Delta-RSI Strategy (with filters)Delta-RSI Strategy (with filters):
This is a version of the Delta-RSI Oscillator strategy with several criteria available to filter entry and exit signals. This script is also suitable for backtesting over a user-defined period and offers several risk management options (take profit and stop loss).
Since the publication of the Delta-RSI Oscillator script, I have been asked many times to make it compatible with the Strategy Tester and add filtering criteria to minimize "false" signals. This version covers many of these requests. Feel free to insert your favorite D-RSI parameters and play around!
ABOUT DELTA-RSI
Delta-RSI represents a smoothed time derivative of the RSI designed as a momentum indicator (see links below):
INPUT DESCTIPTION
MODEL PARAMETERS
Polynomial Order : The order of local polynomial used to interpolate the relative strength index (RSI).
Length : The length of the lookback frame where local regression is applied.
RSI Length : The timeframe of RSI used as input.
Signal Length : The signal line is a EMA of the D-RSI time series. This input parameter defines the EMA length.
ALLOWED ENTRIES
The strategy can include long entries, short entries or both.
ENTRY AND EXIT CONDITIONS
Zero-crossing : bullish trade signal triggered when D-RSI crosses zero from negative to positive values (bearish otherwise)
Signal Line Crossing : bullish trade signal triggered when D-RSI crosses from below to above the signal line (bearish otherwise)
Direction Change : bullish trade signal triggered when D-RSI was negative and starts ascending (bearish otherwise)
APPLY FILTERS TO
The filters (described below) can be applied to long entry, short entry and exit signals.
RELATIVE VOLUME FILTER
When activated, the D-RSI-driven entries and exits will be triggered only if the current volume is greater than N times the average over the last M bars.
VOLATILITY FILTER
When activated, the D-RSI-driven entries and exits will be triggered only if the N-period average true range, ATR, is greater than the M-period ATR. If N < M, this condition implies increasing volatility.
OVERBOUGHT/OVERSOLD FILTER
When activated, the D-RSI-driven entries and exits will be triggered only if the value of 14-period RSI is in the range between N and M.
STOP LOSS/TAKE PROFIT
Fixed and trailing stop loss as well as take profit options are available.
FIXED BACKTESTING START/END DATES
If the checkboxes are not checked, the strategy will backtest all available price bars.
Tìm kiếm tập lệnh với "Relative"
Quantitative Qualitative Estimation QQE
The QQE indicator is a momentum based indicator to determine trend and sideways.
The Qualitative Quantitative Estimation (QQE) indicator works like a smoother version of the popular Relative Strength Index (RSI) indicator. QQE expands on RSI by adding two volatility based trailing stop lines. These trailing stop lines are composed of a fast and a slow moving Average True Range (ATR). These ATR lines are smoothed making this indicator less susceptible to short term volatility.
The most common method of using QQE is to look for crosses of the fast and slow moving trailing stop lines during periods when the QQE line reflects overbought or oversold conditions
Qualitative Quantitative Estimation made up of a smoothed Relative Strength Index (RSI) indicator plus fast and slow volatility-based trailing levels.
Qualitative Quantitative Estimation can be used in two directions:
1.Determine the trend, i.e. if the line is above the 50 level, the trend is ascending, if below - descending;
2.Search for signals at the moment of crossing of the QQE FAST (maroon) and QQE SLOW (blue) lines.
The QQE itself is generally considered to indicate an up-trend ifQQE FAST is above QQE SLOW, and a down-trend if below QQE SLOW.
Often a middle-range between 40 and 60 is set and if the indicator is in that range, then the market is considered to be tracking sideways, or in no trend.
You will need to set only one parameter – “SF” "RSI SMoothing Factor", an analogue of the period in RSI.
By the way, judging from the open source information, the algorithm used the standard strength index with a period of 14 for calculations.
Various signals can be created from the indicator such as:
-Buy when QQE FAST crosses above QQE SLOW below 50 level or just buy when QQE lines crosses above 50 level.
-Sell when QQE FAST crosses below QQE SLOW above 50 level or just sell when QQE lines crosses below 50 level.
WARNING: QQE IS A RSI BASED INDICATOR SO THAT IT CAN TRIGGER FALSE SIGNALS DURING DIVERGENCES!
Kıvanç Özbilgiç
Comparison (Malaysia Index & Sector)This is just a simple tool for convenient to compare and showing a clear image of all sector and index in Malaysia. They are just in one indicator. From this indicator, you can predict momentum of each sector in Malaysia, which is currently in bull or bear trend.
STRUCTURE
In the setting, the first line with the option of the following index (Malaysia Index) :
1. FBMKLCI
2. FTSEMYX:FBMSCAP
3. FTSEMYX:FBMACE
4. FTSEMYX:FBM70
5. FTSEMYX:FBMT100
6. FTSEMYX:FBMFLG
7. FTSEMYX:FBMEMAS
8. FTSEMYX:FA40
9. FTSEMYX:FBMMSCS
10. FTSEMYX:FBMAPMYR
11. FTSEMYX:FBMMSCAP
The rest of lines is all of the following sector (Malaysia Sector):
1. Technology
2. Telecommunication
3. Health
4. Consumer Product
5. Industrial Product
6. Construction
7. Property
8. Plantation
9. Utilities
10. Transportation
11. Energy
12. REIT
13. Finance
The last line (Line 15) is provided for other stock/index which is not available in option to manually fill.
All sector and index price are smoothen by Moving Average (MA). The default moving average is Relative Moving Average (RMA) which is used in Relative Strength Index ( RSI ) Oscillator. But the range is different from RSI , it is from -100 to 100 instead of 0 to 100. In the end, result and interpretation are just the same as RSI . Green area indicates oversold area, while red area is overbought.
Other choice of Moving Averages are available to change.
The problem of putting all together is the script may take longer to process. It is just for convenient use.
Bottom-Up or Top-Down Invest?
Choppiness Index and RSI by ceyhun
Choppiness Index and RSI by ceyhun
This indicator is based on the inverse relationship between CHOP and RSI.
Bar color
If the RSI is greater than CHOP, the Bar color will be blue.
If CHOP is greater than RSI, the bar color will be red.
CHOP
If CHOP is less than 38.2, the color will turn blue. positive
If the CHOP is between 38.2 and 61.8, the color will be yellow and neutral.
If CHOP is greater than 61.8, the color will turn red. negative
Rsi
If Rsi is greater than 61.8, the color will turn blue, positive
If Rsi is between 38.2 and 61.8, the color will be hexagonal and neutral
If Rsi is less than 38.2 the color will be red, negative
The Choppiness Index (CHOP) is an indicator designed to determine if the market is choppy (trading sideways) or not choppy (trading within a trend in either direction). The Choppiness Index is an example of an indicator that is not directional at all. CHOP is not meant to predict future market direction, it is a metric to be used to for defining the market's trendiness only. A basic understanding of the indicator would be; higher values equal more choppiness, while lower values indicate directional trending.
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a well versed momentum based oscillator which is used to measure the speed (velocity) as well as the change (magnitude) of directional price movements. Essentially the RSI, when graphed, provides a visual mean to monitor both the current, as well as historical, strength and weakness of a particular market. The strength or weakness is based on closing prices over the duration of a specified trading period creating a reliable metric of price and momentum changes. Given the popularity of cash settled instruments (stock indexes) and leveraged financial products (the entire field of derivatives); RSI has proven to be a viable indicator of price movements.
RSIVolume_2graf.01[wozdux] Tactics and strategy Tactics and strategy
The indicator combines 2 variants of the RSI indicator. The first option is calculated relative to the normal close price. The second option is calculated relative to the volume price. The volume price is calculated as the product of the volume price. For normal RSI, the default period is 9, for the volume price .
Settings. Level_close sets the width of the middle region, the oscillations of the indicator chart for the average of the closing price. Level_volume*close sets the critical level for the volume price. Period 24 (len1) specifies the RSI calculation period for the volume price. Period 9 (len3) specifies the RSI calculation period for the regular price.
The combination of two versions of the indicator helps to see more truthful information about the mood of buyers and sellers. When the volume price reaches its critical level of 8 units, it is a signal to a strong fall in the price. In this state, you should monitor the classic RSI. Thus, the classic RSI determines the tactical movement, and the volumetric RSI – strategic.
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Тактика и стратегия
Индикатор совмещает в себе 2 варианта индикатора RSI. Первый вариант вычисляется относительно обычной цены закрытия. Второй вариант вычисляется относительно объемной цены. Объемную цену вычисляют как произведение цены на объем. Для обычного RSI по умолчанию берется период 9 , для объемной цены .
Настройки. Level_close задает ширину средней области колебания графика индикатора для обычной цены закрытия. Level_volume*close задает критический уровень для объемной цены. Период 24 (len1) задает период вычисления RSI для объемной цены. Период 9(len3) задает период вычисления RSI для обычной цены.
Сочетание двух вариантов индикатора помогает увидеть более правдивую информацию о настроениях покупателей и продавцов. Когда объемная цена достигает своего критического уровня 8 единиц, то это является сигналом к сильному падению цены. В этом состоянии следует следить за классической RSI. Таким образом классическое RSI определяет тактическое движение, а объемное RSI – стратегическое.
SPY/VXX/TLT RSI crisscrossAre treasuries moving with VIX or are they correlated with equities?
Who's changing faster, VXX or SPY?
The indicator displays the RSI's of SPY, VXX and TLT so you can see how they are moving relative to each other.
Apirine Slow RSI [LazyBear]The slow relative strength index (SRSI) indicator created by Vitali Apirine is a momentum price oscillator similar to RSI in its application and interpretation. Oscillating between 0 and 100, it generates both OB/OS signals and midline (50) cross over signals and divergences.
As author suggests, bullish/bearish divergences generated by SRSI are not as effective during strong trends. To avoid fading an established trend, the system is used in conjunction with a trend confirmation tool like ADX indicator.
You can configure the OB/OS levels, default are 70/30.
More info:
The slow relative strength index, TASC 2015-07
List of my public indicators: bit.ly
List of my app-store indicators: blog.tradingview.com
S&P500 Sectors Relative Overviewdear fellows,
this indicator is yet another representation of S&P 500 industry sectors.
it is inspired by mr. stanley drukenmiller who in an interview mentioned that he knows no better market forecaster than the inside of the sp500 itself, which are its industry sectors.
thus, we have been for a while thinking on how to represent the performance of these sectors such that one could visually estimated the current stage of the cycle, and grasp the next one.
unfortunatelly, we believe this cannot be achieved by solely looking into SP500 industry sectors. perhaps coupled with a broad market indicator like our MRI, for instance, one can have greater odds of success.
what does it show
it displays colorfully through out time how each sector travels through its 200 period high and lows.
note that an alternative view of the sectors relatively to SPX could be considered, but by now we focused on the relative performance against its recent past (200 period, regardless the timeframe).
over the colored columns we've plotted in white the SPX under the same logic.
how is it calculated
each sector price is converged into a percentage of how near it is to its 200 period low.
so, when the price of the sector index equals the 200 period min, it is valued as 0.
when it equals the 200 period max, it is valued as 100.
same for the white plot of SPX above the colored columns.
thus a flat reading at 100 makes it indistinguishable a continued ATH extension from a pause at the ATH.
how is it colored
when the converted price results in a value lesser or equal 33, its respective bar is colored in red.
when it is between 33 and 66, the bar is colored in yellow.
and when it lies above 66, in green.
on how is it grouped
the specific ordering of the sectors is not yet settled.
we've grouped it visually based on likelihood.
on how to use this indicator
although we believe that it does not suffice for any conclusion on the market, we do not believe that an above chart can improve the resulting insight. so, at least by the time being, we recommend it to be stared alone, although not exclusively, by trader.
we are open to suggestions of any sort.
your feedback is much appreciated.
this is a work we'd have been looking for a while to put it out.
enjoy.
best regards.
Zigzag Simple [SCL]🟩 OVERVIEW
Draws zigzag lines from pivot Highs to pivot Lows. You can choose between three different ways of calculating pivots:
• True Highs and Lows
• Williams pivots
• Oscillator pivots
🟩 HOW TO USE
This indicator can be used to understand market structure, which is arguably the primary thing you need to be aware of when trading. The zigzag by itself does not display a market structure bias, nor any information about prices of pivots, HH and HL labels, or anything like that. Nevertheless, a simple zigzag is perhaps the easiest and most intuitive way to understand what price is doing.
Choose a pivot style that you like, customise the colours and line style, and enjoy!
🟩 PIVOT TYPES EXPLAINED
True Highs and Lows
This is not an invention of mine (all credit to my humble mentor), but I haven't seen anyone else code them up. A true High is a close below the low of the candle with the highest high. A true Low is a close above the high of a candle with the lowest low. These are solid, price action-based pivots that can sometimes confirm quickly.
Williams pivots
This is how most people calculate pivots. They're simply the highest high for x bars back and x bars forwards. They're the vanilla of pivots IMO: serviceable but not very interesting. They're very convenient to code because there are built-in Pine functions for them: ta.pivothigh and ta.pivotlow . They confirm a predictable number of bars after they happen, which is great for coding but also makes the trader wait for confirmation.
Oscillator pivots
This is a completely different concept, which uses momentum in order to define pivots. For example, when you get a rise in momentum and momentum then drops a configurable amount, it confirms a pivot high, and vice versa for a pivot low. I don't know if anyone else does it –- although some indicators do mark pivots in momentum itself, and plenty do divergences, I wasn't able to find one that specifically marked *pivots in price* because of pivots in momentum 🤷♂️
Anyway, while this approach needs a whole investigation on its own, here we simply plot some pivots in a smoothed RSI. This indicator doesn't plot the actual momentum values -- for a more visual understanding of how this works, refer to the examples in the OscillatorPivots library.
🟩 UNIQUE ADVANTAGES
In contrast to other zigzag indicators available, this one lets you choose between the standard and some more unique methods of generating the zigzags. Additionally, because it's based on libraries, it is relatively easy for programmers to use as a basis for experimentation.
🟩 GEEK STUFF
Although there is considerable practical use for pivot-based zigzags in trading, this script is primarily a demonstration in coding -- specifically the power of libraries!
Most of the script consists of setup, especially defining inputs. The final section sacrifices some readability for conciseness, simply to emphasise how little code you need when the heavy lifting is done by libraries .
The actual calculations and drawing are achieved in just 8 lines.
The equivalent code in the libraries is ~250 lines long.
All libraries used are my own, public and open-source:
• MarketStructure
• DrawZigZag
• OscillatorPivots
RSI Shadow by TartigradiaHave you ever wondered how much the RSI can vary during an open session? How much wicks can make the RSI overshoots before it retraces for the close?
This indicator plots the RSI shadow, which is the area between the highest and lowest RSI values attained during each open session, from the high/low wick price candle (ie, not the open value).
Technically, we calculate the RSI as usual for all past bars, except for current bar for which we use the high and low values to calculate the RSI Shadow bounds. The invisible PineScript loop then repeats this process for each bar.
In practice, the RSI Shadow provides 2 different informations:
1. This allows to visually represent the variability that historically happened for each bar, which help in better understanding the context at the time and may help predict future similar patterns.
2. The closer the RSI is to one bound, high or low, the more bullish or bearish respectively the price action is. Intuitively, when RSI is close to the high shadow bound, it means that price action is so bullish it often closes in proximity to the highest value attained during the open session, hence very bullish sentiment. And inversely for low and bearish sentiment. To ease visualization of these sentiments, a background highlighting is provided.
The indicator works under all timeframes, but it appears to provide a very reliable information with longer timeframe. The background highlighting showing the bullish/bearish sentiment based on the RSI Shadow appears to indicate crypto market cycles relatively reliably, with 2-3 consecutive bars with the same background color indicating a strong trend.
False positives can be reduced by looking at both the background color and the RSI direction, if both are congruent (ie, both bullish), then the trend indication is good, otherwise the trend indicated by the background color should be disregarded. An option was added to uncolor background if incongruent with RSI's direction.
There is also a "shadow margin" setting that allows to further reduce the number of false positives, at the expense of reduced sensitivity (a margin of 3 seems to eliminate most false positives).
Note: if you need a more complete RSI indicator with overbought/oversold signals, check out RSI+ (alt), which includes all RSI related indicators I make (such as RSI Shadow):
Optimised RSI strategy for Reversals (by Coinrule)The most common way to use the RSI to spot a good buy opportunity is to check for values lower than 30. Unfortunately, the RSI can remain in oversold territory for long periods, and that could leave you trapped in a trade in loss. It would be appropriate to wait for a confirmation of the trend reversal.
In the example above I use a short-term Moving Average (in this case, the MA9) coupled with an RSI lower than 40. This combination of events is relatively rare as reversal confirmations usually come when RSI values are already higher. As unusual as this setup is, it provides buy-opportunities with much higher chances of success.
The parameters of this strategy would be:
ENTRY: RSI lower than 40 and MA9 lower than the price
TAKE PROFIT and STOP-LOSS with a ratio of at least 2. That means that if you set up a take profit of 3%, your stop-loss shouldn’t be larger than 1.5%.
The advantage of this approach is that it has a high rate of success and allows you the flexibility of setting up the percentages of the take profit and stop-loss according to your preferences and risk appetite.
EMA Slope - RSI Indicator# EMA Slope - RSI Indicator
## Script Description (for Publishing Page)
**EMA Slope - RSI Indicator** combines normalized EMA slope momentum analysis with RSI divergence detection and momentum comparison to create a visual signal indicator with five distinct signal types. The indicator's originality lies in its unique "No Trade Zone" (NTZ) concept applied to slope momentum, combined with centered RSI format for direct comparison, and multiple complementary signal methods that work together to identify both trend-following and reversal opportunities across different market conditions.
**Core Concept - EMA Slope Normalization:** Calculates rate of change of long MA (default 160 EMA) by comparing current value to N bars ago (default 3 bars). Raw slope difference normalized to -100 to +100 scale using 500-bar rolling range: normalizedSlope = 100 * (longMA - longMA ) / (highest(maDF, 500) - lowest(maDF, 500)). Creates consistent momentum oscillator comparable across price levels and timeframes.
**No Trade Zone (NTZ) Logic:** NTZ (±8 default) creates neutral zone where slope momentum is too weak for reliable signals. Indicator only triggers NTZ Cross signals when slope crosses out of threshold zone, ensuring signals occur only when momentum is sufficiently strong.
**Centered RSI Format (RSI-50):** Traditional RSI (0-100 range) difficult to compare with slope. This indicator uses centered RSI = (RSI - 50), creating -50 to +50 range zero-centered on same scale as normalized slope. Enables direct visual and mathematical comparison between RSI and slope momentum, enabling Slope-RSI exhaustion detection and RSI-Slope Oscillator signals.
**Component Integration:** Five signal types target different market conditions. NTZ Cross and Acceleration target trend-following when momentum strong. RSI Divergence and Slope-RSI Divergence target reversals when price/momentum diverge. RSI-Slope Oscillator targets momentum alignment when RSI and slope converge. Multi-method approach provides signals across trending, reversing, and ranging markets.
### 📊 Technical Calculations
**Slope Normalization:** maDF = longMA - longMA , normalized: maDf = 100 * maDF / (highest(maDF, 500) - lowest(maDF, 500)), ranges -100 to +100.
**Acceleration Detection:** maAcce = abs(maDf - maDf ) * smoothBars * 2, normalized: maAcc = 50 * maAcce / highest(maAcce, 200). Values above threshold (35 display, 40 signals) indicate sudden momentum shifts. Visualized as colored circles: cyan (bullish), red (bearish).
**RSI Calculation:** rsi = sma(rsi(source, length), smoothing), centered: cRsi = rsi - 50 (ranges -50 to +50). Smoothed using SMA (default 3 bars) to reduce noise.
**RSI Divergence:** Uses pivot high/low detection on smoothed RSI. Pivot lookback = 16 - sensitivityInput (inverse: sensitivity 6 = 10-bar lookback, sensitivity 10 = 6-bar lookback). Compares price pivots (actual high/low including wicks) against RSI pivots. Bullish: priceLowerLow AND rsiHigherLow. Bearish: priceHigherHigh AND rsiLowerHigh. Stores multiple previous pivots (default 8 max) for comparison.
**Slope-RSI Exhaustion:** Compares normalized slope against centered RSI on same scale. Bearish: slope accelerating up (delta > 0, slope > NTZ) BUT RSI declining (cRsi < cRsi AND cRsi < cRsi ). Bullish: slope accelerating down (delta < 0, slope < -NTZ) BUT RSI rising. Gap threshold (default 10.0 points) filters noise. Visualized with dashed lines and gap labels.
**RSI-Slope Oscillator:** State machine tracks cross events (rsiSlopeCrossUp = cRsi > maDf AND cRsi <= maDf ), waits for confirmation: both RSI and slope heading same direction. Long: RSI crosses above slope AND both heading UP. Short: RSI crosses below slope AND both heading DOWN. Useful for range-bound markets.
**Stretch Filter:** maPercentDiff = (longMA - shortMA) / shortMA * 100. Blocks long signals if longMA > shortMA by threshold (overextended up). Blocks short signals if shortMA > longMA by threshold (overextended down). Default 0.45% prevents signals when MAs too far apart.
**Delta Calculation:** Measures change in normalized slope between bars. Timeframe mode: compares current confirmed slope with previous confirmed (more reliable, slight delay). Standard mode: compares current with previous bar (faster, may use unconfirmed). Minimum threshold (default 3.4) filters weak momentum changes.
**Trailing Stop (Blackflag FTS Swingarm):** Uses Wilder's MA of true range. Modified mode: trueRange = max(HiLo, HRef, LRef) with enhanced gap handling. Unmodified: standard true range. Trailing stop calculated based on ATR factor and price trend direction. Separate settings for divergence signals (wider stops, grace periods).
### 🚀 Signal Types and Conditions
**1. NTZ Cross Signals:** Long: Slope crosses above +NTZ (default +8) AND positive delta ≥ threshold (default 3.4) AND stretch filter allows AND optional trend confirmation (short MA > long MA). Short: Slope crosses below -NTZ AND negative delta ≥ threshold AND filters allow. Exit: Slope re-enters NTZ OR reverses direction for confirmation bars OR trailing stop.
**2. Acceleration Signals:** Long: Acceleration ≥ threshold (default 40) AND slope above NTZ AND positive delta sufficient AND filters allow. Short: Acceleration ≥ threshold AND slope below -NTZ AND negative delta sufficient AND filters allow. Visual: Colored circles (cyan bullish, red bearish). Works independently to catch sudden momentum bursts.
**3. RSI Divergence Signals:** Bullish: Price lower low while smoothed RSI higher low, detected via pivot comparison (default up to 8 pivots). Bearish: Price higher high while RSI lower high. Optional Slope-RSI confirmation. Visual: Purple lines (bearish), lime lines (bullish). Exit: Divergence-specific trailing stop (wider ATR, grace period).
**4. Slope-RSI Divergence Signals:** Bullish: Slope accelerating down (negative delta, slope < -NTZ) BUT RSI rising over lookback AND gap exceeds threshold (default 10.0 points). Bearish: Slope accelerating up (positive delta, slope > NTZ) BUT RSI declining AND gap exceeds threshold. Visual: Orange triangles (bullish exhaustion), yellow triangles (bearish exhaustion) with dashed lines. Exit: Divergence-specific trailing stop.
**5. RSI-Slope Oscillator Signals:** Long: RSI crosses above slope AND both heading upward. Short: RSI crosses below slope AND both heading downward. State machine tracks cross then confirms direction. Exit: Opposite oscillator condition (allows reversal) OR trailing stop after grace period.
### 📖 How to Use
**Adding to Chart:** TradingView → Indicators → Search "EMA Slope - RSI Indicator" → Add (displays in separate pane below price).
**Visual Elements:** Colored area = normalized EMA slope (Green = bullish above NTZ, Red = bearish below -NTZ, Gray = NTZ zone). Blue line = Centered RSI (-50 to +50). Colored circles = Acceleration (Cyan = bullish, Red = bearish). Green triangles (↑) = Long signals (bottom). Red triangles (↓) = Short signals (top). Orange X = Exit signals. Dashed lines = NTZ boundaries. Purple/Lime lines = RSI divergences. Orange/Yellow triangles = Slope-RSI exhaustion. Table (top-right) = Current Slope, RSI, Gap values.
**Parameter Configuration:** MA Settings: Short 40 (stretch filter), Long 160 (slope), Types: SMA/EMA/DEMA/TEMA/WMA/VWMA/SMWMA/SWMA/HMA. Ratios: 20/80 (fast), 40/160 (standard), 50/200 (slow). Core: NTZ Threshold 8 (5-6 more signals, 10-12 stronger), Min Delta 3.4 (5-10 stronger, 1-3 sensitive), Max Stretch 0.45% (0.3% conservative, 1.0% permissive, 0 disable), Use Timeframe Delta true (confirmed bar vs previous bar). RSI: Length 14, Smoothing 3, Source close. Divergence: Sensitivity 6 (higher = more sensitive, 6 = 10-bar lookback, 10 = 6-bar lookback), Max Peaks 8 (2-15 range), Show Divergences true. Slope-RSI: Lookback 4 (2-10, higher = conservative), Min Gap 10.0 pts (0-100, higher = strong only, 0 disable), Show Exhaustion true. Signal Enables: NTZ Cross true, Acceleration true, RSI Divergence false, Slope-RSI Divergence true, RSI-Slope Oscillator true, Require Slope-RSI Confirmation false. Exit: Confirmation Bars 4 (0-10, 0 immediate, 2-4 filters false), Show Trailing Stop true, Trail Type Modified/Unmodified, ATR Period 10, ATR Factor 4.0 (2-3 tight, 4 standard, 5-6 wide), Divergence Grace 3 bars, Divergence ATR 4.0 (recommend 5-8), Oscillator Grace 3 bars, Oscillator ATR 4.0.
**Alerts:** Right-click indicator pane → Add Alert → Choose condition (Long/Short Entry/Exit) → Configure notifications.
**Interpreting Signals:** Trending Markets: Focus NTZ Cross and Acceleration, higher NTZ (10-12) for stronger signals, use trend confirmation. Reversal Opportunities: Enable RSI Divergence and Slope-RSI Divergence, look for exhaustion markers and divergence lines, use wider stops. Range-Bound: Enable RSI-Slope Oscillator, signals when RSI and slope align, allows position reversal. Multi-Timeframe: Higher TF for trend, lower TF for timing, stronger when aligned. Market Adjustments: Crypto 20/80 MA, NTZ 6-7, Delta 4-5 | Forex 40/160 MA, NTZ 8, Delta 3.4 | Stocks 50/200 MA, NTZ 10-12, Delta 2-3.
### 📈 Use Cases
Day Trading (5m-15m, fast MAs 20/80), Swing Trading (1h-4h, standard 40/160), Position Trading (4h-Daily, slow 50/200), Trend Following (NTZ Cross/Acceleration in trends), Reversal Trading (RSI Divergence/Slope-RSI at reversals), Range Trading (RSI-Slope Oscillator in choppy markets), Momentum Analysis (Centered RSI and normalized slope comparison), Trend Exhaustion Detection (Slope-RSI exhaustion markers).
### ⚠️ Important Disclaimer
**THIS IS NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE**
This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. Trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results. No guarantee of accuracy - signals may be false. Not professional financial advice - consult a qualified advisor. Use only as part of comprehensive analysis. Always use proper risk management. Combine with other analysis techniques before making trading decisions. Indicator signals don't guarantee profitable trades. You are solely responsible for trading decisions and risk management. By using this indicator, you acknowledge understanding the risks and that you use it at your own risk. Never invest more than you can afford to lose. Works on all markets: Crypto, Forex, Stocks, Commodities, Futures
## Short Description (for Script Header - 200-300 chars)
Visual signal indicator combining normalized EMA slope momentum (No Trade Zone concept) with centered RSI format for direct comparison. Five signal types: NTZ momentum crosses, acceleration bursts, price-RSI divergences, slope-RSI exhaustion reversals, and RSI-slope oscillator alignment. Includes stretch filter, exit confirmation bars, and trailing stop exits with separate settings per signal type.
## Tags (for Publishing)
EMA, Moving Average, Slope, Momentum, No Trade Zone, NTZ, Indicator, Technical Analysis, RSI, Relative Strength Index, Centered RSI, RSI-50, Divergence, Slope-RSI, Exhaustion, RSI-Slope Oscillator, Normalized Comparison, Stretch Filter, Trend Confirmation, Exit Confirmation, Trailing Stop, Alerts, Signals, Visual Signals, Entry Signals, Exit Signals, Crypto, Forex, Stocks, Futures, Swing Trading, Day Trading, Reversal Trading, Range Trading, Momentum Analysis
## Category
**Indicators** → **Momentum**
ChromaFlows Momentum Index - Consensus Engine V1.2ChromaFlows Momentum Index — Conceptual Description
Overview
ChromaFlows Momentum Index is a momentum-analysis tool designed to evaluate trend quality and directional agreement by combining multiple oscillators into a single consensus-based system.
Rather than displaying independent signals from separate indicators, this script produces output only when all internal engines align, filtering out conflicting or low-quality momentum conditions.
The goal is not to generate standalone trading signals, but to provide a clear visual representation of momentum consensus and regime strength.
Conceptual Architecture
The indicator is built around three momentum engines, each assigned a distinct functional role:
Slow Stochastic — acts as the primary momentum baseline, defining the broader overbought/oversold context.
Fast Stochastic — functions as a short-term acceleration filter, detecting rapid changes in momentum relative to the baseline.
RSI — serves as a regime validator, confirming whether momentum conditions are stable enough to be considered directional.
These components are not averaged or displayed independently.
Each engine is conditionally dependent on the others.
Interaction & Consensus Logic
ChromaFlows uses a strict consensus model:
A directional state is produced only when all momentum engines agree on direction.
If even one engine diverges, the system suppresses directional output and enters a neutral state.
This logic prevents partial or conflicting momentum signals from being displayed and reduces noise commonly produced by single-indicator oscillators.
The resulting output represents agreement quality, not raw oscillator values.
Visual Output & Interpretation
The main oscillator wave represents the current momentum state derived from the consensus logic:
Bullish Consensus — all engines aligned to the upside
Bearish Consensus — all engines aligned to the downside
Neutral State — disagreement or low-quality momentum
Additional visual elements (signal markers and trend filters) are derived from the same internal state, providing contextual confirmation rather than independent signals.
These visuals are intended to help users interpret momentum context, not to automate execution.
Originality & Purpose
This script is not a visual mashup of existing indicators.
Its output cannot be replicated by observing the individual components separately, as the system’s behavior depends on conditional interaction and suppression logic between engines.
By requiring full agreement before displaying momentum states, ChromaFlows emphasizes momentum clarity over signal frequency, making it suitable as a contextual analysis layer within broader trading frameworks.
Usage Notes
ChromaFlows Momentum Index is a visual analysis tool designed to assist with market interpretation.
It does not provide investment advice or guarantee outcomes and should be used in conjunction with other forms of analysis and risk management.
Version Notes (V1.2)
• Expanded divergence detection logic added for SMI line for improved momentum context
• Minor internal optimizations and code refinements
SCOTTGO - MOMO RVOL Trend Painter V2 (Elite Pro)SCOTTGO - MOMO RVOL Trend Painter V2 (Elite Pro)
This professional-grade trend-following indicator identifies high-probability "Elite" entry points by combining Relative Volume (RVOL) with strict trend alignment and momentum filters. It is designed to filter out market noise and highlight only the most significant institutional moves.
Core Features
Elite Signal Logic: Triggers only when high RVOL (default >2.0x) aligns with a confirmed trend (Price vs. VWAP & 9EMA) and positive momentum (RSI & MACD).
Dynamic Bar Coloring: Instantly paints bars Green (Bullish) or Red (Bearish) when all "Elite" criteria are met.
Smart Labeling: Labels are corner-anchored to the left of the signal bar. This prevents visual clutter and ensures labels never obstruct new price action.
Detailed Tooltips: Hover over any "Elite" flag to see a comprehensive breakdown of the specific metrics (RVOL value, Trend status, RSI, and MACD) that triggered the signal.
Key Components
RVOL Threshold: Adjustable sensitivity to volume spikes.
Trend Filter: Optional requirement for price to stay above/below VWAP and the 9EMA.
Momentum Filters: Integrated RSI and MACD confirmation to avoid "exhaustion" trades.
Visual Customization: Full control over label spacing, colors, and opacity.
How to use: Look for the ⭐ ELITE flags as confirmation for trend continuation or high-volume breakouts. Use the triangles for precise candle entry points.
Disclaimer: Technical analysis tools are for informational purposes only. Trading involves significant financial risk.
Trend Prediction Meter [PointAlgo]The Trend Prediction Meter & Levels is a composite market-bias and volatility visualization tool designed to summarize trend strength, momentum, price positioning, and volatility into a single normalized score.
It provides a structured framework to interpret directional bias and probable price expansion zones during active market conditions.
Concept Overview
Markets often reflect multiple conditions simultaneously—trend direction, momentum strength, price location within a range, and volatility.
This indicator combines these elements into a unified Bullish Score (0–100), displayed as a meter and supported by projected ATR-based levels.
Rather than focusing on a single signal, the script aims to present context about current market conditions.
Bullish Score Composition (0–100)
The meter represents a weighted blend of multiple market factors:
1. Trend Strength (EMA Structure)
Uses a fast and slow EMA to assess directional bias.
The distance between EMAs is normalized into a trend strength score.
Strong separation indicates directional conviction; compression suggests balance.
2. Momentum Strength (RSI Blend)
Combines a short-term and mid-term RSI.
Helps capture both immediate momentum and broader directional stability.
Higher readings indicate sustained bullish pressure, lower readings indicate bearish pressure.
3. Position Within Recent Range
Measures where price is trading relative to its recent high–low range.
Values near the top of the range reflect strength; values near the bottom reflect weakness.
Mid-range positioning indicates equilibrium.
4. Volume Participation
Compares current volume against its recent average.
Acts as a minor confidence modifier rather than a primary driver.
Each component is normalized and combined using fixed weights to produce a final Bullish Score between 0 and 100.
Bias Classification
The Bullish Score is translated into descriptive market states:
Extreme Bullish
Very Bullish
Bullish
Neutral
Bearish
Very Bearish
These labels describe current bias, not future certainty.
Meter Visualization
The meter plot dynamically changes color based on the score range.
A dashed midline at 50 represents balance.
Background shading highlights strong bullish or bearish dominance zones.
Crossovers of the 50-level indicate shifts in directional control.
ATR-Based Projection Levels:
To provide volatility context, the indicator calculates ATR-based upside and downside reference levels:
Two potential expansion levels (TP1 and TP2) are projected above and below price.
The distance of these levels adapts based on current bias strength.
These levels are contextual reference zones, not fixed targets.
Prediction Dashboard
An optional side table summarizes key readings at the most recent bar:
Symbol
Current bias label
Bullish Score
Current price
ATR value
Upside and downside projection levels
Directional comment (Upside favoured / Downside favoured / Balanced)
This dashboard is designed to provide a quick structural overview without requiring manual calculation.
Signals & Alerts
Built-in alerts are available for:
Bullish bias conditions
Bearish bias conditions
Bullish Score crossing above 50
Bullish Score crossing below 50
Alerts are informational and reflect internal state changes only.
Customization:
Users can adjust:
RSI lengths
EMA lengths
Range lookback period
ATR parameters
Display options for the meter and dashboard
This allows adaptation across different instruments and timeframes.
Usage Notes
Best suited for analytical interpretation rather than standalone decision-making.
Designed to complement price action, structure, or other indicators.
Works across multiple markets where volume and volatility data are available.
Disclaimer :
This indicator is intended for educational and analytical purposes only.
It does not provide investment, trading, or financial advice.
All signals and levels should be validated with independent analysis and appropriate risk management.
Dynamic 15-Ticker Multi-Symbol Table 2025 EditionTitle:
Dynamic 15-Ticker Multi-Symbol Table 2025 Edition
Description:
This script provides a multi-ticker table for TradingView charts. It is fully open-source and free to use. The table displays up to 15 tickers, including SPY as the baseline symbol. The script updates in real-time on any timeframe.
Features:
SPY baseline: The first row always shows SPY for reference.
Custom tickers: Add up to 14 additional tickers via the input settings. Rows without tickers remain hidden.
Price and direction: Each ticker row displays the current price and an indicator of direction based on recent price movement.
RSI (14) indicator: Shows the current relative strength index value with a simple directional marker.
Volume formatting: Displays volume values in thousands, millions, or billions automatically. Volume change is indicated with directional markers.
Stable layout: The table uses alternating row colors for readability and maintains consistent row count without collapsing or disappearing rows.
Real-time updates: All displayed values refresh automatically on any chart timeframe.
How to use:
Add the script to your chart.
Enter your chosen tickers in the input settings. SPY will remain as the first ticker automatically.
Tickers not entered will remain hidden. When a ticker is removed, the row will be removed-dynamically.
Observe live prices, RSI values, and volume changes directly on your chart without switching symbols.
Additional notes:
The script is fully open-source; users are encouraged to modify or improve it.
No external links or references are required to understand its function.
This script does not repaint and does not require additional requests to update values.















