your analysis, not as a standalone signal. A break above or below this level can signify a shift in market control.
Backtesting: Always backtest the indicator on your preferred market and timeframe to understand how it performs under different conditions.
MSFusion- MultiScoreFusionThis Pine Script strategy, MSFusion - MultiScoreFusion, combines Ichimoku components and Hull Moving Average (HMA) signals to generate a composite score for each bar.
It evaluates several conditions—such as price crossing above HMA55, Tenkan and Kijun lines, and price position relative to the Ichimoku cloud—and assigns scores to each.
The script displays a label with the total score and a tooltip listing the contributing conditions when a strong bullish signal is detected. This approach helps traders quickly assess market momentum and trend strength using multiple technical criteria.
Auto Levels & Smart Money [ #Algo ] Pro : Smart Levels is Smart Trades 🏆
"Auto Levels & Smart Money Pro" indicator is specially designed for day traders, pull-back / reverse trend traders / scalpers & trend analysts. This indicator plots the key smart levels , which will be automatically drawn at the session's start or during the session, if specific input is selected.
🔶 Usage and Settings :
A :
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
B :
⇓ ( *refer 📷 images ) ⇓
🔷 Features :
a : automated smart levels with #algo compatibility.
b : plots auto SHADOW candle levels Zones ( smart money concept ).
c : ▄▀ RENKO Emulator engine ( plots Non-repaintable #renko data as a line chart ).
d : session 1st candle's High, Low & 50% levels ( irrespective of chart time-frame ).
e : 1-hour High & Low levels of specific candle, ( from the drop-down menu ), for any global market symbols or crypto.
f : previous Day / Week / Month, chart High & Low.
g : pivot point levels of the Daily, Weekly & Monthly charts.
h : 2 class types of ⏰ alerts ( only signals or algo execution ).
i : auto RENKO box size (ATR-based) table for 30 symbols.
j : auto processes " daylight saving time 🌓" data and plots accordingly.
💠Note: "For key smart levels, it processes data from a customized time frame, which is not available for the *free Trading View subscription users , and requires a premium plan." By this indicator, you have an edge over the paid subscription plan users and can automatically plot the shadow candle levels and Non-repaintable RENKO emulator for the current chart on the free Trading View Plan at any time frame .
⬇ Take a deep dive 👁️🗨️ into the Smart levels trading Basic Demonstration ⬇
▄▀ 1: "RENKO Emulator Engine" ⭐ , plots a noiseless chart for easy Top/Bottom set-up analysis. 10 types of 💼 asset classes options available in the drop-down menu.
LTP is tagged to current RSI ➕ volatility color change for instant decisions.
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
🟣 2: "Shadow Candle Levels and Zones" will be drawn at the start of the session (which will project shadow candle levels of the previous day), and it comes with a zone. which specifies the Supply and Demand Zone area. *Shadow levels can be drawn for the NSE & BSE: Index/Futures/Options/Equity and MCX: Commodity/FNO market only.
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓https://www.tradingview.com/x/SIskBm77/
🟠 3: plots "Session first candle High, low, and 50%" levels ( irrespective of chart time-frame ), which a very important levels for an intraday trader with add-on levels of Previous Day, Week & Month High and Low levels.
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
🔵 4: plots "Hourly chart candle" High & Low levels for the specific candles, selected from the drop-down menu with Pivot Points levels of Daily, Weekly, Monthly chart.
Note: The drop-down menu gives a manual selection of the hour candles for all "🌐 Crypto / XAU-USD / Forex / USA".
ex: "2nd hr" will give the session's First hour candle "High & Low" level.
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
🔲 5: "Auto RENKO box size" ( ATR based ) : This indicator is specially designed for 'Renko' trading enthusiasts, where the Box size of the ' Renko chart ' for intraday or swing trading, ( ATR based ) , automatically calculated for the selected ( editable ) symbols in the table.
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
*NOTE :
Table symbols are for NSE/BSE/USA.
Symbols are Non-editable (fixed).
Table Symbols for MCX only.
Table Symbols for XAU & 🌐CRYTO.
⏰ 6: "Alert functions."
⇓ ( *refer 📷 image ) ⇓
◻ : Total 8 signal alerts can be possible in a Single alert.
◻ : Total 12 #algo alerts , ( must ✔ tick the Consent check box for algo and alerts execution/trigger ).
💹 Modified moving average line. Includes data from both the exponential and simple moving average.
This Indicator will work like a Trading System . It is different from other indicators, which give Signals only. This script is designed to be tailored to your personal trading style by combining components to create your own comprehensive strategy . The synergy between the components is key to its usefulness.
It focuses on the key Smart Levels and gives you an Extra edge over others.
✅ HOW TO GET ACCESS :
You can see the Author's instructions to get instant access to this indicator & our premium suite. If you like any of my Invite-Only indicators, let me know!
⚠ RISK DISCLAIMER :
All content provided by "TradeWithKeshhav" is for informational & educational purposes only.
It does not constitute any financial advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any securities of any type. All investments / trading involve risks. Past performance does not guarantee future results / returns.
Regards :
TradeWithKeshhav & team
Happy trading and investing!
Ichimoku Horizon v2Ichimoku Horizon v2
Multi-timeframe Ichimoku. Pine Script v6.
lookahead_off, no-repaint. Chart timeframe + up to three higher horizons.
What’s new in v2
Presets (+ Custom mode).
Timeframe banner.
Lines and colors configurable per TF.
Right-side labels for Tenkan/Kijun + “Kumo TF” labels.
Preset structure
Timeframe 1 = short horizon → blue.
Timeframe 2 = medium horizon → green.
Timeframe 3 = long horizon → violet.
MTF display is automatic only when the selected TF is higher than the chart TF.
Calculation rules
Tenkan 9, Kijun 26, SSB 52, Displacement 26.
SSA = average(Tenkan, Kijun) projected +26.
SSB = (52-high + 52-low) / 2 projected +26.
Chikou = close plotted 26 periods back.
lookahead_off and no-repaint
lookahead_off: calculations use no future data. Lines update live while a bar forms, then freeze at close.
No-repaint: past values never change after close. Plots reflect the real-time state exactly.
Adjustable labels
Distance: per-TF right offset (in bars) to position labels.
Size and color: Tiny/Small/Normal/Large, color per TF.
Anti-overlap: automatic spacing when two labels share nearly the same price.
Disclaimer
Ichimoku Horizon is a decision-support tool. It guarantees no results and does not replace your analysis or training in trading and risk. Before risking capital, test on a demo account if possible. Match parameters to your asset and horizon. Markets are volatile: losses, including total loss, are possible. Use risk management.
Imbalance (FVG)Indicator Description
This script is designed to automatically identify and visualize Fair Value Gaps (FVGs), also known as Imbalances, on your chart. An FVG is a key price action concept that highlights areas where the price moved swiftly, leaving a gap behind. This indicator is simple to use and fully customizable, making it an excellent tool for both novice and experienced traders.
Key Features
Automatic Detection: The indicator scans the market in real-time, automatically drawing FVG zones for both Bullish and Bearish moves.
Mitigation Tracking: When the price returns to an FVG zone, the indicator automatically marks it as "mitigated" (filled) by changing its color and style. This provides a clear signal that the imbalance has been neutralized.
Extend Zones Into the Future: Unmitigated FVG zones are automatically extended into the future, allowing them to be used as potential future support or resistance levels.
Full Customization: The user has complete control over the indicator's appearance. You can change the colors for bullish, bearish, and mitigated zones, as well as toggle their visibility on and off.
Performance Optimization: A built-in limit for the number of drawn objects prevents chart clutter and avoids errors from TradingView's drawing limits, ensuring smooth performance.
How to Use?
FVG zones can be used in various ways, including:
Price Magnets: Markets often tend to revert to "fill" these gaps.
Potential Entry Points: Price entering an FVG zone can present an opportunity to open a position, especially if confirming signals appear.
Support/Resistance Zones: Unfilled gaps can act as strong, dynamic levels of support or resistance.
Racktor Analysis Assistant
Racktor Analysis Assistant — Feature Overview
The Racktor Analysis Assistant is a multi-module market-structure toolkit that plots pivots, BoS/ChoCh levels, session breakouts, inside bars, and higher-timeframe BTS/STB trap signals — with complete styling controls and alerting.
Smart Pivot Engine (ZigZag Core)
- Adaptive pivot period switching based on timeframe threshold.
- ZigZag stream tracks pivot types (H/L, HH/HL/LH/LL) with Major & Minor streams.
- Clean visuals: optional ZigZag line & pivot labels with customizable style, width, and color.
Major & Minor Structure Signals
- Detects BoS and ChoCh for both Major and Minor swings.
- Updates External Trend on Major events and Internal Trend on Minor events.
- One-time triggers per level via locking.
- Per-category styling for Major/Minor Bullish & Bearish BoS and ChoCh.
- Alerts with symbol, pivot, timeframe, and time, limited to specific timeframes if desired.
Inside Bar Module
- Toggleable Inside Bar detection.
- Custom colors for bullish and bearish inside bars.
- Optional alerts on detection.
Session Breakout Suite
- Custom session window with shaded box.
- On session close, plots High/Mid/Low breakout lines extendable for N hours.
- Optional previous day & week high/low lines.
- Breakout vs Liquidity Sweep modes (close-based or wick-based confirmation).
- Display styles: Fixed (triangles) or Moving (vertical dotted lines).
- Alerts for “first event” or “every event.”
BTS/STB Trap (Higher-Timeframe ID1/ID2 Logic)
- BTS/STB toggle with selectable check timeframe (default: 4H).
- STB (bullish, Sell→Buy): strict ID1/ID2 relationships, both candles bullish; green circle below HTF ID1 low.
- BTS (bearish, Buy→Sell): strict ID1/ID2 relationships, both candles bearish; red circle above HTF ID1 high.
- Non-repainting; dots appear only at HTF candle close.
- Timeframe-aware rendering (dots show only on selected timeframe).
- Alerts for STB/BTS at HTF close.
Styling & Limits
- Per-feature color/style/width customization.
- Generous limits for boxes, labels, and lines.
- Session tools limited to ≤ 120-minute charts for accuracy.
Anti-Repaint
- HTF signals use lookahead_off and HTF-close gating to avoid repainting.
- BoS/ChoCh and Session logic track prior values and use locks to prevent duplicates.
Quick Start
Set the Timeframe Threshold and pivot periods for lower/higher TFs.
Enable desired Major/Minor BoS/ChoCh lines and customize styles.
Activate Inside Bar Module if required.
Configure Session Breakout window, mode, and alert settings.
Enable BTS/STB detection, keeping 4H default or selecting a custom TF.
Add alerts for chosen signals and let the assistant annotate structure, sessions, and HTF traps.
Best Use with Racktor's Core Trading Strategy
For traders who want structure clarity without clutter, this Analysis-Assistant is built to keep your chart actionable and adaptive.
Theil-Sen Line Filter [BackQuant]Theil-Sen Line Filter
A robust, median-slope baseline that tracks price while resisting outliers. Designed for the chart pane as a clean, adaptive reference line with optional candle coloring and slope-flip alerts.
What this is
A trend filter that estimates the underlying slope of price using a Theil-Sen style median of past slopes, then advances a baseline by a controlled fraction of that slope each bar. The result is a smooth line that reacts to real directional change while staying calm through noise, gaps, and single-bar shocks.
Why Theil-Sen
Classical moving averages are sensitive to outliers and shape changes. Ordinary least squares is sensitive to large residuals. The Theil-Sen idea replaces a single fragile estimate with the median of many simple slopes, which is statistically robust and less influenced by a few extreme bars. That makes the baseline steadier in choppy conditions and cleaner around regime turns.
What it plots
Filtered baseline that advances by a fraction of the robust slope each bar.
Optional candle coloring by baseline slope sign for quick trend read.
Alerts when the baseline slope turns up or down.
How it behaves (high level)
Looks back over a fixed window and forms many “current vs past” bar-to-bar slopes.
Takes the median of those slopes to get a robust estimate for the bar.
Optionally caps the magnitude of that per-bar slope so a single volatile bar cannot yank the line.
Moves the baseline forward by a user-controlled fraction of the estimated slope. Lower fractions are smoother. Higher fractions are more responsive.
Inputs and what they do
Price Source — the series the filter tracks. Typical is close; HL2 or HLC3 can be smoother.
Window Length — how many bars to consider for slopes. Larger windows are steadier and slower. Smaller windows are quicker and noisier.
Response — fraction of the estimated slope applied each bar. 1.00 follows the robust slope closely; values below 1.00 dampen moves.
Slope Cap Mode — optional guardrail on each bar’s slope:
None — no cap.
ATR — cap scales with recent true range.
Percent — cap scales with price level.
Points — fixed absolute cap in price points.
ATR Length / Mult, Cap Percent, Cap Points — tune the chosen cap mode’s size.
UI Settings — show or hide the line, paint candles by slope, choose long and short colors.
How to read it
Up-slope baseline and green candles indicate a rising robust trend. Pullbacks that do not flip the slope often resolve in trend direction.
Down-slope baseline and red candles indicate a falling robust trend. Bounces against the slope are lower-probability until proven otherwise.
Flat or frequent flips suggest a range. Increase window length or decrease response if you want fewer whipsaws in sideways markets.
Use cases
Bias filter — only take longs when slope is up, shorts when slope is down. It is a simple way to gate faster setups.
Stop or trail reference — use the line as a trailing guide. If price closes beyond the line and the slope flips, consider reducing exposure.
Regime detector — widen the window on higher timeframes to define major up vs down regimes for asset rotation or risk toggles.
Noise control — enable a cap mode in very volatile symbols to retain the line’s continuity through event bars.
Tuning guidance
Quick swing trading — shorter window, higher response, optionally add a percent cap to keep it stable on large moves.
Position trading — longer window, moderate response. ATR cap tends to scale well across cycles.
Low-liquidity or gappy charts — prefer longer window and a points or ATR cap. That reduces jumpiness around discontinuities.
Alerts included
Theil-Sen Up Slope — baseline’s one-bar change crosses above zero.
Theil-Sen Down Slope — baseline’s one-bar change crosses below zero.
Strengths
Robust to outliers through median-based slope estimation.
Continuously advances with price rather than re-anchoring, which reduces lag at turns.
User-selectable slope caps to tame shock bars without over-smoothing everything.
Minimal visuals with optional candle painting for fast regime recognition.
Notes
This is a filter, not a trading system. It does not account for execution, spreads, or gaps. Pair it with entry logic, risk management, and higher-timeframe context if you plan to use it for decisions.
Momentum Concepts [A1TradeHub]ℹ️ General Information — TSI + Stochastic Z-Score (Momentum Duo)
Purpose: A two-oscillator stack that blends trend strength (TSI) with extreme-move normalization (Stochastic Z-Score) to time entries with confirmation instead of guessing tops/bottoms.
Components
Stochastic Z-Score (SZ): Converts price stretch into a bounded curve.
Red zone ≈ overbought supply, Green zone ≈ oversold demand.
The hook out of a band often marks turning points.
True Strength Index (TSI): Measures momentum quality and direction.
Signal/line cross = timing, Zero-line = trend filter, slope = acceleration.
Core Read
Alignment = edge: SZ leaves a band and TSI agrees (cross/slope).
Divergences: Higher-low on SZ/TSI vs lower-low in price (bullish). Lower-high on SZ/TSI vs higher-high in price (bearish). Best when near bands.
Mid-range = chop: Avoid trades when SZ is centered and TSI is flat.
Best Practices
Use structure (PDH/PDL, EMAs 13/48/200, trendlines) as context.
Scale profits into opposing SZ band or on TSI flatten/cross-back.
Place stops beyond the last swing or key EMA; skip high-volatility news.
Timeframes
Works on intraday (e.g., 5–15m) and swings (1h/4h). Use higher TF for bias, lower TF for entries.
This combo is designed to keep you on the right side of momentum, act at band hooks with TSI confirmation, and stand down when conditions are indecisive.
I. 🔴🟢 TSI Oscillator — Quick Guide
What you’re seeing
Lines: Fast TSI + slow Signal (both EMA-smoothed momentum).
Zones: 🟢 Green = oversold, 🔴 Red = overbought, 0-line = trend regime.
Long: 🟢 hook up → fast crosses above slow → ideally reclaim 0.
Short: 🔴 roll down → fast crosses below slow → ideally lose 0.
Exits: Trim into the opposite zone or on a cross back.
Divergence: TSI ↑ vs price ↓ = bullish; TSI ↓ vs price ↑ = bearish.
Avoid: Both lines chopping around 0.
II. Stochastic Z-Score — Quick Guide
Zones: 🔴 Red = overbought/supply, 🟢 Green = oversold/demand.
Curve: Watch the hook out of a zone for the turn.
Signals
🟢 Green Arrow (from Green zone): Momentum turns up → call/long bias. Enter on first pullback; stop under last swing/13-EMA.
🔻 Red/Bearish Arrow (from Red zone): Momentum rolls down → put/short bias. Enter on first lower-high; stop above last swing/13-EMA.
⚪ Ball = Momentum Shift: Early heads-up (slope change). Use as confirmation/add-on, not a standalone entry.
ICT Sessions & Killzones +PRO (VinceFxBT)ICT Sessions & Killzones +PRO (VinceFxBT)
All in one Session and Killzone script for FX, Futures and Crypto markets. It includes London, New York, CBDR & Asia Sessions and Killzones.
Features
Includes London, New York, Asia, CBDR sessions
Includes all ICT Killzones
Extended session highs/lows up to 90s back, until mitigated.
Set recurring alerts for session highs and lows
Includes Indices price levels and opens
Uses UTC timezones with automatic Daylight Saving Time so NO timezone correction needed ; ) Works out of the box for all regions, including different dates of DST for US/EU.
Session highs/lows displayed on chart as lines, box or background color
Customize line styles, width and colors
Customize colors for Sessions and Killzones
Optionally include weekends for Session or Killzone separately
Optionally display day separators and labels
Fully control which options are displayed at higher or lower timeframes. (e.g. hide sessions when timeframe is 1h or higher)
Session display options
Session Background Color.
Session High & Low Lines, including Session Middle Line.
Extended session highs/lows until mitigated
Extended Session Highs & Lows until mitigated.
Session Background Color with extended Asia Session Highs & Lows until mitigated.
Set recurring alerts for session highs and lows
Set automatic alerts when previous and/or current session levels are broken.
The Bravo KitThe Bravo Suite is an all-encompassing toolset that provides traders with various indicators and technical analysis tools. It is designed for ease of use, with simple inputs and intuitive visuals, to assist the average trader in making informed decisions. This guide will provide an overview of the different features included in the Bravo Suite and delve into some of the more intricate details.
Features of the Bravo Suite
Bravo Candles
These candles provide a unique way of visualizing price action by color-coding the candles based on their angle relative to the past price. Users have the option to enable or disable the Bravo Candles theme.
As shown below purple shades start to appear when price is overextended - leveraging the trend angle calculation:
Bravo Sequential
The Bravo Sequential system is a unique take on the traditional 9 count system that aims to identify potential trend exhaustion points. The major difference in the Bravo Sequential is that it uses the trend angle once again, instead of the generic method of counting candlesticks. By incorporating trend angle, it can potentially provide better insights into the momentum behind the current price trend and identify trend exhaustion points more effectively.
This approach allows the Bravo Sequential system to take into account not only the number of consecutive price increases or decreases but also the strength of these movements. Consequently, it can provide a more accurate depiction of the underlying trend, especially if the momentum of the price action is changing.
While the traditional 9 count system only counts the number of sequential candles based on consecutive higher or lower closes, the Bravo Sequential system uses the angle of the trend to identify if the trend is losing strength. It displays a 9 count when it detects a possible trend exhaustion point, accompanied by an optional label for better visibility on the chart.
+ Icons are also produced at the custom 9 count levels making it clearer to see these potential exhaustion zones.
Bravo Fibonacci Bands
The Bravo Fibonacci Bands are an advanced and innovative feature of the Bravo Suite, specifically designed to offer a more precise and dynamic price channel using a custom blend of Fibonacci numbers and weighted averages. This powerful combination allows traders to observe potential support and resistance levels, providing valuable insights into market direction and price movements.
Fibonacci numbers are a well-known and incredibly important concept in mathematics, with various applications in trading and technical analysis.
The Bravo Suite harnesses the power of Fibonacci numbers in the Bravo Fibonacci Bands by building a custom low lag weighted average from the input length. This is achieved by applying the metallic mean (also known as the "golden mean" or "silver mean") to the input series. By leveraging Fibonacci numbers in this manner, the weighted average effectively shifts more weight to the most recent values, emphasizing the importance of the current market trend.
The Bravo Fibonacci Bands dynamically adjust to the ever-changing market conditions, offering the trader an powerful level of precision in identifying crucial price levels. This approach blends the best of both worlds.
The end result is a reliable, easy-to-read price channel that gives traders the confidence to make informed decisions no matter what the market throws their way.
Moving Averages
The Bravo 9 Moving Average is included in the suite, alongside other useful Moving Averages for various timeframes, such as 200-day Moving Average, and 200-week Moving Average. Traders can toggle the visibility of each Moving Average. These are custom designed lower lag moving averages designed as assistive and supporting features in the toolkit.
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.
ATR% | Volatility NormalizerThis indicator measures true volatility by expressing the Average True Range (ATR) as a percentage of price. Unlike basic ATR plots, which show raw values, this version normalizes volatility to make it directly comparable across instruments and timeframes.
How it works:
Uses True Range (High–Low plus gaps) to capture actual market movement.
Normalizes by dividing ATR by the chosen price base (default: Close).
Multiplies by 100 to output a clean ATR% line.
Smoothing is flexible: choose from RMA, SMA, EMA, or WMA.
Optional Feature:
For comparison, you can toggle an auxiliary line showing the average absolute close-to-close % move, highlighting the difference between simplified and true volatility.
Why use it:
Track regime shifts: identify when volatility expands or contracts in % terms.
Compare volatility across different markets (equities, crypto, forex, commodities).
Integrate into risk management: position sizing, stop placement, or volatility filters for entries.
Interpretation:
Rising ATR% → expanding volatility, potential breakouts or unstable ranges.
Falling ATR% → contracting volatility, possible consolidation or range-bound conditions.
Sudden spikes → market “shocks” worth paying attention to.
SMAs, EMAs, 52W High Low, CPRThis is all in one indicator which has SMAs, EMAs, CPR, Trend ribbon and SuperTrend.
We are adding other indicator in upcoming days.
Crypto Flows [ETF|On-chain]The surge in Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs has transformed how crypto is held and traded. By mid‑2025, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs already controlled roughly 1.28 million BTC, or about 6.5 percent of the circulating supply (Fosque, 2025). This accumulation has coincided with sharp price rallies and signals that regulated vehicles are absorbing a meaningful share of supply (Fosque, 2025; Wright, 2025). At the same time, on‑chain analytics show that exchange flows still influence markets: large inflows to exchanges often precede sell‑offs, whereas withdrawals to private wallets signal accumulation and reduced sell pressure (Singh, 2024; CryptoQuant, 2024). IntoTheBlock’s large‑holder inflow indicator even notes that spikes in whale buying frequently mark major bottoms (IntoTheBlock, 2022). I wanted to weave these pieces together, so I created this indicator.
Essence and logic
The script draws from two data streams: net flows into ETFs and net on‑chain flows from large holders, both scaled by the asset’s circulating market cap. ETF flows are aggregated across the ten largest INDEX:BTCUSD Bitcoin ETFs, the ten largest Ethereum INDEX:ETHUSD ETFs and the first CRYPTOCAP:SOL Solana ETF; each fund has its own checkbox and colour selection. On‑chain data uses IntoTheBlock’s large‑holder inflows and outflows, with dozens of coins available( CRYPTO:XRPUSD CRYPTOCAP:AVAX CRYPTOCAP:ADA CRYPTOCAP:LINK CRYPTO:DOGEUSD CRYPTOCAP:OTHERS ; if your coin isn’t shown in the dropdown you can manually enter its symbol. For each component, daily flows are converted into either a Z‑score or, by default, a percent‑of‑market‑cap series; users choose the weighting between ETF and on‑chain signals. These weighted series are summed into a composite, smoothed, and then two moving averages (a fast and a slow one) are applied to define bullish or bearish regimes. Because ETFs are a recent phenomenon, the early part of the composite is dominated by on‑chain flows; as ETF history lengthens, the fund‑flow component will become more influential. Trade signals are generated via moving‑average crossovers and optional dip triggers, and a trend table summarises current values and directions.
Why these components?
ETF flows reflect institutional adoption and supply absorption. Funds such as IBIT already hold about 744 000 BTC (roughly 3.3 percent of total supply), and cumulative ETF holdings have been growing faster than new coins are mined (Wright, 2025). Net inflows into these vehicles have tended to accompany rising prices and signal long‑horizon capital (Fosque, 2025). On‑chain flows, meanwhile, capture exchange liquidity dynamics. High inflows to exchanges often indicate that investors are preparing to sell, increasing tradable supply (Singh, 2024; CryptoQuant, 2024). Outflows into self‑custody suggest accumulation and reduced sell pressure, providing a bullish signal (Singh, 2024; CryptoQuant, 2024). IntoTheBlock points out that spikes in large‑holder inflows—whales moving coins into cold storage—have historically preceded price bottoms (IntoTheBlock, 2022). By weighting and standardising these flows relative to market cap, the composite aims to offer a more objective lens on risk‑on versus risk‑off regimes than price alone.
Limitations and outlook
ETFs a pretty new, so the data history is short. The list of tracked funds is currently limited to U.S. and European products; adding Asian or Canadian vehicles could provide a fuller picture. On‑chain flows can be noisy and occasionally give conflicting signals, and large‑holder data is not available for every crypto asset. The ETF and on‑chain components are also correlated through market cap, so equal weighting may amplify common trends. As macro conditions evolve and ETF redemption mechanisms change, the usefulness of fund flows could vary. I see this indicator as one tool among many, and I’m considering adding stablecoin flows, derivatives funding rates, or halving‑cycle adjustments. Suggestions are welcome.
Personal note
I’m a student who enjoys exploring the intersection of macro flows, on‑chain analytics and market psychology. This script is free to use. You can enable or disable each component, adjust weights, change the display mode and lookback, and select individual ETF tickers. If it brings you value, feel free to follow my work or reach out with feedback. I appreciate your support. Please remember that this indicator is for educational purposes and not investment advice. I built this indicator in addition to my Liquidity indicator, where I use Global M2, the yield curve, and the high-yield spread to define risk-on/risk-off regimes. If you are interested, you can find it here:
References
CryptoQuant Team. (2024). Exchange in/outflow and netflow user guide.
Fosque, J. (2025). Bitcoin ETFs pull $17.8 billion in 90 days as price surges past $118 K. The Digital Chamber.
IntoTheBlock. (2022). Large holders inflow indicator description.
Singh, O. (2024). Crypto exchange inflows and outflows explained: What they reveal about market trends. CCN.
Wright, L. (2025). Bitcoin ETFs to lock up 1.5 million BTC by New Year as supply squeeze tightens grip. CryptoSlate.
SigmoidCycle Oscillator [LuminoAlgo]Purpose:
The SineCycle Oscillator measures price momentum using sigmoid function mathematics (S-curve transformation) borrowed from neural network theory. It generates an oscillator that fluctuates around 1.0, identifying momentum shifts and potential reversal points.
Mathematical Foundation:
This indicator applies the sigmoid logistic function concept: y = 1/(1+e^-x) , which creates an S-shaped curve. In financial markets context, this transformation:
- Maps price changes to a bounded range (-1 to +1)
- Provides non-linear sensitivity (high near zero, low at extremes)
- Naturally filters outliers without lag penalty
Calculation Process:
1. Statistical Normalization: Price deviations are measured from a moving average baseline and scaled by recent volatility (standard deviation over N periods)
2. Sigmoid Transformation: Normalized values undergo S-curve transformation, which weights small movements linearly but compresses large movements logarithmically
3. Dual Timeframe Analysis:
• Short window: User-defined period (N)
• Long window: Double period (2N)
• Ratio calculation: Short sigmoid average ÷ Long sigmoid average
4. Volatility-Weighted Smoothing: Final values use exponential smoothing where the smoothing factor adjusts based on the coefficient of variation (volatility/mean ratio)
What Makes This Different:
Unlike linear momentum oscillators (RSI, Stochastic) that use fixed mathematical relationships, the sigmoid transformation creates variable sensitivity zones. This mimics how professional traders mentally weight price movements.
Trading Application:
Signal Types:
- Momentum: Green (>1.0) = bullish, Red (<1.0) = bearish
- Reversals: 1.0 line crosses with volume confirmation
- Divergence: Price makes new high/low, oscillator doesn't
- Exhaustion: Extended readings (>1.2 or <0.8) suggest overextension
Optimal Conditions:
- Works best: Trending markets with clear swings
- Avoid: Low volume, ranging markets under 1% daily movement
- Timeframes: 4H and above for reliability
Parameter Guidelines:
- Length 8-10: Day trading (expect more whipsaws)
- Length 14-20: Swing trading (balanced signals)
- Length 25-30: Position trading (fewer, stronger signals)
Limitations:
- Lag increases with higher length settings
- Can give false signals during news-driven spikes
- Requires additional confirmation in choppy markets
Trading Framework:
Based on momentum persistence theory - assumes trends continue until sigmoid curve flattens (indicating momentum exhaustion). The mathematical model captures both mean reversion (extreme readings) and trend following (mid-range readings) characteristics.