Pattern grafici
Relative Strength Index, Divergences, color and more lines.Modified RSI technical indicator with divergences. Additional colors and more lines have been added.
BM 1.0BM 1.0 is a direction-focused indicator built to eliminate guesswork and emotional trading. It filters market noise and highlights high-probability directional bias, allowing traders to align themselves with the dominant force in the market instead of fighting it.
Magic 13 for China Stock MarketPrice Exhaustion Counter - 9/13 Signals
This indicator tracks consecutive closes relative to their 4-bar precedent, identifying potential trend exhaustion points.
KEY FEATURES:
- Counts consecutive higher/lower closes up to 9
- Extends counting to 13 for confirmation signals
- Customizable early warning display (counts 5-8)
- Background highlighting for approaching signals
- Clean, non-overlapping label placement
SIGNAL GUIDE:
- Counts 5-8 (orange): Early momentum warning
- Count 9 (purple/green badge): Primary exhaustion signal
- Counts 10-13 (green/purple): Extended momentum - stronger reversal potential
CUSTOMIZATION:
- Toggle early signals visibility
- Adjust label offset for clarity
- Enable/disable background hints
- All timeframes supported
Identifies high-probability reversal zones based on consecutive price action.
Lindsey Measured Move Price TargetsLindsey is a pivot-structure target tool that auto-maps a simple 3-point swing sequence (P1 → P2 → P3) and projects a symmetry-based target (P4), then prints it as a clean “🎯” balloon on your chart. It’s designed to give traders a fast, repeatable way to visualize where the next measured move could resolve—without cluttering the price action.
How it works
The script detects pivot highs/lows using your chosen Left/Right Swing Bars (pivot confirmation).
It tracks a three-point structure:
Bull case: P1 = pivot low, P2 = pivot high, P3 = higher pivot low
Bear case: P1 = pivot high, P2 = pivot low, P3 = lower pivot high
Once a valid P3 prints, it calculates a projected target:
Bull target: P4 = P2 + (P2 − P3)
Bear target: P4 = P2 − (P3 − P2)
The target is displayed as a right-shifted balloon, so you can keep it visible ahead of current candles.
How to operate it (practical workflow)
Set Swing Sensitivity
Left Swing Bars / Right Swing Bars control how “strict” pivots are.
Lower values = more signals (noisier). Higher values = fewer, cleaner structures.
Place the balloon where you want it
Balloon Right Offset (bars) moves the 🎯 label forward in time for readability.
Vertical Offset nudges the label up/down in price units to avoid overlapping candles or other tools.
Lock or keep it live
Turn Lock Target Balloon ON to keep the last target fixed on-chart.
Leave it OFF to always display the most recent valid projection.
Style it to your theme
Customize bull/bear balloon colors, text color, and P1/P2/P3 marker colors.
Why it’s useful (benefits)
Clear targets without guesswork: turns swing structure into a consistent measured-move projection.
Less chart noise: one readable target balloon instead of multiple lines and annotations.
Works across assets/timeframes: pivots adapt naturally to volatility and timeframe.
Trader-friendly controls: offset + vertical spacing + lock mode make it easy to integrate with existing layouts.
Notes / best practices
Pivots confirm after the right-side bars complete—so targets are intentionally non-repainting in structure detection, but they appear with that normal pivot confirmation delay.
For choppy ranges, increase pivot bars to reduce whipsaw targets; for trends, slightly lower them to catch more swing opportunities.
ZLT - Date and Time MarkerPine Script v5 indicator called “DateTime Marker” that overlays on the chart and marks bars whose timestamp matches a user-defined schedule. When a bar “matches,” it can draw:
a vertical line through the bar,
a label with a time/date string, and
a triangle marker below the bar (always plotted on matches).
What you can configure
Marker Type (the matching rule)
You choose one of five modes:
Every Minute
Inputs: everyNMinutes (default 15), minuteOffset (default 0)
Match condition: minute % everyNMinutes == minuteOffset
Example with defaults: marks bars at :00, :15, :30, :45 each hour.
Hourly
Inputs: everyNHours (default 4), hourlyMinute (default 0)
Match condition: hour % everyNHours == 0 AND minute == hourlyMinute
Example with defaults: marks bars at 00:00, 04:00, 08:00, 12:00, 16:00, 20:00 (at minute 00).
Daily Time
Inputs: dailyHour (default 10), dailyMinute (default 0)
Match condition: hour == dailyHour AND minute == dailyMinute
Example with defaults: marks 10:00 every day.
Weekly Day & Time
Inputs: weekDay (default Tuesday), weeklyHour (default 16), weeklyMinute (default 0)
It converts the weekday name to Pine’s dayofweek number via getDayNumber().
Match condition: dayofweek == targetDay AND hour == weeklyHour AND minute == weeklyMinute
Example with defaults: marks Tuesday 16:00.
Monthly Date & Time
Inputs: monthlyDay (default 2), monthlyHour (default 23), monthlyMinute (default 0)
Match condition: dayofmonth == monthlyDay AND hour == monthlyHour AND minute == monthlyMinute
Example with defaults: marks the 2nd day of each month at 23:00.
Visual settings
showLine: whether to draw the vertical line.
lineStyle: Solid/Dashed/Dotted (mapped to Pine line styles by getLineStyle()).
lineColor, lineWidth: styling for the line (width is rounded to an integer because Pine line width is integer).
showLabel: whether to draw a label.
labelColor: background color of the label (text is forced white).
What happens when a bar matches
When isMatch becomes true on a bar:
Vertical line: line.new() at that bar’s bar_index, from low to high, extended extend.both (so it spans the full chart vertically).
Label: label.new() at the bar’s high, with mode-specific text:
Minute/Hourly/Daily: "HH:mm"
Weekly: "Tuesday HH:mm" (or whatever day selected)
Monthly: "Day 2 - HH:mm" (or chosen day)
Triangle marker: plotshape() draws a triangle up below the bar on every match (this happens regardless of showLine / showLabel).
Important practical implications
This uses the bar’s exchange/chart time (TradingView’s time, hour, minute, etc.), so results depend on the symbol/session and chart timezone settings.
On timeframes coarser than 1 minute, “Every Minute” still checks only the bar’s timestamp minute value; it won’t mark intra-bar minutes that don’t exist as separate bars.
Because it can create many objects (lines/labels), it sets max_labels_count=500. Lines are not capped here, so very dense marking can still clutter the chart.
If you tell me your intended use (e.g., “mark NY open,” “mark every 15m candle close,” “mark macro events weekly”), I can point out whether the current matching logic fits that precisely or needs adjustments (sessions, timezones, avoiding duplicates, limiting lines, etc.).
Dual MACD CrossWhat Is This Indicator?
This indicator is a visual tool for reading changes in market momentum.
Instead of giving buy or sell orders, it helps you see when the market’s short-term behavior starts to differ from its underlying direction. Think of it as a way to observe shifts in mood rather than make automatic decisions.
What Do the Lines Mean?
You will see three visual elements:
The thin green line represents the market’s short-term momentum.
It reacts quickly to recent price changes and shows what the market is doing right now.
The thicker white line represents the market’s reference trend.
It moves more slowly and reflects the broader, more stable direction of the market.
The yellow dotted line is the zero baseline.
It does not generate signals. Its only purpose is to help you visually judge whether momentum is generally positive (above zero) or negative (below zero).
How Should This Indicator Be Read?
The key is the relationship between the green and white lines.
When the green line is above the white line, short-term momentum is stronger than the market’s reference trend.
When the green line is below the white line, short-term momentum is weaker.
The indicator is not concerned with how high or low the lines are by themselves.
What matters is how they interact.
What Do the Triangle Markers Mean?
The small triangle markers highlight moments of transition.
An upward triangle appears when the green line crosses above the white line.
This suggests that short-term momentum is beginning to outperform the broader trend.
A downward triangle appears when the green line crosses below the white line.
This suggests that momentum is weakening relative to the broader trend.
These markers are attention points, not commands. They indicate potential change, not certainty.
Why Is the Zero Line Important?
The zero line provides context.
A crossover that happens above the zero line occurs while the market is already in a relatively strong state.
A crossover below the zero line happens in a weaker environment and may represent a failed move or an early attempt at reversal.
The same crossover can mean very different things depending on its position relative to zero.
What Is This Indicator Best Used For?
This indicator is best used to:
Observe early signs of trend changes
Compare short-term momentum versus underlying direction
Confirm what you are already seeing in price action or other indicators
It is not designed to:
Predict tops or bottoms precisely
Act as a standalone buy/sell system
Measure overbought or oversold conditions
A Simple Analogy
Imagine driving a car.
The green line is how hard you are pressing the accelerator.
The white line is your current speed.
The yellow zero line is the difference between moving forward or backward.
The triangles mark moments when acceleration begins to change the car’s actual movement.
The indicator helps you notice when effort starts to translate into direction.
The Right Way to Use It
This indicator does not tell you what to do.
It encourages you to ask better questions:
Is momentum starting to lead or lag?
Is this change supported by price structure?
Does the broader context confirm or contradict this signal?
Used this way, it becomes a tool for awareness, not prediction.
If you’d like, I can also provide:
A one-paragraph version for documentation
A training script for beginners
Or a minimal tooltip-style explanation for sharing with others
NQ Pro Dashboard (Master Fix)This indicator is a "Head-Up Display" designed specifically for trading NQ (Nasdaq-100 Futures). It aggregates data from the broader market (volatility) and the specific stocks that drive the Nasdaq index (The "Magnificent 7") to give you a single Trend Power Score.
Here is a breakdown of how the logic works under the hood:
1. The Inputs (Data Feed)
The script watches 9 specific assets in real-time (daily timeframe data):
Fear Gauges:
VIX: The volatility index for the S&P 500.
VXN: The volatility index specifically for the Nasdaq-100.
The Engine (Mag 7):
NVDA, AAPL, MSFT, AMZN, GOOGL, META, TSLA.
2. The Logic: "Weighted" Market Strength
Instead of treating every stock equally, the script applies a Weighting Multiplier to the Mag 7 stocks based on their approximate impact on the Nasdaq-100 index.
Heavyweights (1.5x): NVDA, AAPL, MSFT (These move the market the most).
Middleweights (1.0x): AMZN, GOOGL, META.
Lightweight (0.7x): TSLA (Has the least pull of the group).
It calculates a single percentage number (MAG 7 (W)) representing the combined push or pull of these stocks.
3. The "Trend Power" Score (0-100)
This is the core signal. It starts at a neutral 50 and adds/subtracts points based on market conditions.
Fear Factor:
If VIX or VXN drops > 2% (Fear dying), it adds points (Bullish).
If VIX or VXN spikes > 2% (Fear rising), it subtracts points (Bearish).
Stock Strength:
If the Weighted Mag 7 Average is > 1.0% (Strong Rally), it adds a massive 30 points.
If it's negative (Sell-off), it subtracts points.
The Score Breakdown:
80 - 100 (Green): STRONG BULL. The engines are firing (stocks up) and the brakes are off (VIX down). Do not short.
0 - 20 (Red): STRONG BEAR. Panic selling is occurring. Do not buy.
40 - 60 (Orange): CHOP / RANGE. Conflicting signals (e.g., stocks are up but VIX is also up). Be careful.
4. The "Exhaustion" Meter (ATR)
The RANGE row tells you if the market has "gas left in the tank."
It compares Today's Range (High - Low) to the 14-Day Average Range (ATR).
< 50% (Yellow): Compressed. The market hasn't moved much yet. Expect a breakout soon.
> 120% (Purple): Extended. The market has moved massive amounts today. A reversal or pause is statistically likely (mean reversion).
5. The Visuals (Leaders Row)
The bottom row gives you a quick visual scan of the individual stocks:
N▲ (Green): Nvidia is up.
T▼ (Red): Tesla is down.
This helps you spot "divergences"—for example, if the Trend Score is high but NVDA is Red, the rally might be fragile.
BTC - RVPM: Run Velocity & Probability MapBTC – RVPM: Run Velocity & Probability Map | RM
Strategic Context: Understanding Price Runs
A "Price Run" (also known as a streak or consecutive sessions) is a foundational concept in time-series analysis that measures the duration of a price movement without a significant counter-signal. While common indicators like RSI or MACD measure magnitude or momentum, they often ignore the Persistence of the trend. Historically, markets move through cycles of expansion and mean-reversion. A Price Run represents a period of "Unidirectional Flow" — a fingerprint of institutional accumulation or systematic distribution. However, standard "run-counting" is often too simplistic for the volatile crypto markets.
What Makes RVPM Special?
Most community run-counters are binary; they simply tell you if X days were green or red. The RVPM distinguishes itself through three proprietary layers:
• The Intensity Filter: It doesnt just count days; it counts effort . By ignoring "flat" days through a percentage-return threshold, it filters out noise that would otherwise skew the statistical probability.
• Dynamic Benchmarking: Instead of using an arbitrary number (like "7 days"), the RVPM looks back at 200 bars of history to find the local "Persistence Ceiling." It adapts to the current volatility regime of Bitcoin.
• The Velocity Score: It transform simple counts into a -100 to +100 histogram, allowing traders to see momentum "decaying" (e.g., dropping from 90 to 70) even if the price continues to rise.
The 3 Pillars of the Engine
1. Velocity Mapping (Persistence Histogram)
The histogram calculates the density of directional effort within a defined window. It functions as the "Pulse" of the trend, mapping market behavior into three distinct zones:
• High Velocity Zone (> 80 or < -80): Institutional Expansion. This identifies a "clean" move where one side of the market possesses total structural control. In this zone, the trend is efficient, and counter-signals are immediately absorbed.
• The Neutral Zone (Near Zero): Momentum Equilibrium. When the histogram fluctuates near the zero line, the market is in a "Recharge Phase." Neither bulls nor bears are achieving persistent dominance. Tactically, this is the "Waiting Room" where range-bound chop is likely, and traders should wait for a new "Expansion" spike before committing.
• Velocity Decay: The Exhaustion Warning. Velocity Decay occurs when the indicator moves from an extreme (e.g., +95) back toward the zero line (e.g., +50) while the price is still rising. This is a "Persistence Divergence." It tells you that while the trend is still moving, the consistency of the bars is fragmenting. The "fuel" is being depleted, and the trend is transitioning from an "Institutional Expansion" into a "Speculative Exhaustion."
2. n-of-m Consistency (The Pips)
The "Pips" (Circles) mark when a specific consistency threshold is met (e.g., 5 out of 7 bars in one direction). This identifies "Leaky Trends" that are still statistically dominated by one side of the ledger.
3. Statistical Exhaustion (The Arrows)
The Dark Red (Top) and Dark Green (Bottom) triangles represent the engine's "Mean-Reversion Signal." The calculation is based on a Relative Maximum Streak (RMS) logic: the script tracks the current linear, consecutive bar count (ignoring bars that fail the Intensity Filter) and continuously benchmarks this against the highest streak recorded over the last 200 bars ( ta.highest(streak, 200) ). The triangles are triggered specifically when the current run reaches 80% of this historical record (the "Anomaly Threshold"). Mathematically, this identifies a move that is statistically pushing against its half-year limit. By using this dynamic threshold rather than a fixed number, the "Extreme" signal automatically tightens during low-volatility regimes and expands during high-volatility expansions, ensuring the signal only appears when the "statistical rubber band" is at a true breaking point.
Operational Interface: The RVPM Dashboard
The Status Dashboard (Top Right) serves as a real-time monitor for momentum health, providing a clean summary of the underlying persistence data:
• Current STREAK: The active, consecutive count of bars meeting the Intensity Filter. It is dynamically color-coded (Cyan/Bullish or Red/Bearish) to provide an instant read on trend seniority.
• WINDOW Consistency: Measures the Momentum Density (the n-of-m value). A value of "6" in a "7-bar" window indicates a high-conviction regime that is successfully absorbing pullbacks without losing its primary trajectory.
Tactical Playbook: The Mean-Reversion Rule
Price action typically follows a "Rubber Band" effect. The further it is stretched without a break, the more "unstable" the trend becomes as the pool of available buyers or sellers is depleted.
• The Setup: Wait for the Triangle Arrows to appear.
• The Logic: The move has reached a 200-day anomaly. A "Liquidity Vacuum" is forming on the opposite side.
• The Action: This is a high-probability Mean-Reversion signal. It is a tactical time to take profits or look for a sharp snap-back move toward the 20-period moving average or the "Institutional Mean."
Settings & Parameters
• Window Length (m): The lookback window used to calculate the Velocity Score.
• Required Days (n): The minimum number of directional bars needed within the window to trigger a "Consistency Pip."
• Intensity Filter (%): The minimum % change required for a bar to be counted toward a run.
• Lookback Period: The historical window (Default: 200 bars) used to calculate the "Maximum Streak" records for exhaustion alerts.
Timeframe Recommendation
The RVPM is best viewed on the Daily (1D) timeframe. This filters out intraday noise and provides the most reliable statistical mapping for macro exhaustion points.
Credits & Verification
The RVPM logic aligns with institutional "Persistence" models and Glassnode's Price Stretch benchmarks. By benchmarking against a rolling 200-day window, the indicator automatically adapts to changing market volatility.
Risk Disclaimer & No Financial Advice
The information, data, and analytical models provided in this publication are for educational and informational purposes only. This script does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Trading cryptocurrencies and other financial instruments carries a high degree of risk, and statistical anomalies or "Extreme Runs" do not guarantee future price action. Past performance is never indicative of future results. Every trader is responsible for their own due diligence and risk management. Rob Maths and the associated entities are not liable for any financial losses incurred through the use of this tool. Always consult with a certified financial professional before making significant investment decisions.
Tags:
bitcoin, btc, persistence, streaks, price-runs, momentum, mean-reversion, exhaustion, Rob Maths
Candle 2 Closure [LuxAlgo]The Candle 2 Closure tool detects a specific reversal pattern on the chart spanning four bars. The first bar trades into a key price level. The second bar trades outside the first bar's range, but closes inside, indicating a reversal. The third bar closes outside the second bar's range, in the direction of the reversal, creating a price expansion. The fourth bar is a continuation of prices in that same direction.
This tool features key levels, equilibrium zones, and real-time alarms upon confirmation of the second and third candles of the pattern.
This specific part of the more complete Fractal model by TTrades was requested by a lot of you. We are happy to bring it to you and wish you a merry Christmas!
🔶 USAGE
This pattern is a TTrades concept: a reversal setup that is very easy to understand. It occurs when the current bar trades outside of the previous bar's range, but closes inside it. In other words, traders try to push prices outside of the previous bar's range, but fail. This is considered a reversal, meaning that traders encountered opposing forces that overwhelmed them. Thus, the expectation is that prices will trade in the new direction, changing the market bias from bullish to bearish, or vice versa.
Let's look at the example in the chart, where the four candles of this setup are marked. Note that we have selected a perfect setup, where all conditions are met.
Candle 1: This bar traded into a key price area at the top of the range, spanning several months.
Candle 2: This bar traded outside the range of Candle 1, but failed to close outside. This is the reversal.
Candle 3: The wick of this bar formed at or below the equilibrium zone of Candle 2, and it closed outside the range of Candle 2. This is the expansion.
Candle 4: At this point, the setup is complete, and the expectation for this candle is that it will trade in the same direction. The top of the candle is at or below the equilibrium zone of Candle 3. This is the continuation.
In a strong setup, the top or bottom of the next bar will form inside the equilibrium zone defined by the highlighted areas on candles 2 and 3.
This is a perfect bearish setup, featuring all elements. Not all setups will be like this, but when this setup occurs, it is important for traders to be aware of it.
The tool is highly customizable from the settings panel and features real-time alerts at candle 2 and 3 confirmations.
Now, let's take a broader view of the same chart. We have disabled the display of candle 2 and filtered the setups with a length of 50.
As we can see, most of the last 17 setups found on the EUR/USD daily chart lead to multi-day or multi-month price movements.
🔹 Filtering Reversals
The tool features a reversals filter that is disabled by default. This filter allows us to filter out minor reversals and display only those that are important.
Traders can adjust the length parameter to display reversals only at the top or bottom of the last N specified bars. We can see some examples in the chart.
🔹 Wick Threshold
From the settings panel, traders can fine-tune the equilibrium zone for candle 2.
If the wick exceeds the threshold expressed as a percentage of the total bar range, the equilibrium zone will be calculated based only on the wick. In all other cases, the full bar range will be used.
🔶 SETTINGS
Candle 2 (Reversal): Enable or disable Candle 2 reversals.
Candle 3 (Expansion): Enable or disable Candle 3 expansions.
Reversals Filter: Filter reversals as the highest or lowest of the last N bars.
Wick Threshold %: Filter wicks as percentage of total bar range.
🔹 Style
Bullish Color: Select bullish color.
Bearish Color: Select bearish color.
Transparency: Select the transparency level. 0 is solid and 100 is fully transparent.
Levels: Enable or disable the horizontal levels.
Candle 2 Zone: Enable or disable the Candle 2 equilibrium zones.
Candle 3 Zone: Enable or disable the Candle 3 equilibrium zones.
🔹 Alerts
Candle 2 Alerts: Enable or disable Candle 2 alerts.
Candle 3 Alerts: Enable or disable Candle 3 alerts.
Wickless Candle Revisit TrackerWickless Candle Revisit Tracker
Identifies wickless candles (strong momentum candles) and tracks whether price revisits their opening level, providing statistical insights into price behavior patterns.
WHAT ARE WICKLESS CANDLES?
• Green wickless: Open = Low (no lower wick) - opened at the low and moved only upward
• Red wickless: Open = High (no upper wick) - opened at the high and moved only downward
These candles represent strong directional momentum, and their opening levels often act as support/resistance zones that price may revisit.
KEY FEATURES:
• Automatic Detection: Identifies wickless candles with configurable tolerance for broker spread
• Real-time Tracking: Monitors each wickless candle until price revisits its opening level
• Visual Indicators:
- Labels show "WL↑" or "WL↓" with bars count when revisited (or "N/A" if pending)
- Horizontal lines mark price levels (gray dashed = pending, green solid = revisited)
• Comprehensive Statistics Table:
- Total wickless candles detected
- Revisit rate percentage
- Min/Max/Average bars until revisit
- Pending count
• History Limit: Configure how far back to analyze (default: 500 bars)
• Customizable: Adjust colors, toggle labels/lines/table, reposition statistics
USE CASES:
• Identify potential support/resistance levels from momentum candles
• Measure how often price fills "fair value gaps" or inefficiencies
• Track mean reversion patterns after strong momentum moves
• Backtest the reliability of wickless candle levels as trading zones
SETTINGS:
• Wick Tolerance: Allow small wicks due to broker spread (e.g., 0.0001 for forex)
• History Limit: Number of bars to analyze (older candles are hidden)
• Visual Controls: Toggle labels, lines, and statistics table
• Color Customization: Adjust line colors for pending/revisited states
ALERTS:
Built-in alerts for wickless candle detection (green, red, or both).
Perfect for traders analyzing price inefficiencies, fair value gaps, and momentum-based support/resistance levels.
RSI Ladder TP Strategy v1.0 Overview
This strategy is an RSI-based reversal entry system with a ladder-style take-profit mechanism.
It supports Long-only, Short-only, or Both directions and provides optional Average Entry Price, Stop Loss, and Take Profit reference lines on the chart.
Entry Rules
Long Entry: RSI crosses above the Oversold level (default: 20).
Short Entry: RSI crosses below the Overbought level (default: 80).
Optional: If enabled, the script will close the current position when an opposite signal appears before opening a new one.
Exit Rules (Ladder Take Profit)
Take profit is placed as a ladder using tpLevels and tpStepPct.
Example (default tpStepPct = 1%, tpLevels = 10):
TP1 at +1%, TP2 at +2%, … TP10 at +10% (relative to current average entry price).
Each TP level closes tpClosePct of the remaining position, meaning it scales out geometrically:
If tpClosePct = 50% → remaining position becomes 50%, then 25%, then 12.5%, etc.
Stop Loss
Optional stop loss is placed at slPct (%) away from the average entry price:
Long: avg * (1 - slPct%)
Short: avg * (1 + slPct%)
Visual Lines
Average Entry Price Line: current strategy.position_avg_price
Stop Loss Line: based on slPct
Next TP Line: shows the estimated next TP level based on current profit%
All TP Lines: optional (can clutter the chart)
==============================================================
Recommended Use
This strategy is best used on markets with strong mean-reversion behavior.
For exchanges/bots that do not support hedge mode in a single strategy, run two separate instances:
One set to Long Only
One set to Short Only
15M Swing Sweep Lines + SMT (ES vs NQ)15M Swing Sweep Lines (NY Killzones)Visualize liquidity sweeps of 15-minute swing highs/lows exclusively during high-impact London & New York killzones.This ICT-inspired indicator detects when price sweeps (wicks beyond) the most recent confirmed 15-minute swing high or low — classic signs of liquidity raids or stop hunts — but only if the sweep happens during key "killzone" sessions where institutional activity is typically highest.Key Features15M Swing Detection: Uses confirmed pivot highs/lows (length 2) on the 15-minute timeframe for reliable structure points.
Killzone Filters (New York time):London Killzone: 3:00 AM – 4:59 AM
New York Killzone: 9:30 AM – 10:59 AM (captures the high-volatility NY open overlap)
Sweep Visualization:Bearish Sweep (high > last 15M swing high): Thick red horizontal line from the swing point to the sweep bar.
Bullish Sweep (low < last 15M swing low): Thick green horizontal line from the swing point to the sweep bar.
Lines use xloc.bar_time for precise placement and extend only to the bar where the sweep occurs.
No duplicates: Prevents multiple lines for the same swing sweep.
Non-repainting logic with lookahead_off for clean, trustworthy signals.
Why Killzones MatterMany ICT/SMC traders focus on these windows because they often feature aggressive manipulation, equal highs/lows sweeps, and the setup for strong directional moves. This tool helps you instantly spot when buy-side or sell-side liquidity has been raided on the 15M structure during these prime times.Ideal ForConfirming potential reversals or inducements after liquidity grabs.
Adding confluence to entries during London or NY sessions.
Futures traders (ES, NQ, etc.) looking for clean visual cues of smart money engineering.
Lightweight, overlay-friendly, and focused — add it to your chart for clearer insight into 15M liquidity sweeps when it matters most. Perfect companion for killzone-based strategies!
Box Theory [Interactive Zones] PyraTimeThis script combines Nicholas Darvas’s "Box Theory" with modern Supply and Demand (Premium/Discount) concepts. It automatically identifies the most recent Swing High and Swing Low to delineate the current trading range.
The purpose of this tool is to visualize market structure and help traders identify when price is relatively expensive (Premium) or cheap (Discount) within a defined range.
Visual Guide: What You Are Seeing
The Box: Represents the active trading range defined by the most recent significant Swing High and Swing Low.
Red Zone (Premium): The top 25% of the range. Mathematically, prices here are considered "expensive" relative to the current structure.
Green Zone (Discount): The bottom 25% of the range. Prices here are considered "cheap" relative to the current structure.
Grey Zone (Equilibrium): The middle 50% of the range. This is the area of fair value where price often consolidates.
Dashed Line (EQ): The exact 50% midpoint of the range.
Tutorial: How to Trade Using This Indicator
Method 1: Mean Reversion (Range Trading) This method applies when the market is moving sideways.
Identify Structure: Wait for a box to form.
Wait for Extremes: Do not trade when price is in the middle (Grey/White area). Wait for price to enter the Red or Green zones.
Entry Trigger:
Shorts: When price enters the Red Zone, look for a rejection (wicks leaving the zone) or a lower timeframe breakdown. Target the EQ (Midline) as your first take profit.
Longs: When price enters the Green Zone, look for support formation. Target the EQ (Midline) as your first take profit.
Method 2: Trend Continuation (Breakouts) This method applies when the market is trending strongly.
Breakout: Monitor the alerts. A close outside the box indicates a potential shift in market structure.
Retest: After a breakout up, the old "Red Zone" (Resistance) often flips to become new Support. Wait for price to pull back to the top of the old box before entering.
Configuration Guide (Settings)
Pivot Left/Right Bars (Sensitivity):
Default (20/20): Best for Swing Trading. It filters out market noise and only draws boxes based on major structural points.
Lower (5/5): Best for Scalping. It will create smaller, more frequent boxes but increases the risk of false signals.
Zone Percentage:
Default (25%): Standard deviation for Supply/Demand zones.
Alternative (15%): Use this for "sniping" entries at the absolute extremes of the range.
Multi-Timeframe (MTF):
Enable "Use Higher Timeframe" to see Daily or Weekly ranges while trading on lower timeframes (like the 15m or 1H). This helps keep your intraday trades aligned with the major trend.
Technical Note on "Lag" This indicator uses Pivots to draw the box. A pivot is only confirmed after a certain number of bars have passed (the "Pivot Right Bars" setting).
Example: If "Pivot Right Bars" is set to 20, the box will update 20 bars after the actual high or low occurred. This is necessary to confirm that the point was indeed a Swing High/Low. Do not treat the box lines as predictive; they are reactive to confirmed structure.
4MA / 4MA[1] Forward Projection with 4 SD Forecast Bands4MA / 4MA Projection + 4 SD Bands + Cross Table is a forward-projection tool built around a simple moving average pair: the 4-period SMA (MA4) and its 1-bar lagged value (MA4 ). It takes a prior MA behavior pattern, projects that structure forward, and wraps the projected mean path with four Standard Deviation (SD) bands to visualize probable future price ranges.
This indicator is designed to help you anticipate:
Where the MA structure is likely to travel next
How wide the “expected” future price corridor may be
Where a future MA4 vs MA4 crossover is most likely to occur
When the real (live) crossover actually prints on the chart
What you see on the chart
1) Live moving averages (current market)
MA4 tracks the short-term mean of price.
MA4 is simply the previous bar’s MA4 value (a 1-bar lag).
Their relationship (MA4 above/below MA4 ) gives a clean, minimal read on trend alignment and directional bias.
2) Projected MA path (forward curve)
A forward “ghost” of the MA structure is drawn ahead of price. This projected curve represents the indicator’s best estimate of how the moving average structure may evolve if the market continues to rhyme with the selected historical behavior window.
3) 4 Standard Deviation bands (predictive future price ranges)
Surrounding the projected mean path are four SD envelopes. Think of these as forecast corridors:
Inner bands = tighter “expected” range
Outer bands = wider “stress / extreme” range
These bands are not a guarantee—rather, they’re a structured way to visualize “how far price can reasonably swing” around the projected mean based on observed volatility.
4) Vertical projection lines (most probable cross zone)
Within the projected region you’ll see vertical lines running through the bands. These lines mark the most probable zone where MA4 and MA4 are expected to cross in the projection.
In plain terms:
The projected MAs are two curves.
When those curves are forecasted to intersect, the script marks the intersection region with a vertical line.
This gives you a forward “timing window” for a potential MA shift.
5) Cross Table (top-right)
The table is your confirmation layer. It reports:
Current MA4 value
Current MA4 value
Whether MA4 is above or below MA4
The most recent BUY / SELL cross event
When a real, live crossover happens on the actual chart:
It registers as BUY (MA4 crosses above MA4 )
Or SELL (MA4 crosses below MA4 )
…and the table updates immediately so you can confirm the event without guessing.
How to use it
Practical workflow
Use the projected SD bands as future range context
If price is projected to sit comfortably inside inner bands, the market is behaving “normally.”
If price reaches outer bands, you’re in a higher-volatility / stretched scenario.
Use vertical lines as a “watch zone”
Vertical lines do not force a trade.
They act like a forward “heads-up”: this is the most likely window for an MA crossover to occur if the projection holds.
Use the table for confirmation
When the crossover happens for real, the table is your confirmation signal.
Combine it with structure (support/resistance, trendlines, market context) rather than trading it in isolation.
Notes and best practices
This is a projection tool: it helps visualize a structured forward hypothesis, not a certainty.
SD bands are best used as forecast corridors (risk framing, range planning, and expectation management).
The table is the execution/confirmation layer: it tells you what the MAs are doing now.
Squeeze + ADX + TTM [V6]Execution speed: The TradingView engine processes v6 scripts much faster.
Stability: By using standard functions like ta.sma or ta.linreg, the indicator is less prone to calculation errors on lower timeframes.
Clarity: I've reorganized the ADX calculation within a function to make it more readable if you decide to modify it later.
Price Range CHoCH Alert🎯 Smart Money Concept (SMC) indicator that monitors a specific price level and alerts only when price touches that level AND
subsequently creates a Change of Character (CHoCH).
Key Features:
• Set a custom price level to monitor
• Detects CHoCH/BOS based on pivot highs/lows
• Alerts ONLY when: Price touches level → CHoCH occurs
• Visual confirmation with level line and status table
• Configurable tolerance for precise level targeting
• Works for both bullish and bearish scenarios
Perfect for:
✓ Institutional level trading
✓ Key support/resistance breakouts
✓ Liquidity grab confirmations
✓ Structure break validation
Simply set your target price level and let the indicator watch for the perfect SMC setup!
The Strat Candle Labels & Color Inc F2D F2UThis script uses TheStrat candle numbers 1, 2D, 2U, 3 and places the text below or above. I have also now added the Failed 2D/2U labels. You can also change the text size. This also allows you to change the colors of the candles with two options for the 1 & 3 so you can color them in the direction they are going. For example a 1 that is green can be green and a 1 that is red can be red.
Swing HelperThis script, titled "Swing helper", is a multi-metric dashboard designed to provide a comprehensive snapshot of a security's volatility, relative volume, and price action health directly on the chart. It focuses on Average Daily Range (ADR) relationship and key performance indicators to help traders identify setups like volatility contractions or trend strength.
Key Features
Dual-ADR Analysis: Calculates and compares Long-Term (LT) and Short-Term (ST) ADR percentages. The ADR Ratio helps identify when volatility is expanding or contracting relative to historical norms.
Relative Volume (RVol): Compares current volume to a 20-day moving average, highlighting institutional participation.
Dynamic Closing Range: Visualizes where the price is closing relative to the day's true range (the "Closing Range %"), indicating buying or selling pressure.
SMA 50 Distance: A unique metric that measures the price's distance from the 50-day Simple Moving Average in "ADR units," helping to gauge how overextended a stock is.
Automated Price Projections: Dynamically plots -1x and -2x ADR levels from the current price to provide immediate downside targets or support levels.
Custom Bar Coloring: Highlights specific price action patterns:
Inside Days (Blue)
Upside Reversals (Green)
Downside Reversals (Red)
Visual Customization
The script includes a highly flexible Summary Table with customizable positions, sizes, and colors (including borders and headers), allowing it to fit into any dark or light mode chart layout without obstructing price action.
How to Use
Volatility Contraction: Watch for the ADR Ratio to drop, indicating a tightening range before a potential breakout.
Relative Strength: Look for high RVol combined with a high Closing Range % (e.g., >75%) to confirm strong demand.
Mean Reversion: Use the SMA50 Dist metric to identify when a stock is "stretched" too far from its moving average relative to its daily volatility.
Market time opens @NeoNztime opens marked out new york session , london session, asia session and highs and lows of each one
Harmonic Patterns [kingthies]Harmonic Patterns
This indicator scans price swings for classic X-A-B-C-D harmonic patterns and plots the structure plus a PRZ (Potential Reversal Zone) to help you frame areas where reactions are statistically more likely. It supports both bullish and bearish setups and can trigger alerts when a new D pivot confirms a pattern.
What it does
Builds a pivot-based swing map (ZigZag-style) using a configurable Pivot Length .
Evaluates the most recent 5 swing points (X, A, B, C, D) against harmonic ratio rules with a user-defined tolerance .
Detects: Gartley, Bat, Butterfly, Crab, Deep Crab, Cypher, Shark (loose) .
Draws the pattern legs (X-A-B-C-D), labels the detection with ratio readouts, and projects a PRZ using 3 target levels (derived from XA/BC logic per pattern).
Offers two rendering modes:
Best only : picks the closest match (lowest score) to reduce clutter.
Show all : plots every valid match (uses filled PRZ boxes to keep object usage under control).
PRZ (Potential Reversal Zone)
PRZ is built from three target levels and expanded into a zone.
Optional padding uses ATR (ATR multiplier) to widen/narrow the zone for volatility.
Display modes: Off, Box, Lines, Both .
Zones can be extended forward by a configurable number of bars to keep the area visible as price develops.
How to use
Start with Confirm only when D pivot forms enabled (recommended) to reduce false positives while patterns are still forming.
Adjust Pivot Length based on timeframe:
Lower values = more swings, more signals, more noise.
Higher values = cleaner structures, fewer signals.
Use Ratio Tolerance to control strictness:
Lower tolerance = fewer, higher-confidence matches.
Higher tolerance = more matches, potentially lower quality.
Treat harmonics as context , not a standalone entry system:
Look for confluence (HTF levels, structure, volume, momentum/RSI divergence, etc.).
Use your own confirmation and risk plan (invalidations beyond PRZ / beyond D).
Settings overview
Swings (Pivot ZigZag)
Pivot Length: pivot sensitivity.
Use Wicks: uses High/Low; if off, uses Close.
Max Stored Swings: limits stored pivots for performance/object control.
Harmonic Detection
Ratio Tolerance (%): allowed deviation around ideal ratios.
Confirm only when D pivot forms: reduces repaint-like behavior.
When multiple match: Best only vs Show all.
Pattern Filters enable/disable each pattern type.
PRZ
PRZ Display: Off / Box / Lines / Both.
PRZ Padding (ATR multiplier): volatility-adjusted zone padding.
PRZ Extend (bars): how far to project the zone.
Visuals
Draw Legs: draws X-A-B-C-D.
Show Pattern Label: prints pattern name, direction, ratios, and score.
Label Offset: shift label forward if you want more space.
Alerts
“Bullish/Bearish Harmonic (Any)” triggers on any detected pattern.
Per-pattern alerts are included for each supported pattern type.
Notes
This indicator is educational and intended to assist with pattern recognition and confluence mapping.
Harmonic patterns do not guarantee reversals—always manage risk and confirm with your own process.
Gaps IdentifierThis indicator identifies up and down Gaps using previous period's close price to the next period's open price. Potentially useful for Gap rebound strategies.
(Will identify gaps 4%–11% by default; can change in settings)
A-Share Broad-Based ETF Dual-Core Timing System1. Strategy Overview
The "A-Share Broad-Based ETF Dual-Core Timing System" is a quantitative trading strategy tailored for the Chinese A-share market (specifically for broad-based ETFs like CSI 300, CSI 500, STAR 50). Recognizing the market's characteristic of "short bulls, long bears, and sharp bottoms," this strategy employs a "Left-Side Latency + Right-Side Full Position" dual-core driver. It aims to safely bottom-fish during the late stages of a bear market and maximize profits during the main ascending waves of a bull market.
2. Core Logic
A. Left-Side Latency (Rebound/Bottom Fishing)
Capital Allocation: Defaults to 50% position.
Philosophy: "Buy when others fear." Seeks opportunities in extreme panic or momentum divergence.
Entry Signals (Triggered by any of the following):
Extreme Panic: RSI Oversold (<30) + Price below Bollinger Lower Band + Bullish Candle Close (Avoid catching falling knives).
Oversold Bias: Price deviates more than 15% from the 60-day MA (Life Line), betting on mean reversion.
MACD Bullish Divergence: Price makes a new low while MACD histogram does not, accompanied by strengthening momentum.
B. Right-Side Full Position (Trend Following)
Capital Allocation: Aggressively scales up to Full Position (~99%) upon signal trigger.
Philosophy: "Follow the trend." Strike heavily once the trend is confirmed.
Entry Signals (All must be met):
Upward Trend: MACD Golden Cross + Price above 20-day MA.
Breakout Confirmation: CCI indicator breaks above 100, confirming a main ascending wave.
Volume Support: Volume MACD Golden Cross, ensuring price increase is backed by volume.
C. Smart Risk Control
Bear Market Exhaustion Exit: In a bearish trend (MA20 < MA60), the strategy does not "hold and hope." It immediately liquidates left-side positions upon signs of rebound exhaustion (breaking below MA20, touching MA60 resistance, or RSI failure).
ATR Trailing Stop: Uses Average True Range (ATR) to calculate a dynamic stop-profit line that rises with the price to lock in profits.
Hard Stop Loss: Forces a stop-loss if the left-side bottom fishing fails and losses exceed a set ATR multiple, preventing deep drawdowns.
3. Recommendations
Target Assets: High liquidity broad-based ETFs such as CSI 300 ETF (510300), CSI 500 ETF (510500), ChiNext ETF (159915), STAR 50 ETF (588000).
Timeframe: Daily Chart.






















