VIDYA Auto-Trading(Reversal Logic)Overview
This script is a dynamic trend-following strategy based on the Variable Index Dynamic Average (VIDYA). It adapts in real time to market volatility, aiming to enhance entry precision and optimize risk management.
⚠️ This strategy is intended for educational and research purposes. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All results are based on historical simulations using fixed parameters.
Strategy Objectives
The objective of this strategy is to respond swiftly to sudden price movements and trend reversals, providing consistent and reliable trade signals under historical testing conditions. It is designed to be intuitive and efficient for traders of all levels.
Key Features
Momentum Sensitivity via VIDYA: Reacts quickly to momentum shifts, allowing for accurate trend-following entries.
Volatility-Based ATR Bands: Automatically adjusts stop levels and entry conditions based on current market volatility.
Intuitive Trend Visualization: Uptrends are marked with green zones, and downtrends with red zones, giving traders clear visual guidance.
Trading Rules
Long Entry: Triggered when price crosses above the upper band. Any existing short position is closed.
Short Entry: Triggered when price crosses below the lower band. Any existing long position is closed.
Exit Conditions: Positions are reversed based on signal changes, using a position reversal strategy.
Risk Management Parameters
Market: ETHUSD(5M)
Account Size: $3,000 (reasonable approximation for individual traders)
Commission: 0.02%
Slippage: 2 pip
Risk per Trade: 5% of account equity (adjusted to comply with TradingView guidelines for realistic risk levels)
Number of Trades: 251 (based on backtest over the selected dataset)
⚠️ The risk per trade and other values can be customized. Users are encouraged to adapt these to their individual needs and broker conditions.
Trading Parameters & Considerations
VIDYA Length: 10
VIDYA Momentum: 20
Distance factor for upper/lower bands: 2
Source: close
Visual Support
Trend zones, entry points, and directional shifts are clearly plotted on the chart. These visual cues enhance the analytical experience and support faster decision-making.
Visual elements are designed to improve interpretability and are not intended as financial advice or trade signals.
Strategy Improvements & Uniqueness
Inspired by the public work of BigBeluga, this script evolves the original concept with meaningful enhancements. By combining VIDYA and ATR bands, it offers greater adaptability and practical value compared to conventional trend-following strategies.
This adaptation is original work and not a direct copy. Improvements are designed to enhance usability, risk control, and market responsiveness.
Summary
This strategy offers a responsive and adaptive approach to trend trading, built on momentum detection and volatility-adjusted risk management. It balances clarity, precision, and practicality—making it a powerful tool for traders seeking reliable trend signals.
⚠️ All results are based on historical data and are subject to change under different market conditions. This script does not guarantee profit and should be used with caution and proper risk management.
Đường Trung bình trượt
Signal Indicator + SAR + 30min Trend Background🔹 BTC/USD 3-Minute Trend Signal Indicator + SAR + 30-Minute Background Trend
📌 Overview
This indicator is designed for high-precision BTC/USD trading on the 3-minute timeframe. It integrates multiple trend confirmation tools to improve signal accuracy, reduce false entries, and help traders align with higher timeframe trends.
⚡ Key Features & Enhancements
✅ Multi-Timeframe Trend Confirmation:
Uses 3-minute EMA trend filter + 30-minute EMA confirmation.
Background color changes dynamically based on 30-minute trend.
✅ Smart Parabolic SAR Filter (Optional):
Reduces false signals with an adjustable confirmation delay.
Helps avoid premature exits in strong trends.
✅ Momentum & Trend Strength Analysis:
Uses MACD for directional confirmation.
RSI filtering to avoid overbought/oversold conditions.
ADX filter ensures trades are taken in strong trends.
✅ Breakout Confirmation & Heikin-Ashi Filtering:
Detects breakouts from key resistance & support levels.
Uses Heikin-Ashi candle trend confirmation for smoother signals.
✅ Bollinger Bands Trend Validation:
Filters trades based on price position relative to Bollinger Bands.
Avoids choppy market conditions.
✅ Session Time Filtering:
Limits trades to high-liquidity trading hours (9 AM - 8 PM UTC).
✅ BUY/SELL Alerts & Labels:
Displays BUY/SELL labels on the chart when conditions are met.
TradingView Alerts for automated bot integration.
🛠️ How It Works
1️⃣ Trend Confirmation
Short-term (3-min) trend: Calculated using EMA(20).
Higher timeframe (30-min) trend: Acts as a filter (optional background color).
Valid BUY/SELL signals must align with the higher timeframe trend.
2️⃣ Entry Signals (BUY & SELL Conditions)
🚀 BUY Signal
Price breaks above resistance (last 20 candles).
MACD bullish crossover.
EMA Trend + Higher TF EMA confirms uptrend.
Bollinger Bands validation (trading above mid-band).
SAR confirms uptrend (optional).
Heikin-Ashi trend aligns bullish.
ADX > 20 (ensures strong trend).
Time filter active (9 AM - 8 PM UTC).
🔻 SELL Signal
Price breaks below support (last 20 candles).
MACD bearish crossover.
EMA Trend + Higher TF EMA confirms downtrend.
Bollinger Bands validation (trading below mid-band).
SAR confirms downtrend (optional).
Heikin-Ashi trend aligns bearish.
ADX > 20 (ensures strong trend).
Time filter active (9 AM - 8 PM UTC).
3️⃣ Alerts & Labels
BUY alert triggers 🚀 when all conditions align.
SELL alert triggers 🔻 when all conditions align.
Labels appear on the chart to indicate signals.
⚙️ Customization & Settings
🔧 User-Configurable Options:
Parabolic SAR filter (optional).
SAR confirmation delay (prevents false exits).
Background trend color from 30-min timeframe.
Adjustable background opacity for better visibility.
Trading session filter (to avoid low-volume periods).
📊 Best Use Cases
✅ Scalping BTC/USD on a 3-minute chart.
✅ Trend-following strategy with multiple confirmations.
✅ Reducing false signals with multi-indicator validation.
✅ Automated trading (TradingView alerts integration).
⚠️ Disclaimer
📌 This indicator is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice.
📌 Always backtest and validate the strategy before using it for live trading.
📌 Past performance does not guarantee future results.
💬 How to Use?
1️⃣ Add the indicator to your 3-minute BTC/USD chart.
2️⃣ Enable/disable filters based on your trading style.
3️⃣ Set alerts for automated notifications.
4️⃣ Follow trend confirmations before entering trades.
Ryna 3 EMA Multi-Timeframe Indicator**EMA Multi-Timeframe Strategy (Pine Script v6)**
This TradingView indicator is designed to assist traders using a **multi-timeframe trend-following strategy** based on Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs).
**Core Functionality**
- **Trend Identification:**
Uses a configurable **EMA (e.g., EMA 50)** on a **higher timeframe** (e.g., H1, D1, W1) to determine the market bias:
- If price is **above** the trend EMA → **Long bias**
- If price is **below** the trend EMA → **Short bias**
- **Entry Signals:**
Uses two EMAs (fast & slow, e.g., EMA 8 & EMA 21) on either:
- The **current chart timeframe**, or
- A **separately selected timeframe** (e.g., entry on M15, trend on H1)
→ Signals are generated based on **EMA crossovers**:
- **Bullish crossover** (fast crosses above slow) → Long signal
- **Bearish crossover** (fast crosses below slow) → Short signal
- Only when aligned with the higher-timeframe trend
- **Visual Output:**
- Optional display of entry EMAs when sourced from the trend timeframe
- Always displays the trend EMA
- Entry signals shown with triangle markers on the chart
- **Info Panel (Top Center):**
- Shows selected timeframes and EMA settings
- Indicates current trend bias (LONG / SHORT / NEUTRAL)
- Notes if entry EMAs are hidden due to settings
- **Alerts:**
- Optional alerts for long and short entry signals based on EMA crossovers
#### **User Inputs**
- **Trend Timeframe & EMA Length**
- **Entry Timeframe & EMA Fast/Slow Lengths**
- **Option to show/hide entry EMAs when using the trend timeframe**
- **Option to show/hide Infobox on Chart**
Multi-Timeframe MA DashboardThis indicator monitors 5 timeframes: 5min, 15min, 1hr, 4hr, and Daily. It displays fast and slow moving averages for each timeframe, along with the current price. The trend direction is color-coded: green for bullish (fast MA above slow MA) and red for bearish (fast MA below slow MA).
The dashboard also shows the last crossover signal (Buy/Sell) for each timeframe.
Visual arrows are plotted on the chart for the current timeframe. A green up arrow indicates a potential bullish crossover (Buy signal), while a red down arrow indicates a potential bearish crossover (Sell signal).
The dashboard is elegant and professional, with alternating row colors for better readability. It can be placed in any corner of the screen and customized with user-defined colors for bullish and bearish trends.
Alerts are triggered when a crossover occurs on any timeframe. These alerts include the timeframe and signal type (e.g., "5min: ↑ BUY").
How to Read the Indicator
The dashboard displays the following for each timeframe:
Fast MA: The value of the fast moving average.
Slow MA: The value of the slow moving average.
Price: The current price for the timeframe.
Trend: The current trend direction (Bullish or Bearish).
Signal: The last crossover signal (↑ BUY or ↓ SELL).
On the chart, green up arrows indicate a bullish crossover (Fast MA crosses above Slow MA), while red down arrows indicate a bearish crossover (Fast MA crosses below Slow MA).
Green text in the dashboard indicates a bullish trend or signal, while red text indicates a bearish trend or signal.
How to Use the Indicator
Use the dashboard to monitor the trend direction across multiple timeframes. Look for confluence (agreement) between timeframes to identify stronger trends. Observe the "Signal" column in the dashboard for the last crossover on each timeframe. Use the arrows on the chart to identify potential crossover points for the current timeframe.
Enable alerts to be notified of crossover signals on any timeframe. Alerts include the timeframe and signal type for easy reference.
Adjust the fast and slow moving average lengths to suit your trading style. Choose between EMA, SMA, or WMA for the moving average type. Customize the dashboard placement and colors for better visibility.
Important Notes
This indicator is not a buy or sell recommendation. It is a tool to assist traders in their analysis. Always use this indicator in conjunction with other tools, such as support/resistance levels, volume analysis, and price action. Past performance of moving averages does not guarantee future results.
How to Add the Indicator
Add the indicator to your chart from the TradingView library. Configure the inputs:
Fast MA Length: Default is 20.
Slow MA Length: Default is 50.
MA Type: Choose between EMA, SMA, or WMA.
Dashboard Placement: Select the corner of the screen where the dashboard will appear.
Colors: Customize the colors for bullish and bearish trends.
Monitor the dashboard and chart for trends and signals.
Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not provide financial, investment, or trading advice. Always perform your own analysis and consult with a financial advisor before making trading decisions.
Ichimoku Cloud Auto TF🧠 Timeframe Breakdown for Ichimoku Cloud Auto TF
Each timeframe in this indicator is carefully calibrated to reflect meaningful Ichimoku behavior relative to its scale. Here's how each one is structured and what it's best used for:
⏱️ 1 Minute (1m)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 5 / 15 / 45
Use: Scalping fast price action.
Logic: Quick reaction to short-term momentum. Best for highly active traders or bots.
⏱️ 2 Minutes (2m)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 6 / 18 / 54
Use: Slightly smoother than 1m, still ideal for scalping with a little more stability.
⏱️ 5 Minutes (5m)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 8 / 24 / 72
Use: Intraday setups, quick trend capture.
Logic: Balanced between reactivity and noise reduction.
⏱️ 15 Minutes (15m)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 9 / 27 / 81
Use: Short-term swing and intraday entries with higher reliability.
⏱️ 30 Minutes (30m)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 10 / 30 / 90
Use: Intra-swing entries or confirmation of 5m/15m signals.
🕐 1 Hour (1H)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 12 / 36 / 108
Use: Ideal for swing trading setups.
Logic: Anchored to Daily reference (1H × 24 ≈ 1D).
🕐 2 Hours (2H)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 14 / 42 / 126
Use: High-precision swing setups with better context.
🕒 3 Hours (3H)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 15 / 45 / 135
Use: Great compromise between short and mid-term vision.
🕓 4 Hours (4H)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 18 / 52 / 156
Use: Position traders & intraday swing confirmation.
Logic: Designed to echo the structure of 1D Ichimoku but on smaller scale.
📅 1 Day (1D)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 9 / 26 / 52
Use: Classic Ichimoku settings.
Logic: Standard used globally for technical analysis. Suitable for swing and position trading.
📆 1 Week (1W)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 12 / 24 / 120
Use: Long-term position trading & institutional swing confirmation.
Logic: Expanded ratios for broader perspective and noise filtering.
🗓️ 1 Month (1M)
Tenkan / Kijun / Span B: 6 / 12 / 24
Use: Macro-level trend visualization and investment planning.
Logic: Condensed but stable structure to handle longer data cycles.
📌 Summary
This indicator adapts Ichimoku settings dynamically to your chart's timeframe, maintaining logical ratios between Tenkan, Kijun, and Span B. This ensures each timeframe remains responsive yet meaningful for its respective market context.
Uptrick: Z-Score FlowOverview
Uptrick: Z-Score Flow is a technical indicator that integrates trend-sensitive momentum analysi s with mean-reversion logic derived from Z-Score calculations. Its primary objective is to identify market conditions where price has either stretched too far from its mean (overbought or oversold) or sits at a statistically “normal” range, and then cross-reference this observation with trend direction and RSI-based momentum signals. The result is a more contextual approach to trade entry and exit, emphasizing precision, clarity, and adaptability across varying market regimes.
Introduction
Financial instruments frequently transition between trending modes, where price extends strongly in one direction, and ranging modes, where price oscillates around a central value. A simple statistical measure like Z-Score can highlight price extremes by comparing the current price against its historical mean and standard deviation. However, such extremes alone can be misleading if the broader market structure is trending forcefully. Uptrick: Z-Score Flow aims to solve this gap by combining Z-Score with an exponential moving average (EMA) trend filter and a smoothed RSI momentum check, thus filtering out signals that contradict the prevailing market environment.
Purpose
The purpose of this script is to help traders pinpoint both mean-reversion opportunities and trend-based pullbacks in a way that is statistically grounded yet still mindful of overarching price action. By pairing Z-Score thresholds with supportive conditions, the script reduces the likelihood of acting on random price spikes or dips and instead focuses on movements that are significant within both historical and current contextual frameworks.
Originality and Uniquness
Layered Signal Verification: Signals require the fulfillment of multiple layers (Z-Score extreme, EMA trend bias, and RSI momentum posture) rather than merely breaching a statistical threshold.
RSI Zone Lockout: Once RSI enters an overbought/oversold zone and triggers a signal, the script locks out subsequent signals until RSI recovers above or below those zones, limiting back-to-back triggers.
Controlled Cooldown: A dedicated cooldown mechanic ensures that the script waits a specified number of bars before issuing a new signal in the opposite direction.
Gradient-Based Visualization: Distinct gradient fills between price and the Z-Mean line enhance readability, showing at a glance whether price is trading above or below its statistical average.
Comprehensive Metrics Panel: An optional on-chart table summarizes the Z-Score’s key metrics, streamlining the process of verifying current statistical extremes, mean levels, and momentum directions.
Why these indicators were merged
Z-Score measurements excel at identifying when price deviates from its mean, but they do not intrinsically reveal whether the market’s trajectory supports a reversion or if price might continue along its trend. The EMA, commonly used for spotting trend directions, offers valuable insight into whether price is predominantly ascending or descending. However, relying solely on a trend filter overlooks the intensity of price moves. RSI then adds a dedicated measure of momentum, helping confirm if the market’s energy aligns with a potential reversal (for example, price is statistically low but RSI suggests looming upward momentum). By uniting these three lenses—Z-Score for statistical context, EMA for trend direction, and RSI for momentum force—the script offers a more comprehensive and adaptable system, aiming to avoid false positives caused by focusing on just one aspect of price behavior.
Calculations
The core calculation begins with a simple moving average (SMA) of price over zLen bars, referred to as the basis. Next, the script computes the standard deviation of price over the same window. Dividing the difference between the current price and the basis by this standard deviation produces the Z-Score, indicating how many standard deviations the price is from its mean. A positive Z-Score reveals price is above its average; a negative reading indicates the opposite.
To detect overall market direction, the script calculates an exponential moving average (emaTrend) over emaTrendLen bars. If price is above this EMA, the script deems the market bullish; if below, it’s considered bearish. For momentum confirmation, the script computes a standard RSI over rsiLen bars, then applies a smoothing EMA over rsiEmaLen bars. This smoothed RSI (rsiEma) is monitored for both its absolute level (oversold or overbought) and its slope (the difference between the current and previous value). Finally, slopeIndex determines how many bars back the script compares the basis to check whether the Z-Mean line is generally rising, falling, or flat, which then informs the coloring scheme on the chart.
Calculations and Rational
Simple Moving Average for Baseline: An SMA is used for the core mean because it places equal weight on each bar in the lookback period. This helps maintain a straightforward interpretation of overbought or oversold conditions in the context of a uniform historical average.
Standard Deviation for Volatility: Standard deviation measures the variability of the data around the mean. By dividing price’s difference from the mean by this value, the Z-Score can highlight whether price is unusually stretched given typical volatility.
Exponential Moving Average for Trend: Unlike an SMA, an EMA places more emphasis on recent data, reacting quicker to new price developments. This quicker response helps the script promptly identify trend shifts, which can be crucial for filtering out signals that go against a strong directional move.
RSI for Momentum Confirmation: RSI is an oscillator that gauges price movement strength by comparing average gains to average losses over a set period. By further smoothing this RSI with another EMA, short-lived oscillations become less influential, making signals more robust.
SlopeIndex for Slope-Based Coloring: To clarify whether the market’s central tendency is rising or falling, the script compares the basis now to its level slopeIndex bars ago. A higher current reading indicates an upward slope; a lower reading, a downward slope; and similar readings, a flat slope. This is visually represented on the chart, providing an immediate sense of the directionality.
Inputs
zLen (Z-Score Period)
Specifies how many bars to include for computing the SMA and standard deviation that form the basis of the Z-Score calculation. Larger values produce smoother but slower signals; smaller values catch quick changes but may generate noise.
emaTrendLen (EMA Trend Filter)
Sets the length of the EMA used to detect the market’s primary direction. This is pivotal for distinguishing whether signals should be considered (price aligning with an uptrend or downtrend) or filtered out.
rsiLen (RSI Length)
Defines the window for the initial RSI calculation. This RSI, when combined with the subsequent smoothing EMA, forms the foundation for momentum-based signal confirmations.
rsiEmaLen (EMA of RSI Period)
Applies an exponential moving average over the RSI readings for additional smoothing. This step helps mitigate rapid RSI fluctuations that might otherwise produce whipsaw signals.
zBuyLevel (Z-Score Buy Threshold)
Determines how negative the Z-Score must be for the script to consider a potential oversold signal. If the Z-Score dives below this threshold (and other criteria are met), a buy signal is generated.
zSellLevel (Z-Score Sell Threshold)
Determines how positive the Z-Score must be for a potential overbought signal. If the Z-Score surpasses this threshold (and other checks are satisfied), a sell signal is generated.
cooldownBars (Cooldown (Bars))
Enforces a bar-based delay between opposite signals. Once a buy signal has fired, the script must wait the specified number of bars before registering a new sell signal, and vice versa.
slopeIndex (Slope Sensitivity (Bars))
Specifies how many bars back the script compares the current basis for slope coloration. A bigger slopeIndex highlights larger directional trends, while a smaller number emphasizes shorter-term shifts.
showMeanLine (Show Z-Score Mean Line)
Enables or disables the plotting of the Z-Mean and its slope-based coloring. Traders who prefer minimal chart clutter may turn this off while still retaining signals.
Features
Statistical Core (Z-Score Detection):
This feature computes the Z-Score by taking the difference between the current price and the basis (SMA) and dividing by the standard deviation. In effect, it translates price fluctuations into a standardized measure that reveals how significant a move is relative to the typical variation seen over the lookback. When the Z-Score crosses predefined thresholds (zBuyLevel for oversold and zSellLevel for overbought), it signals that price could be at an extreme.
How It Works: On each bar, the script updates the SMA and standard deviation. The Z-Score is then refreshed accordingly. Traders can interpret particularly large negative or positive Z-Score values as scenarios where price is abnormally low or high.
EMA Trend Filter:
An EMA over emaTrendLen bars is used to classify the market as bullish if the price is above it and bearish if the price is below it. This classification is applied to the Z-Score signals, accepting them only when they align with the broader price direction.
How It Works: If the script detects a Z-Score below zBuyLevel, it further checks if price is actually in a downtrend (below EMA) before issuing a buy signal. This might seem counterintuitive, but a “downtrend” environment plus an oversold reading often signals a potential bounce or a mean-reversion play. Conversely, for sell signals, the script checks if the market is in an uptrend first. If it is, an overbought reading aligns with potential profit-taking.
RSI Momentum Confirmation with Oversold/Overbought Lockout:
RSI is calculated over rsiLen, then smoothed by an EMA over rsiEmaLen. If this smoothed RSI dips below a certain threshold (for example, 30) and then begins to slope upward, the indicator treats it as a potential sign of recovering momentum. Similarly, if RSI climbs above a certain threshold (for instance, 70) and starts to slope downward, that suggests dwindling momentum. Additionally, once RSI is in these zones, the indicator locks out repetitive signals until RSI fully exits and re-enters those extreme territories.
How It Works: Each bar, the script measures whether RSI has dropped below the oversold threshold (like 30) and has a positive slope. If it does, the buy side is considered “unlocked.” For sell signals, RSI must exceed an overbought threshold (70) and slope downward. The combination of threshold and slope helps confirm that a reversal is genuinely in progress instead of issuing signals while momentum remains weak or stuck in extremes.
Cooldown Mechanism:
The script features a custom bar-based cooldown that prevents issuing new signals in the opposite direction immediately after one is triggered. This helps avoid whipsaw situations where the market quickly flips from oversold to overbought or vice versa.
How It Works: When a buy signal fires, the indicator notes the bar index. If the Z-Score and RSI conditions later suggest a sell, the script compares the current bar index to the last buy signal’s bar index. If the difference is within cooldownBars, the signal is disallowed. This ensures a predefined “quiet period” before switching signals.
Slope-Based Coloring (Z-Mean Line and Shadow):
The script compares the current basis value to its value slopeIndex bars ago. A higher reading now indicates a generally upward slope, while a lower reading indicates a downward slope. The script then shades the Z-Mean line in a corresponding bullish or bearish color, or remains neutral if little change is detected.
How It Works: This slope calculation is refreshingly straightforward: basis – basis . If the result is positive, the line is colored bullish; if negative, it is colored bearish; if approximately zero, it remains neutral. This provides a quick visual cue of the medium-term directional bias.
Gradient Overlays:
With gradient fills, the script highlights where price stands in relation to the Z-Mean. When price is above the basis, a purple-shaded region is painted, visually indicating a “bearish zone” for potential overbought conditions. When price is below, a teal-like overlay is used, suggesting a “bullish zone” for potential oversold conditions.
How It Works: Each bar, the script checks if price is above or below the basis. It then applies a fill between close and basis, using distinct colors to show whether the market is trading above or below its mean. This creates an immediate sense of how extended the market might be.
Buy and Sell Labels (with Alerts):
When a legitimate buy or sell condition passes every check (Z-Score threshold, EMA trend alignment, RSI gating, and cooldown clearance), the script plots a corresponding label directly on the chart. It also fires an alert (if alerts are set up), making it convenient for traders who want timely notifications.
How It Works: If rawBuy or rawSell conditions are met (refined by RSI, EMA trend, and cooldown constraints), the script calls the respective plot function to paint an arrow label on the chart. Alerts are triggered simultaneously, carrying easily recognizable messages.
Metrics Table:
The optional on-chart table (activated by showMetrics) presents real-time Z-Score data, including the current Z-Score, its rolling mean, the maximum and minimum Z-Score values observed over the last zLen bars, a percentile position, and a short-term directional note (rising, falling, or flat).
Current – The present Z-Score reading
Mean – Average Z-Score over the zLen period
Min/Max – Lowest and highest Z-Score values within zLen
Position – Where the current Z-Score sits between the min and max (as a percentile)
Trend – Whether the Z-Score is increasing, decreasing, or flat
Conclusion
Uptrick: Z-Score Flow offers a versatile solution for traders who need a statistically informed perspective on price extremes combined with practical checks for overall trend and momentum. By leveraging a well-defined combination of Z-Score, EMA trend classification, RSI-based momentum gating, slope-based visualization, and a cooldown mechanic, the script reduces the occurrence of false or premature signals. Its gradient fills and optional metrics table contribute further clarity, ensuring that users can quickly assess market posture and make more confident trading decisions in real time.
Disclaimer
This script is intended solely for informational and educational purposes. Trading in any financial market comes with substantial risk, and there is no guarantee of success or the avoidance of loss. Historical performance does not ensure future results. Always conduct thorough research and consider professional guidance prior to making any investment or trading decisions.
Advanced HFT Detection with VWAP & SpreadsExplanation of the HFT Detection Strategy
🔹 1. Key Indicators Used in the Strategy
It's works by combining VWAP, moving averages (SMA), volume spikes, and price jumps to detect potential HFT activity.
✅ (A) VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price)
VWAP acts as a benchmark price that professional traders and institutions use to execute large orders.
If price is above VWAP, buyers are in control → Bullish trend
If price is below VWAP, sellers are in control → Bearish trend
HFT algorithms often place buy orders above VWAP and sell orders below VWAP to follow momentum.
➡️ Why VWAP? It ensures that signals follow the institutional trading trend.
✅ (B) Moving Averages (SMA)
Moving averages smooth out price data and help in detecting short-term momentum changes.
Fast Moving Average (5-period SMA): Reacts quickly to price changes
Slow Moving Average (20-period SMA): Identifies trend direction
➡️ Why SMA? It filters noise and confirms short-term trend shifts.
✅ (C) Volume Spike Detection
High-frequency trading is often accompanied by large volume surges. We define a volume spike as:
📌 Current Volume > 2× Average Volume of last 20 bars
➡️ Why Volume? HFTs execute rapid buy/sell orders when they detect liquidity, leading to sudden volume bursts.
✅ (D) Price Jump Detection (Sudden Volatility)
HFT algorithms often exploit quick price movements. We check if the price has moved more than twice the ATR (Average True Range) in the last 5 bars.
➡️ Why ATR? It helps to detect abnormal price movements compared to normal volatility.
🔹 2. Trading Signal Logic
Now that we have VWAP, moving averages, volume, and price movement filters, we generate buy and sell signals based on conditions.
✅ (A) Buy Signal Condition
A BUY signal is triggered when:
✔ Fast SMA crosses above Slow SMA → Short-term trend is turning bullish
✔ Volume spike occurs → HFTs are active
✔ Sudden price jump detected → High volatility
✔ Price is above VWAP → Confirms bullish trend
➡️ Why this works? It confirms that institutional traders & HFTs are buying aggressively.
✅ (B) Sell Signal Condition
A SELL signal is triggered when:
✔ Fast SMA crosses below Slow SMA → Short-term trend is turning bearish
✔ Volume spike occurs → HFTs are selling aggressively
✔ Sudden price drop detected → High volatility
✔ Price is below VWAP → Confirms bearish trend
➡️ Why this works? It confirms that institutional traders & HFTs are selling aggressively.
🔹 3. Visual Representation (Plotting Signals & VWAP)
Once we detect buy and sell signals, we mark them on the chart.
✅ (A) Buy/Sell Markers
🟢 Buy → Green upward arrow below the candle
🔴 Sell → Red downward arrow above the candle
✅ (B) VWAP Line on Chart
We also plot VWAP as a blue line to visualize trend direction.
✅ (C) Highlighting Volume Spikes
To easily spot HFT activity, we highlight volume spike bars with a blue background.
🔹 4. How to Use This Strategy?
1️⃣ Apply this script on a 1-minute or 5-minute intraday chart.
2️⃣ Look for BUY signals above VWAP and SELL signals below VWAP.
3️⃣ Verify that the volume spikes before taking action.
4️⃣ Use stop-loss & risk management (e.g., stop-loss at recent low/high).
🚀 Summary: Why This Strategy Works?
✅ VWAP ensures we follow institutional traders
✅ Volume spikes confirm sudden liquidity inflows
✅ Price jumps detect fast market moves caused by HFT bots
✅ Moving averages smooth out short-term trend shifts
MACD Z-ScoreMACD Z-Score Indicator Description
This indicator takes the traditional MACD and converts its histogram into a standardized z‑score. It does so by first calculating the MACD using a fast and a slow moving average (which you can choose to compute with either SMA or EMA). The MACD histogram is then derived as the difference between the MACD line and a signal line (again, with your choice of smoothing method).
Next, the indicator computes a z‑score of that histogram over a user‑defined lookback period. In simple terms, it measures how far (in terms of standard deviations) the current histogram value deviates from its average. This standardization makes it easier to compare the MACD’s momentum across different assets or timeframes. There’s also an option to further smooth the z‑score with an EMA to reduce noise.
Finally, the indicator plots the resulting z‑score along with horizontal reference lines at key levels (such as 1, -1, 2, -2, 3, and -3) and changes the background color when the z‑score exceeds a high threshold (above 2) or drops below a low threshold (below -2), providing a visual cue for potential long or short conditions.
This indicator is ideal for traders looking for a normalized way to assess momentum, helping them to easily spot when the MACD histogram deviates significantly from its typical range.
Multiple VWMATradingView Indicator: Multiple VWMA
This TradingView indicator allows you to display up to five separate Volume Weighted Moving Averages (VWMAs) directly on your price chart.
What it does:
Plots 5 VWMAs: It calculates and draws five distinct VWMA lines (or other styles) on the chart.
Volume Weighting: Unlike simple moving averages, a VWMA gives more weight to prices where trading volume was higher, potentially offering a clearer picture of the trend strength confirmed by volume.
Highly Customizable: Each of the five VWMAs can be configured independently through the indicator's settings panel. For each one, you can set:
Length: The lookback period (number of bars) used for the calculation.
Source: The price data to use (e.g., close, open, high, low, hl2, etc.).
Timeframe: You can calculate each VWMA based on a different timeframe than the one currently displayed on your chart (e.g., view daily VWMAs on an hourly chart). Leave blank to use the chart's timeframe.
Offset: Shift the VWMA line forwards or backwards on the chart by a specific number of bars.
Style: Choose how each VWMA is displayed (Line, Histogram, or Cross).
Overlay: The VWMAs are plotted directly over the price bars for easy comparison.
Purpose:
This indicator is useful for traders who want to analyze trends using multiple volume-weighted perspectives simultaneously. By comparing VWMAs of different lengths or based on different timeframes, you can gain insights into short-term vs. long-term trends, potential support/resistance levels, and the significance of price movements based on accompanying volume.
ATR and Moving AverageUsing ATR and Moving Average: A Technical Analysis Strategy
The Average True Range (ATR) and the Moving Average are two important technical analysis tools that can be used together to identify trading opportunities in the market. In this article, we will explore how to use these two tools and how the crossover between them can indicate changes in the market.
What is ATR?
The Average True Range (ATR) is a measure of the volatility of an asset, which calculates the average true range of an asset over a period of time. The true range is the difference between the closing price and the opening price of an asset, or the difference between the closing price and the highest or lowest price of the day. ATR is an important measure of volatility, as it helps to identify the magnitude of price fluctuations of an asset.
What is Moving Average?
The Moving Average is a technical analysis tool that calculates the average price of an asset over a period of time. The Moving Average can be used to identify trends and price patterns, and is an important tool for traders. There are different types of Moving Averages, including the Simple Moving Average (SMA), the Exponential Moving Average (EMA), and the Weighted Moving Average (WMA).
Crossover between ATR and Moving Average
The crossover between ATR and Moving Average can be an important indicator of changes in the market. When ATR crosses above the Moving Average, it may indicate that the volatility of the asset is increasing and that the price may be about to rise. This occurs because ATR is increasing, which means that the true range of the asset is increasing, and the Moving Average is being surpassed, which means that the price is rising.
On the other hand, when ATR crosses below the Moving Average, it may indicate that the volatility of the asset is decreasing and that the price may be about to fall. This occurs because ATR is decreasing, which means that the true range of the asset is decreasing, and the Moving Average is being surpassed, which means that the price is falling.
Trading Strategies
There are several trading strategies that can be used with the crossover between ATR and Moving Average. Some of these strategies include:
Buying when ATR crosses above the Moving Average, with the expectation that the price will rise.
Selling when ATR crosses below the Moving Average, with the expectation that the price will fall.
Using the crossover between ATR and Moving Average as a filter for other trading strategies, such as trend analysis or pattern recognition.
In summary, the crossover between ATR and Moving Average can be an important indicator of changes in the market, and can be used as a technical analysis tool to identify trading opportunities. However, it is important to remember that no trading strategy is foolproof, and that it is always important to use a disciplined approach and manage risk adequately.
Supertrend + MACD CrossoverKey Elements of the Template:
Supertrend Settings:
supertrendFactor: Adjustable to control the sensitivity of the Supertrend.
supertrendATRLength: ATR length used for Supertrend calculation.
MACD Settings:
macdFastLength, macdSlowLength, macdSignalSmoothing: These settings allow you to fine-tune the MACD for better results.
Risk Management:
Stop-Loss: The stop-loss is based on the ATR (Average True Range), a volatility-based indicator.
Take-Profit: The take-profit is based on the risk-reward ratio (set to 3x by default).
Both stop-loss and take-profit are dynamic, based on ATR, which adjusts according to market volatility.
Buy and Sell Signals:
Buy Signal: Supertrend is bullish, and MACD line crosses above the Signal line.
Sell Signal: Supertrend is bearish, and MACD line crosses below the Signal line.
Visual Elements:
The Supertrend line is plotted in green (bullish) and red (bearish).
Buy and Sell signals are shown with green and red triangles on the chart.
Next Steps for Optimization:
Backtesting:
Run backtests on BTC in the 5-minute timeframe and adjust parameters (Supertrend factor, MACD settings, risk-reward ratio) to find the optimal configuration for the 60% win ratio.
Fine-Tuning Parameters:
Adjust supertrendFactor and macdFastLength to find more optimal values based on BTC's market behavior.
Tweak the risk-reward ratio to maximize profitability while maintaining a good win ratio.
Evaluate Market Conditions:
The performance of the strategy can vary based on market volatility. It may be helpful to evaluate performance in different market conditions or pair it with a filter like RSI or volume.
Let me know if you'd like further tweaks or explanations!
Swing Trade IndicatorThis is a Swing Trade Indicator that combines several technical indicators to analyze market conditions and generate trade signals. I've included two tables that provide real-time information to help you analyze the market and track trades: the Market Status Table and the Trade Tracking Table. These tables are overlaid on the TradingView chart and are customizable in terms of position and visibility.
Simple Moving Averages (SMAs):
Determines trend direction (e.g., bullish if fastMA > slowMA).
Calculates the average closing price over a set period:
fastMA: 21-period SMA (short-term trend).
slowMA: 50-period SMA (medium-term trend).
ultraSlowMA: 200-period SMA (long-term trend).
How:
ta.sma(close, fastLength) computes the SMA of the closing price over fastLength bars (similarly for slowLength and ultraSlowLength).
Volume Analysis:
Identifies potential liquidity spikes.
Measures trading volume to detect high activity.
Average volume over liquidityPeriod (20 bars).
Standard deviation of volume to set a dynamic threshold.
How:
avgVolume = ta.sma(volume, liquidityPeriod): Average volume.
volumeStdDev = ta.stdev(volume, liquidityPeriod): Volatility of volume.
highVolume = volume > avgVolume + volumeStdDev * volumeThresholdMultiplier: Flags high volume if it exceeds the average plus a multiplier (default 1.0) times the standard deviation.
Relative Strength Index (RSI):
Filters entries to avoid overextended markets.
Measures momentum and overbought/oversold conditions.
14-period RSI with thresholds at 60 (overbought) and 40 (oversold).
How:
rsiValue = ta.rsi(close, rsiLength) calculates RSI based on price changes over 14 bars.
Average Directional Index (ADX):
Gauges whether the trend is strong enough to trade.
Assesses trend strength.
14-period ADX.
How:
Calculates True Range (tr), Plus Directional Movement (plusDM), and Minus Directional Movement (minusDM).
Smooths these with ta.rma (Running Moving Average) over adxLength (14).
Computes plusDI and minusDI (directional indicators), then dx (difference), and finally adxValue = ta.rma(dx, adxLength) for trend strength.
Classifies as "Strong" (≥40), "Moderate" (≥20), or "Weak" (<20).
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) (Optional):
Optional filter for entry conditions if useMacdFilter is enabled.
Tracks momentum and trend changes.
Fast EMA (12), Slow EMA (26), Signal Line (9).
How:
= ta.macd(close, macdFastLength, macdSlowLength, macdSignalLength) computes the MACD components.
macdBullish = macdLine > signalLine: Bullish signal.
macdBearish = macdLine < signalLine: Bearish signal.
Liquidity Zones:
Confirms entries near key levels and suggests next trade setups.
Identifies support and resistance levels based on recent price extremes.
Dynamic levels over 20 bars (if useDynamicLevels is true).
How:
highLiquidityLevel1 = ta.highest(high, 20): Highest high in last 20 bars.
highLiquidityLevel2 = ta.highest(high , 20): Highest high from 20 to 40 bars ago.
highLiquidityLevel3 = ta.lowest(low, 20): Lowest low in last 20 bars.
highLiquidityLevel4 = ta.lowest(low , 20): Lowest low from 20 to 40 bars ago.
Upper and lower zones are derived (upperLevel, lowerLevel), with a midpoint between them.
How It Calculates Entries and Exits
Long Entry:
Basic Conditions (longEntry):
close > fastMA: Price is above the 21-period SMA.
fastMA > slowMA: Short-term trend is above medium-term trend (bullish).
rsiValue < rsiOverbought: RSI below 60 (not overbought).
(not useMacdFilter or macdBullish): If MACD filter is off, ignore it; if on, MACD must be bullish.
Confirmed Entry (confirmedLongEntry):
longEntry is true.
close >= highLiquidityLevel3 * 0.95 and close <= highLiquidityLevel3 * 1.05: Price is within 5% of the lower liquidity level (support).
Action: Sets currentPosition = 'long', records entry price and bar, plots a green triangle below the bar.
Short Entry:
Basic Conditions (shortEntry):
close < fastMA: Price is below the 21-period SMA.
fastMA < slowMA: Short-term trend is below medium-term trend (bearish).
rsiValue > rsiOversold: RSI above 40 (not oversold).
(not useMacdFilter or macdBearish): If MACD filter is off, ignore it; if on, MACD must be bearish.
Confirmed Entry (confirmedShortEntry):
shortEntry is true.
close <= highLiquidityLevel1 * 1.05 and close >= highLiquidityLevel1 * 0.95: Price is within 5% of the upper liquidity level (resistance).
Action: Sets currentPosition = 'short', records entry price and bar, plots a red triangle above the bar.
Exit Conditions
Note: The exit logic is defined but commented out in the script (//longExit and //shortExit), meaning it doesn’t automatically exit positions. It calculates stop-loss and take-profit levels for manual use:
Long Exit (if uncommented):
close < stopLossLevelLong: Price falls below stop-loss (entry price × (1 - 1.5%)).
close > takeProfitLevelLong: Price exceeds take-profit (entry price × (1 + 1.5% × 2.0)).
Short Exit (if uncommented):
close > stopLossLevelShort: Price rises above stop-loss (entry price × (1 + 1.5%)).
close < takeProfitLevelShort: Price falls below take-profit (entry price × (1 - 1.5% × 2.0)).
Suggested Levels: The script provides suggestedLongSL, suggestedLongTP, suggestedShortSL, and suggestedShortTP in the Market Status Table, based on liquidity levels rather than entry price, for manual exits.
Users Can Edit Settings:
Market Status Table Position: Dropdown (e.g., "top_right" to "bottom_left").
Trade Tracking Table Position: Dropdown (e.g., "bottom_right" to "middle_center").
Visibility Toggles (checkboxes):
Show Tables: Enable/disable tables (default: true).
Show Liquidity Zones: Not plotted but affects logic (default: true).
Show Entry Points: Show/hide entry triangles (default: true).
Use Dynamic Levels: Enable/disable liquidity zones (default: true).
Use MACD for Entry Filter: Add MACD to entry conditions (default: false).
Show MACD on Chart: Not implemented but reserved (default: false).
Indicator Periods:
Fast MA Length: Integer (default: 21, e.g., change to 10).
Slow MA Length: Integer (default: 50, e.g., change to 30).
Ultra Slow MA Length: Integer (default: 200, e.g., change to 100).
Liquidity Detection Period: Integer (default: 20, e.g., change to 10).
RSI Length: Integer (default: 14, e.g., change to 7).
ADX Length: Integer (default: 14, e.g., change to 20).
MACD Fast/Slow/Signal Length: Integers (default: 12/26/9, e.g., 9/21/5).
Thresholds:
Volume Threshold Multiplier: Float (default: 1.0, e.g., 1.5 for stricter high volume).
RSI Overbought: Integer (default: 60, e.g., 70).
RSI Oversold: Integer (default: 40, e.g., 30).
Stop Loss %: Float (default: 1.5, e.g., 2.0, range 0.1-10).
Take Profit Ratio: Float (default: 2.0, e.g., 3.0, range 1.0-5.0).
Liquidity Threshold (%): Float (default: 2.0, e.g., 1.5, range 0.5-5.0).
Vulkan Profit
Overview
The Vulkan Profit indicator is a trend-following tool that identifies potential entry and exit points by monitoring the relationship between short-term and long-term moving averages. It generates clear buy and sell signals when specific moving average conditions align, making it useful for traders looking to confirm trend changes across multiple timeframes.
How It Works
The indicator utilizes four different moving averages:
Fast WMA (period 3) - A highly responsive weighted moving average
Medium WMA (period 8) - A less sensitive weighted moving average
Fast EMA (period 18) - A responsive exponential moving average
Slow EMA (period 28) - A slower exponential moving average
These moving averages are grouped into two categories:
Short-term MAs: Fast WMA and Medium WMA
Long-term MAs: Fast EMA and Slow EMA
Signal Generation Logic
The Vulkan Profit indicator generates signals based on the relative positions of these moving averages:
Buy Signal (Green Triangle)
A buy signal appears when the minimum value of the short-term MAs becomes greater than the maximum value of the long-term MAs. In other words, when both short-term MAs cross above both long-term MAs.
Sell Signal (Red Triangle)
A sell signal appears when the maximum value of the short-term MAs becomes less than the minimum value of the long-term MAs. In other words, when both short-term MAs cross below both long-term MAs.
Visual Components
Moving Averages - All four moving averages can be displayed or hidden
Signal Arrows - Green triangles for buy signals, red triangles for sell signals
Colored Line - A line that changes color based on the current market stance (green for bullish, red for bearish)
Customization Options
The indicator offers several customization settings:
Toggle the visibility of moving averages
Toggle the visibility of buy/sell signals
Adjust the color, width, and position of the signal line
Choose between different line styles (Line, Stepline, Histogram)
Practical Trading Applications
Trend Identification: The relative positioning of all moving averages helps identify the current market trend
Entry/Exit Points: The buy and sell signals can be used as potential entry and exit points
Trend Confirmation: The colored line provides ongoing confirmation of the trend direction
Filter: Can be used in conjunction with other indicators as a trend filter
Trading Strategy Suggestions
Trend Following: Enter long positions on buy signals and exit on sell signals during trending markets
Confirmation Tool: Use the signals to confirm trades identified by other indicators
Timeframe Analysis: Apply the indicator across multiple timeframes for stronger confirmation
Risk Management: Place stop-loss orders below recent swing lows for long positions and above recent swing highs for short positions
Tips for Best Results
The indicator performs best in trending markets and may generate false signals in ranging or highly volatile markets
Consider the broader market context before taking trades based solely on these signals
Use appropriate position sizing and risk management regardless of the indicator's signals
The longer timeframes generally produce more reliable signals with fewer false positives
The Vulkan Profit indicator combines the responsiveness of short-term averages with the stability of long-term averages to capture significant trend changes while filtering out minor price fluctuations.
First EMA Touch (Last N Bars)Okay, here's a description of the "First EMA Touch (Last N Bars)" TradingView indicator:
Indicator Name: First EMA Touch (Last N Bars)
Core Purpose:
This indicator is designed to visually highlight on the chart the exact moment when the price (specifically, the high/low range of a price bar) makes contact with a specified Exponential Moving Average (EMA) for the first time within a defined recent lookback period (e.g., the last 20 bars).
How it Works:
EMA Calculation: It first calculates a standard Exponential Moving Average (EMA) based on the user-defined EMA Length and EMA Source (e.g., close price). This EMA line is plotted on the chart, often serving as a dynamic level of potential support or resistance.
"Touch" Detection: For every price bar, the indicator checks if the bar's range (from its low to its high) overlaps with or crosses the calculated EMA value for that bar. If low <= EMA <= high, it's considered a "touch".
"First Touch" Logic: This is the key feature. The indicator looks back over a specified number of preceding bars (defined by the Lookback Period). If a "touch" occurs on the current bar, and no "touch" occurred on any of the bars within that preceding lookback window, then the current touch is marked as the "first touch".
Visual Signal: When a "first touch" condition is met, the indicator plots a distinct shape (by default, a small green triangle) below the corresponding price bar. This makes it easy to spot these specific events.
Key Components & Settings:
EMA Line: The calculated EMA itself is plotted (typically as an orange line) for visual reference.
First Touch Signal: A shape (e.g., green triangle) appears below bars meeting the "first touch" criteria.
EMA Length (Input): Determines the period used for the EMA calculation. Shorter lengths make the EMA more reactive to recent price changes; longer lengths make it smoother and slower.
Lookback Period (Input): Defines how many bars (including the current one) the indicator checks backwards to determine if the current touch is the first one. A lookback of 20 means it checks if there was a touch in the previous 19 bars before signalling the current one as the first.
EMA Source (Input): Specifies which price point (close, open, high, low, hl2, etc.) is used to calculate the EMA.
Interpretation & Potential Uses:
Identifying Re-tests: The signal highlights when price returns to test the EMA after having stayed away from it for the duration of the lookback period. This can be significant as the market re-evaluates the EMA level.
Potential Reversal/Continuation Points: A first touch might indicate:
A potential area where a trend might resume after a pullback (if price bounces off the EMA).
A potential area where a reversal might begin (if price strongly rejects the EMA).
A point of interest if price consolidates around the EMA after the first touch.
Filtering Noise: By focusing only on the first touch within a period, it can help filter out repeated touches that might occur during choppy or consolidating price action around the EMA.
Confluence: Traders might use this signal in conjunction with other forms of analysis (e.g., horizontal support/resistance, trendlines, candlestick patterns, other indicators) to strengthen trade setups.
Limitations:
Lagging: Like all moving averages, the EMA is a lagging indicator.
Not Predictive: The signal indicates a specific past event (the first touch) occurred; it doesn't guarantee a future price movement.
Parameter Dependent: The effectiveness and frequency of signals heavily depend on the chosen EMA Length and Lookback Period. These may need tuning for different assets and timeframes.
Requires Confirmation: It's generally recommended to use this indicator as part of a broader trading strategy and not rely solely on its signals for trade decisions.
In essence, the "First EMA Touch (Last N Bars)" indicator provides a specific, refined signal related to price interaction with a moving average, helping traders focus on potentially significant initial tests of the EMA after a period of separation.
CRT with Trend FilterExplanation of Functionality
The CRT RED DOG with Trend Filter indicator is a tool used to identify buy and sell signals on a price chart. It filters signals based on the market trend to ensure higher accuracy.
Main Components of the Indicator
Moving Average (EMA) Settings
Users can set the moving average (EMA) length as desired, with a default value of 50 days.
This moving average is used to determine the market trend.
Determining Market Trend
Uptrend: Occurs when the closing price is above the moving average.
Downtrend: Occurs when the closing price is below the moving average.
Identifying Buy and Sell Signals
Buy Signal: Occurs when the current bar's low is lower than the previous bar's low, and the closing price is higher than the previous bar's close, during an uptrend.
Sell Signal: Occurs when the current bar's high is higher than the previous bar's high, and the closing price is lower than the previous bar's close, during a downtrend.
Displaying Signals on the Chart
Buy signals are displayed with a green arrow below the candlestick.
Sell signals are displayed with a red arrow above the candlestick.
Time frame Day >> 15M
Triangular Hull Moving Average [BigBeluga X PineIndicators]This strategy is based on the original Triangular Hull Moving Average (THMA) + Volatility indicator by BigBeluga. Full credit for the concept and design goes to BigBeluga.
The strategy blends smoothed trend-following logic using a Triangular Hull Moving Average with dynamic volatility overlays, providing actionable trade signals with responsive visual feedback. It's designed for traders who want a non-lagging trend filter while also monitoring market volatility in real time.
How the Strategy Works
1. Triangular Hull Moving Average (THMA) Core
At its core, the strategy uses a Triangular Hull Moving Average (THMA) — a variation of the traditional Hull Moving Average with triple-smoothing logic:
It combines multiple weighted moving averages (WMAs) to create a faster and smoother trend line.
This reduces lag without compromising trend accuracy.
The THMA reacts more responsively to price movements than classic MAs.
THMA Formula:
thma(_src, _length) =>
ta.wma(ta.wma(_src,_length / 3) * 3 - ta.wma(_src, _length / 2) - ta.wma(_src, _length), _length)
This logic filters out short-term noise while still being sensitive to genuine trend shifts.
2. Volatility-Enhanced Candle Plotting
An optional volatility mode overlays the chart with custom candles that incorporate volatility bands:
Wicks expand and contract dynamically based on market volatility.
The volatility value is computed using a HMA of high-low range over a user-defined length.
The candle bodies reflect THMA values, while the wicks reflect the current volatility spread.
This feature allows traders to visually gauge the strength of price moves and anticipate possible breakouts or slowdowns.
3. Trend Reversal Signal Detection
The strategy identifies trend reversals when the THMA line crosses over/under its own past value:
A bullish signal is triggered when THMA crosses above its value from two bars ago.
A bearish signal is triggered when THMA crosses below its value from two bars ago.
These shifts are marked on the chart with triangle-shaped signals for clear visibility.
This logic helps detect momentum shifts early and enables reactive trade entries.
Trade Entry & Exit Logic
Trade Modes Supported
Users can choose between:
Only Long – Enters long trades only.
Only Short – Enters short trades only.
Long & Short – Enables both directions.
Entry Conditions
Long Entry:
Triggered when a bullish crossover is detected.
Active only if the strategy mode allows long trades.
Short Entry:
Triggered when a bearish crossover is detected.
Active only if the strategy mode allows short trades.
Exit Conditions
In Only Long mode, the strategy closes long positions when a bearish signal appears.
In Only Short mode, the strategy closes short positions when a bullish signal appears.
In Long & Short mode, the strategy does not auto-close positions — instead, it opens new positions on each confirmed signal.
Dashboard Visualization
In the bottom-right corner of the chart, a live dashboard displays:
The current trend direction (🢁 for bullish, 🢃 for bearish).
The current volatility level as a percentage.
This helps traders quickly assess market status and adjust their decisions accordingly.
Customization Options
THMA Length: Adjust how smooth or reactive the trend detection should be.
Volatility Toggle & Length: Enable or disable volatility visualization and set sensitivity.
Color Settings: Choose colors for up/down trend visualization.
Trade Direction Mode: Limit the strategy to long, short, or both types of trades.
Use Cases & Strategy Strengths
1. Trend Following
Use the THMA-based candles and triangle signals to enter with momentum. The indicator adapts quickly, reducing lag and improving trade timing.
2. Volatility Monitoring
Visualize the strength of the trend with volatility wicks. Use expanding bands to confirm breakouts and contracting ones to detect weakening moves.
3. Signal Confirmation
Combine this tool with other indicators or use the trend shift triangles as confirmations for manual entries.
Conclusion
The THMA + Volatility Strategy is a non-repainting trend-following system that integrates:
Triangular Hull MA for advanced trend detection.
Real-time volatility visualization.
Clear entry signals based on trend reversals.
Configurable trade direction settings.
It is ideal for traders who:
Prefer smoothed price analysis.
Want to follow trends with precision.
Value visual volatility feedback for breakout detection.
Full credit for the original concept and indicator goes to BigBeluga.
Litecoin Trailing-Stop StrategyAltcoins Trailing-Stop Strategy
This strategy is based on a momentum breakout approach using PKAMA (Powered Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average) as a trend filter, and a delayed trailing stop mechanism to manage risk effectively.
It has been designed and fine-tuned Altcoins, which historically shows consistent volatility patterns and clean trend structures, especially on intraday timeframes like 15m and 30m.
Strategy Logic:
Entry Conditions:
Long when PKAMA indicates an upward move
Short when PKAMA detects a downward trend
Minimum spacing of 30 bars between trades to avoid overtrading
Trailing Stop:
Activated only after a customizable delay (delayBars)
User can set trailing stop % and delay independently
Helps avoid premature exits due to short-term volatility
Customizable Parameters:
This strategy uses a custom implementation of PKAMA (Powered Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average), inspired by the work of alexgrover
PKAMA is a volatility-aware moving average that adjusts dynamically to market conditions, making it ideal for altcoins where trend strength and direction change frequently.
This script is for educational and experimental purposes only. It is not financial advice. Please test thoroughly before using it in live conditions, and always adapt parameters to your specific asset and time frame.
Feedback is welcome! Feel free to clone and adapt it for your own trading style.
EMA Bias + Persistent RSI Cross (2min Table)EMA + RSI CROSS per 2min Strat
IYKYK
Tells us when EMA + RSI align to provide higher confidence trades. A+ = Both EMA + RSI are aligning
Quick Analysis [ProjeAdam]OVERVIEW:
The Quick Analysis indicator is a multi-symbol technical screener that aggregates key indicator values—RSI, TSI, ADX, and Supertrend—for up to 30 different symbols. It displays the data on a customizable dashboard table overlaid on the chart, enabling traders to quickly compare market conditions across multiple assets.
ALGORITHM:
1. Initialization and Input Setup
The script sets the indicator’s title, short title, and overlay option.
It configures the dashboard table by allowing users to toggle its display, set its position (e.g., Bottom Right), and choose its size.
Input parameters for the technical indicators (RSI, TSI, ADX, Supertrend) are defined.
Up to 30 symbols are provided with toggle options so that users can select which ones to include in the analysis.
2. Technical Indicator Calculations
Custom functions are defined to smooth data for TSI (using double EMA smoothing) and to calculate ADX based on directional movements.
The main function, which runs on each symbol via request.security, computes:
RSI based on the close price.
TSI using the change in price and smoothing techniques.
ADX by comparing positive and negative directional movements.
Supertrend to signal market direction changes.
3. Data Aggregation and Matrix Formation
A matrix is created to store the aggregated values (price, RSI, TSI, ADX, Supertrend) for each symbol.
For each enabled symbol, a custom function retrieves the current indicator values and adds them as a row to the matrix.
4. Table Visualization and Dynamic Updates
A dashboard table is initialized with user-defined location and size settings.
The table headers include “SYMBOL”, “PRICE”, “RSI”, “TSI”, “ADX”, and “Supertrend”.
For every row in the matrix, the table is updated with the corresponding data:
The symbol code is extracted and displayed.
The current price and computed indicator values are shown.
Conditional formatting is applied (RSI and TSI cells change color based on threshold levels, Supertrend is marked with “Down 📛” or “Up 🚀”).
5. Real-Time Data Updates
The table refreshes on every new bar, ensuring that the displayed data remains current and reflects the latest market conditions across the selected symbols.
INDICATOR SUMMARY: RSI, TSI, ADX, and Supertrend
RSI (Relative Strength Index): Measures the speed and change of price movements, oscillating between 0 and 100. Typically, values above 70 indicate overbought conditions, while values below 35 indicate oversold conditions.
TSI (True Strength Index): Uses double EMA smoothing to measure price momentum and helps identify trend strength and potential reversal points.
ADX (Average Directional Index): Measures the strength of a trend, regardless of its direction. Higher values suggest a strong trend, while lower values indicate a weak trend.
Supertrend: A trend-following indicator based on the Average True Range (ATR) that identifies the market direction and potential support/resistance levels. It typically displays visual signals such as “Up 🚀” or “Down 📛.”
HOW DOES THE INDICATOR WORK?
Data Gathering: Uses TradingView’s security function to request real-time data for multiple symbols simultaneously.
Indicator Computation: For each symbol, the script calculates RSI, TSI, ADX, and Supertrend using a blend of built-in Pine Script functions and custom smoothing algorithms.
Visualization: A dynamically updated table displays the results with conditional colors and symbols for immediate visual cues on market trends and potential trade signals.
SETTINGS PANEL
Dashboard Configuration: Options to toggle the Trend Table, select its position, and determine the table size.
Indicator Parameters: Customizable settings for RSI (length, overbought/oversold levels), TSI (smoothing lengths and thresholds), ADX (smoothing and DI length), and Supertrend (ATR length and factor).
Symbol Management: Enable/disable switches for each of the 30 symbols along with symbol input fields, allowing users to choose which assets to analyze.
BENEFITS OF THE QUICK ANALYSIS INDICATOR
Comprehensive Market Overview:
Aggregates key technical metrics for multiple symbols on a single chart.
Customizability and Flexibility:
Fully configurable dashboard and indicator settings allow tailoring to various trading strategies.
Time Efficiency:
Automates the process of monitoring multiple assets, saving traders time and effort.
Visual Clarity:
Conditional color coding and clear table formatting provide immediate insights into market conditions.
Enhanced Multi-Market Analysis:
The ability to toggle and compare up to 30 different symbols supports diversified market evaluation.
CUSTOMIZATION
Users can modify indicator periods, thresholds, and table aesthetics through the input panel.
The symbol selection mechanism enables dynamic analysis across various markets, facilitating comparative insights and strategic decision-making.
CONCLUSION
The Quick Analysis indicator serves as a powerful, multi-symbol screener for traders by consolidating crucial technical indicators into a single, easy-to-read dashboard. Its dynamic updates, extensive customization options, and clear visual representation make it an essential tool for real-time market analysis.
If you have any ideas to further enhance this tool—whether by integrating additional sources, refining calculations, or adding new features—please feel free to suggest them in DM.
MA Distance (% and ATR) + Threshold CountMA Distance (% & ATR) + Threshold Count
This script visualizes how far price is extended from key moving averages using both percentage and ATR-based distance. It includes a dynamic threshold system that tracks how unusually extended price is, based on historical volatility.
🔍 Features:
Calculates distance from:
10 EMA, 20 SMA, 50 SMA, 100 SMA, 200 SMA
Measures both:
% distance from each MA
ATR-multiple distance from each MA
Automatically calculates dynamic upper/lower thresholds using a rolling standard deviation
Plots a colored dot when distance exceeds these thresholds
Dots appear above or below the bar depending on direction
Color-coded summary table displays:
% distance
ATR distance
Threshold extremes
Total number of threshold hits
🎯 Customization:
Toggle which MAs to display in the table
Set your own lookback window and threshold sensitivity (via stdev multiplier)
Show/hide dots based on how many thresholds are hit
Use this tool to identify when price is overextended from its moving averages and approaching historically significant levels of deviation. Great for spotting mean reversion setups, parabolic runs, or deep pullbacks.
DAMA OSC - Directional Adaptive MA OscillatorOverview:
The DAMA OSC (Directional Adaptive MA Oscillator) is a highly customizable and versatile oscillator that analyzes the delta between two moving averages of your choice. It detects trend progression, regressions, rebound signals, MA cross and critical zone crossovers to provide highly contextual trading information.
Designed for trend-following, reversal timing, and volatility filtering, DAMA OSC adapts to market conditions and highlights actionable signals in real-time.
Features:
Support for 11 custom moving average types (EMA, DEMA, TEMA, ALMA, KAMA, etc.)
Customizable fast & slow MA periods and types
Histogram based on percentage delta between fast and slow MA
Trend direction coloring with “Green”, “Blue”, and “Red” zones
Rebound detection using close or shadow logic
Configurable thresholds: Overbought, Oversold, Underbought, Undersold
Optional filters: rebound validation by candle color or flat-zone filter
Full visual overlay: MA lines, crossover markers, rebound icons
Complete alert system with 16 preconfigured conditions
How It Works:
Histogram Logic:
The histogram measures the percentage difference between the fast and slow MA:
hist_value = ((FastMA - SlowMA) / SlowMA) * 100
Trend State Logic (Green / Blue / Red):
Green_Up = Bullish acceleration
Blue_Up (or Red_Up, depending the display settings) = Bullish deceleration
Blue_Down (or Green_Down, depending the display settings) = Bearish deceleration
Red_Down = Bearish acceleration
Rebound Logic:
A rebound is detected when price:
Crosses back over a selected MA (fast or slow)
After being away for X candles (rebound_backstep)
Optional: filtered by histogram zones or candle color
Inputs:
Display Options:
Show/hide MA lines
Show/hide MA crosses
Show/hide price rebounds
Enable/disable blue deceleration zones
DAMA Settings:
Fast/Slow MA type and length
Source input (close by default)
Overbought/Oversold levels
Underbought/Undersold levels
Rebound Settings:
Use Close and/or Shadow
Rebound MA (Fast/Slow)
Candle color validation
Flat zone filter rebounds (between UnderSold and UnderBought)
Available MA type:
SMA (Simple MA)
EMA (Exponential MA)
DEMA (Double EMA)
TEMA (Triple EMA)
WMA (Weighted MA)
HMA (Hull MA)
VWMA (Volume Weighted MA)
Kijun (Ichimoku Baseline)
ALMA (Arnaud Legoux MA)
KAMA (Kaufman Adaptive MA)
HULLMOD (Modified Hull MA, Same as HMA, tweaked for Pine v6 constraints)
Notes:
**DEMA/TEMA** reduce lag compared to EMA, useful for faster reaction in trending markets.
**KAMA/ALMA** are better suited to noisy or volatile environments (e.g., BTC).
**VWMA** reacts strongly to volume spikes.
**HMA/HULLMOD** are great for visual clarity in fast moves.
Alerts Included (Fully Configurable):
Golden Cross:
Fast MA crosses above Slow MA
Death Cross:
Fast MA crosses below Slow MA
Bullish Rebound:
Rebound from below MA in uptrend
Bearish Rebound:
Rebound from above MA in downtrend
Bull Progression:
Transition into Green_Up with positive delta
Bear Progression:
Transition into Red_Down with negative delta
Bull Regression:
Exit from Red_Down into Blue/Green with negative delta
Bear Regression:
Exit from Green_Up into Blue/Red with positive delta
Crossover Overbought:
Histogram crosses above Overbought
Crossunder Overbought:
Histogram crosses below Overbought
Crossover Oversold:
Histogram crosses above Oversold
Crossunder Oversold:
Histogram crosses below Oversold
Crossover Underbought:
Histogram crosses above Underbought
Crossunder Underbought:
Histogram crosses below Underbought
Crossover Undersold:
Histogram crosses above Undersold
Crossunder Undersold:
Histogram crosses below Undersold
Credits:
Created by Eff_Hash. This code is shared with the TradingView community and full free. do not hesitate to share your best settings and usage.
Trend Strength MeterThe Trend Strength Meter (TSM) is a powerful and versatile indicator designed to help traders identify market trends, measure their strength, and detect potential reversals with ease. This indicator combines the power of moving averages, divergence detection, and a clean, customizable dashboard to provide actionable insights for traders of all levels.
How It Works
Trend Strength Calculation:
1. The TSM calculates the trend strength using the difference between two Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs): a fast EMA (default: 20) and a slow EMA (default: 50).
2. The difference is expressed as a percentage of the slow EMA, providing a clear measure of the trend's strength and direction.
Histogram Visualization:
1. A color-coded histogram visually represents the trend strength:
Green: Bullish trend
Red: Bearish trend
Gray: Neutral or no significant trend
2. A smoothed trend strength line (SMA of the trend strength) is also plotted for better clarity.
Divergence Detection:
1. The indicator detects bullish and bearish divergences using the RSI (Relative Strength Index) and price action.
2. Bullish Divergence: Price makes a lower low, but RSI makes a higher low, signaling potential upward momentum.
3. Bearish Divergence: Price makes a higher high, but RSI makes a lower high, signaling potential downward momentum.
=> Divergences are marked with arrows on the chart:
Green Arrow: Bullish divergence
Red Arrow: Bearish divergence
Dashboard:
1. A clean and informative dashboard displays key information:
Trend Strength Value: The current strength of the trend
Trend Direction: Bullish, Bearish, or Neutral
Last Signal: Buy, Sell, or None (based on divergence signals)
The dashboard is fully customizable and can be positioned anywhere on the chart (e.g., top-right, bottom-left, center, etc.).
Key Features
1. Trend Strength Measurement: Quickly identify the strength and direction of the trend.
2. Divergence Detection: Spot potential reversals before they occur with bullish and bearish divergence signals.
3. Customizable Dashboard: Move the dashboard to your preferred location on the chart for better visibility.
4. User-Friendly Design: Clean visuals and intuitive color coding make it easy to interpret market conditions.
5. Actionable Signals: Provides clear Buy/Sell signals based on divergence, helping traders make informed decisions.
How to Use
1. Trend Confirmation:
Use the histogram and trend strength value to confirm the current market trend.
Green bars indicate a bullish trend, while red bars indicate a bearish trend.
2. Divergence Signals:
Look for divergence arrows (green for bullish, red for bearish) to anticipate potential reversals.
Combine divergence signals with other technical analysis tools for higher accuracy.
3. Dashboard Insights:
Monitor the dashboard for real-time updates on trend strength, direction, and the latest signal.
Use the "Last Signal" (Buy/Sell) to validate your trading decisions.
4. Custom Settings:
Adjust the EMA lengths and divergence lookback period to suit your trading style and timeframe.
Position the dashboard anywhere on the chart for convenience.
Best Practices
1. Use the TSM in conjunction with other indicators or price action analysis for confirmation.
2. Test the indicator on different timeframes to find the one that works best for your strategy.
3. Always practice proper risk management when trading.
Disclaimer
This indicator is a tool to assist in technical analysis and should not be used as a standalone trading strategy. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and consult with a financial advisor before making trading decisions.
Adv EMA Cloud v6 (ADX, Alerts)Summary:
This indicator provides a multi-faceted view of market trends using Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) arranged in visually intuitive clouds, enhanced with an optional ADX-based range filter and configurable alerts for key market conditions. It aims to help traders quickly gauge trend alignment across short, medium, and long timeframes while filtering signals during potentially choppy market conditions.
Key Features:
Multiple EMAs: Displays 10-period (Fast), 20-period (Mid), and 50-period (Slow) EMAs.
Long-Term Trend Filter: Includes a 200-period EMA to provide context for the overall dominant trend direction.
Dual EMA Clouds:
Fast/Mid Cloud (10/20 EMA): Fills the area between the 10 and 20 EMAs. Defaults to Green when 10 > 20 (bullish short-term momentum) and Red when 10 < 20 (bearish short-term momentum).
Mid/Slow Cloud (20/50 EMA): Fills the area between the 20 and 50 EMAs. Defaults to Aqua when 20 > 50 (bullish mid-term trend) and Fuchsia when 20 < 50 (bearish mid-term trend).
Optional ADX Range Filter: Uses the Average Directional Index (ADX) to identify potentially non-trending or choppy markets. When enabled and ADX falls below a user-defined threshold, the EMA clouds will turn grey, visually warning that trend-following signals may be less reliable.
Configurable Alerts: Provides several built-in alert conditions using Pine Script's alertcondition function:
Confluence Condition: Triggers when a 10/20 EMA crossover occurs while both EMA clouds show alignment (both bullish/green/aqua or both bearish/red/fuchsia) and price respects the 200 EMA filter and the ADX filter indicates a trend (if filters are enabled).
MA Filter Cross: Triggers when price crosses above or below the 200 EMA filter line.
Full Alignment Start: Triggers on the first bar where full bullish or bearish alignment occurs (both clouds aligned + MA filter respected + ADX trending, if filters are enabled).
How It Works:
EMA Calculation: Standard Exponential Moving Averages are calculated for the 10, 20, 50, and 200 periods based on the closing price.
Cloud Creation: The fill() function visually shades the area between the 10 & 20 EMAs and the 20 & 50 EMAs.
Cloud Coloring: The color of each cloud is determined by the relationship between the two EMAs that define it (e.g., if EMA 10 is above EMA 20, the first cloud is bullish-colored).
ADX Filter Logic: The script calculates the ADX value. If the "Use ADX Trend Filter?" input is checked and the calculated ADX is below the specified "ADX Trend Threshold", the script considers the market potentially ranging.
ADX Visual Effect: During detected ranging periods (if the ADX filter is active), the plotCloud12Color and plotCloud23Color variables are assigned a neutral grey color instead of their normal bullish/bearish colors before being passed to the fill() function.
Alert Logic: Boolean variables track the specific conditions (crossovers, cloud alignment, filter positions, ADX state). The alertcondition() function creates triggerable alerts based on these pre-defined conditions.
Potential Interpretation (Not Financial Advice):
Trend Alignment: When both clouds share the same directional color (e.g., both bullish - Green & Aqua) and price is on the corresponding side of the 200 EMA filter, it may suggest a stronger, more aligned trend. Conversely, conflicting cloud colors may indicate indecision or transition.
Dynamic Support/Resistance: The EMA lines themselves (especially the 20, 50, and 200) can sometimes act as dynamic levels where price might react.
Range Warning: Greyed-out clouds (when ADX filter is enabled) serve as a visual warning that trend-based strategies might face increased difficulty or whipsaws.
Confluence Alerts: The specific confluence alerts signal moments where multiple conditions align (crossover + cloud agreement + filters), which some traders might view as higher-probability setups.
Customization:
All EMA lengths (10, 20, 50, 200) are adjustable via the Inputs menu.
The ADX length and threshold are configurable.
The MA Trend Filter and ADX Trend Filter can be independently enabled or disabled.
Disclaimer:
This indicator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Trading financial markets involves significant risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own thorough analysis and consider your risk tolerance before making any trading decisions. This indicator should be used in conjunction with other analysis methods and tools. Do not trade based solely on the signals or visuals provided by this indicator.
PARKER Currency Strength with RESETS v 3.00PARKER Currency Strength v3.00 is a comprehensive multi-currency strength indicator designed for Forex traders who want detailed insights into major currency performance. Here are some of its key features:
Customizable Session Resets:
The indicator supports automatic resets of currency strength calculations at the start of each major market session (Sydney, Tokyo, London, and New York). You can also enable a custom reset with a user-defined reset time and name.
User-Defined Market Hours:
With the new "Market Settings" section, you can set the open and close times for each market (Sydney, Tokyo, London, and New York) using hour and minute inputs. This allows you to tailor the session times to your local time zone or trading preferences.
Session Shading and Labels:
The background color of the indicator pane changes based on the active market session. Labels are generated at the start of each session to provide clear visual cues. Market session labels and times are also displayed on the chart for quick reference.
Dual Mode Display:
In addition to the reset-based currency strength calculations, the indicator can plot "normal" (continuous) currency strength lines at 50% transparency, allowing you to compare different calculation methods side by side.
Fully Customizable Appearance:
Customize line colors, widths, and offsets for each currency pair via user inputs, enabling a personalized and clear display that fits your trading style.
This indicator is ideal for Forex traders who require a dynamic and highly customizable tool to monitor currency strength, adapt to different market sessions, and make informed trading decisions based on real-time performance data.