NQ Position Size CalculatorNQ Position Size Line Calculator is designed specifically for Nasdaq 100 futures (NQ) and micro futures (MNQ) traders who want to maintain disciplined risk management. This visual tool eliminates the guesswork from position sizing by displaying distance lines and contract calculations directly on your chart.
The indicator creates horizontal lines at 10-tick intervals from your stop loss level, showing you exactly how many contracts to trade at each distance to maintain your predetermined risk amount. Whether you're trading regular NQ contracts or micro MNQ contracts, this calculator ensures you never risk more than intended while providing instant visual feedback for optimal position sizing decisions.
 How to Use the Indicator 
Step 1: Configure Your Settings
 
 Stop Loss Price: Enter your exact stop loss level (e.g., 20000.00)
 Risk Amount ($): Set your maximum dollar risk per trade (e.g., $500)
 
Contract Type: Choose between:
 
 NQ (Regular): $5 per tick - for larger accounts
 MNQ (Micro): $0.50 per tick - for smaller accounts or conservative sizing
 
Display Options:
 
 Max Lines: Number of distance lines to show (default: 30)
 Show Labels: Toggle tick distance and contract count labels
 Line Color: Customize the color of distance lines
 Label Size: Choose tiny, small, or normal label sizes
 
Step 2: Read the Visual Display
Once configured, the indicator displays:
Stop Loss Line:
 
 Thick yellow line marking your exact stop loss level
 Yellow label showing the stop loss price
 
Distance Lines:
 
 Dashed red lines at 10-tick intervals above and below your stop loss
 Lines appear on both sides for long and short position planning
 
Labels (if enabled):
 
 Green labels (right side): For long positions above your stop loss
 Red labels (left side): For short positions below your stop loss
 Format: "20T 5x" means 20 ticks distance, 5 contracts maximum
 
Step 3: Use the Information Tables
The indicator provides two helpful tables:
Position Size Table (top-right):
 
 Shows common tick distances (10, 20, 40, 80, 160 ticks)
 Displays risk per contract at each distance
 Contract count for your specified risk amount
 Total risk with rounded contract numbers
 
Settings Table (bottom-right):
 
 Confirms your current risk amount
 Shows selected contract type
 Displays current settings for quick reference
 
Step 4: Apply to Your Trading
For Long Positions:
 
 Look at the green labels on the right side of your chart
 Find your desired entry level
 Read the label to see: distance in ticks and maximum contracts
 Example: "30T 8x" = 30 ticks from stop, buy 8 contracts maximum
 
For Short Positions:
 
 Look at the red labels on the left side of your chart
 Find your desired entry level
 Read the label for tick distance and contract count
 Example: "40T 6x" = 40 ticks from stop, sell 6 contracts maximum
 
Step 5: Trading Execution
Before Entering a Trade:
 
 Identify your stop loss level and input it into the indicator
 Choose your entry point by looking at the distance lines
 Note the contract count from the corresponding label
 Verify the risk amount matches your trading plan
 Execute your trade with the calculated position size
 
Risk Management Features:
 
 Contract rounding: All position sizes are rounded down (never up) to ensure you don't exceed your risk limit
 Zero position filtering: Lines only show where position size is at least 1 contract
 Dual-sided display: Plan both long and short opportunities simultaneously
Micro
MicroStrategy MetricsA script showing all the key MSTR metrics. I will update the script every time degen Saylor sells some more office furniture to buy BTC. 
All based around valuing MSTR, aside from its BTC holdings. I.e. the true market cap = enterprise value - BTC holdings. Hence, you're left with the value of the software business + any premium/discount decided by investors.
From this we can derive:
- BTC Holdings % of enterprise value
- Correlation to BTC (in this case we use CME futures...may change this)
- Equivalent Share Price (true market cap divided by shares outstanding)
- P/E Ratio (equivalent share price divided by quarterly EPS estimates x 4)
- Price to FCF Ratio (true market cap divided by FCF (ttm))
- Price to Revenue (^ but with total revenue (ttm))

