J. YOUNG INDICATOR (2)QUICK REFERENCE to help with a PRICE FOR OPTIONS and or B/H entry MEDIAN PRICE of the MONTHLY/QUARTERLY aVWAPS to get a more accurate price point
Options
Trend + Squeeze High VolatilityGood for High Volatility Stocks and Options
Trend and Squeeze High Volatility
Good For High Volatility Stocks and Options
Dynamic Gamma Inspired IndicatorDynamic Gamma Inspired Indicator
This indicator identifies potential market regime shifts between low-volatility (mean-reverting) and high-volatility (trending) environments by using a dynamic, volatility-adaptive framework inspired by options market gamma exposure concepts.
Core Concepts
This indicator uses a volatility-based model that mimics how market maker hedging can influence price stability and volatility. While it's not possible to calculate true Gamma Exposure (GEX) in Pine Script without external options data, this script uses the Average True Range (ATR) as a proxy to create dynamic zones that adapt to current market conditions.
Positive Gamma Environment (Green Background) When price is contained within the upper and lower walls, it suggests a period of stability where market makers' hedging may suppress volatility. In this "mean-reversion" regime, prices tend to revert to the central pivot.
Negative Gamma Environment (Orange Background) When price breaks outside the walls, it signals a potential increase in volatility, where hedging can amplify price moves. This "trend-amplification" regime suggests the potential for strong breakout or trend-following moves.
How It Works
The indicator is built on three key components that dynamically adjust to market volatility:
Dynamic Pivot (Blue Line) An Exponential Moving Average (EMA) acts as the central "zero gamma" pivot point.
Dynamic Walls (Red & Green Lines) These upper and lower bands are calculated by adding or subtracting a multiple of the Average True Range (ATR) from the central EMA pivot. This is similar to how Keltner Channels use ATR to create volatility-based envelopes. The walls expand during high volatility and contract during low volatility.
How to Use This Indicator
The indicator automatically plots signals based on the current market regime:
Mean-Reversion Signals (Inside the Walls)
Long Reversion: Appears when the price crosses up through the central pivot, suggesting a potential move toward the upper wall.
Short Reversion: Appears when the price crosses down through the central pivot, suggesting a potential move toward the lower wall.
Breakout Signals (Outside the Walls)
Long Breakout: Appears when the price breaks and closes above the upper wall, signaling the start of a potential uptrend.
Short Breakout: Appears when the price breaks and closes below the lower wall, signaling the start of a potential downtrend.
Customization
You can tailor the indicator to different assets and timeframes by adjusting the following inputs:
Central Pivot EMA Length: Determines the period for the central moving average.
ATR Length for Walls: Sets the lookback period for the Average True Range calculation.
ATR Multiplier for Walls: Adjusts the width of the channel. A larger multiplier creates wider walls, filtering out more noise but providing fewer signals.
Disclaimer: This indicator is a tool for analysis and should not be used as a standalone trading signal. Always use proper risk management and combine it with other analysis methods. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Implied Volatility RangeThe Implied Volatility Range is a forward-looking tool that transforms option market data into probability ranges for future prices. Based on the lognormal distribution of asset prices assumed in modern option pricing models, it converts the implied volatility curve into a volatility cone with dynamic labels that show the market’s expectations for the price distribution at a specific point in time. At the selected future date, it displays projected price levels and their percentage change from today’s close across 1, 2, and 3 standard deviation (σ) ranges:
1σ range = ~68.2% probability the price will remain within this range.
2σ range = ~95.4% probability the price will remain within this range.
3σ range = ~99.7% probability the price will remain within this range.
What makes this indicator especially useful is its ability to incorporate implied volatility skew. When only ATM IV (%) is entered, the indicator displays the standard Black–Scholes lognormal distribution. By adding High IV (%) and Low IV (%) values tied to strikes above and below the current price, the indicator interpolates between these inputs to approximate the implied volatility skew. This adjustment produces a market-implied probability distribution that indicates whether the option market is leaning bullish or bearish, based on the data entered in the menu:
ATM IV (%) = Implied volatility at the current spot price (at-the-money).
High IV (%) = Implied volatility at a strike above the current spot price.
High Strike = Strike price corresponding to the High IV input (OTM call).
Low IV (%) = Implied volatility at a strike below the current spot price.
Low Strike = Strike price corresponding to the Low IV input (OTM put).
Expiration (Day, Month, Year) = Option expiration date for the projection.
Once these inputs are entered, the indicator calculates implied probability ranges and, if both High IV and Low IV values are provided, adjusts for skew to approximate the option market’s distribution. If no implied volatility data is supplied, the indicator defaults to a lognormal distribution based on historical volatility, using past realized volatility over the same forward horizon. This keeps the tool functional even without implied volatility inputs, though in that case the output represents only an approximation of ATM IV, not the actual market view.
In summary, the Implied Volatility Range is a powerful tool that translates implied volatility inputs into a clear and practical estimate of the market’s expectations for future prices. It allows traders to visualize the probability of price ranges while also highlighting directional bias, a dimension often difficult to interpret from traditional implied volatility charts. It should be emphasized, however, that this tool reflects only the market’s expectations at a specific point in time, which may change as new information and trading activity reshape implied volatility.
ATM & ITM Strike Table (NIFTY & BANKNIFTY)This script is like a cheat sheet for option traders.
When you put it on your chart, it shows you a small table with:
The current spot price (the real market price).
The futures price (another version of the same index that sometimes trades a bit higher or lower).
The ATM strike (the strike price closest to the market price).
Which call option and put option are “in the money” and most relevant right now.
A little note to remind you if you’re looking at the right chart.
In short:
It saves you from doing mental math every time by automatically pointing out the key option strike prices you should be aware of.
Multi Straddle-Strangle ChartThis powerful indicator is designed for options traders who want to visualize and track the combined premium of multiple straddle and strangle strategies in a single, dedicated pane.
Quickly analyze and compare up to five different options strategies at a glance, directly on your chart. This tool is perfect for monitoring volatility, tracking potential profits/losses on a position, and spotting key support and resistance levels based on option premiums.
Key Features:
Plot Up to 5 Strategies: Simultaneously plot any combination of up to 5 straddles or strangles.
Real-Time Data: Fetches live data for both Call and Put options to give you an up-to-the-second view of the combined price.
Dynamic Symbol Generation: Automatically detects the underlying symbol (e.g., NIFTY, BANKNIFTY, stocks) and builds the correct option symbols based on your input.
Customizable Inputs: Easily configure the expiry date, strike prices and line colors for each of the 5 lines.
In-Chart Summary Table: A clean and clear table in the corner of your chart provides a quick summary of each enabled strategy and its current price.
Important Note on Usage:
This tool requires you to input a strike price in all fields, even if you do not plan to use all five lines. This is necessary because of a fundamental rule in the Pine Script language: every input must have a constant, non-empty default value. The indicator is optimized to only fetch data for the lines you have explicitly enabled with the "Enable Line X" checkbox.
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BTC Sigma CloudOverview
The BTC Sigma Cloud indicator calculates and displays 1, 2, and 3 sigma price movements for Bitcoin (BTC) on a rolling basis, visualized as a cloud. It shows historical volatility bands and projects them forward for the next 7 days.
Settings:
Vol Lookback: Default is 20 periods. Adjust to change the volatility calculation window.
Interpretation:
Cloud Bands: The cloud consists of three shaded layers representing 1σ, 2σ, and 3σ moves above and below the current price.
1σ (Innermost): 68% probability of price staying within this range.
2σ (Middle): 95% probability.
3σ (Outermost): 99.7% probability.
Historical View: The cloud tracks past price movements based on volatility.
Projection: The cloud extends 7 days forward, indicating potential price ranges based on current volatility.
Labels: Subtle labels (1σ, -1σ, 2σ, -2σ, 3σ, -3σ) mark the upper and lower bounds of each sigma level on the latest bar for clarity.
Trading Use:
Use the cloud to gauge potential support/resistance zones.
Monitor price behavior near sigma levels for breakout or reversal signals.
The projected cloud helps anticipate future price ranges for planning trades.
Notes
Best used on daily charts for Bitcoin.
Adjust the lookback period to suit shorter or longer-term analysis.
Combine with other indicators for confirmation.
SESSIONS Golden Team SESSIONS — Multi-Session Forex Box & Range Analysis
This indicator displays the major Forex market sessions — London, New York, Tokyo, Sydney, and Frankfurt — directly on the chart. Each session is shown as a customizable colored box with optional Fibonacci levels and opening range markers.
It also calculates and displays the average pip range of each session over a user-defined number of past days, allowing traders to analyze volatility patterns for each trading period.
Key Features:
Configurable session times and time zones
Individual on/off toggle for each session
Custom colors, box transparency, and border styles
Optional Opening Range and Fibonacci retracement levels for each session
Average pip range table for quick volatility reference
Works on any intraday timeframe
How It Works:
The script identifies the start and end times of each session based on user settings.
A box is drawn around the high/low of the session period.
At the end of each session, the pip range is recorded, and an average is calculated over the last N sessions (default: 20).
The results are displayed in a statistics table showing average pips and whether the session is currently active.
Suggested Use:
Identify high-volatility sessions for breakout trading
Filter trades to active trading hours
Study historical volatility to refine entry timing
Options Greeks AnalyzerOptions Greeks Analyzer (Training & Learning Guide)
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1. Introduction
Options trading is advanced compared to regular stock trading, and one of the most important aspects is Options Greeks. Greeks are mathematical values that measure how the price of an option will react to changes in various factors such as the underlying asset’s price, volatility, interest rates, and time to expiry.
This Options Greeks Analyzer tool is built using TradingView Pine Script v5. It serves as a real time training and analysis dashboard that helps learners visualize how options greeks behave, how option prices change, and how traders can make informed decisions.
📌 Educational Disclaimer:
This tool is only for training and learning purposes. It is not a financial advice tool nor to be used for live trading decisions. The data shown is theoretical Black Scholes model calculations, which may differ from actual option market prices.
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2. How the Tool Works
The Options Greeks Analyzer is divided into different modules. Below is a step by step walkthrough:
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Step 1: User Inputs
• Implied Volatility (IV%) — You can manually enter volatility, which is the most important factor in option pricing. Higher IV = higher option premium.
• Expiry Selection — Choose from preset durations like 7D, 14D, 30D etc. Days to expiry directly affect time decay (Theta).
• Strike Price Mode — You can select either:
o ATM (At-the-Money = Current price of stock/index)
o Custom strike (Enter your own strike price)
• Risk-Free Rate (%) — A small interest rate factor (like government bond yield) used for theoretical valuation.
• Table Customization — Choose table size, position, and whether to show price lines for easy visibility.
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Step 2: Market Data & Volatility
• The tool takes the current market price (Spot Price) as input.
• It calculates realized volatility from historical price fluctuations (using past 30 bars/log returns).
• Implied Volatility (manual input) is then compared to realized vol:
o If IV > Historical Volatility → Market pricing is “expensive” (HIGH IV RANK).
o If IV < Historical Volatility → Market is “cheap” (LOW IV RANK).
o Otherwise, it’s MEDIUM.
📌 Why it matters?
Traders can decide whether buying or selling options is favorable. Beginners learn that timing entry with volatility is more critical than just looking at market direction.
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Step 3: Black-Scholes Formula
The core engine uses the Black-Scholes model, a mathematical formula widely used to compute option fair prices.
It uses the following inputs:
• Current price (Spot)
• Strike Price
• Time to Expiry (T)
• Risk Free Rate (r)
• Implied Volatility (σ)
This produces:
• Call Option Price
• Put Option Price
📌 This teaches learners how premiums are derived theoretically and why the same strike can have different values depending on IV and time.
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Step 4: Option Greeks Calculation
The tool computes the first order Greeks:
• Delta → Measures how much the option price changes when the underlying stock moves by 1 point.
(Call Delta ranges 0–1, Put Delta ranges -1 to 0).
• Gamma → Sensitivity of Delta to price change. A measure of volatility risk.
• Theta → Time decay. Shows how much value option loses as each day passes. Calls and Puts have negative Theta (decay).
• Vega → Measures how sensitive option price is to volatility changes.
• Rho → Interest rate sensitivity. Mostly minor in equity options but important for training.
📌 New traders learn how each factor impacts profits/losses. Instead of random guessing, they see mathematical impact in numbers.
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Step 5: Dashboard & Visualization
The tool builds a professional dashboard table on the chart.
It shows categories such as:
1. Asset Info — Spot, Strike, DTE (days to expiry), IV%, IV Rank, 1-Day Trend, Moneyness (ATM/OTM/ITM).
2. Option Prices — Call, Put, Break-even levels, Time Value, Expected Move (%), Realized vs Implied Vol.
3. Greeks with Visual Progress Bars — Easily shows Delta, Gamma, Vega, Theta, Rho in intuitive graphical representations.
4. Status Bar — Suggests theoretical bias like:
o HIGH IV → Favor Option Selling
o LOW IV → Favor Option Buying
o MEDIUM → Neutral observation
5. Recommendation Line — Offers training-based suggestions like “Buy Straddles”, “Sell Call Spreads”, etc. These are not signals, but scenarios to learn strategies.
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3. How It Helps Beginners
1. Learn Greeks in Action:
Beginners often memorize formulas but never see real-time changes. This dashboard updates every bar to show how Greeks change dynamically.
2. Compare Volatilities:
Traders understand difference between historical vs implied volatility and why option premiums behave differently.
3. Understand Risk Levels:
The tool highlights when Gamma risk is high (danger for sellers) or when Theta is most favorable.
4. Training Mode for Strategies:
Helps beginners experiment by changing IV, strike, expiry and seeing how straddles, spreads, naked options would behave theoretically.
5. Prepares Before Live Trading:
Safe environment to practice option analysis without risking capital.
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4. Educational Use Cases
• Scenario 1: Change expiry from 7D to 30D — see how Theta becomes slower for longer expiries.
• Scenario 2: Increase IV from 25% to 80% — watch how option premiums inflate, and recommendation changes from “Buy” to “Sell”.
• Scenario 3: Select OTM vs ITM strikes — check how delta moves from near 0 to near 1.
By running these scenarios, learners understand why professional traders hedge Greeks instead of directional gambling.
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5. Disclaimer
This Options Greeks Analyzer is built strictly for educational and training purposes.
• It uses theoretical formulas (Black-Scholes) that may not match actual option market prices.
• The recommendations are for learning strategy logic only, not real-world execution signals.
• Trading in options carries significant risks and may result in capital loss.
📌 Always consult with a financial advisor before applying real strategies.
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✅ Summary
This Options Greeks Analyzer:
• Teaches how Greeks, IV, and premiums work.
• Provides a real-time interactive dashboard for training.
• Helps beginners practice option scenarios safely.
• Is meant strictly for learning and not live trading execution.
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Disclaimer from aiTrendview
This script and its trading signals are provided for training and educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice or a guaranteed trading system. Trading involves substantial risk, and there is the potential to lose all invested capital. Users should perform their own analysis and consult with qualified financial professionals before making any trading decisions. aiTrendview disclaims any liability for losses incurred from using this code or trading based on its signals. Use this tool responsibly, and trade only with risk capital.
Support and Resistance levels from Options DataINTRODUCTION
This script is designed to visualize key support and resistance levels derived from options data on TradingView charts. It overlays lines, labels, and boxes to highlight levels such as Put Walls (gamma support), Call Walls (gamma resistance), Gamma Flip points, Vanna levels, and more.
These levels are intended to help traders identify potential areas of price magnetism, reversal, or breakout based on options market dynamics. All calculations and visualizations are based on user-provided data pasted into the input field, as Pine Script cannot directly fetch external options data due to platform limitations (explained below).
For convenience, my website allows users to interact with a bot that will generate the string for up to 30 tickers at once getting nearly real-time data on demand (data is cached for 15min). With the output string pasted into this indicator, it's a bliss to shuffle through your portfolio and see those levels for each ticker.
The script is open-source under TradingView's terms, allowing users to study, modify, and improve it. It draws inspiration from common options-derived metrics like gamma exposure and vanna, which are widely discussed in financial literature. No external code is copied without rights; all logic is original or based on standard mathematical formulas.
How the Options Levels Are Calculated
The levels displayed by this script are not computed within Pine Script itself—instead, they rely on pre-calculated values provided by the user (via a pasted data string). These values are derived from options chain data fetched from financial APIs (e.g., using libraries like yfinance in Python). Here's a step-by-step overview of how these levels are generally calculated externally before being input into the script:
Fetching Options Data:
Historical and current options chain data for a ticker (e.g., strikes, open interest, volume, implied volatility, expirations) is retrieved for near-term expirations (e.g., up to 90 days).
Current stock price is obtained from recent history.
Gamma Support (Put Wall) and Resistance (Call Wall):
Gamma Calculation: For each option, gamma (the rate of change of delta) is computed using the Black-Scholes formula:
gamma = N'(d1) / (S * sigma * sqrt(T))
where S is the stock price, K is the strike, T is time to expiration (in years), sigma is implied volatility, r is the risk-free rate (e.g., 0.0445), and N'(d1) is the normal probability density function.
Weighted gamma is multiplied by open interest and aggregated by strike.
The Put Wall is the strike below the current price with the highest weighted gamma from puts (acting as support).
The Call Wall is the strike above the current price with the highest weighted gamma from calls (acting as resistance).
Short-term versions focus on strikes closer to the money (e.g., within 10-15% of the price).
Gamma Flip Level:
Net dealer gamma exposure (GEX) is calculated across all strikes:
GEX = sum (gamma * OI * 100 * S^2 * sign * decay)
where sign is +1 for calls/-1 for puts, and decay is 1 / sqrt(T).
The flip point is the price where net GEX changes sign (from positive to negative or vice versa), interpolated between strikes.
Vanna Levels:
Vanna (sensitivity of delta to volatility) is calculated:
vanna = -N'(d1) * d2 / sigma
where d2 = d1 - sigma * sqrt(T).
Weighted by open interest, the highest positive and negative vanna strikes are identified.
Other Levels:
S1/R1: Significant strikes with high combined open interest and volume (80% OI + 20% volume), below/above price for support/resistance.
Implied Move: ATM implied volatility scaled by S * sigma * sqrt(d/365) (e.g., for 7 days).
Call/Put Ratio: Total call contracts divided by put contracts (OI + volume).
IV Percentage: Average ATM implied volatility.
Options Activity Level: Average contracts per unique strike, binned into levels (0-4).
Stop Loss: Dynamically set below the lowest support (e.g., Put Wall, Gamma Flip), adjusted by IV (tighter in low IV).
Fib Target: 1.618 extension from Put Wall to Call Wall range.
Previous day levels are stored for comparison (e.g., to detect Call Wall movement >2.5% for alerts).
Effect as Support and Resistance in Technical Trading
Options levels like gamma walls influence price action due to market maker hedging:
Put Wall (Gamma Support): High put gamma below price creates a "magnet" effect—market makers buy stock as price falls, providing support. Traders might look for bounces here as entry points for longs.
Call Wall (Gamma Resistance): High call gamma above price leads to selling pressure from hedging, acting as resistance. Rejections here could signal trims, sells or even shorts.
Gamma Flip: Where gamma exposure flips sign, often a volatility pivot—crossing it can accelerate moves (bullish above, bearish below).
Vanna Levels: Positive/negative vanna indicate volatility sensitivity; crosses may signal regime shifts.
Implied Move: Shows expected range; prices outside suggest overextension.
S1/R1 and Fib Target: Volume/OI clusters act as classic S/R; Fib extensions project upside targets post-breakout.
In trading, these are not guarantees—combine with TA (e.g., volume, trends). High activity levels imply stronger effects; low CP ratio suggests bearish sentiment. Alerts trigger on proximities/crosses for awareness, not advice.
Limitations of the TradingView Platform for Data Pulling
TradingView's Pine Script is sandboxed for security and performance:
No direct internet access or API calls (e.g., can't fetch yfinance data in-script).
Limited to chart data/symbol info; no real-time options chains.
Inputs are static per load; updates require manual pasting.
Caching isn't persistent across sessions.
This prevents dynamic data pulling, ensuring scripts remain lightweight but requiring external tools for fresh data.
Creative Solution for On-Demand Data Pulling
To overcome these limitations, users can use external tools or scripts (e.g., Python-based) to fetch and compute levels on demand. The tool processes tickers, generates a formatted string (e.g., "TICKER:level1,level2,...;TIMESTAMP:unix;"), and users paste it into the script's input. This keeps data fresh without violating platform rules, as computation happens off-platform. For example, run a local script to query APIs and output the string—adaptable for any ticker.
Script Functionality Breakdown
Inputs: Custom data string (parsed for levels/timestamp); toggles for short-term/previous/Vanna/stop loss; style options (colors, transparency).
Parsing: Extracts levels for the chart symbol; gets timestamp for "updated ago" display.
Drawing: Lines/labels for levels; boxes for gamma zones/implied move; clears old elements on updates.
Info Panel: Top-right summary with metrics (CP ratio, IV, distances, activity); emojis for quick status.
Alerts: Conditions for proximities, crosses, bounces (e.g., 0.5% bounce from Put Wall).
Performance: Uses vars for persistence; efficient for real-time.
This script is educational—test thoroughly. Not financial advice; past performance isn't indicative of future results. Feedback welcome via TradingView comments.
Shifa A+ (Lean tidy) — v1.5.1calls/puts indicator based on trend line, support based tp and resistance based sl
Momentum Signals – Real-time (Repainting)This indicator generates real-time BUY/SELL signals using a confluence of VWMA trend, 3-bar momentum, and volume, then filters them by a strength score.
⚠️ **WARNING:** This version **repaints**; signals can appear and disappear before the bar closes.
Momentum Signals – Real-time (Repainting)This indicator generates real-time BUY/SELL signals using a confluence of VWMA trend, 3-bar momentum, and volume, then filters them by a strength score.
⚠️ WARNING: This version repaints; signals can appear and disappear before the bar closes.
Fear & Greed Oscillator — LEAP Puts (v6, manual DMI/ADX)Fear & Greed Oscillator — LEAP Puts (v6, manual DMI/ADX) is a Puts-focused mirror of the Calls version, built to flag top risk and momentum rollovers for timing LEAP Put entries. It outputs a smoothed composite from −100 to +100 using slower MACD, manual DMI/ADX (Wilder), RSI and Stoch RSI extremes, OBV distribution vs. accumulation, and volume spike & direction, with optional Put/Call Ratio and IV Rank inputs. All thresholds, weights, and smoothing match the Calls script for 1:1 customization, and a component table shows what’s driving the score. Reading is simple: higher values = rising top-risk (red shading above “Top-Risk”); lower values = deep dip / bounce risk (green shading). Built-in alerts cover Top-Risk, Deep Dip, and zero-line crosses for clear, actionable cues.
LEAP Put Edge — Top Risk Oscillator (v6, divergences + HTF)Pinpoint market tops with precision — a composite oscillator built to spot exhaustion, bearish divergences, and high-probability LEAP Put entry zones.
The LEAP Put Edge — Top Risk Oscillator is designed specifically to help identify high-probability entry points for long-dated Put options (LEAPs) by highlighting exhaustion at market tops. Unlike generic overbought/oversold tools, it combines slower MACD and DMI/ADX for trend quality, RSI and Stochastic RSI for momentum extremes, volume spike and upper-wick exhaustion signals for capitulation risk, and optional bearish divergences in RSI and MACD to confirm weakening strength. The output is a smoothed composite score scaled from -100 to +100, where higher values indicate rising top-risk and bearish edge conditions. Clear thresholds, color-coded plots, and built-in alerts make it straightforward and practical for traders seeking simple, actionable signals to time Put entries with confidence.
Signal Validator - Signal Validator with Volume and IV ProxySignal Validator - Signal Validator with Volume and IV Proxy
Floating Dashboard + KDE (v6)Simple indicator that displays ADX, RSI, MACD, ATR, Average Volume and KDE with dynamic Table and Label.
Swing Support and Resistance [Vijay]Swing-based support & resistance with breakout buy/sell signals and alerts.
Full Description:
The Swing Support and Resistance indicator is a simple yet effective tool to identify swing-based support and resistance levels using pivot points.
Pivot Length: Defines how many bars on each side are used to confirm a swing high (resistance) or swing low (support).
Support & Resistance: Plots the most recent pivot levels as visual markers (circles) on the chart.
Buy & Sell Signals:
A Buy Signal is triggered when price crosses above the last resistance.
A Sell Signal is triggered when price crosses below the last support.
Visual Cues: Arrows are plotted directly on the chart for easy signal recognition.
Alerts: Built-in alert conditions allow you to set TradingView alerts for breakout signals.
This script is useful for traders who rely on price action, breakout trading, and swing structure analysis. It helps quickly spot where price is breaking key levels and provides instant alerts for trade opportunities.
Overnight Gap Dominance Indicator (OGDI)The Overnight Gap Dominance Indicator (OGDI) measures the relative volatility of overnight price gaps versus intraday price movements for a given security, such as SPY or SPX. It uses a rolling standard deviation of absolute overnight percentage changes divided by the standard deviation of absolute intraday percentage changes over a customizable window. This helps traders identify periods where overnight gaps predominate, suggesting potential opportunities for strategies leveraging extended market moves.
Instructions
A
pply the indicator to your TradingView chart for the desired security (e.g., SPY or SPX).
Adjust the "Rolling Window" input to set the lookback period (default: 60 bars).
Modify the "1DTE Threshold" and "2DTE+ Threshold" inputs to tailor the levels at which you switch from 0DTE to 1DTE or multi-DTE strategies (default: 0.5 and 0.6).
Observe the OGDI line: values above the 1DTE threshold suggest favoring 1DTE strategies, while values above the 2DTE+ threshold indicate multi-DTE strategies may be more effective.
Use in conjunction with low VIX environments and uptrend legs for optimal results.
SPX → NQ Levels ConverterSPX → NQ Levels Converter is a Pine Script indicator that projects key S&P 500 (SPX) levels onto the NASDAQ 100 (NQ) chart using a configurable conversion ratio.
• Dynamic ratio: calculates the live SPX/NQ ratio in real time.
• Static ratio: allows manual input of a fixed ratio.
• Supports up to 10 custom SPX levels, automatically converted into their equivalent NQ values.
• Each level is displayed with a line and label (SPX → NQ) with independent color settings.
• Advanced visualization controls:
• line extension (right, left, both, or fixed)
• line length & placement
• label side & offset.
• Lines and labels auto-update on every bar to stay accurate over time.
Use case: particularly useful for traders who track SPX option levels or support/resistance zones but execute trades on the NQ.
Monthly Expected Move (IV + Realized)What it does
Overlays 1-month expected move bands on price using both forward-looking options data and backward-looking realized movement:
IV30 band — from your pasted 30-day implied vol (%)
Straddle band — from your pasted ATM ~30-DTE call+put total
HV band — from Historical Volatility computed on-chart
ATR band — from ATR% extrapolated to ~1 trading month
Use it to quickly answer: “How much could this stock move in ~1 month?” and “Is the market now pricing more/less movement than we’ve actually been getting?”
Inputs (quick)
Implied (forward-looking)
Use IV30 (%) — paste annualized IV30 from your options platform.
Use ATM 30-DTE Straddle — paste Call+Put total (per share) at the ATM strike, ~30 DTE.
Realized (backward-looking)
HV lookback (days) — default 21 (≈1 trading month).
ATR length — default 14.
Note: TradingView can’t fetch option data automatically. Paste the IV30 % or the straddle total you read from your broker (use Mark/mid prices).
How it’s calculated
IV band (±%) = IV30 × √(21/252) (annualized → ~1-month).
Straddle band (±%) = (ATM Call + Put) / Spot to that expiry (≈30 DTE).
HV band (±%) = stdev(log returns, N) × √252 × √(21/252).
ATR band (±%) = (ATR(len)/Close) × √21.
All bands are plotted as upper/lower envelopes around price, plus an on-chart readout of each ±% for quick scanning.
How to use it (at a glance)
IV/Straddle bands wider than HV/ATR → market expects bigger movement than recent actuals (possible catalyst/expansion).
All bands narrow → likely a low-mover; look elsewhere if you want action.
HV > IV → realized swings exceed current pricing (mean-reversion or vol bleed often follows).
Pro tips
For ATM straddle: pick the expiry closest to ~30 DTE, use the ATM strike (closest to spot), and add Call Mark + Put Mark (per share). If the exact ATM strike isn’t quoted, average the two neighboring strikes.
The simple straddle/spot heuristic can read slightly below the IV-derived 1σ; that’s normal.
Keep the chart on daily timeframe—the math assumes trading-day conventions (~252/yr, ~21/mo).
Evening Star Detector (VDS)This is a great indicator for a reversal. After the close of the previous Evening star candle, expect a position for the next fifteen minutes in the opposite direction. This is a method that was discovered by @VicDamoneSean on twitter. Created by @dani_spx7 and @yan_dondotta on twitter. This indicator has been back tested.






















