StdDev Supply/Demand Zone RefinerThis indicator uses standard deviation bands to identify statistically significant price extremes, then validates these levels through volume analysis and market structure. It employs a proprietary "Zone Refinement" technique that dynamically adjusts zones based on price interaction and volume concentration, creating increasingly precise support/resistance areas.
Key Features:
Statistical Extremes Detection: Identifies when price reaches 2+ standard deviations from mean
Volume-Weighted Zone Creation: Only creates zones at extremes with abnormal volume
Dynamic Zone Refinement: Automatically tightens zones based on touch points and volume nodes
Point of Control (POC) Identification: Finds the exact price with maximum volume within each zone
Volume Profile Visualization: Shows horizontal volume distribution to identify key liquidity levels
Multi-Factor Validation: Combines volume imbalance, zone strength, and touch count metrics
Unlike traditional support/resistance indicators that use arbitrary levels, this system:
Self-adjusts based on market volatility (standard deviation)
Refines zones through machine-learning-like feedback from price touches
Weights by volume to show where real money was positioned
Tracks zone decay - older, untested zones automatically fade
Analisi trend
Auto Entry/SL/TP Zones + Dashboard (Fib + MACD Edition)🔥 Auto Entry/SL/TP Zones + Dashboard (Fib + MACD Edition)
This indicator automatically builds Entry, Stop Loss, and Fibonacci-based Take Profit zones on the chart.
It also includes a smart dashboard that combines multiple confirmations to help filter false signals.
Features:
📍 Automatic Entry / Stop Loss / Take Profit (TP1, TP2, TP3) zones.
📊 Dashboard with real-time market conditions.
📈 RSI + Trend (SMA50) + MACD + Divergences + Volume filter.
🎯 Clear LONG / SHORT / WAIT signals.
🚦 Highlights bullish/bearish divergences.
🟢 Works on any symbol & timeframe.
Usage:
When the dashboard shows LONG, follow blue Entry zone with green TP targets above.
When SHORT, follow red Entry zone with green TP targets below.
If WAIT, market conditions are unclear – avoid entry.
⚡ Designed for both intraday and swing traders.
PDH/PDL (prev RTH) + Current ETH High/LowDescription:
This indicator automatically plots the key levels of PDH/PDL (Previous Day High/Low from regular trading hours – RTH) and ETH High/Low (Extended Hours: pre-market + after-hours) in real time.
• PDH/PDL: calculated at the close of RTH (09:30–16:00 NYSE) and anchored until the next day.
• ETH High/Low: updated live during extended hours (04:00–09:29 and 16:00–20:00 NYSE) and “frozen” at the RTH open for reference during the regular session.
• Customization options: colors, line styles (solid/dashed/dotted), thickness, labels, and the ability to extend lines to the right.
• Levels can also be displayed directly on the price scale.
This script is designed for traders who want a quick visualization of the most relevant levels from the previous day and extended hours, making it easier to identify supports, resistances, and potential reaction zones in price action.
By: Miguel Arenas
HH&LL / MSS Detector [Tek Tek Teknik Analiz]This indicator provides a safe trading opportunity by drawing Market Structure Shift levels to determine the direction of the market after capturing the peaks and valleys in the price flow.
Smart Money SignalsSmart Money Signals – Market Flow & Structure Visualizer
Overview
Smart Money Signals is a precision trading tool designed for traders who want to see market structure and momentum flow in real time. By detecting pivots, momentum imbalances, and dynamic support/resistance levels, the indicator transforms raw price action into a clear visual narrative of where capital is entering and exiting the market.
Instead of lagging averages or cluttered signals, Smart Money Signals highlights the moments that matter most—where bullish and bearish flows are confirmed, where support or resistance breaks, and where momentum zones show the true battleground between buyers and sellers. Its adaptive design makes it equally effective for scalpers seeking sharp entries, swing traders tracking reversals, and longer-term traders looking for confirmation of bias.
How It Works
The engine behind Smart Money Signals relies on swing detection and a configurable sensitivity filter. By monitoring directional momentum across recent bars, the system identifies bullish pivots (where downside exhaustion flips into strength) and bearish pivots (where upward thrust collapses into weakness).
When price confirms a pivot, the indicator draws flow lines to mark the breakout and labels them as either continuation or reversal events, depending on existing market bias. Momentum zones are automatically plotted, highlighting the critical areas where buyers defended price or sellers pressed it lower.
Dynamic support and resistance levels extend forward in time, updating live as price develops. These zones change color when broken, visually signaling whether structure has held or failed. Gradient background shading further emphasizes moments of extreme momentum, such as overbought or oversold surges, so that traders instantly see when market pressure intensifies.
Signals and Market Flows
Smart Money Signals provides visual cues that are both intuitive and actionable:
📈 Bullish Flow Signals appear when price breaks above a confirmed pivot, signaling continuation or reversal into strength.
📉 Bearish Flow Signals appear when price breaks below a confirmed pivot, indicating continuation or reversal into weakness.
Momentum Zones highlight the defended areas between pivots, giving traders a visual map of where structure is strongest.
Dynamic Support & Resistance lines extend across the chart, shifting from defense to failure when broken, ensuring that the most relevant levels are always visible.
Break Signals mark the exact bar where key levels give way, confirming structural violations in real time.
By filtering out noise and focusing on meaningful flow events, the system helps traders avoid overreaction and focus only on high-probability structural shifts.
Strategy Integration
Smart Money Signals is versatile across trading styles:
Trend Continuation : Enter in the direction of flow signals, using dynamic zones as both confirmation and stop-loss placement.
Reversal Trading : Watch for pivots tagged as reversal points, where market bias flips and new structure is created.
Momentum Zone Entries : Use the automatically drawn zones to identify low-risk entries on pullbacks or retests.
Bias Alignment : The integrated dashboard reveals the current market bias—bullish, bearish, or neutral—helping traders stay aligned with the dominant flow.
Stop-losses can be positioned beyond the dynamic zone on the opposite side, while take-profits may be guided by the width of zones or momentum-driven extensions. On higher timeframes, the indicator provides context for macro structure, while lower timeframes allow for tactical entry refinement.
Advanced Techniques
Traders seeking deeper precision can combine Smart Money Signals with volume or order flow tools to validate pivots and zone defenses. Monitoring the sequence of bullish and bearish flows helps identify trend maturity, while analyzing the success rate of pivots in the analytics panel builds a data-driven approach to confidence in signals.
Adjusting swing period and sensitivity allows the indicator to adapt to different market conditions, from volatile crypto pairs to steady forex majors. The flexible visual themes—Cyber, Ocean, Sunset, Matrix—ensure readability across setups, while gradient shading keeps the chart intuitive even under fast-moving conditions.
Why Use Smart Money Signals
Markets are driven by liquidity, momentum, and structure. Smart Money Signals uncovers these forces by translating price action into a clear visual map of flow. It shows:
Where structure was built.
Where it was defended.
Where it was broken.
And where momentum is likely to carry next.
By combining flow detection, dynamic zones, and a live analytics dashboard, the indicator provides traders with a complete framework for reading price action in real time.
Whether you trade crypto, forex, or indices, Smart Money Signals adapts seamlessly to any asset class, giving you clarity, precision, and confidence to execute without second-guessing.
Exit SIGNALWhen an asset is overbought, using various methods, CCI, RSI, etc, this indicator paints candles red to signify that a potential top is forming. It is normal when the trend is very strong to see 2 or 3 candles turn red before the top is in. I like to use this to narrow down when to take profits. It's not the most sophisticated and fancy script but it gets it's job done well. :]
If you have any questions about the indicator or wish to try it out yourself for free, comment below or DM me, thanks!
Building a profitable strategy is all about combining various factors, I'm a hybrid trader meaning I mostly learned to trade with price action and smart money concepts only at first however I then learned pinescript and added my own indicators I have personalized to create various strategies, especially when it comes to helping me know when trend has reversed as soon as possible with as little false flags as possible.
FUMO MA Cross Matrix 9/21/50/100/200 FUMO MA Cross Matrix is a flexible and advanced indicator designed for traders who rely on moving average crossovers as part of their strategy.
🔹 Key Features:
Supports 5 types of Moving Averages: EMA, SMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, HMA.
Includes 5 standard MAs: 9, 21, 50, 100, 200 (toggle on/off individually).
Choose which MA crosses to monitor (9×21, 21×50, 50×100, 100×200, and 6 extended combinations).
On-chart signals (labels) when crosses occur.
Alerts system for every selected cross and also summary alerts (“Any Cross Up/Down”).
Option to trigger signals only on confirmed bars (no repaint).
Fully adjustable label visibility and signal style.
🔹 Use Cases:
Detect trend shifts (short-term vs long-term).
Build scalping, swing, or position trading strategies.
Combine with price action or volume analysis for stronger setups.
Quickly react to Golden Cross and Death Cross events.
🔹 How to Use:
Select your preferred MA type (EMA, SMA, etc.).
Enable the MAs (9, 21, 50, 100, 200) you want to plot.
Choose which crossovers to track in the settings.
Enable/disable on-chart labels for better visualization.
Set up alerts:
“CROSS UP/DOWN X>Y” for specific pairs.
“ANY CROSS UP/DOWN” for aggregated signals.
📌 Example Alerts
MA Cross UP 9>21 on BTCUSDT 15m @ 65432
Any selected MA cross DOWN on AAPL 1D @ 195.2
Divergence Confluence OracleOnly Divergences That Matter
Overview
This indicator supercharges RSI divergence with powerful filters: volume, ADX, and support/resistance (S/R) zones. It pinpoints high-probability reversals in the RSI 30–70 "neutral zone", where turnarounds shine. Built for manual traders, it’s your edge for spotting reversals that pack a punch.
🔍 Core Features
1.RSI Divergence Detection
- Bullish: Price lower low, RSI higher low.
- Bearish: Price higher high, RSI lower high.
- Pivot-based logic ensures precise, non-repainting signals.
- Plotted with color-coded lines/labels (green/red for RSI 30–70, gray outside).
2.Volume Confirmation
- Filters for high activity: volume > SMA(volume, 20) × 1.5.
- Why: High volume signals big players are in, boosting divergence reliability—like the market’s vote of confidence.
3.ADX Trend Filter
- ADX < 20 signals range-bound markets where divergences excel, avoiding trend-driven failures.
- Why: Keeps you out of strong trends where divergences often flop.
4.Support/Resistance (S/R) Zones
Built on LonesomeTheBlue’s pivot-channel method, ranking zones by strength (touches).
Why: Divergences near support (bullish) or resistance (bearish) are high-probability, cutting false signals.
🎨 Visualization
- Color-coded lines/labels: Bright green/red for RSI 30–70, muted gray outside.
- Thicker lines for volume/ADX-confirmed setups.
- Subtle background fills (green/red for confirmed, gray for ranges) make setups pop.
- Alerts for RSI 30–70 divergences, with optional volume/ADX filters.
✅ Why This Indicator is Unique
Unlike basic divergence scripts, it asks:
- Is the market engaged? (Volume)
- Is it reversal-friendly? (ADX)
- Is price at a key level? (S/R)
This trio filters out noise, surfacing only divergences with true weight.
📊 How Traders Might Use It
- Signal Filter: Act on divergences with S/R, volume, and ADX alignment.
- Confluence Tool: Pair with manual trendlines, EMAs (e.g., 9/21), or candlestick setups.
- Alert System: Get notified of high-probability setups without endless scanning.
Disclaimer : This indicator is for educational purposes only and is not intended as financial advice. It should be used in conjunction with manual trendlines, EMAs, and other confirmation tools to support your trading decisions. Always conduct your own analysis.
Gravity Trend Line with ±10% Bands_QianYu🌌 Law of Gravity in Stock Trading — by Hu Liyang (胡立阳)—often called the “Godfather of Asian Stock Markets”
✦ Conceptual Origin
The “Law of Gravity” was developed by Mr. Hu Liyang, drawing an analogy between the gravitational pull in physics and the relationship between stock prices and moving averages. It is a medium-term mean reversion theory that helps traders identify rebound opportunities when prices deviate too far from their trend lines.
📈 Indicator Summary: Gravity Trend Line with ±10% Bands
🔧 How It's Calculated:
Gravity Trend Line = Average of SMA(30) and SMA(70)
Represents the fair value zone or center of gravity for price over a medium-term period.
Upper Band = Gravity Line + 10%
Lower Band = Gravity Line - 10%
A shaded zone shows the space between the upper and lower bands — your "gravity channel."
🧭How to Use It for Swing Trading (1H and 4H Charts)
1. Trend Bias Filter
If price is consistently above the Gravity Line, the trend bias is bullish.
If price is below the Gravity Line, the bias is bearish.
Use this to align your trades with the prevailing direction on 4H (macro view) and fine-tune entries on 1H.
2.Trade Entry Zones
Long Setup (buy):
Look for price near or just below the lower band (oversold zone).
Combine with bullish candles or reversal indicators (e.g., MACD bullish crossover, RSI < 30 turning up).
Confirmation: price reclaims the lower band or moves toward gravity line.
Short Setup (sell):
Look for price near or just above the upper band (overbought zone).
Combine with bearish confirmation (e.g., MACD bearish crossover, RSI > 70 turning down).
Confirmation: price starts rejecting from upper band toward gravity line.
3. Take Profit / Exit Zones
Partial TP: At the Gravity Line (mean reversion level).
Final TP: At opposite band (if price has strong momentum).
Alternatively, exit on crossback below gravity line after a long, or above it after a short.
4. Avoiding Traps
Avoid entering trades in the middle of the band (around the Gravity Line) unless there's strong breakout confirmation.
Use 4H for trend context, and 1H for entry precision.
Avoid trading against the broader gravity slope:
If gravity line is clearly sloping up, favor longs.
If sloping down, favor shorts.
📘 Example Strategy Workflow:
Timeframe:
Use 4H for directional bias
Use 1H for entries and exits
Example Long Setup (1H Chart):
Price dips below lower band while 4H trend is up.
Bullish candle forms or RSI/MACD confirms momentum shift.
Entry: price closes back above the lower band.
TP1: near gravity line.
TP2: near upper band.
Or, exit when gain hits +8% to +15%, depending on risk appetite.
📌 Final Notes:
This is a mean-reversion + trend confirmation tool — best used with additional confluence (candlestick patterns, volume, divergence).
It works well in ranging to gently trending markets — not ideal for sharp breakouts unless combined with breakout filters.
This indicator is for educational and reference purposes only.
It is not intended to be a recommendation or signal to buy or sell any security.
Use at your own discretion. Always perform your own due diligence before trading.
Forward P/E CalculatorI could not find a forward P/E indicator that gave me proper results. So here is mine.
Gott's Copernican Trend PredictorThe Gott's Copernican Trend Predictor predicts trend duration using the Copernican Principle - Based on astrophysicist Richard Gott's temporal prediction method.
I had the idea to create this indicator after reading the book The Doomsday Calculation by William Poundstone.
Background & Theory
This indicator implements J. Richard Gott III's Copernican Principle - a statistical method that famously predicted the fall of the Berlin Wall and the duration of Broadway shows with remarkable accuracy.
The Copernican Principle Explained
Named after Copernicus who showed that Earth is not at the center of the universe, this principle assumes that you are not observing something at a special moment in time. When you observe a trend at any random point, you're statistically more likely to be seeing it during the "middle portion" of its lifetime rather than at its very beginning or end.
The Mathematics
Gott's formula provides a 95% confidence interval for how much longer a trend will continue:
Minimum remaining duration = Current Age ÷ 39
Maximum remaining duration = Current Age × 39
The factor of 39 comes from statistical analysis where:
There's only a 2.5% chance you're observing in the first 1/40th of the trend's life
There's only a 2.5% chance you're observing in the last 1/40th of the trend's life
This gives us 95% confidence that the trend will last between Age/39 and Age×39
How It Works
Trend Detection
The indicator uses dual moving averages (default: 50 & 200 period) to identify trend changes:
Bullish Cross: Fast MA crosses above Slow MA → Uptrend begins
Bearish Cross: Fast MA crosses below Slow MA → Downtrend begins
Real-Time Predictions
Once a trend is detected, the indicator continuously calculates:
Trend Age: How long the current trend has been active
Gott's 95% CI: Statistical range for remaining trend duration
Projected End Dates: Calendar dates when the trend might end
How to Use
Setup
Add the indicator to any timeframe (works on minutes, hours, days, weeks)
Customize MA periods and type (SMA, EMA, WMA)
Choose table position and font size for optimal viewing
Interpretation
Example: If a trend is 100 hours old:
Minimum duration: 100 ÷ 39 = ~3 more hours
Maximum duration: 100 × 39 = ~3,900 more hours
95% confidence: The trend will end between these times
This indicator might be useful for swing traders, trend followers, and quantitative analysts.
Coca-Cola example:
Coca-Cola's chart shows an uptrend spanning 810 weeks, approximately 15.5 years. According to Gott's Copernican Principle, this trend age generates a 95% confidence interval predicting the trend will continue for a minimum of 20 weeks and a maximum of 31,590 weeks.
On the other hand, a shorter trend age produces a proportionally smaller minimum duration and different risk profile in terms of statistical continuation probability. For this reason, more recent trends (and more recent companies) are likely to remain in trend for shorter.
ICT Multi-Session Hi/L/EQ
Indicator Overview: The "ICT Multi-Session Hi/L/EQ" indicator is a versatile tool designed for traders utilizing Inner Circle Trader (ICT) strategies, enabling the visualization of key price levels—High (H), Low (L), Equilibrium (EQ, the midpoint between high and low), and Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) levels at 61.8%, 70%, and 79% of the session range—across up to 6 customizable market sessions on a single chart.
Core Functionality: It dynamically tracks and plots session-specific highs, lows, and EQ, updating in real-time as price action evolves, providing traders with immediate insights into potential support, resistance, and balance zones during defined periods like the Asian, London, or New York sessions. This multi-session capability allows for comprehensive market analysis without the need for multiple indicators.
Unique OTE Auto Detection: A standout feature is the automatic detection and directional calculation of OTE levels. When a session forms a new high, OTE levels are recalculated downward from the high to the low (bearish bias), highlighting potential short entry zones. Conversely, a new low triggers upward OTE levels from the low to the high (bullish bias), signaling long opportunities. This auto-detection adapts to market momentum without manual input, making it highly unique for ICT traders seeking efficient entry signals based on range retracements. No other indicator combines this session-based auto-directionality with OTE percentages tailored for ICT methodologies.
Left-Side Trimming Innovation: Another innovative aspect is the left-side trimming option, which allows users to limit the historical extension of lines to a user-defined number of bars (e.g., the last 8 bars), reducing chart clutter and focusing attention on recent price action. This feature is particularly unique as it addresses a common issue in multi-session indicators where full historical lines can overwhelm the chart, making it ideal for scalpers or day traders who prioritize clarity.
Without trimming the left side:
And when left side trimming is enabled:
Multi-Session Customization: Support for up to 6 independent sessions, each with individual time ranges (HHMM-HHMM format), timezones, and enable/disable toggles, offers unparalleled flexibility. Traders can configure sessions for specific market phases (e.g., Asia: 2000-0000 UTC) and customize colors, line styles (solid, dashed, dotted), and label properties separately, ensuring a personalized setup for global trading environments.
Auto-Deletion at Market Close: Levels can be automatically deleted at the session's calculated market close (17:00 NY timestamp), keeping the chart clean for the next session or day, a useful feature for avoiding accumulation of outdated levels.
Label and Visual Controls: Users can toggle labels on/off, adjust text color, background color, transparency, and size (tiny, small, normal, large), with options to stick labels to the right for better visibility. This level of customization ensures the indicator integrates seamlessly with any chart style.
No External Dependencies: All calculations are performed using built-in Pine Script functions on the chart's price data, making it self-contained and reliable without needing external libraries or data sources.
Professional and Compliant Design: Developed to comply with TradingView House Rules, this indicator is original in its combination of multi-session plotting, directional OTE auto-detection, and left-side trimming, providing traders with a robust tool for ICT-based analysis.
How It Works
Session Setup: Define session times and timezones in settings; the script tracks high/low from session start.
Level Calculation: High/low update on every bar; EQ is the midpoint. OTE levels recalculate directionally upon new extremes.
Drawing Mechanism: Lines extend with user-defined padding; trimming cuts left side for cleanliness.
Update Logic: OTE direction shifts based on new high/low detection, with levels refreshed accordingly.
Deletion: Auto-deletes at session end if enabled, resetting for new sessions.
Uniqueness and Innovation
Session OTE Auto Detection: Automatically adjusts OTE direction based on new highs/lows, a feature not commonly available in other indicators, enabling hands-free bias identification.
Left-Side Trimming: Unique clutter-reduction tool that trims historical lines, improving chart readability—a rare capability in session-based indicators.
Multi-Session Support: Handles 6 sessions independently, with per-session OTE, making it a one-stop tool for global market analysis.
Directional OTE: Adapts to market bias, offering dynamic entry zones tailored to ICT strategies.
Full Customization: Extensive controls for visuals and behavior, ensuring adaptability to individual trading styles.
User Guide: How to Use the "ICT Multi-Session Hi/L/EQ" Indicator
This guide provides a comprehensive, step-by-step explanation of how to use the "ICT Multi-Session Hi/L/EQ" indicator on TradingView. The indicator is designed to help Inner Circle Trader (ICT) enthusiasts plot key price levels—High (H), Low (L), Equilibrium (EQ, the midpoint), and Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) levels at 61.8%, 70%, and 79% of the session range—across up to 6 customizable sessions. It also includes a Candle Open line for midnight or custom times. I'll break it down by settings groups, explaining each option, its purpose, how to tweak it, and tips for optimal use. All settings are accessible via the indicator's settings panel (cog icon next to the indicator name on your chart).
General Settings
These control global behaviors that apply to all sessions and levels. They allow you to customize the overall appearance and functionality of the indicator on your chart.
Line Padding (Bars Beyond Current): This integer input (default: 2, minimum: 0) extends the plotted lines beyond the current bar by the specified number of bars.
How to Use/Tweak: Increase this value (e.g., to 5) for longer forward projections of levels, useful for anticipating future price action. Decrease to 0 for no extension. It's ideal for traders who like to see levels projected ahead in volatile markets.
Tip: On lower timeframes (e.g., 5M), higher padding (4-6) helps visualize potential targets; on higher timeframes (1H), keep it low to avoid clutter.
Label Padding (Bars from Line End): An integer (default: 3, minimum: 0) that positions labels away from the end of the lines by the specified bars.
How to Use/Tweak: Adjust to move labels further right (higher value) or closer to the line end (lower value). This prevents label overlap with price action or other indicators.
Tip: If your chart has many labels, set to 5+ for better readability; use 1-2 for minimalistic setups.
Enable Left-Side Trimming: A boolean toggle (default: true) to trim lines from the left, limiting their historical extension.
How to Use/Tweak: Turn on to reduce chart clutter by showing only recent bars of the lines; turn off for full historical view. Pairs with "Left Trim Bars" for fine-tuning.
Tip: Enable for clean charts during live trading; disable for backtesting to see long-term patterns.
Left Trim Bars: An integer (default: 8, minimum: 1) specifying how many bars back from the current bar to trim lines when left trimming is enabled.
How to Use/Tweak: Set higher (e.g., 20) for more historical visibility while trimmed; lower (e.g., 4) for ultra-clean charts focusing on immediate action.
Tip: Use 8-12 for intraday trading on 15M charts; adjust based on timeframe to balance context and clarity.
Stick Labels to Right of Current Bar: A boolean toggle (default: true) to position labels at the right end of the lines.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for labels to "stick" right, keeping them visible as the chart updates; disable for labels at the current bar position.
Tip: Keep enabled for real-time trading to avoid labels shifting left; disable for static analysis.
Delete Previous Session Lines/Labels on Market Close: A boolean toggle (default: true) to automatically delete session lines and labels at the calculated market close (17:00 NY time).
How to Use/Tweak: Enable to keep the chart clean by clearing old sessions; disable to retain historical levels for reference.
Tip: Enable for live trading to focus on active sessions; disable for educational reviews or backtesting.
Session 1 to 6 Settings
Each session has identical options, allowing independent configuration. I'll describe Session 1; replicate for others by changing the number (e.g., Session 2 uses "Session 2 Name", etc.).
Session Name: String input (default: "Asia" for Session 1) to label the session (e.g., "Asia" or "London").
How to Use/Tweak: Enter a descriptive name like "NY Open" for clarity in labels (e.g., "NY Open High").
Tip: Use short names to avoid long labels; this appears in all session labels for easy identification.
Session Time (HHMM-HHMM): Session input (default: "2000-0000" for Session 1) to define the start and end time.
How to Use/Tweak: Set the time range (e.g., "0930-1600" for NY session). Ensure start < end in 24-hour format.
Tip: Use for custom sessions like "London Kill Zone" (0800-1100); validate with the timezone setting.
Session Timezone: String selection (default: "America/New_York") from a list of options.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose the timezone matching your session (e.g., "Europe/London" for UK times).
Tip: Align with session name for accuracy; "Etc/UTC" for universal times.
Enable Session Drawings: Boolean toggle (default: true for Session 1, false for others) to activate the session's lines and labels.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable to show the session; disable to hide it without removing settings.
Tip: Enable one session at a time for focused analysis; use for multi-session overlays.
Enable EQ Line/Label: Boolean toggle (default: true) to show the EQ line and label.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for midpoint plotting; disable to hide EQ while keeping high/low.
Tip: Useful for ICT fair value gaps; toggle off if focusing on extremes only.
Enable Labels: Boolean toggle (default: true) to show labels for high, low, EQ, and OTE levels.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for annotated levels; disable for lines-only view.
Tip: Disable on crowded charts; customize label size for better readability.
Enable OTE Levels: Boolean toggle (default: false) to activate OTE levels (61.8%, 70%, 79%).
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for OTE plotting; disable to hide while keeping high/low/EQ.
Tip: Toggle on for entry zone identification; adjust colors for visual distinction.
Line Color: Color input (default varies by session, e.g., blue for Session 1) for lines.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose a color to differentiate sessions (e.g., green for bullish).
Tip: Use contrasting colors for multiple sessions; match your chart theme.
Line Style: String selection (default: "Dashed") from "Solid", "Dashed", "Dotted".
How to Use/Tweak: Select style for line appearance (e.g., dotted for OTE).
Tip: Use dashed for OTE to distinguish from solid high/low lines.
Label Text Color: Color input (default: white) for label text.
How to Use/Tweak: Set to contrast with background (e.g., black on white charts).
Tip: Use bright colors for visibility; match line color for cohesion.
Label Background Color: Color input (default: black) for label background.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose a semi-transparent background for readability.
Tip: Set to chart background color for subtle labels.
Label Transparency (0=opaque, 100=transparent): Integer input (default: 70) for label opacity.
How to Use/Tweak: Lower for solid labels (e.g., 0); higher for see-through (e.g., 90).
Tip: Use 50-80 for balance; 100 hides background entirely.
Label Text Size: String selection (default: "Small") from "Tiny", "Small", "Normal", "Large".
How to Use/Tweak: Choose size for label visibility (e.g., "Large" for emphasis).
Tip: "Small" for crowded charts; "Large" for main levels.
OTE 61.8% Color: Color input (default: purple) for 61.8% OTE line.
How to Use/Tweak: Customize to highlight the 61.8% level (e.g., gold for key entry).
Tip: Use distinct colors for each OTE level to differentiate (e.g., purple, orange, teal).
OTE 70% Color: Color input (default: orange) for 70% OTE line.
How to Use/Tweak: Set to a secondary color for mid-range OTE.
Tip: Coordinate with overall theme; use faded shades for less prominence.
OTE 79% Color: Color input (default: teal) for 79% OTE line.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose for the deepest OTE level (e.g., red for aggressive entries).
Tip: Make it stand out if 79% is your preferred entry zone.
Candle Open Settings
This section adds a custom open line (e.g., midnight open) with similar customization.
Use Time 1: Boolean toggle (default: true) to enable the first time setting.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for the open line; disable to hide.
Tip: Use for midnight open in ICT setups; toggle off if not needed.
Name: String input (default: "Midnight Open") for the open line label.
How to Use/Tweak: Change to "Daily Open" or similar for context.
Tip: Keep short for clean labels.
Start Time: String input (default: "0000") for open range start.
How to Use/Tweak: Set in HHMM format (e.g., "0000" for midnight).
Tip: Ensure valid (0000-2359); pair with end time for narrow ranges.
End Time: String input (default: "0001") for open range end.
How to Use/Tweak: Set slightly after start (e.g., "0001") for precise open capture.
Tip: Use for quick ranges; start < end always.
Color: Color input (default: teal) for the open line.
How to Use/Tweak: Customize to distinguish from session lines.
Tip: Use gray for subtle open lines.
Timezone: String selection (default: "America/New_York") for the open line.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose matching your chart or session.
Tip: "Etc/UTC" for universal opens.
Enable Line/Label: Boolean toggle (default: true) for the open line/label.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable to show; disable to hide.
Tip: Use for daily opens in ICT; toggle off for session-only focus.
Enable Label: Boolean toggle (default: true) for the open label.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for named label; disable for line-only.
Tip: Disable if labels clutter the chart.
Auto Delete at 18:00 NY: Boolean toggle (default: true) to delete at 18:00 NY.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for cleanup; disable to retain.
Tip: Align with new day start; useful for resetting.
Stick Label to Right: Boolean toggle (default: true) for label positioning.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable for right-side labels; disable for current bar.
Tip: Keep enabled for visibility as chart updates.
Enable Left-Side Trimming: Boolean toggle (default: true) for open line trimming.
How to Use/Tweak: Enable to trim historical open line; disable for full view.
Tip: Similar to session trimming; use for clean charts.
Left Trim Bars: Integer input (default: 8) for open line trim bars.
How to Use/Tweak: Set the number of bars back to show when trimming.
Tip: Lower for more focus; higher for context.
Line Padding (Bars Beyond Current): Integer input (default: 2) for open line extension.
How to Use/Tweak: Increase for forward projection; decrease for no extension.
Tip: Match general padding for consistency.
Label Padding (Bars from Line End): Integer input (default: 3) for open label position.
How to Use/Tweak: Adjust to move label away from line end.
Tip: Higher for spaced labels; lower for compactness.
Line Style: String selection (default: "Solid") for open line style.
How to Use/Tweak: Choose "Dashed" or "Dotted" for distinction.
Tip: Use dotted for subtle opens.
Label Text Color: Color input (default: white) for open label text.
How to Use/Tweak: Set to contrast with background.
Tip: Black for light charts.
Label Background Color: Color input (default: black) for open label background.
How to Use/Tweak: Customize for visibility.
Tip: Semi-transparent for blend.
Label Transparency: Integer input (default: 70) for open label opacity.
How to Use/Tweak: 0 for opaque; 100 for transparent.
Tip: 50-80 for balance.
Label Text Size: String selection (default: "Small") for open label size.
How to Use/Tweak: "Large" for emphasis; "Tiny" for minimalism.
Tip: "Normal" for standard use.
PreviousDayHLEQCME_MINI:NQ1!
Indicator Overview: The "PreviousDayHLEQ" indicator is an essential tool for traders employing Inner Circle Trader (ICT) methodologies, designed to plot the High (H), Low (L), Equilibrium (EQ, the midpoint between high and low), and Optimal Trade Entry (OTE) levels at 61.8%, 70%, and 79% of the previous trading day's range. It provides a clear visual reference for potential support, resistance, and entry zones based on the prior day's price action, helping traders anticipate continuations or reversals in the current day. This indicator stands out by incorporating directional OTE auto-detection, adjusting levels based on whether the previous day formed a new high or low relative to the day before, offering insights into market bias without manual recalculation.
Core Functionality: It tracks and displays the previous day's high and low, calculating the EQ as the average for balance points, and OTE levels as percentage retracements of the range. The script uses a user-defined trading day definition (with timezone support) to accurately capture the day's extremes, ensuring alignment with global market sessions. This core setup allows traders to quickly identify key ICT levels like fair value gaps or liquidity pools from the prior day.
Unique OTE Auto Detection: One of the indicator's most innovative features is its automatic detection of OTE direction. If the previous day made a new high compared to the day before, OTE levels are calculated downward from the high to the low (bearish bias), highlighting potential short entries. Conversely, a new low triggers upward OTE levels from the low to the high (bullish bias), signaling long opportunities. This auto-detection is unique, as it dynamically adapts to historical price expansion without user input, a capability not found in standard previous day indicators that typically use fixed directions. It empowers ICT traders to gauge carry-over momentum from the prior day, such as in scenarios where a bullish expansion suggests buying dips to the 61.8% level.
Directional Bias Indication: Beyond plotting levels, the OTE calculation inherently indicates the previous day's bias (expansion upward or downward), providing context for current day trades. This unique bias detection helps traders align with market structure, e.g., favoring shorts if OTE is downward-oriented, enhancing decision-making in ICT frameworks like order block identification.
Left-Side Trimming Innovation: The indicator includes a highly unique left-side trimming option, allowing users to restrict the historical extension of lines to a specified number of bars (e.g., the last 8 bars). This reduces visual clutter on charts with long history, focusing attention on recent and relevant price action—a feature rarely seen in previous day indicators, where lines often span the entire chart and obscure current developments. Traders can toggle trimming on/off and adjust the bar count, making it ideal for clean, professional setups.
Customization and Visual Controls: Users can fully customize line colors (separate for high, low, EQ, and each OTE level), styles (solid, dashed, dotted), and label properties (text color, background color, transparency, size). This level of granularity ensures the indicator fits any chart theme or strategy, with options to enable/disable individual elements like EQ or OTE for minimalistic views. The stick-right label option keeps labels visible as the chart updates, preventing overlap.
Auto-Deletion at Trading Day End: Levels can be automatically cleared at the indicator's calculated market close (17:00 NY time), a unique feature that prevents accumulation of outdated data, keeping the chart fresh for the next day. This is particularly useful for day traders who reset their setups daily.
No External Dependencies: The indicator operates solely on chart price data using built-in Pine Script functions, ensuring reliability and compatibility without needing additional libraries or internet access.
How It Works
Previous Day Data Capture: The script identifies the previous trading day using the user-defined timezone and calculates high, low, EQ, and OTE levels based on that day's range.
OTE Calculation: Levels are computed as percentages of the range, with auto-detection switching direction if a new high/low was made relative to the day before.
Drawing and Trimming: Lines are plotted with user-set padding for extension, and trimming cuts the left side to focus on current action.
Update Mechanism: Levels update in real-time as the previous day's data is fixed, but the script refreshes on chart reloads or new days.
Deletion Logic: At market close, if auto-delete is enabled, all elements are removed to prepare for the next cycle.
Uniqueness and Innovation
Session OTE Auto Detection: Automatically determines OTE direction based on previous day's high/low expansion, a rare feature that provides bias insights not available in basic previous day high/low indicators, aiding ICT traders in identifying entry zones with market context.
Left-Side Trimming: This innovation allows customizable historical line length, solving chart clutter issues unique to previous day indicators that typically show full history, enhancing usability for live trading.
Directional OTE with Multi-Level Support: Combines auto-bias detection with three OTE percentages (61.8%, 70%, 79%), offering more granular entry options than single-level tools, tailored for ICT's focus on range retracements.
Independent Customization per Element: Separate controls for high, low, EQ, and OTE colors/styles, plus transparency and size, provide unmatched flexibility compared to rigid indicators.
Auto-Deletion for Cleanliness: Unique cleanup at market close prevents level buildup, a practical feature for multi-day analysis not commonly implemented in similar tools.
How to Use It
Setup: Add to chart, configure timezone (e.g., "America/New_York"), and enable the indicator.
Customization: Adjust line colors (e.g., blue for high), styles (dashed for OTE), and enable trimming (8 bars for focus).
Interpretation: Use OTE for entries (e.g., buy at 61.8% in bullish bias); EQ for reversion.
Tips: Test on historical data; combine with ICT concepts like CISD, FVG etc.
This indicator elevates ICT trading with its auto-detection and trimming. Use with risk management; trading carries risk
Bullish Breakaway Dual Session-Publish-Consolidated FVG
Inspired by the FVG Concept:
This indicator is built on the Fair Value Gap (FVG) concept, with a focus on Consolidated FVG. Unlike traditional FVGs, this version only works within a defined session (e.g., ETH 18:00–17:00 or RTH 09:30–16:00).
Bullish consolidated FVG & Bullish breakaway candle
Begins when a new intraday low is printed. After that, the indicator searches for the 1st bullish breakaway candle, which must have its low above the high of the intraday low candle. Any candles in between are part of the consolidated FVG zone. Once the 1st breakaway forms, the indicator will shades the candle’s range (high to low). Then it will use this candle as an anchor to search for the 2nd, 3rd, etc. breakaways until the session ends.
Session Reset: Occurs at session close.
Repaint Behavior:
If a new intraday (or intra-session) low forms, earlier breakaway patterns are wiped, and the system restarts from the new low.
Counter:
A session-based counter at the top of the chart displays how many bullish consolidated FVGs have formed.
Settings
• Session Setup:
Choose ETH, RTH, or custom session. The indicator is designed for CME futures in New York timezone, but can be adjusted for other markets.
If nothing appears on your chart, check if you loaded it during an inactive session (e.g., weekend/Friday night).
• Max Zones to Show:
Default = 3 (recommended). You can increase, but 3 zones are usually most useful.
• Timeframe:
Best on 1m, 5m, or 15m. (If session range is big, try higher time frame)
Usage
1. Avoid Trading in Wrong Direction
• No bullish breakaway = No long trade.
• Prevents the temptation to countertrade in strong downtrends.
2. Catch the Trend Reversal
• When a bullish breakaway appears after an intraday low, it signals a potential reversal.
• You will need adjust position sizing, watch out liquidity hunt, and place stop loss.
• Best entries of your preferred choices: (this is your own trading edge)
Retest
Breakout
Engulf
MA cross over
Whatever your favorite approach
• Reversal signal is the strongest when price stays within/above the breakaway candle’s
range. Weak if it breaks below.
3. Higher Timeframe Confirmation
• 1m can give false reversals if new lows keep forming.
• 5m often provides cleaner signals and avoids premature reversals.
Failed Trade Example:
This indicator will repaint if a new intraday session low is updated. So it is possible to have a failed trade. Here is an example from the same session in 1m chart. However, if you enter the trade later at another bullish breakaway candle signal. The loss can be mitigated by the profit.
Therefore you should use smaller position size for your 1st trade. You should also considering using 5m chart to avoid 1m bull trap. In this example, if you use 5m chart, you can totally avoid this failed trade.
If you enter the trade, you will see the intraday low is stop loss hunted. You can also see the 1st bullish breakaway candle is super weak. There are a lot of candles below the breakaway candle low, so it is very possible to fail.
In the next chart, you can see the failed traded get stop loss hunted. However you can enter another trade with huge profit to win back the loss from the 1st trade if you follow the rule.
Summary
This indicator offers 3 main advantages:
1. Prevents wrong-direction trades.
2. Confirms trend entry after reversal signals.
3. Filters false positives using higher timeframes.
How to sharp your edge:
1. ⏳Extreme patience⏳: Do not guess the bottom during a downtrend before a confirmed bullish breakaway candle. If you get caught, have the courage to cut loss. This is literally the most important usage of this indicator. Again, this is the most important rule of this indicator and actually the hardest rule to follow.
2. 🛎Better Entry🛎: After a confirmed bullish breakaway, you will always have a good opportunity to enter the trade using established trading technique. Your edge will come from the position size, draw down, stop loss placement, risk/reward ratio.
3. ✂Cut loss fast✂: If you enter a trade according to the rule, but you are still not making profit for a period of time, and the price is below the low of the breakaway candle. It is very likely you may hit stop loss soon (intraday session low). It won't be a bad idea to cut loss before stop loss hit.
4. 🔂Reentry with confidence after stop loss🔂: a stop loss will not invalidate the indicator. If you see a second chance to reenter, you should still follow the trade guide and rule.
5. 🕔Time frame matter🕔: try 1m, 3m, 5m, 10m, 15m time frame. Over time, you should know what time frame work best for you and the market. Higher time frame will reduce the noise of false positive trade, but it comes with a higher stop loss placement and less max profit, however it may come with a lower draw down. Time frame will matter depending on the range of the session. If the session range is small (<0.5%), lower time frame is good. If session range is big (>1%), 5m time frame is better. Remember to wait for candle to close, if you use higher time frame.
Last Mention:
The indicator is only used for bullish side trading.
KAMA Trend Flip - SightLing LabsBuckle up, traders—this open-source KAMA Trend Flip indicator is your ticket to sniping trend reversals with a Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average (KAMA) that’s sharper than a Wall Street shark’s tooth. No voodoo, no fluff—just raw, volatility-adaptive math that dances with the market’s rhythm. It zips through trending rockets and chills in choppy waters, slashing false signals like a samurai. Not laggy like the others - this thing is the real deal!
Core Mechanics:
• Efficiency Ratio (ER): Reads the market’s pulse (0-1). High ER = turbo-charged MA, low ER = smooth operator.
• Adaptive Smoothing: Mixes fast (default power 2) and slow (default 30) constants to match market mood swings.
• Trend Signals: KAMA climbs = blue uptrend (bulls run wild). KAMA dips = yellow downtrend (bears take over). Flat = gray snooze-fest.
• Alerts: Instant pings on flips—“Trend Flip Up” for long plays, “Down” for shorts. Plug into bots for set-and-forget domination.
Why It Crushes:
• Smokes static MAs in volatile arenas (crypto, stocks, you name it). Backtests show 20-30% fewer fakeouts than SMA50.
• Visual Pop: Overlays price with bold blue/yellow signals. Slap it on BTC 1D to see trends light up like Times Square.
• Tweakable: Dial ER length (default 50) to your timeframe. Short for scalps, long for swing trades.
Example Settings in Action:
• 10s Chart (Hyper-Scalping): Set Source: Close, ER Length: 100, Fast Power: 1, Slow Power: 6. Catches micro-trends in crypto like a heat-seeking missile. Blue/yellow flips scream entry/exit on fast moves.
• 2m Chart (Quick Trades): Set Source: Close, ER Length: 14, Fast Power: 1, Slow Power: 6. Perfect for rapid trend shifts in stocks or forex. Signals align with momentum bursts—check historical flips for proof.
Deployment:
• Drop it on any chart. Backtest settings to match your asset’s volatility—tweak until it sings.
• Pair with RSI or volume spikes for killer confirmation. Pro move: Enter on flip + volume pop, exit on reverse.
• Strategy-Ready: Slap long/short logic on alerts to build a lean, mean trading machine.
Open source from SightLing Labs—grab it, hack it, profit from it. Share your tweaks in the comments and let’s outsmart the market together. Trade hard, win big!
Trendlines Oscillator [LuxAlgo]The Trendlines Oscillator helps traders identify trends and momentum based on the normalized distances between the current price and the most recently detected bullish and bearish trend lines.
The indicator features bullish and bearish momentum, a signal line with crossings, and multiple smoothing options.
🔶 USAGE
The indicator displays three lines: two for momentum and one for the signal. When one of the momentum lines (bullish or bearish) crosses the signal line, the tool displays a dot to indicate which momentum is gaining strength.
As a general rule, when the green bullish momentum line is above the red bearish momentum line, it indicates buyer strength. This means that the actual prices are farther from the support trend lines than the resistance trend lines. The opposite is true for seller strength.
To calculate bullish momentum, the tool first identifies bullish trend lines acting as support below the price. Then, it measures the delta between the price and those trend lines and normalizes the reading into the displayed momentum values.
The same process is used for bearish momentum, but with bearish trendlines acting as resistance above the price.
🔹 Length & Memory
Modifying the Length and Memory values will cause the tool to display different momentum values.
Traders can adjust the length to detect larger trendlines and adjust the memory to indicate how many trendlines the tool should consider.
As the chart above shows, smaller values make the tool more responsive, while larger values are useful for detecting larger trends.
🔹 Smoothing
By default, the data is not smoothed, and the signal uses a triangular moving average with a length of 10. Traders can smooth both the data and the signal line.
Traders can choose from up to ten different methods, or none. Some examples are shown on the chart above.
🔶 DETAILS
The steps for the calculations are as follows:
1. Gather the pivots, highs, and lows.
ph = fixnan(ta.pivothigh(lengthInput, lengthInput))
pl = fixnan(ta.pivotlow(lengthInput, lengthInput))
2. Calculate the slope and y-intercept for each trendline between contiguous lower highs (resistance) or higher lows (support).
if ph < ph
slope = (ph - ph )/(n-lengthInput - phx1)
res.unshift(l.new(ph - slope * phx1, slope))
if pl > pl
slope = (pl - pl )/(n-lengthInput - plx1)
sup.unshift(l.new(pl - slope * plx1, slope))
3. Calculate the value of each trendline on the current bar, then calculate the difference with the current price (delta). To calculate the relative sum of deltas, only consider trendlines below the price for support or above the price for resistance.
method get_point(l id, x)=>
id.slope * x + id.intercept
for element in sup
point = element.get_point(n)
if sourceInput > point
sup_sum += sourceInput - point
sup_den += math.abs(sourceInput - point)
for element in res
point = element.get_point(n)
if sourceInput < point
res_sum += point - sourceInput
res_den += math.abs(point - sourceInput)
4. Normalize the value from 0 to 100 by taking the sum of the relative values of the deltas divided by the sum of the absolute values of the deltas.
float supportLine = sup_sum / sup_den * 100
float resistanceLine = res_sum / res_den * 100
5. Smooth both values, then calculate the signal line as the difference between them.
float smoothSupport = smooth(supportLine,dataSmoothingInput,dataSmoothingLengthInput)
float smoothResistance = smooth(resistanceLine,dataSmoothingInput,dataSmoothingLengthInput)
float signal = math.abs(smoothSupport - smoothResistance)
float signalLine = smooth(signal,smoothingInput,smoothingLengthInput)
6. Calculate the crossing signals against the signal line, using only the first signal from each series of bullish or bearish crossings.
bullSignal = smoothSupport > signalLine and smoothSupport < signalLine
bearSignal = smoothResistance > signalLine and smoothResistance < signalLine
lastSignal := bullSignal and lastSignal == BEAR ? BULL : bearSignal and lastSignal == BULL ? BEAR : lastSignal
firstBull = ta.change(lastSignal) > 0
firstBear = ta.change(lastSignal) < 0
🔶 SETTINGS
Length: The size of the market structure used for trendline detection.
Memory: The number of trendlines used in calculations.
Source: The source for the calculations is closing prices by default.
🔹 Smoothing
Data Smoothing: Choose the smoothing method and length
Signal Smoothing: Choose the smoothing method and length
Tide Tracker ZonesTide Tracker Zones – Advanced Trend & Pullback Visualizer
Overview
Tide Tracker Zones is a sophisticated trading tool designed for traders who require clarity, precision, and actionable insights in real time. The indicator converts price action into dynamic trend zones, allowing users to instantly recognize market direction, potential reversals, and low-risk entry opportunities. By visualizing the market in this way, traders can focus on execution rather than deciphering complex charts.
Unlike static indicators, Tide Tracker Zones adapts to market volatility, providing a clear picture of bullish and bearish pressure across multiple timeframes. Its visual design, including color-coded trend zones, a prominent guide line, and carefully placed signals, ensures that market behavior is easy to interpret, making it suitable for scalping, swing trading, and longer-term strategies alike.
How It Works
The indicator relies on dynamic upper and lower bands derived from recent price ranges and a configurable multiplier. These bands expand during volatile periods and contract when price action stabilizes, creating flexible zones that reflect the dominant market tide.
A guide line tracks the active band, serving as a continuous reference for trend direction. Unlike traditional moving averages, the guide line does not clutter the chart but instead provides a subtle, intuitive indication of whether the market is in a bullish or bearish phase. Background shading reinforces this trend visually, highlighting bullish zones in one color and bearish zones in another, so the prevailing market flow is immediately clear.
The system continuously evaluates price relative to the bands to determine trend direction and detect potential reversals. When price crosses a band and flips the trend, the guide line updates, and signals are generated, providing traders with actionable information without overwhelming the chart.
Signals and Pullbacks
Tide Tracker Zones offers visual cues that make entry points more obvious and less speculative. Trend reversal arrows are plotted when the market changes direction: BUY arrows indicate a shift from bearish to bullish, and SELL arrows indicate a shift from bullish to bearish.
The indicator also highlights first pullbacks within an active trend. These pullback dots mark low-risk opportunities to enter a trend in progress, filtered to ensure that only the most relevant signals are displayed. The system uses ATR-based spacing to place arrows and dots vertically on the chart, preventing visual clutter and ensuring readability even during periods of high volatility.
Color-coded zones enhance situational awareness. Bullish zones are displayed in a customizable orange, while bearish zones are shown in green. Transparency is dynamically adjusted to maintain chart clarity while still providing a clear indication of trend strength.
Strategy Integration
Tide Tracker Zones can be used effectively for both trend-following and pullback strategies. Traders may enter positions in the direction of the guide line and colored zone, using trend reversal arrows for confirmation. First pullback dots offer tactical entries with reduced risk, allowing traders to enter a trend after a brief retracement.
Stop-loss levels can be placed just beyond the opposing trend zone, while take-profit targets may be determined using the width of the bands to account for market volatility. The indicator adapts seamlessly across multiple timeframes. Higher timeframes provide context and filter noise, while lower timeframes allow traders to refine entry timing. This makes it a versatile tool for scalping, swing trading, or longer-term positions.
Advanced Techniques
For traders seeking greater precision, Tide Tracker Zones can be combined with volume or momentum indicators to validate signals. Observing the sequence of trend arrows and pullback dots allows users to develop a systematic approach to entries and exits. Monitoring the width and behavior of the bands over time can also provide insights into periods of expanding or contracting volatility, helping traders anticipate market shifts.
Adjustments to the spread length and multiplier allow the indicator to be tuned for different assets and market conditions. By understanding the interaction between the guide line, trend zones, and pullback signals, traders can create a robust framework for decision-making, reducing guesswork and improving consistency.
Why Use Tide Tracker Zones
Tide Tracker Zones provides instant clarity and actionable insight in any market. Its dynamic zones and guide line give a clear visual understanding of trend direction, while trend reversal arrows and pullback dots highlight potential entry points. Unlike traditional indicators, it adapts to volatility and changing conditions, making it reliable across multiple asset classes and timeframes.
By combining trend detection, pullback analysis, and intuitive visual guidance, Tide Tracker Zones equips traders with a complete framework for disciplined, confident trading, transforming complex price action into a visual map of opportunity.
Trend CandlesTrend Candles
Overview
The Trend Candles indicator is a simple yet effective tool designed to help traders visually identify the prevailing market trend. By combining candle coloring with a trend-based Exponential Moving Average (EMA), it enhances chart readability and makes trend-following strategies easier to apply.
Concepts
Exponential Moving Average (EMA): The EMA is a moving average that places more weight on recent price data. It reacts faster to price changes compared to a Simple Moving Average (SMA), making it well-suited for trend detection.
Trend Determination:
- If the EMA is rising (current EMA > previous EMA), the market is considered bullish.
- If the EMA is falling (current EMA < previous EMA), the market is considered bearish.
- If the EMA is flat (no significant change), no trend color is applied.
Candle Coloring:
- Green candles = Uptrend
- Purple candles = Downtrend
- Default candles = Sideways/Flat EMA
Features
- Trend Visualization: Candles automatically change color based on EMA slope, making it easy to spot bullish and bearish phases.
- Customizable EMA Length: The trader can set the EMA period (default is 50), allowing flexibility for short-term or long-term trend analysis.
- Overlay EMA Line: An orange EMA line is plotted on the chart for additional confirmation of the trend.
- Clean & Minimalist: Focuses on trend clarity without cluttering the chart with unnecessary signals.
How to Use
1. Apply the indicator to your chart.
2. Adjust the EMA Length as per your trading style (shorter = faster signals, longer = smoother trend).
3. Follow the candle color:
- Green = Favor long entries.
- Purple = Favor short entries.
- No color = Stay cautious, as trend is unclear.
4. Use with other confirmation tools (support/resistance, volume, or oscillators).
5. Users are encouraged to experiment with different EMA lengths. The default length is 50, but you can explore other values based on your needs. In particular, try Fibonacci numbers such as 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, and 233 to observe how trends behave differently.
Disclaimer
The information provided by the Trend Candles indicator is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk, and past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Always do your own research and use risk management practices.
SmartPlusSmartPlus
Overview
The SmartPlus indicator is a complete framework for intraday traders. It combines key market reference points (VWAP, moving averages, and the first 15-minute high/low range) with predictive levels based on historical daily moves. Together, these elements allow traders to build directional bias, spot breakouts, and manage risk throughout the session.
Key Features
1. VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price)
- Plots the intraday VWAP in real time.
- VWAP acts as a central “fair value” reference point for institutional order flow.
- Price trading above VWAP generally suggests bullish bias, while below VWAP leans bearish.
2. Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs)
- Two configurable EMAs are included:
- Fast EMA (default: 21 periods)
- Slow EMA (default: 34 periods)
- Each EMA is plotted with a single, user-selectable color for clarity.
- Crossovers or alignment between price, VWAP, and EMAs help define market structure.
3. Smart Bar Coloring
- Candles automatically change color when conditions align:
- Bull Zone: Price above VWAP, Fast EMA, and Slow EMA.
- Bear Zone: Price below VWAP, Fast EMA, and Slow EMA.
- Fluorescent bar coloring helps highlight momentum zones visually without additional analysis.
4. First 15-Minute High/Low/Mid (Automatic)
- Automatically detects the first 15 minutes of each new trading day (no manual input required).
- Plots horizontal lines for:
- First 15-Minute High (green)
- First 15-Minute Low (red)
- Midpoint of that range (gray)
- Once the initial 15-minute window ends, these levels remain projected throughout the session as breakout or support/resistance zones.
- Alerts trigger when price breaks above the high or below the low after the window.
5. Daily Support/Resistance Forecast
- Uses a rolling lookback of recent daily ranges (default: 126 days).
- Tracks average up moves and down moves from the daily open.
- Optionally incorporates standard deviation for wider confidence bands.
- Plots forecast levels above/below the current day’s open for reference.
Trading Logic (How to Use)
- Bullish Bias:
- Price is above VWAP, above both EMAs, and ideally above the first 15-minute high.
- This setup suggests trend continuation or breakout opportunities on the long side.
- Bearish Bias:
- Price is below VWAP, below both EMAs, and ideally below the first 15-minute low.
- This setup suggests downward pressure or breakout opportunities on the short side.
- Neutral / Caution Zone:
- Price caught between VWAP, EMAs, or inside the 15-minute range often signals indecision.
- Best to wait for confirmation or breakout before committing to trades.
Expectations After Using It
- The script provides context and structure, not trading signals.
- It highlights where price is relative to meaningful market levels so traders can act with greater confidence.
- Combining VWAP, EMAs, and the 15-minute breakout framework helps traders stay aligned with the market’s natural rhythm.
Disclaimer
This script is a tool for market analysis and educational purposes only.
It does not constitute financial advice, trading recommendations, or guaranteed profitability.
Markets are inherently risky, and past patterns do not ensure future results.
Always combine this tool with sound risk management, personal research, and professional guidance before making any trading decisions.
Intellxis Premium InsightUnderstanding the Intellxis - Premium Insight Indicator
This guide provides a way to understand the output of the Premium Insight plugin for TradingView. Its core feature is the "Premium Status" column, which analyzes how an option's premium behaves relative to the underlying asset's price. Use the below guide to decode every status message and leverage this powerful plugin in your trading.
Call Option Statuses
Strong (Spot 🡅): The Call premium is increasing as the underlying asset price rises. This confirms a bullish trend and indicates the option is behaving as expected.
Down (Spot 🡇): The Call premium is decreasing as the underlying asset price falls. This is the normal, expected behavior for a call option in a downtrend.
Down (Spot ⟷): The Call premium is decreasing while the underlying asset price is flat. This erosion of value is due to the passage of time and is an expected behavior.
Weak (Spot 🡅): The Call premium is decreasing slightly even though the underlying asset price is rising. This is an anomaly and suggests weakness in the bullish move.
Flat (Spot 🡅): The Call premium is not changing despite a rise in the underlying asset price. This indicates the premium is not responding to a favorable move, which is a sign of weakness.
Strong (Spot 🡇): The Call premium is increasing even though the underlying asset price is falling. This is a highly counter-intuitive signal and could point to a sharp increase in implied volatility.
MELTDOWN (Spot 🡅): The Call premium is collapsing significantly while the underlying asset price is RISING. This contradicts normal option behavior and may signal an imminent reversal or volatility crush.
MELTDOWN (Spot ⟷): The Call premium is collapsing significantly while the underlying is flat. This suggests a massive drop in implied volatility or other strong selling pressure not related to price direction.
Down Significantly (Spot 🡇): The Call premium is dropping significantly as the underlying spot price is moving down.
Up (Spot ⟷): The Call premium is increasing while the underlying spot price is flat. This is likely due to a sudden increase in volatility.
Flat (Spot ⟷): Normal: The Call premium is flat and the underlying spot price is also flat.
Put Option Statuses
Strong (Spot 🡇): The Put premium is increasing as the underlying asset price falls. This confirms a bearish trend and indicates the option is behaving as expected.
Down (Spot 🡅): The Put premium is decreasing as the underlying asset price rises. This is the normal, expected behavior for a put option in an uptrend.
Down (Spot ⟷): The Put premium is decreasing while the underlying asset price is flat. This erosion of value is due to the passage of time and is an expected behavior.
Weak (Spot 🡇): The Put premium is dropping slightly even though the underlying asset price is falling. This is an anomaly and suggests weakness in the bearish move.
Flat (Spot 🡇): The Put premium is not changing despite a fall in the underlying asset price. This indicates the premium is not responding to a favorable move, which is a sign of weakness.
Strong (Spot 🡅): The Put premium is increasing even though the underlying asset price is rising. This is a highly counter-intuitive signal and could point to a sharp increase in implied volatility.
MELTDOWN (Spot 🡇): The Put premium is collapsing significantly while the underlying asset price is FALLING. This contradicts normal option behavior and may signal an imminent reversal or volatility crush.
MELTDOWN (Spot ⟷): The Put premium is collapsing significantly while the underlying is flat. This suggests a massive drop in implied volatility or other strong selling pressure not related to price direction.
Down Significantly (Spot 🡅): The Put premium is dropping significantly as the underlying spot price is moving up.
Up (Spot ⟷): The Put premium is increasing while the underlying spot price is flat. This is likely due to a sudden increase in volatility.
Flat (Spot ⟷): The Put premium is flat and the underlying spot price is also flat.
Multi-TF Trend Table (Configurable)1) What this tool does (in one minute)
A compact, multi‑timeframe dashboard that stacks eight timeframes and tells you:
Trend (fast MA vs slow MA)
Where price sits relative to those MAs
How far price is from the fast MA in ATR terms
MA slope (rising, falling, flat)
Stochastic %K (with overbought/oversold heat)
MACD momentum (up or down)
A single score (0%–100%) per timeframe
Alignment tick when trend, structure, slope and momentum all agree
Use it to:
Frame bias top‑down (M→W→D→…→15m)
Time entries on your execution timeframe when the higher‑TF stack is aligned
Avoid counter‑trend traps when the table is mixed
2) Table anatomy (each column explained)
The table renders 9 columns × 8 rows (one row per timeframe label you define).
TF — The label you chose for that row (e.g., Month, Week, 4H). Cosmetic; helps you read the stack.
Trend — Arrow from fast MA vs slow MA: ↑ if fastMA > slowMA (up‑trend), ↓ otherwise (down‑trend). Cell is green for up, red for down.
Price Pos — One‑character structure cue:
🔼 if price is above both fast and slow MAs (bullish structure)
🔽 if price is below both (bearish structure)
– otherwise (between MAs / mixed)
MA Dist — Distance of price from the fast MA measured in ATR multiples:
XS < S < M < L < XL according to your thresholds (see §3.3). Useful for judging stretch/mean‑reversion risk and stop sizing.
MA Slope — The fast MA one‑bar slope:
↑ if fastMA - fastMA > 0
↓ if < 0
→ if = 0
Stoch %K — Rounded %K value (default 14‑1‑3). Background highlights when it aligns with the trend:
Green heat when trend up and %K ≤ oversold
Red heat when trend down and %K ≥ overbought Tooltip shows K and D values precisely.
Trend % — Composite score (0–100%), the dashboard’s confidence for that timeframe:
+20 if trendUp (fast>slow)
+20 if fast MA slope > 0
+20 if MACD up (signal definition in §2.8)
+20 if price above fast MA
+20 if price above slow MA
Background colours:
≥80 lime (strong alignment)
≥60 green (good)
≥40 orange (mixed)
<40 grey (weak/contrary)
MACD — 🟢 if EMA(12)−EMA(26) > its EMA(9), else 🔴. It’s a simple “momentum up/down” proxy.
Align — ✔ when everything is in gear for that trend direction:
For up: trendUp and price above both MAs and slope>0 and MACD up
For down: trendDown and price below both MAs and slope<0 and MACD down Tooltip spells this out.
3) Settings & how to tune them
3.1 Timeframes (TF1–TF8)
Inputs: TF1..TF8 hold the resolution strings used by request.security().
Defaults: M, W, D, 720, 480, 240, 60, 15 with display labels Month, Week, Day, 12H, 8H, 4H, 1H, 15m.
Tips
Keep a top‑down funnel (e.g., Month→Week→Day→H4→H1→M15) so you can cascade bias into entries.
If you scalp, consider D, 240, 120, 60, 30, 15, 5, 1.
Crypto weekends: consider 2D in place of W to reflect continuous trading.
3.2 Moving Average (MA) group
Type: EMA, SMA, WMA, RMA, HMA. Changes both fast & slow MA computations everywhere.
Fast Length: default 20. Shorten for snappier trend/slope & tighter “price above fast” signals.
Slow Length: default 200. Controls the structural trend and part of the score.
When to change
Swing FX/equities: EMA 20/200 is a solid baseline.
Mean‑reversion style: consider SMA 20/100 so trend flips slower.
Crypto/indices momentum: HMA 21 / EMA 200 will read slope more responsively.
3.3 ATR / Distance group
ATR Length: default 14; longer makes distance less jumpy.
XS/S/M/L thresholds: define the labels in column MA Dist. They are compared to |close − fastMA| / ATR.
Defaults: XS 0.25×, S 0.75×, M 1.5×, L 2.5×; anything ≥L is XL.
Usage
Entries late in a move often occur at L/XL; consider waiting for a pullback unless you are trading breakouts.
For stops, an initial SL around 0.75–1.5 ATR from fast MA often sits behind nearby noise; use your plan.
3.4 Stochastic group
%K Length / Smoothing / %D Smoothing: defaults 14 / 1 / 3.
Overbought / Oversold: defaults 70 / 30 (adjust to 80/20 for trendier assets).
Heat logic (column Stoch %K): highlights when a pullback aligns with the dominant trend (oversold in an uptrend, overbought in a downtrend).
3.5 View
Full Screen Table Mode: centers and enlarges the table (position.middle_center). Great for clean screenshots or multi‑monitor setups.
4) Signal logic (how each datapoint is computed)
Per‑TF data (via a single request.security()):
fastMA, slowMA → based on your MA Type and lengths
%K, %D → Stoch(High,Low,Close,kLen) smoothed by kSmooth, then %D smoothed by dSmooth
close, ATR(atrLen) → for structure and distance
MACD up → (EMA12−EMA26) > EMA9(EMA12−EMA26)
fastMA_prev → yesterday/previous‑bar fast MA for slope
TrendUp → fastMA > slowMA
Price Position → compares close to both MAs
MA Distance Label → thresholds on abs(close − fastMA)/ATR
Slope → fastMA − fastMA
Score (0–100) → sum of the five 20‑point checks listed in §2.7
Align tick → conjunction of trend, price vs both MAs, slope and MACD (see §2.9)
Important behaviour
HTF values are sampled at the execution chart’s bar close using Pine v6 defaults (no lookahead). So the daily row updates only when a daily bar actually closes.
5) How to trade with it (playbooks)
The table is a framework. Entries/exits still follow your plan (e.g., S/D zones, price action, risk rules). Use the table to know when to be aggressive vs patient.
Playbook A — Trend continuation (pullback entry)
Look for Align ✔ on your anchor TFs (e.g., Week+Day both ≥80 and green, Trend ↑, MACD 🟢).
On your execution TF (e.g., H1/H4), wait for Stoch heat with the trend (oversold in uptrend or overbought in downtrend), and MA Dist not at XL.
Enter on your trigger (break of pullback high/low, engulfing, retest of fast MA, or S/D first touch per your plan).
Risk: consider ATR‑based SL beyond structure; size so 0.25–0.5% account risk fits your rules.
Trail or scale at M/L distances or when score deteriorates (<60).
Playbook B — Breakout with confirmation
Mixed stack turns into broad green: Trend % jumps to ≥80 on Day and H4; MACD flips 🟢.
Price Pos shows 🔼 across H4/H1 (above both MAs). Slope arrows ↑.
Enter on the first clean base‑break with volume/impulse; avoid if MA Dist already XL.
Playbook C — Mean‑reversion fade (advanced)
Use only when higher TFs are not aligned and the row you trade shows XL distance against the higher‑TF context. Take quick targets back to fast MA. Lower win‑rate, faster management.
Playbook D — Top‑down filter for Supply/Demand strategy
Trade first retests only in the direction where anchor TFs (Week/Day) have Align ✔ and Trend % ≥60. Skip counter‑trend zones when the stack is red/green against you.
6) Reading examples
Strong bullish stack
Week: ↑, 🔼, S/M, slope ↑, %K=32 (green heat), Trend 100%, MACD 🟢, Align ✔
Day: ↑, 🔼, XS/S, slope ↑, %K=45, Trend 80%, MACD 🟢, Align ✔
Action: Look for H4/H1 pullback into demand or fast MA; buy continuation.
Late‑stage thrust
H1: ↑, 🔼, XL, slope ↑, %K=88
Day/H4: only 60–80%
Action: Likely overextended on H1; wait for mean reversion or multi‑TF alignment before chasing.
Bearish transition
Day flips from 60%→40%, Trend ↓, MACD turns 🔴, Price Pos “–” (between MAs)
Action: Stand aside for longs; watch for lower‑high + Align ✔ on H4/H1 to join shorts.
7) Practical tips & pitfalls
HTF closure: Don’t assume a daily row changed mid‑day; it won’t settle until the daily bar closes. For intraday anticipation, watch H4/H1 rows.
MA Type consistency: Changing MA Type changes slope/structure everywhere. If you compare screenshots, keep the same type.
ATR thresholds: Calibrate per asset class. FX may suit defaults; indices/crypto might need wider S/M/L.
Score ≠ signal: 100% does not mean “must buy now.” It means the environment is favourable. Still execute your trigger.
Mixed stacks: When rows disagree, reduce size or skip. The tool is telling you the market lacks consensus.
8) Customisation ideas
Timeframe presets: Save layouts (e.g., Swing, Intraday, Scalper) as indicator templates in TradingView.
Alternative momentum: Replace the MACD condition with RSI(>50/<50) if desired (would require code edit).
Alerts: You can add alert conditions for (a) Align ✔ changes, (b) Trend % crossing 60/80, (c) Stoch heat events. (Not shipped in this script, but easy to add.)
9) FAQ
Q: Why do I sometimes see a dash in Price Pos? A: Price is between fast and slow MAs. Structure is mixed; seek clarity before acting.
Q: Does it repaint? A: No, higher‑TF values update on the close of their own bars (standard request.security behaviour without lookahead). Intra‑bar they can fluctuate; decisions should be made at your bar close per your plan.
Q: Which columns matter most? A: For trend‑following: Trend, Price Pos, Slope, MACD, then Stoch heat for entries. The Score summarises, and Align enforces discipline.
Q: How do I integrate with ATR‑based risk? A: Use the MA Dist label to avoid chasing at extremes and to size stops in ATR terms (e.g., SL behind structure at ~1–1.5 ATR).
Round Levels Cross AlertRound Levels Cross Alert
Overview
The Round Levels Cross Alert is a Pine Script v6 indicator for TradingView that detects when the price crosses user-defined round price levels (e.g., 100, 200, 500). It is designed for traders focusing on psychological or key support/resistance levels, providing clear visual markers and real-time alerts with detailed messages.
Features
Custom Round Levels: Set your preferred price interval (e.g., 100 points) using the Round Level Interval input.
Visual Cues: Green triangle-up shapes appear below bars for upward crosses; red triangle-down shapes appear above for downward crosses.
Detailed Alerts: Alerts include the ticker, crossed level, and time in HH:mm AM/PM format, triggered only on confirmed bars for accuracy.
Multi-Level Detection: Captures multiple round-level crosses in a single bar, sending individual alerts for each.
User-Friendly: Easy to set up and integrates with TradingView's alert system for notifications via email, SMS, or other platforms.
How It Works
The script calculates the nearest round level by flooring the closing price divided by the user-defined interval. It detects changes in this level to identify crosses, then:
Plots a shape to visually mark the cross.
Generates an alert with the ticker, crossed level, and current time.
Handles multiple level crosses in one bar, ensuring all are reported.
Ideal For
Swing Traders: Identify key levels for entries/exits.
Day Traders: Monitor real-time price action at round numbers.
Automated Alerts: Stay informed with timely notifications.
Customization
Adjust the Round Level Interval to match your asset or strategy (e.g., 50, 100, 1000).
Configure TradingView alerts to suit your notification preferences.
This indicator is a simple, effective tool for tracking price movements at significant round levels with clear visuals and actionable alerts.
Control Point System📊 Control Zone Strategy - Trading System Summary
🎯 Core Concept
Trade based on control zone breaks where buyers take over seller zones (bullish) or sellers take over buyer zones (bearish).
📍 Key Levels Setup
Seller Control Zones (Resistance)
PMH (Pre Market High) - Where sellers stopped buyers
YDH (Yesterday High) - Where sellers stopped buyers
Buyer Control Zones (Support)
PML (Pre Market Low) - Where buyers stopped sellers
YDL (Yesterday Low) - Where buyers stopped sellers
📈 EMA System
200 EMA (Purple) - Trend Filter: Above = Bullish bias | Below = Bearish bias
48 EMA (Red) - Last line of defense for pullbacks/shorts
13 EMA (Green) - Pullback levels (if above 200) or Short levels (if below 200)
8 EMA (Orange) - Exit indicator
⚡ Entry Signals
BULLISH Setup (Buyers Take Control)
Condition: Price breaks above PMH or YDH (seller zones)
Confirmation: Above 200 EMA for bullish trend
Entry: Use 5-minute timeframe for precise entries
Logic: Buyers have overpowered seller control zones
BEARISH Setup (Sellers Take Control)
Condition: Price breaks below PML or YDL (buyer zones)
Confirmation: Below 200 EMA for bearish trend
Entry: Use 5-minute timeframe for precise entries
Logic: Sellers have overpowered buyer control zones
🚪 Exit Strategy
Main Exit Rule
Exit Signal: Full candle close above 8 EMA on 5 or 10-minute chart
Runners: Take partial profits along the way, let runners ride until 8 EMA exit
Profit Taking
Scale out at key resistance/support levels
Use Daily 13 EMA as potential exit target
Trail stops using 8 EMA
⏰ Timeframes
Entry: 5-minute chart
Exit Monitoring: 5-minute or 10-minute chart for 8 EMA signals
PMH/PML: Calculated from 4:00 AM - 8:29 AM EST premarket session
🎯 Quick Decision Matrix
ScenarioActionBiasBreak above PMH/YDH + Above 200 EMABUYBullishBreak below PML/YDL + Below 200 EMASELLBearishFull candle close above 8 EMAEXITNeutralPrice at 13/48 EMA + Trend intactAdd/ScaleContinue
💡 Key Rules
Trend is king - Always check 200 EMA first
Zone breaks = control shifts - Trade in direction of new control
8 EMA exit - Respect the exit signal to preserve profits
Scale profits - Don't exit everything at once, use runners
Bottom Line: Trade the battle for control between buyers and sellers at key levels, with trend as your guide and 8 EMA as your exit!