Market Structure Dashboard | Flux ChartsGENERAL OVERVIEW
Market Structure Dashboard is a multi-timeframe market structure analysis indicator. It combines EMA trend detection, swing high/low tracking, market structure labels, Order Block detection, Fair Value Gap detection, liquidity sweep detection, volume analysis, volatility analysis, trading sessions, ICT killzones, a weighted trend bias system, and HTF levels into one unified dashboard. Each component is calculated independently across up to 7 configurable timeframes and displayed together in a single organized view.
(Screenshot: Full dashboard overview - all sections visible)
(Screenshot: Dashboard on a busy chart showing OB/FVG boxes, swing labels, HTF lines)
WHAT IS THE THEORY BEHIND THIS INDICATOR?
The core idea is that a trade setup becomes more reliable when multiple timeframes agree on direction. A bullish signal on a 5-minute chart carries more weight when the 15-minute, 1-hour, and daily timeframes also show bullish conditions. Analyzing each timeframe separately is both time-consuming and prone to error. The Market Structure Dashboard automates this process by calculating key metrics across all enabled timeframes and presenting them side by side.
The indicator draws from two established trading methodologies. Smart Money Concepts (SMC) focuses on identifying institutional footprints in price action through patterns like Order Blocks, Fair Value Gaps, and liquidity sweeps. Inner Circle Trader (ICT) methodology emphasizes time-based analysis through specific trading windows called killzones and the importance of previous day, week, and month highs and lows.
Rather than treating these concepts in isolation, the dashboard organizes them into a layered framework. Structure shows where the market has been. Zones show where it may react. Sessions and killzones show when activity tends to increase. The trend bias system combines all factors into a single weighted score, giving traders a quick read on overall market sentiment across timeframes.
The purpose of the Market Structure Dashboard is to present the current market activity across multiple timeframes and how these conditions relate to earlier market structure, volume, and timing.
(Screenshot: Multi-timeframe confluence example - all TFs showing bearish alignment)
(Screenshot: Multi-timeframe disagreement example - mixed signals across TFs)
MARKET STRUCTURE DASHBOARD FEATURES
The Market Structure Dashboard indicator includes 14 main features:
EMA Trend Detection
Swing High/Low Tracking
Market Structure Labels (HH/HL/LH/LL)
Order Block Detection
Fair Value Gap Detection
Liquidity Sweep & Reclaim Detection
Volume Analysis
Volatility Analysis
Trading Sessions
ICT Killzones
Trend Bias System
HTF Levels (PDH/L, PWH/L, PMH/L)
Visual Overlays
Dashboard Customization
Each component operates independently while sharing the same underlying market structure logic. All features are calculated across up to 7 user-configurable timeframes and displayed in a unified dashboard. Detailed explanations for each component are provided in the sections that follow.
EMA TREND DETECTION
🔹 What is an EMA?
An Exponential Moving Average (EMA) is a type of moving average that gives more weight to recent price data. Unlike a Simple Moving Average that weights all prices equally, the EMA responds faster to recent price changes while still considering historical data. Traders use EMAs to identify trend direction and dynamic support/resistance levels.
When price trades above the EMA, the short-term trend is considered bullish. When price trades below the EMA, the short-term trend is considered bearish. The distance between price and EMA can indicate trend strength, with larger distances suggesting stronger momentum.
🔹 How the Indicator Uses EMA
The dashboard calculates a 9-period EMA (configurable) for each enabled timeframe. The EMA Trend column displays both direction and distance.
◇ Direction is shown with an up arrow (↑) when price is above EMA, or a down arrow (↓) when price is below EMA.
◇ Distance is displayed as percentage, price, or pips based on the Distance Display setting. For example, "+0.45% ↑" means price is 0.45% above the EMA on that timeframe.
◇ Color coding shows green when price is above EMA (bullish) and red when price is below EMA (bearish).
The EMA can optionally be plotted as a visual overlay on the chart. It can also be included as a factor in the Trend Bias calculation, where each timeframe's EMA direction contributes to the overall bias score.
(Screenshot: EMA column showing bearish readings - red, ↓)
SWING HIGH/LOW TRACKING
🔹 What are Swing Highs and Lows?
A swing high is a price peak where a candle's high is higher than the highs of surrounding candles. A swing low is a price trough where a candle's low is lower than the lows of surrounding candles. These points represent short-term reversals and define the boundaries of price movement.
Swing points are foundational to market structure analysis. Breaking a swing high suggests bullish momentum. Breaking a swing low suggests bearish momentum. The sequence of swing points creates market structure patterns that reveal trend direction.
🔹 How the Indicator Tracks Swing Highs/Lows?
The indicator detects swing points using a configurable Swing Length parameter (default: 5). A swing high is confirmed when a candle's high is higher than the specified number of candles on both sides. A swing low is confirmed when a candle's low is lower than the specified number of candles on both sides. This confirmation requirement means swing points are identified with a delay, ensuring they are valid pivots rather than temporary spikes. This same Swing Length setting is also used by Order Block detection and Market Structure labels, so adjusting it affects all three features.
◇ The Swing H/L column displays a visual position indicator showing where price sits within the current swing range. A dot moves along a bar between L (swing low) and H (swing high) to show exact position.
◇ When price breaks outside the range, arrows indicate the direction. An up arrow (↑) appears when price breaks above the swing high. A swing high break indicates that buyers have pushed price beyond the previous peak, suggesting bullish momentum and a potential continuation higher.
(Screenshot: Price above Swing High)
A down arrow (↓) appears when price breaks below the swing low. A swing low break indicates that sellers have pushed price beyond the previous trough, suggesting bearish momentum and a potential continuation lower
(Screenshot: Price breaks Swing Low)
When a liquidity sweep occurs (price breaks a level then reclaims it), special arrows appear: ⤴ for a swept and reclaimed low, ⤵ for a swept and reclaimed high. A swept and reclaimed swing means price broke beyond the level, likely triggering stop-loss orders resting beyond it, but then reversed back inside the range. This suggests the breakout was a false move and the opposite direction may follow. Liquidity sweeps are explained in detail in the Liquidity Sweep & Reclaim Detection section below.
◇ Color coding shows green when price is in the lower half of the range or breaks above the swing high, and red when price is in the upper half or breaks below the swing low.
(Screenshot)
◇ Tooltips provide additional context when hovering over any Swing H/L cell, such as "Price is nearing swing low on 15M" or "Price above swing high on 1H - swing high broken."
MARKET STRUCTURE LABELS (HH/HL/LH/LL)
🔹 What is Market Structure?
Market structure refers to the pattern of swing highs and swing lows that price creates over time. By comparing consecutive swing points, each new swing can be classified into one of four types.
◇ HH (Higher High): A swing high that is higher than the previous swing high, indicating bullish momentum.
◇ HL (Higher Low): A swing low that is higher than the previous swing low, indicating bullish momentum.
◇ LH (Lower High): A swing high that is lower than the previous swing high, indicating bearish momentum.
◇ LL (Lower Low): A swing low that is lower than the previous swing low, indicating bearish momentum.
(Screenshot: Bullish and Bearish Swing Points)
Bullish structure consists of HH and HL patterns, where price makes higher highs and higher lows. Bearish structure consists of LH and LL patterns, where price makes lower highs and lower lows. Mixed structure contains conflicting patterns and indicates consolidation or potential trend change.
🔹 How the Indicator Displays Market Structure
The Structure column shows the last three structure labels in sequence along with an overall bias arrow.
◇ "LL-LH-HL →" indicates mixed structure with no clear direction.
◇ "HH-HL-HH ↑" indicates bullish structure with higher highs and higher lows.
◇ "LH-LL-LH ↓" indicates bearish structure with lower highs and lower lows.
(Screenshot: Dashboard showing neutral, bearish and bullish indication across different timeframes)
The indicator tracks each new swing point as it forms, compares it to the previous swing of the same type, and assigns the appropriate label. Market Structure labels use the same Swing Length setting as Swing High/Low tracking, so both features stay synchronized. Structure bias is determined by the most recent high type and low type combined. If the last swing high was HH and the last swing low was HL, bias is bullish. If the last swing high was LH and the last swing low was LL, bias is bearish. Any other combination shows neutral.
Color coding shows green for bullish structure, red for bearish structure, and gray for mixed or neutral structure.
ORDER BLOCK DETECTION
🔹 What is an Order Block?
An Order Block is a concept from Smart Money analysis representing a candle or consolidation area where institutional orders may have been placed. In SMC methodology, Order Blocks are identified as the last opposing candle before a significant price move that breaks market structure.
◇ A Bullish Order Block is the last bearish candle before a rally that breaks a swing high. When price returns to this zone, it may find support.
◇ A Bearish Order Block is the last bullish candle before a drop that breaks a swing low. When price returns to this zone, it may find resistance.
Order Blocks are considered "mitigated" when price trades completely through them, suggesting the institutional orders have been filled.
🔹 How the Indicator Detects Order Blocks
The detection algorithm follows a specific sequence to identify valid Order Blocks.
◇ Step 1: The indicator tracks swing highs and swing lows using the configured Swing Length setting (shared with Swing High/Low tracking and Market Structure labels).
◇ Step 2: When price breaks above a swing high, the indicator identifies a bullish breakout. When price breaks below a swing low, it identifies a bearish breakout.
◇ Step 3: For a bullish Order Block, the indicator finds the candle with the lowest low between the broken swing high and the current bar. For a bearish Order Block, it finds the candle with the highest high between the broken swing low and the current bar.
◇ Step 4: The Order Block zone is created spanning from that candle's low to its high.
◇ Step 5: Mitigation is applied when price closes through the Order Block. Bullish OBs are mitigated when price closes below the zone. Bearish OBs are mitigated when price closes above the zone.
The Order Block column shows the nearest unmitigated Order Block for each timeframe. "IN BULL OB ↑" means price is currently inside a bullish Order Block. "BULL OB (5.4%) ↑" means the nearest OB is bullish and 5.5% away. "NONE" means no unmitigated Order Blocks exist on that timeframe.
(Screenshot: Nearest order block is Bull OB)
(Screenshot: Price in Bear OB)
FAIR VALUE GAP DETECTION
🔹What is a Fair Value Gap?
A Fair Value Gap (FVG), also called an imbalance, is a three-candle pattern where a gap exists between the first and third candle that the middle candle did not fill. This gap represents an area where price moved quickly, creating an imbalance in the market.
◇ A Bullish FVG forms when the first candle's high is lower than the third candle's low, creating an upward gap. When price returns to this gap, it may find support.
◇ A Bearish FVG forms when the first candle's low is higher than the third candle's high, creating a downward gap. When price returns to this gap, it may find resistance.
FVGs are considered mitigated when price wicks into the gap, filling the inefficiency.
🔹 How the Indicator Detects FVGs
The detection logic checks for the three-candle gap pattern with specific conditions.
◇ For a Bullish FVG, the current candle's low must be above the candle from three bars ago's high (gap exists), and the middle candle must be bullish (displacement candle).
◇ For a Bearish FVG, the current candle's high must be below the candle from three bars ago's low (gap exists), and the middle candle must be bearish (displacement candle).
◇ The FVG zone spans from the gap's bottom to its top.
◇ Mitigation occurs when price wicks below the gap bottom for bullish FVGs, or above the gap top for bearish FVGs. Note that FVG mitigation is more sensitive than Order Block mitigation.
FVGs only need a wick to touch them, while Order Blocks require a close through them.
The FVG column displays similarly to Order Blocks. "IN BULL FVG ↑" means price is inside a bullish Fair Value Gap. "BULL FVG (0.2%) ↑" means the nearest FVG is bullish and 0.2% away. "NONE" means no unmitigated FVGs exist on that timeframe.
(Screenshot: Price in Bull FVG)
(Screenshot: Bear FVG +3.4% away)
LIQUIDITY SWEEP & RECLAIM DETECTION
🔹 What is a Liquidity Sweep?
Liquidity refers to resting orders in the market, particularly stop-loss orders. Traders commonly place stops just beyond swing highs and swing lows, creating pools of liquidity at these levels. A liquidity sweep occurs when price breaks beyond a swing point, potentially triggering stops, but then reverses and closes back inside the range.
◇ A Bullish Liquidity Sweep occurs when price breaks below a swing low, then reverses and closes back above it. This pattern suggests potential buying interest after weak hands have been stopped out.
◇ A Bearish Liquidity Sweep occurs when price breaks above a swing high, then reverses and closes back below it. This pattern suggests potential selling interest after weak hands have been stopped out.
🔹 How the Indicator Detects Liquidity Sweeps
The indicator tracks whether each swing level has been broken and then reclaimed.
◇ A swing low is marked as broken when price trades below it. A swing high is marked as broken when price trades above it.
◇ A reclaim is detected when price closes back above a broken swing low (bullish) or back below a broken swing high (bearish).
◇ The break and reclaim flags reset when a new swing point forms, ensuring fresh detection for each level.
When a liquidity sweep is detected, the Swing H/L column displays special indicators. The ⤴ symbol indicates a bullish liquidity sweep where price swept the low and reclaimed. The ⤵ symbol indicates a bearish liquidity sweep where price swept the high and reclaimed. Tooltips provide additional context such as "Liquidity sweep - price swept swing low and reclaimed on 15M."
(Screenshot: Swing High Swept)
(Screenshot: Previous Month Low Swept)
VOLUME ANALYSIS
🔹 What is Volume Analysis?
Volume represents the number of shares, contracts, or units traded during a given period. High volume suggests strong interest and participation behind a price move. Low volume suggests weak interest and moves may lack follow-through. Comparing current volume to average volume helps identify unusual activity.
🔹 How the Indicator Analyzes Volume The dashboard calculates current volume as a percentage of its 20-period simple moving average.
◇ The Volume column displays a visual bar using filled and empty blocks to represent volume level relative to average.
◇ Volume states are classified as EXTREME (over 200% of average), HIGH (over 120%), NORMAL (over 80%), LOW (over 50%), or VERY LOW (50% or less).
(Screenshot: Extreme Volume)
◇ Color coding shows yellow for extreme volume, orange for high volume, and gray for normal, low, and very low.
◇ Tooltips show the exact percentage, such as "Volume is currently at 145% of average."
VOLATILITY ANALYSIS
🔹 What is Volatility?
Volatility measures how much price fluctuates over a given period. High volatility means large price swings. Low volatility means small price movements. The Average True Range (ATR) is a common volatility measure that calculates the average of true ranges over a period.
🔹 How the Indicator Measures Volatility
The dashboard calculates a 14-period ATR and compares it to its own 20-period average (configurable).
◇ The Volatility column displays the current state as HIGH (ATR over 130% of average), NORMAL (ATR between 70-130% of average), or LOW (ATR under 70% of average).
◇ Color coding shows red for high volatility, gray for normal, and green for low volatility.
◇ Tooltips provide context such as "Volatility is currently high" or "Volatility is currently low."
Low volatility often precedes significant moves, making it a useful setup indicator when combined with price at key levels.
(Screenshot: High Volatility)
TRADING SESSIONS
🔹 What are Trading Sessions?
Financial markets have varying activity levels throughout the day. Trading is typically divided into three major sessions based on which financial centers are open.
◇ Asian Session runs from 7:00 PM to 3:00 AM EST. It is characterized by generally lower volatility and ranging price action
◇ London Session runs from 3:00 AM to 12:00 PM EST. It is characterized by higher volatility and trending moves
◇ New York Session runs from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM EST. It has high volatility especially during the London overlap from 8:00 AM to 12:00 PM EST, affecting USD pairs and all majors.
🔹 How the Indicator Displays Sessions
The Session column shows the current session name in the first row as ASIAN, LONDON, NEW YORK, or OFF HOURS (between sessions from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM EST).
◇ The second row shows a progress bar that fills as the session advances, with each block representing approximately one hour.
◇ Sessions are color-coded as blue for Asian, green for London, orange for New York, and gray for off hours. These colors can be customized in the settings
◇ The indicator uses New York (EST) timezone for all session calculations and includes replay mode support.
(Asian Session and Killzone)
ICT KILLZONES
🔹 What are Killzones?
Killzones are specific time windows within each trading session when market activity tends to be higher. These windows are derived from ICT (Inner Circle Trader) methodology and represent times when significant moves are more likely to occur.
◇ Asian Killzone runs from 8:00 PM to 12:00 AM EST and often sets the initial range for the day.
◇ London Killzone runs from 2:00 AM to 5:00 AM EST and covers the London open when major moves are common.
◇ New York AM Killzone runs from 9:30 AM to 11:00 AM EST and covers the NYSE open, a high volume period.
◇ New York Lunch runs from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM EST and typically has lower activity and consolidation.
◇ New York PM Killzone runs from 1:30 PM to 4:00 PM EST when afternoon continuation moves occur.
🔹 How the Indicator Displays Killzones
The Killzone column shows the current killzone in the first row as ASIAN KZ, LONDON KZ, NY AM KZ, NY LUNCH, NY PM KZ, or NO KILLZONE when outside all killzones.
◇ When outside a killzone, the second row shows a countdown to the next killzone, such as "NY AM KZ in 2h:15m."
◇ Killzones are color-coded as blue for Asian, green for London, orange for NY AM, gray for NY Lunch, and purple for NY PM. These colors can be customized in the settings
TREND BIAS SYSTEM
🔹 What is Trend Bias?
The Trend Bias System aggregates multiple factors across all enabled timeframes to produce a single directional bias score. Instead of analyzing each factor and timeframe separately, this system provides a weighted summary of overall market sentiment.
🔹 How the Indicator Calculates Trend Bias The calculation involves three components working together.
(Screenshot: BTC Bearish Trend)
◇ Factors determine what contributes to bias. Users can enable or disable Structure (market structure bias), Order Block (direction of nearest OB), FVG (direction of nearest FVG), EMA Trend (price position relative to EMA), and Swing Position (where price sits in the swing range). Each enabled factor contributes +1 for bullish, -1 for bearish, or 0 for neutral per timeframe.
◇ Weights determine how much each timeframe matters. Each timeframe has a configurable weight from 0 to 10. Default weights are 1 for 1M and 5M, 2 for 15M, 1H, and 4H, 3 for Daily, and 4 for Weekly. Higher weights mean that timeframe contributes more to the final score.
(Screenshot: Gold Bullish Trend)
◇ Score Calculation combines factors and weights. For each active timeframe, the sum of factor scores is multiplied by the timeframe's weight. The total score is the sum of all timeframe scores. The maximum possible score is the sum of each weight multiplied by the number of enabled factors. The bias percentage equals the total score divided by the maximum possible score, multiplied by 100.
◇ Bias Labels are assigned based on percentage. Over 50% shows BULLISH ↑. Between 20% and 50% shows LEAN BULL ↑. Between -20% and 20% shows NEUTRAL →. Between -50% and -20% shows LEAN BEAR ↓. Below -50% shows BEARISH ↓.
The Trend Bias column displays the bias label in the first row and the raw score in the second row, such as "+22/60" meaning 22 points out of 60 possible.
HTF LEVELS (PDH/L, PWH/L, PMH/L)
🔹 What are HTF Levels?
Higher Timeframe (HTF) Levels are significant price points from previous completed periods. These levels represent clear, objective reference points that many traders watch.
◇ PDH/PDL (Previous Day High/Low) are the high and low of the previous completed trading day and act as intraday support and resistance.
◇ PWH/PWL (Previous Week High/Low) are the high and low of the previous completed week and are significant levels for swing trading.
◇ PMH/PML (Previous Month High/Low) are the high and low of the previous completed month and are major levels for position trading.
🔹 How the Indicator Displays HTF Levels The HTF Levels Dashboard section (optional) shows a swing-style position bar for each enabled level, displaying where price sits within the previous day, week, or month range.
◇ The same liquidity sweep detection applies to HTF levels. If price sweeps PDL and reclaims, the ⤴ indicator appears.
(Screenshot: Previous Week Low Swept)
◇ Visual overlays can plot HTF level lines on the chart with customizable colors and line styles.
◇ When multiple levels are close together, labels automatically combine. For example, "PDH/PWH" appears when both levels are at similar prices, or "PDL/PWL/PML" when all three lows align.
(Screenshot: PWH/PMH labels combined when Previous Week Low and Previous Month Low align)
VISUAL OVERLAYS
Beyond the dashboard, the indicator offers optional visual overlays that plot directly on the price chart.
🔹 Order Block Zones
When enabled, Order Blocks appear as semi-transparent rectangular boxes. Green boxes represent bullish Order Blocks and red boxes represent bearish Order Blocks. Boxes span from the OB candle's low to its high and extend forward based on the Extend setting. Optional labels show "OB ↑" or "OB ↓" inside the zones.
🔹 FVG Zones
Fair Value Gaps appear as boxes with dashed borders to distinguish them from Order Blocks. Green dashed boxes represent bullish FVGs and red dashed boxes represent bearish FVGs. They share the same extend and label options as Order Blocks.
(Order Blocks & Fair Value Gaps)
🔹 Swing Labels
HH, HL, LH, and LL labels can be plotted directly at each swing point on the chart. Labels appear above swing highs and below swing lows. Green labels indicate bullish structure (HH, HL) and red labels indicate bearish structure (LH, LL). The Show Last setting controls how many labels appear.
🔹 Swing Lines
Horizontal lines can be drawn at the current swing high and swing low. A red line appears at the swing high and a green line at the swing low. Line styles are customizable as solid, dashed, or dotted.
(Swing Labels & Swing Lines)
🔹 HTF Level Lines
Horizontal lines can be plotted at Previous Day, Week, and Month highs and lows. Each level has a separate enable toggle with customizable colors and line styles. Labels auto-combine when levels are close together.
🔹 EMA Line
A standard EMA line can be plotted on the chart using the same EMA Length setting as the dashboard with customizable color.
DASHBOARD CUSTOMIZATION:
The dashboard is highly customizable to fit different trading styles and screen setups.
🔹Dashboard Position
Choose from 9 dashboard positions including top left, top center, top right, middle left, middle center, middle right, bottom left, bottom center, and bottom right.
🔹Dashboard Colors
Two color themes are available. Dark Mode has dark backgrounds with light text and is the default. Light Mode has light backgrounds with dark text.
🔹Column Toggles
Enable or disable individual columns in each dashboard section to show only the information needed. The Market Structure Dashboard section can toggle EMA Trend, Swing H/L, Structure, Order Block, and FVG columns. The Current Timeframe Dashboard section can toggle Volume, Swing H/L, and Volatility columns. The Market Context Dashboard section can toggle Session, Killzone, and Trend Bias columns. The HTF Levels Dashboard section can toggle PDH/L, PWH/L, and PMH/L levels.
🔹Color Settings
Customize colors for trend colors (bull, bear, neutral), session colors (Asian, London, NY), and killzone colors (Asian KZ, London KZ, NY AM, Lunch, PM).
🔹Distance Display
Choose how distances are shown. Percent shows values like "0.45%" and is the default. Price shows raw values like "45.50". Pips shows values like "45 pips" and is useful for forex.
SETTINGS:
🔹 Timeframes
Configure which timeframes are analyzed in the dashboard. Enable toggles turn each of the 7 timeframes on or off. Timeframe selection sets the specific timeframe for each slot (1M, 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H, D, W, M, or custom). Trend weight controls how much each timeframe contributes to the overall bias calculation (0-10), with higher values giving that timeframe more influence.
🔹 Market Structure Dashboard
Controls the main multi-timeframe dashboard section. The enable toggle turns the entire section on or off. Column toggles allow you to show or hide individual columns: EMA Trend, Swing H/L, Structure, Order Block, and FVG. Disabling columns you don't need reduces visual clutter and focuses the dashboard on the information most relevant to your trading style.
🔹 Current Timeframe Dashboard
Controls the current chart timeframe section that displays volume, swing position, and volatility data. The enable toggle turns the entire section on or off. Column toggles allow you to show or hide individual columns: Volume, Swing H/L, and Volatility.
🔹 Market Context Dashboard
Controls the market context section that displays session, killzone, and trend bias information. The enable toggle turns the entire section on or off. Column toggles allow you to show or hide individual columns: Session, Killzone, and Trend Bias.
🔹 HTF Levels Dashboard
Controls the higher timeframe levels section that displays previous day, week, and month high/low data. The enable toggle turns the entire section on or off. Level toggles allow you to show or hide individual levels: PDH/L, PWH/L, and PMH/L.
🔹 Trend Bias Settings
Controls which factors contribute to the trend bias calculation. Factor toggles allow you to include or exclude Structure, Order Block, FVG, EMA Trend, and Swing H/L from the bias score. Disabling factors you don't find relevant customizes how the overall bias is determined.
🔹 Visual Overlays
Controls what is plotted directly on the price chart. Order Blocks and FVGs each have an enable toggle, bull/bear colors, show last count (how many zones to display), extend bars (how far zones project forward), and labels toggle. Swing Labels have an enable toggle, bull/bear colors, and show last count. Swing Lines have an enable toggle, high/low colors, line style (solid, dashed, dotted), and extend bars. HTF Level Lines for Previous Day, Week, and Month highs/lows each have an enable toggle, colors, and line style, with a shared extend setting for all HTF lines. EMA has an enable toggle and color setting.
🔹 General Settings
Core indicator parameters. EMA Length sets the period for EMA calculation (default 9). Swing Length sets how many bars are required to confirm a pivot and is used for Swing Point detection, Order Block detection, and Market Structure labels (default 5). Volatility Lookback sets the period for ATR averaging (default 20). Distance Display controls how distances are shown: Percent, Price, or Pips. Dashboard Position sets where the dashboard appears on the chart (9 options). Dashboard Theme switches between Dark Mode and Light Mode. Color settings allow customization of trend colors (bull, bear, neutral), session colors (Asian, London, NY), and killzone colors (Asian KZ, London KZ, NY AM, Lunch, PM).
(Full Dashboard)
(Customized Display)
UNIQUENESS:
The Market Structure Dashboard focuses on multi-timeframe confluence by calculating and displaying the same analytical components across up to 7 timeframes simultaneously. Unlike indicators that show one timeframe at a time, each row in the dashboard represents a complete analysis of that timeframe's structure, zones, and trend state. This allows traders to observe alignment, disagreement, and transitions across timeframes within a single view.
The weighted Trend Bias System combines structure, zones, EMA, and swing position into a single score that accounts for timeframe importance. Higher timeframes can be weighted more heavily, reflecting their greater significance in establishing overall market direction.
The dashboard also integrates time-based context through session and killzone tracking, helping traders identify when market conditions align with historically active trading windows. All components coexist without overriding each other, providing a comprehensive framework for multi-timeframe market structure analysis.
Indicatore Pine Script®






















