Cicli
Inicio de Semana (línea vertical completa)This indicator plots a vertical line at the start of each new trading week. The line extends across the entire chart window, making it easy to visually identify weekly boundaries.
Key features:
Full-height vertical lines marking the beginning of every week.
Customizable color, width, and style (solid, dotted, or dashed).
Works on any timeframe (daily, intraday, etc.), automatically adjusting to weekly changes.
Purpose:
This tool is designed to help traders quickly spot the start of a new trading week, improving time-based analysis and making it easier to evaluate price action, weekly cycles, and strategy performance.
Liquidity-Weighted Business Cycle (Satoshi Global Base)🌍 BTC-Affinity Global Liquidity Business Cycle (MACD Model)
This indicator models Bitcoin’s macroeconomic business cycle using a BTC-weighted global liquidity index as its foundation. It adapts a MACD-based framework to visualize expansions and contractions in fiat liquidity across major economies with high Bitcoin affinity.
🔍 What It Does:
🧠 Constructs a Global M2 Liquidity Index from the top 10 most BTC-relevant fiat currencies
(USD, EUR, JPY, GBP, INR, CNY, KRW, BRL, CAD, AUD)
— each weighted by its Bitcoin adoption score and FX-converted into USD.
📊 Applies a MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) signal to the index to detect macro liquidity trends.
🟢 Plots a histogram of business cycle momentum (red = expansion, green = contraction).
🔴 Marks potential cycle peaks, useful for macro trading alignment.
⚖️ BTC Affinity-Weighted Countries:
🇺🇸 United States
🇪🇺 Eurozone
🇯🇵 Japan
🇬🇧 United Kingdom
🇮🇳 India
🇨🇳 China
🇰🇷 South Korea
🇧🇷 Brazil
🇨🇦 Canada
🇦🇺 Australia
Weights are user-adjustable to reflect evolving capital controls, regulation, and real-world BTC adoption trends.
✅ Use Cases:
Confirm macro risk-on vs risk-off regimes for BTC and crypto.
Identify ideal entry and exit zones in macro pair trades (e.g., MSTR vs MSTY).
Monitor how global monetary expansion feeds into BTC valuations.
US Liquidity-Weighted Business Cycle📈 BTC Liquidity-Weighted Business Cycle
This indicator models the Bitcoin macro cycle by comparing its logarithmic price against a log-transformed liquidity proxy (e.g., US M2 Money Supply). It helps visualize cyclical tops and bottoms by measuring the relative expansion of Bitcoin price versus fiat liquidity.
🧠 How It Works:
Transforms both BTC and M2 using natural logarithms.
Computes a liquidity ratio: log(BTC) – log(M2) (i.e., log(BTC/M2)).
Runs MACD on this ratio to extract business cycle momentum.
Plots:
🔴 Histogram bars showing cyclical growth or contraction.
🟢 Top line to track the relative price-to-liquidity trend.
🔴 Cycle peak markers to flag historical market tops.
⚙️ Inputs:
Adjustable MACD lengths
Toggle for liquidity trend line overlay
🔍 Use Cases:
Identifying macro cycle tops and bottoms
Timing long-term Bitcoin accumulation or de-risking
Confirming global liquidity's influence on BTC price movement
Note: This version currently uses US M2 (FRED:M2SL) as the liquidity base. You can easily expand it with other global M2 sources or adjust the weights.
K-TREND Strategy k trend is very useful and high profitablility , it gives entry signals with buy/sell entry signalwith stoploss and targets
NYC Candle Times Grid Muestra el horario de apertura de las velas en diferentes time frames.
Displays the opening hours of the candles in different time frames.
VWAP Suite v1.0.5This is the latest script by Kenny at The Nexus Discord. ONLY available to members in The Nexus, please DM Kenny to be approved for the script.
VWAP Suite gives you many different vwaps and Anchored Vwaps to choose from also being able to set your own custom ones from important timeframes. Trump pump? Yep. Major lows, Yup.
Also can email kenny@aceindicators.com for questions.
BTC Regime Phase [HY|YC|GLI]The correlation between global liquidity and INDEX:BTCUSD has attracted a lot of attention. Building on this insight, I developed an indicator that not only tracks global liquidity but also integrates the high‑yield spread and yield‑curve slope to capture credit risk and growth expectations.
Essence and Logic
At its core, the Risk‑On Composite Z‑Score converts three macro factors global liquidity momentum, the US high‑yield spread and the slope of the US yield curve into standardized Z‑scores, weights them, and tracks moving‑average crossovers. Each factor has a rationale: high‑yield spreads are powerful business‑cycle indicators and often outperform other financial variables (Gertler & Lown, 2000). Yield‑curve steepness reflects investor optimism and prompts shifts toward riskier assets global liquidity drives cross‑border flows and risk sentiment (Goldberg, 2023; Lee, 2024). Combining these measures gives a composite signal that has historically aligned well with Bitcoin’s tops and bottoms. Usable also for other crypto coins: INDEX:ETHUSD CRYPTO:SOLUSD CRYPTO:LINKUSD
Limitations and My Current Model Outlook
I want to be transparent: the three model sections are highly correlated. Currently, the high‑yield spread and yield curve data come only from the US; I may add Euro or Japanese spreads later. I’m also aware that macro dynamics are evolving. Fiscal policy and political choices could shorten bear markets and make the current sell signals less relevant. In a stagflationary world, inflation‑adjusted liquidity may swing more violently and require an asset‑inflation adjustment. Yet, the model has captured Bitcoin’s tops and bottoms almost to the week—future patterns may rhyme, not repeat.
Questions and Ideas:
Do you think this model will still be useful as fiscal and monetary regimes shift?
Should I add a stagnation modulation perhaps real yields or inflation‑adjusted liquidity—to better capture a stagflation scenario?
Are there high‑yield spreads on TV beyond the US that I should include? (Euro and Japan indices do exist.)
Would it make sense to incorporate Bitcoin halving events or a stock‑to‑flow module?
The indicator is free to use. If it brings you value, you’re welcome to follow for updates. I appreciate your support and feedback. When you are interested in the source code, feel free to contact me for more details. When you feel like supporting me with some sats, contact me and I will give you a Lightning address. I am a student and that would help a lot – but please only if you can afford it!
♡ Thanks to everyone who contributes insight on TradingView ♡
© Robinhodl21
Features: Users can enable or disable each component, adjust weights and choose a short‑tenor (1‑year or 2‑year) for the yield curve. The script automatically scales lookback windows based on the chart timeframe (daily, weekly or monthly). It offers visual plots of each Z‑score, the composite score, and smoothed moving averages, with background colours highlighting regimes and markers for entries and exits. Trade logic includes optional dip‑buy triggers when the composite falls below a threshold, Friday‑only execution on daily charts to reduce whipsaws. A trend table summarises current Z‑scores and their trends. Settings are tuned for BTC weekly data but should be adjusted for other assets or timeframes. Because some inputs (e.g., GLI weights) have limited historical data, long backtests may be less reliable when using on other Risk On Assets like NASDAQ:NDX NCDEX:COPPER
‼ Disclaimer: This indicator is for educational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. Markets involve risk; past performance is not indicative of future results. Users should not rely solely on this script for trading decisions. Always test and adapt settings to your asset, timeframe and risk tolerance. The author assumes no liability for any trading losses.
Literature:
Gertler, M., & Lown, C. S. (2000). The information in the high yield bond spread for the business cycle: Evidence and some implications. NBER Working Paper 7549.
Lee, B. (2024). Staying ahead of the yield curve. CME Group.
McCauley, R. N. (2012). Risk‑on/risk‑off, capital flows, leverage and safe assets. BIS Working Paper 382.
Goldberg, L. (2023). Global liquidity: Drivers, volatility and toolkits. Federal Reserve Bank of New York Staff Report 1064.
FRED (2025). ICE BofA Euro High Yield Index Option‑Adjusted Spread (BAMLHE00EHYIOAS). St. Louis Fed Data.
Office of Financial Research (2025). Financial Stress Index sources: High yield indices..
Tashev, T. (2025). The Bitcoin Stock‑to‑Flow Model: A comprehensive guide. Webopedia.
Daily Separator & Killzone marker (L3J)The “Daily Separator (L3J)” is a tool built for day traders who want a clean intraday structure around key U.S. market times and a professional trading-day model. It visually segments trading days, marks critical intraday timestamps (pre-market, cash open, killzone), and aligns with routines inspired by ICT concepts.
Important note: internal code comments and notes are written in French.
What the script does
Draws clear, configurable vertical lines to separate each trading day.
Supports two trading-day models:
- CME 18:00–17:00 (anchored on the Asian session, common for indices/futures)
- Calendar 00:00–23:59 (midnight-to-midnight)
Plots four key intraday rays in UTC‑4:
- 08:30 — U.S. pre-market open
- 09:30 — U.S. cash market open
- 09:50 — killzone start (per my routine)
- 10:30 — killzone end (per my routine)
Smart display logic: each day’s marker stays visible until the time is reached, then auto-hides to keep charts clean.
Object-budget control: caps the number of historical separators to preserve performance.
Day trading strengths (ICT-friendly)
Robust CME anchoring: day switches at the Asian session start in UTC‑4, which better reflects U.S. liquidity flow than calendar midnight.
Focused killzone: highlights 09:50–10:30 for impulse setups, rebalancing, and liquidity events around the open.
Clean readability: fully customizable colors, styles, and widths; markers auto-remove after their window.
Inputs (end‑user labels in French)
- Timezone: choose the time zone (default UTC‑4) for session alignment.
- Day separator:
- Day type: “CME 18:00–17:00” or “Calendrier 00:00–23:59”
- Color, style (solid, dashed, dotted), width
- Max number of visible separators (performance control)
Session (CME): Asian session window used as the anchor (default 18:00–16:00 UTC‑4)
ndependent intraday markers:
- Pre‑Market Open 08:30
- Market Open 09:30
- Killzone Open 09:50
- Killzone Close 10:30
- Each with show/hide, color, style, and width settings
Best practices
U.S. indices ( CME_MINI:ES1! , CME_MINI:NQ1! ) and U.S. equities: favor the “CME 18:00–17:00” mode for a more liquidity‑centric read.
ICT day trading: form directional bias around 09:30, execute between 09:50–10:30 as initial volatility structures.
Multi‑timeframe use: keep it on execution charts (1–5 min) and context charts (15–60 min) for time alignment.
Technical notes
Created by L3J.
Pine Script v6, overlay=true, controlled object budget.
Deterministic time calculations via Pine built‑ins.
All times are expressed in UTC‑4 to align with U.S. practice; adjust the timezone input as needed.
- Internal code comments/notes are written in French.
If this script helps you structure your sessions better, consider leaving a like and sharing it with other intraday traders.
Happy trading, everyone!
Volume Wave AnalyzerWave Buy vs Sell Volume (with Box) analyzes the buying and selling volume within a selected range of past candles. It sums volume from bullish bars (where close > open) as buy volume, bearish bars (close < open) as sell volume, and splits volume evenly for neutral (doji) bars. The indicator displays:
Buy Volume and Sell Volume totals over the chosen candle range
Delta (difference between buy and sell volumes)
Buy Percentage representing buying pressure strength
A visual box on the chart highlighting the selected candle range
This helps traders quickly assess market sentiment and volume dominance during recent price movements, supporting more informed trading decisions.
MO and Stoch GOLD H4 V1 – Kim TradingMO and Stoch GOLD H4 V1 – Kim Trading
Slogan: “Trading Is a Profession, Trading Is Life”
Market: XAUUSD (spot gold) • Timeframe: H4 (4 hours)
Entry/Exit Rules
When a B, B1★ … (buy) or S, S1★ … (sell) signal appears, first reference the prevailing trend and consider applying DCA in the direction of that trend. In addition, combine with other methods to build the most optimal setup.
Signal Confidence Tiers
B — S
B1★ — S1★
B2★ — S2★
B3★ — S3★
Enter trades only when one of the four signal types above is printed.
Author: Kim Trading • Version: V1 • Date: 2025-08-22
#XAUUSD #Gold #H4 #MO #Stoch #KimTrading
[blackcat] L1 Dual Ehlers Bandpass FilterOVERVIEW
The Dual Ehlers Bandpass Filter combines two bandpass filters tuned to the dominant and subdominant market cycles, creating a powerful signal extraction tool. This indicator uses John Ehlers' advanced digital signal processing techniques to isolate specific frequency components from price data. By mixing the outputs of two bandpass filters, it provides a smoother, more responsive signal that captures both primary and secondary market cycles. The indicator includes divergence detection capabilities and multiple mixing methods for customizable signal extraction.
FEATURES
- Dual bandpass filtering with dominant and subdominant cycle detection
- Multiple dominant cycle calculation methods (HoDyDC, PhAcDC, DuDiDC, CycPer, BPZC)
- Flexible mixing options: weighted, sum, difference, dominant-only, or subdominant-only
- Adjustable bandwidth parameters for both filters
- Built-in divergence detection with customizable lookback periods
- Optional display of individual filter components
- Color-coded signals and alerts for bullish/bearish divergences
HOW TO USE
1. Select your preferred price source (close, high, low, etc.)
2. Choose the dominant cycle calculation method from the available options
3. Set the subdominant cycle ratio (typically 0.1-0.9 of the dominant cycle)
4. Adjust bandwidth parameters for both filters (0.1-1.0 range)
5. Select your preferred mixing method:
- Weighted: Mix based on adjustable weights
- Sum: Add both filter outputs
- Difference: Subtract subdominant from dominant
- Dominant: Show only the dominant filter
- Subdominant: Show only the subdominant filter
6. Enable divergence detection to identify potential trend reversals
7. Optionally enable individual filter plots for analysis
LIMITATIONS
- The indicator requires sufficient historical data for accurate cycle detection
- Dominant cycle calculations may vary significantly during low volatility periods
- Divergence signals are lagging indicators and should be used with confirmation
- Bandpass filters may produce false signals during choppy market conditions
- The indicator is not suitable for all trading styles and timeframes
NOTES
- The indicator uses the blackcat1402/dc_ta library for advanced cycle calculations
- Zero line crossing can indicate potential trend changes
- Positive values typically suggest bullish momentum, negative values bearish momentum
- Divergence signals appear as colored dots and labels on the chart
- Alert conditions are available for both bullish and bearish divergences
THANKS
Special thanks to John Ehlers for his pioneering work in digital signal processing for financial markets.
Ludvig Indicator PROThe Ludvig Indicator is designed to identify high-probability breakout setups by combining trend, volume, volatility, and relative strength filters. It helps you enter stocks (or ETFs/crypto) when institutional money is likely flowing in, while avoiding false breakouts and weak trends.
🔑 Core Features
Zero-Lag EMA (ZLEMA)
Faster, less lagging trend detection compared to traditional EMAs.
Used as the basis for dynamic ATR bands.
ATR Volatility Bands
Adaptive bands based on the Average True Range (ATR).
Define the zone where price must close outside to confirm trend strength.
Breakout Confirmation
Requires price to close above recent highs (lookback configurable).
Ensures signals are “true breakouts,” not just noise around moving averages.
Volume Filter (Relative Volume)
Validates breakouts with significantly higher volume than average.
Prevents low-liquidity signals from triggering.
Trend Strength (ADX)
Built-in ADX calculation ensures only strong, trending moves are considered.
Default filter: ADX ≥ 18 (configurable).
Relative Strength vs. Benchmark
Compares the asset’s momentum against a benchmark (default: SPY).
Only signals when the asset is outperforming the benchmark.
Useful for sector rotation and picking leaders instead of laggards.
Alerts & Signals
Breakout entries are marked with small green triangles.
Built-in alerts for automated notifications (TradingView alerts).
Sweep2Trade Pro [CHE]Sweep2Trade Pro \ — Liquidity Sweep → Trend → Confirmation
Sweep2Trade Pro \ helps you catch high-probability reversals or continuations that start with a liquidity sweep, align with the T3 trend, and finalize with a structure confirmation (BOS). It’s designed to reduce noise, time your entries, and keep you out of weak, chop-driven signals.
What’s a “sweep”?
A liquidity sweep happens when price briefly breaks a prior swing high/low (where many stops sit), triggers those stops, and then snaps back. This “stop-hunt” creates liquidity for bigger players and often precedes a sharp move in the opposite direction if the break fails, or fuels continuation if structure actually shifts.
What’s a BOS (Break of Structure)?
A BOS is a price action event where the market takes out a recent swing level in the trend’s direction, signaling continuation and confirming that structure has shifted (bullish BOS through a recent swing high, bearish BOS through a recent swing low).
How the indicator works (at a glance)
1. Regime Filter (T3 + R²)
T3 Moving Average: A smoother, faster-responding moving average that aims to reduce lag while filtering noise, so trend direction changes are clearer.
R² (Coefficient of Determination): Measures how “linear” the recent price path is (0→1). Higher values = stronger, cleaner trend; lower values = more chop. Used here to allow trades only when trend quality exceeds a user-set threshold.
2. Sweep Detection
Bullish sweep: price pokes below a prior swing low and closes back above it.
Bearish sweep: price pokes above a prior swing high and closes back below it.
Lookback length is configurable.
3. Sequence Lock (built-in FSM)
The script manages state in phases so you don’t jump the gun:
Phase 1: Sweep detected → wait for T3 to turn in the corresponding direction.
Phase 2: T3 direction confirmed → show “SWEEP OK” and wait for final confirmation.
Trade Signal: Only fires if confirmation arrives before a timeout.
4. Confirmation Layer
BOS via wick or close (you choose),
Strong close toward the signal (top/bottom quartile of the candle),
Optional “close above/below T3” condition.
These checks help avoid weak sweeps that immediately fade.
5. Alerts & Visuals
“SWEEP OK” markers show when the sweep + T3 direction align.
Final BUY/SELL arrows appear only when the confirmation layer passes.
Ready-made alert conditions for automation.
What you can do with it
Time reversals after sweeps: Enter when a stop-hunt fades and structure confirms.
Ride continuations: Use BOS with the T3 trend to pyramid or re-enter with structure on your side.
Filter chop: Let R² gate entries to periods with cleaner directional drift.
Automate: Use the included alerts with your platform or webhook setup.
Inputs (key settings)
Regime Filter
T3 Length / Volume Factor: Controls smoothness and responsiveness. Smaller length → faster, more sensitive; higher volume factor → smoother curve.
R² Lookback & Threshold: Length of the linear fit window and the minimum “trend quality” required. Higher thresholds mean fewer, cleaner signals.
Sweep / Sequence
Swing Lookback: How far back to define the “reference” high/low for sweeps.
Timeout: Maximum bars allowed between phases to keep signals fresh.
Restart timeout on Phase 2: Optional safety so entries don’t go stale.
Confirmation
BOS Lookback: Micro-pivot window for structure breaks.
Wick vs Close BOS: Conservative traders may prefer close.
Require close above/below T3: Tightens confirmation with trend alignment.
Practical guide (quick start)
1. Timeframe & markets: Works across majors, indices, and crypto. Start with 5m–1h intraday or 1h–4h swing; adjust R² threshold upward on noisier pairs.
2. Entry recipe (Long):
Bullish sweep of a prior low → T3 turns up → BOS/strong close.
Optional: enable “close above T3” for extra confirmation.
3. Entry recipe (Short): Mirror the above.
4. Stops: Common choices are just beyond the sweep wick (tighter) or past the BOS invalidation (safer).
5. Targets: Previous structural levels, measured move, or a T3 trail (exit when price closes back through T3).
6. Avoid low-quality contexts: If R² is very low, market is likely ranging erratically—skip or widen filters.
Tips & best practices
Context first: The same sweep means different things in a strong trend vs. flat regime; that’s why the T3+R² filter exists.
BOS choice: Wick-based BOS is earlier but noisier; close-based BOS is slower but cleaner. Tune per market.
Backtest -> Forward test: Validate settings per symbol/timeframe; then paper trade before going live.
Risk: Fixed fractional risk with asymmetric R\:R (e.g., 1:1.5–1:3) generally performs better than “all-in” discretionary sizing.
Behind the scenes (for the curious)
T3 is a multi-stage EMA construction that produces a smooth curve with reduced lag versus simple/standard EMAs.
R² is the square of correlation (0–1). Here it’s used as a moving gauge of how well price aligns to a linear path—our “trend quality” dial.
Stop-hunts / sweeps are a recognized microstructure phenomenon where clustered stops provide the liquidity that fuels the next move.
Disclaimer
No indicator guarantees profits. Sweep2Trade Pro \ is a decision aid; always combine with solid risk management and your own judgment. Backtest, forward test, and size responsibly.
The content provided, including all code and materials, is strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument, or an offer of any financial product or service. All strategies, tools, and examples discussed are provided for illustrative purposes to demonstrate coding techniques and the functionality of Pine Script within a trading context.
Any results from strategies or tools provided are hypothetical, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading and investing involve high risk, including the potential loss of principal, and may not be suitable for all individuals. Before making any trading decisions, please consult with a qualified financial professional to understand the risks involved.
By using this script, you acknowledge and agree that any trading decisions are made solely at your discretion and risk.
Enhance your trading precision and confidence 🚀
Happy trading
Chervolino
Custom Support & Resistance Levels (Manual Input)This indicator lets you plot your own support levels (and can be extended for resistance) directly on the chart by entering them as comma-separated values.
📌 Supports manual input for multiple price levels.
📊 Lines are extended across the chart for clear visualization.
🎨 Dynamic coloring:
Green if the current price is above the level.
Red if the current price is below the level.
🧹 Old lines are automatically cleared to avoid clutter.
This tool is ideal if you:
Prefer to mark your own key zones instead of relying only on auto-detected levels.
Want clean and simple visualization of critical price areas.
👉 Coming soon: Resistance levels input (commented in the code, can be enabled).
Same Day Past CandlesSame-Day Past Candles
This indicator is a tool that plots the shapes of the candles from the same date one and two years ago directly on the current chart. By visually comparing past price movements, it can help you analyze seasonality and cyclical patterns.
Key Features
Plots Past Candles: Displays candles from the same date one and two years ago on your current chart.
Toggle Visibility: You can individually turn the display of the "1 year ago candle" and "2 years ago candle" on or off in the indicator's settings.
Candle Shape: The open, high, low, and close prices of the past candles are plotted, scaled to the current price range.
How to Use
Add this indicator to a daily chart for best results. The plotted candles are slightly offset upwards so they don't overlap with the current price, making it easier to compare the shape of the past candles with the current chart movement.
Visually checking how specific past price changes are reflected on the same day this year can provide insights for your trading strategy.
I do not speak English at all. Please understand that if you send me a message, I may not be able to reply, or my reply may have a different meaning. Thank you for your understanding.
Buy/Sell Volume VWAP with Liquidity and Price SensitivityBuy/Sell Volume VWAP with Liquidity & Price Sensitivity
A dual-VWAP overlay that separates buy-side vs sell-side pressure using lower-timeframe volume and recent price behavior. It shows two adaptive VWAP lines and a bias cloud to make trend and imbalance easy to see—no params fussing required.
What you’ll see
Buy VWAP (green) and Sell VWAP (red) plotted on the chart
Slope-aware coloring : brighter when that side is improving, darker when easing
Bias cloud: green when Buy > Sell, red when Sell > Buy
Optional last-value bubbles on the price scale for quick readouts
How it works
Looks inside each bar (lower timeframe, e.g., 1-second) to estimate buy vs sell pressure
Blends that pressure with recent price movement to keep the lines responsive but stable
Maintains separate VWAP tracks for buy-side and sell-side and resets daily or at a time you choose
How to use it
Trend & bias: When Buy VWAP stays above Sell VWAP (green cloud), buyers have the upper hand; the opposite (red cloud) favors sellers.
Conviction: A wider gap between the two lines often means a stronger imbalance.
Context: Use alongside structure (higher highs/lows, key levels) for confirmation—this is not a stand-alone signal.
Inputs
Timeframe: Lower-TF sampling (default 1S).
Reset Time: Defaults to 09:30 (session open); set to your market.
Appearance: Two-shade palettes for buy/sell, line width, last-value bubbles, and cloud opacity.
Tips
Works on most symbols and intraday timeframes; lower-TF sampling can be heavier on resources.
If the cloud flips frequently, consider viewing on a slightly higher chart timeframe for cleaner structure.
Disclaimer
For educational use only. Not investment advice. Test on replay/paper before live decisions.
PCV2 imgoatedlines on lines, grid on grid.
25s chatter. 50s hum. 100s chant.
the 500s throb, the 1000s scream.
hidden in the block: 250 / 750, the off-beat echoes.
stare too long and the candles turn to teeth.
price does not move, you move.
support? resistance? it’s just the lattice, the cage, the whisper.
they say this will help you “find confluence”…
no. this will help you get your first dookie butt.
don’t explain it. just add it. let the grid cook.
PCV2 waitimgoatedlines on lines, grid on grid.
25s chatter. 50s hum. 100s chant.
the 500s throb, the 1000s scream.
hidden in the block: 250 / 750, the off-beat echoes.
stare too long and the candles turn to teeth.
price does not move, you move.
support? resistance? it’s just the lattice, the cage, the whisper.
they say this will help you “find confluence”…
no. this will help you get your first dookie butt.
don’t explain it. just add it. let the grid cook.
SHHHHHHH“Round Numbers — 100/50/25”
lines… endless lines… they whisper in 25s, scream in 50s, collapse in 100s.
price dances on the grid, you don’t trade it, it trades you.
blue for the void. orange for the in-between. green for the fracture.
extend both. never stop. above and below. above and below.
do not ask why 25. do not ask why 50. the 100s already know.
quarter. half. whole. repeat until delirium.
add it to chart → stare too long → numbers start staring back.