Luxy Momentum, Trend and Breakout Indicators Suit V6TABLE OF CONTENTS
This is Version 6 (V6) - the latest and most optimized release. If you are using any older versions (V5, V4, V3, etc.), it is highly recommended to replace them with V6.
Why This Indicator is Different
Who Should Use This
Core Components Overview
The UT Bot Trading System
Understanding the Market Bias Table
Candlestick Pattern Recognition
Visual Tools and Features
How to Use the Indicator
Performance and Optimization
FAQ
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1. WHY THIS INDICATOR IS DIFFERENT
Most traders use multiple separate indicators on their charts, leading to cluttered screens, conflicting signals, and analysis paralysis. The Suite solves this by integrating proven technical tools into a single, cohesive system.
Key Advantages:
All-in-One Design: Instead of loading 5-10 separate indicators, you get everything in one optimized script. This reduces chart clutter and improves TradingView performance.
Multi-Timeframe Bias Table: Unlike standard indicators that only show the current timeframe, the Bias Table aggregates trend signals across multiple timeframes simultaneously. See at a glance whether 1m, 5m, 15m, 1h are aligned bullish or bearish - no more switching between charts.
Smart Confirmations: The indicator doesn't just give signals - it shows you WHY. Every entry has multiple layers of confirmation (MA cross, MACD momentum, ADX strength, RSI pullback, volume, etc.) that you can toggle on/off.
Dynamic Stop Loss System: Instead of static ATR stops, the SL is calculated from multiple support/resistance layers: UT trailing line, Supertrend, VWAP, swing structure, and MA levels. This creates more intelligent, price-action-aware stops.
R-Multiple Take Profits: Built-in TP system calculates targets based on your initial risk (1R, 1.5R, 2R, 3R). Lines freeze when touched with visual checkmarks, giving you a clean audit trail of partial exits.
Educational Tooltips Everywhere: Every single input has detailed tooltips explaining what it does, typical values, and how it impacts trading. You're not guessing - you're learning as you configure.
Performance Optimized: Smart caching, conditional calculations, and modular design mean the indicator runs fast despite having 15+ features. Turn off what you don't use for even better performance.
No Repainting: All signals respect bar close. Alerts fire correctly. What you see in history is what you would have gotten in real-time.
What Makes It Unique:
Integrated UT Bot + Bias Table: No other indicator combines UT Bot's ATR trailing system with a live multi-timeframe dashboard. You get precision entries with macro trend context.
Candlestick Pattern Recognition with Interactive Tooltips: Patterns aren't just marked - hover over any emoji for a full explanation of what the pattern means and how to trade it.
Opening Range Breakout Tracker: Built-in ORB system for intraday traders with customizable session times and real-time status updates in the Bias Table.
Previous Day High/Low Auto-Detection: Automatically plots PDH/PDL on intraday charts with theme-aware colors. Updates daily without manual input.
Dynamic Row Labels in Bias Table: The table shows your actual settings (e.g., "EMA 10 > SMA 20") not generic labels. You know exactly what's being evaluated.
Modular Filter System: Instead of forcing a fixed methodology, the indicator lets you build your own strategy. Start with just UT Bot, add filters one at a time, test what works for your style.
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2. WHO WHOULD USE THIS
Designed For:
Intermediate to Advanced Traders: You understand basic technical analysis (MAs, RSI, MACD) and want to combine multiple confirmations efficiently. This isn't a "one-click profit" system - it's a professional toolkit.
Multi-Timeframe Traders: If you trade one asset but check multiple timeframes for confirmation (e.g., enter on 5m after checking 15m and 1h alignment), the Bias Table will save you hours every week.
Trend Followers: The indicator excels at identifying and following trends using UT Bot, Supertrend, and MA systems. If you trade breakouts and pullbacks in trending markets, this is built for you.
Intraday and Swing Traders: Works equally well on 5m-1h charts (day trading) and 4h-D charts (swing trading). Scalpers can use it too with appropriate settings adjustments.
Discretionary Traders: This isn't a black-box system. You see all the components, understand the logic, and make final decisions. Perfect for traders who want tools, not automation.
Works Across All Markets:
Stocks (US, international)
Cryptocurrency (24/7 markets supported)
Forex pairs
Indices (SPY, QQQ, etc.)
Commodities
NOT Ideal For:
Complete Beginners: If you don't know what a moving average or RSI is, start with basics first. This indicator assumes foundational knowledge.
Algo Traders Seeking Black Box: This is discretionary. Signals require context and confirmation. Not suitable for blind automated execution.
Mean-Reversion Only Traders: The indicator is trend-following at its core. While VWAP bands support mean-reversion, the primary methodology is trend continuation.
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3. CORE COMPONENTS OVERVIEW
The indicator combines these proven systems:
Trend Analysis:
Moving Averages: Four customizable MAs (Fast, Medium, Medium-Long, Long) with six types to choose from (EMA, SMA, WMA, VWMA, RMA, HMA). Mix and match for your style.
Supertrend: ATR-based trend indicator with unique gradient fill showing trend strength. One-sided ribbon visualization makes it easier to see momentum building or fading.
ZLSMA: Zero-lag linear-regression smoothed moving average. Reduces lag compared to traditional MAs while maintaining smooth curves.
Momentum & Filters:
MACD: Standard MACD with separation filter to avoid weak crossovers.
RSI: Pullback zone detection - only enter longs when RSI is in your defined "buy zone" and shorts in "sell zone".
ADX/DMI: Trend strength measurement with directional filter. Ensures you only trade when there's actual momentum.
Volume Filter: Relative volume confirmation - require above-average volume for entries.
Donchian Breakout: Optional channel breakout requirement.
Signal Systems:
UT Bot: The primary signal generator. ATR trailing stop that adapts to volatility and gives clear entry/exit points.
Base Signals: MA cross system with all the above filters applied. More conservative than UT Bot alone.
Visual Intelligence:
Market Bias Table: Multi-timeframe dashboard showing trend alignment across 7 timeframes plus macro bias (3-day, weekly, monthly, quarterly, VIX).
Candlestick Patterns: Six major reversal patterns auto-detected with interactive tooltips.
ORB Tracker: Opening range high/low with breakout status (intraday only).
PDH/PDL: Previous day levels plotted automatically on intraday charts.
VWAP + Bands: Session-anchored VWAP with up to three standard deviation band pairs.
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4. THE UT BOT TRADING SYSTEM
The UT Bot is the heart of the indicator's signal generation. It's an advanced ATR trailing stop that adapts to market volatility.
Why UT Bot is Superior to Fixed Stops:
Traditional ATR stops use a fixed multiplier (e.g., "stop = entry - 2×ATR"). UT Bot is smarter:
It TRAILS the stop as price moves in your favor
It WIDENS during high volatility to avoid premature stops
It TIGHTENS during consolidation to lock in profits
It FLIPS when price breaks the trailing line, signaling reversals
Visual Elements You'll See:
Orange Trailing Line: The actual UT stop level that adapts bar-by-bar
Buy/Sell Labels: Aqua triangle (long) or orange triangle (short) when the line flips
ENTRY Line: Horizontal line at your entry price (optional, can be turned off)
Suggested Stop Loss: A composite SL calculated from multiple support/resistance layers:
- UT trailing line
- Supertrend level
- VWAP
- Swing structure (recent lows/highs)
- Long-term MA (200)
- ATR-based floor
Take Profit Lines: TP1, TP1.5, TP2, TP3 based on R-multiples. When price touches a TP, it's marked with a checkmark and the line freezes for audit trail purposes.
Status Messages: "SL Touched ❌" or "SL Frozen" when the trade leg completes.
How UT Bot Differs from Other ATR Systems:
Multiple Filters Available: You can require 2-bar confirmation, minimum % price change, swing structure alignment, or ZLSMA directional filter. Most UT implementations have none of these.
Smart SL Calculation: Instead of just using the UT line as your stop, the indicator suggests a better SL based on actual support/resistance. This prevents getting stopped out by wicks while keeping risk controlled.
Visual Audit Trail: All SL/TP lines freeze when touched with clear markers. You can review your trades weeks later and see exactly where entries, stops, and targets were.
Performance Options: "Draw UT visuals only on bar close" lets you reduce rendering load without affecting logic or alerts - critical for slower machines or 1m charts.
Trading Logic:
UT Bot flips direction (Buy or Sell signal appears)
Check Bias Table for multi-timeframe confirmation
Optional: Wait for Base signal or candlestick pattern
Enter at signal bar close or next bar open
Place stop at "Suggested Stop Loss" line
Scale out at TP levels (TP1, TP2, TP3)
Exit remaining position on opposite UT signal or stop hit
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5. UNDERSTANDING THE MARKET BIAS TABLE
This is the indicator's unique multi-timeframe intelligence layer. Instead of looking at one chart at a time, the table aggregates signals across seven timeframes plus macro trend bias.
Why Multi-Timeframe Analysis Matters:
Professional traders check higher and lower timeframes for context:
Is the 1h uptrend aligning with my 5m entry?
Are all short-term timeframes bullish or just one?
Is the daily trend supportive or fighting me?
Doing this manually means opening multiple charts, checking each indicator, and making mental notes. The Bias Table does it automatically in one glance.
Table Structure:
Header Row:
On intraday charts: 1m, 5m, 15m, 30m, 1h, 2h, 4h (toggle which ones you want)
On daily+ charts: D, W, M (automatic)
Green dot (🟢) next to title = live updating
Headline Rows - Macro Bias:
These show broad market direction over longer periods:
3 Day Bias: Trend over last 3 trading sessions (uses 1h data)
Weekly Bias: Trend over last 5 trading sessions (uses 4h data)
Monthly Bias: Trend over last 30 daily bars
Quarterly Bias: Trend over last 13 weekly bars
VIX Fear Index: Market regime based on VIX level - bullish when low, bearish when high
Opening Range Breakout: Status of price vs. session open range (intraday only)
These rows show text: "BULLISH✔️", "BEARISH✖️", or "NEUTRAL⚠️"
Indicator Rows - Technical Signals:
These evaluate your configured indicators across all active timeframes:
Fast MA > Medium MA (shows your actual MA settings, e.g., "EMA 10 > SMA 20")
Price > Long MA (e.g., "Price > SMA 200")
Price > VWAP
MACD > Signal
Supertrend (up/down/neutral)
ZLSMA Rising
RSI In Zone
ADX ≥ Minimum
These rows show emojis: 🟩 (bullish), 🟥 (bearish), 🟡 (neutral/NA)
AVG Column:
Shows percentage of active timeframes that are bullish for that row. This is the KEY metric:
AVG > 70% = strong multi-timeframe bullish alignment
AVG 40-60% = mixed/choppy, no clear trend
AVG < 30% = strong multi-timeframe bearish alignment
How to Use the Table:
For a long trade:
Check AVG column - want to see > 60% ideally
Check headline bias rows - want to see BULLISH, not BEARISH
Check VIX row - bullish market regime preferred
Check ORB row (intraday) - want ABOVE for longs
Scan indicator rows - more green = better confirmation
For a short trade:
Check AVG column - want to see < 40% ideally
Check headline bias rows - want to see BEARISH, not BULLISH
Check VIX row - bearish market regime preferred
Check ORB row (intraday) - want BELOW for shorts
Scan indicator rows - more red = better confirmation
When AVG is 40-60%:
Market is choppy, mixed signals. Either stay out or reduce position size significantly. These are low-probability environments.
Unique Features:
Dynamic Labels: Row names show your actual settings (e.g., "EMA 10 > SMA 20" not generic "Fast > Slow"). You know exactly what's being evaluated.
Customizable Rows: Turn off rows you don't care about. Only show what matters to your strategy.
Customizable Timeframes: On intraday charts, disable 1m or 4h if you don't trade them. Reduces calculation load by 20-40%.
Automatic HTF Handling: On Daily/Weekly/Monthly charts, the table automatically switches to D/W/M columns. No configuration needed.
Performance Smart: "Hide BIAS table on 1D or above" option completely skips all table calculations on higher timeframes if you only trade intraday.
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6. CANDLESTICK PATTERN RECOGNITION
The indicator automatically detects six major reversal patterns and marks them with emojis at the relevant bars.
Why These Six Patterns:
These are the most statistically significant reversal patterns according to trading literature:
High win rate when appearing at support/resistance
Clear visual structure (not subjective)
Work across all timeframes and assets
Studied extensively by institutions
The Patterns:
Bullish Patterns (appear at bottoms):
🔺 Bullish Engulfing: Green candle completely engulfs prior red candle's body. Strong reversal signal.
🔨 Hammer: Small body with long lower wick (at least 2× body size). Shows rejection of lower prices by buyers.
🌅 Morning Star: Three-candle pattern (large red → small indecision → large green). Very strong bottom reversal.
Bearish Patterns (appear at tops):
🔻 Bearish Engulfing: Red candle completely engulfs prior green candle's body. Strong reversal signal.
🌠 Shooting Star: Small body with long upper wick (at least 2× body size). Shows rejection of higher prices by sellers.
🌆 Evening Star: Three-candle pattern (large green → small indecision → large red). Very strong top reversal.
Interactive Tooltips:
Unlike most pattern indicators that just draw shapes, this one is educational:
Hover your mouse over any pattern emoji
A tooltip appears explaining: what the pattern is, what it means, when it's most reliable, and how to trade it
No need to memorize - learn as you trade
Noise Filter:
"Min candle body % to filter noise" setting prevents false signals:
Patterns require minimum body size relative to price
Filters out tiny candles that don't represent real buying/selling pressure
Adjust based on asset volatility (higher % for crypto, lower for low-volatility stocks)
How to Trade Patterns:
Patterns are NOT standalone entry signals. Use them as:
Confirmation: UT Bot gives signal + pattern appears = stronger entry
Reversal Warning: In a trade, opposite pattern appears = consider tightening stop or taking profit
Support/Resistance Validation: Pattern at key level (PDH, VWAP, MA 200) = level is being respected
Best combined with:
UT Bot or Base signal in same direction
Bias Table alignment (AVG > 60% or < 40%)
Appearance at obvious support/resistance
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7. VISUAL TOOLS AND FEATURES
VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price):
Session-anchored VWAP with standard deviation bands. Shows institutional "fair value" for the trading session.
Anchor Options: Session, Day, Week, Month, Quarter, Year. Choose based on your trading timeframe.
Bands: Up to three pairs (X1, X2, X3) showing statistical deviation. Price at outer bands often reverses.
Auto-Hide on HTF: VWAP hides on Daily/Weekly/Monthly charts automatically unless you enable anchored mode.
Use VWAP as:
Directional bias (above = bullish, below = bearish)
Mean reversion levels (outer bands)
Support/resistance (the VWAP line itself)
Previous Day High/Low:
Automatically plots yesterday's high and low on intraday charts:
Updates at start of each new trading day
Theme-aware colors (dark text for light charts, light text for dark charts)
Hidden automatically on Daily/Weekly/Monthly charts
These levels are critical for intraday traders - institutions watch them closely as support/resistance.
Opening Range Breakout (ORB):
Tracks the high/low of the first 5, 15, 30, or 60 minutes of the trading session:
Customizable session times (preset for NYSE, LSE, TSE, or custom)
Shows current breakout status in Bias Table row (ABOVE, BELOW, INSIDE, BUILDING)
Intraday only - auto-disabled on Daily+ charts
ORB is a classic day trading strategy - breakout above opening range often leads to continuation.
Extra Labels:
Change from Open %: Shows how far price has moved from session open (intraday) or daily open (HTF). Green if positive, red if negative.
ADX Badge: Small label at bottom of last bar showing current ADX value. Green when above your minimum threshold, red when below.
RSI Badge: Small label at top of last bar showing current RSI value with zone status (buy zone, sell zone, or neutral).
These labels provide quick at-a-glance confirmation without needing separate indicator windows.
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8. HOW TO USE THE INDICATOR
Step 1: Add to Chart
Load the indicator on your chosen asset and timeframe
First time: Everything is enabled by default - the chart will look busy
Don't panic - you'll turn off what you don't need
Step 2: Start Simple
Turn OFF everything except:
UT Bot labels (keep these ON)
Bias Table (keep this ON)
Moving Averages (Fast and Medium only)
Suggested Stop Loss and Take Profits
Hide everything else initially. Get comfortable with the basic UT Bot + Bias Table workflow first.
Step 3: Learn the Core Workflow
UT Bot gives a Buy or Sell signal
Check Bias Table AVG column - do you have multi-timeframe alignment?
If yes, enter the trade
Place stop at Suggested Stop Loss line
Scale out at TP levels
Exit on opposite UT signal
Trade this simple system for a week. Get a feel for signal frequency and win rate with your settings.
Step 4: Add Filters Gradually
If you're getting too many losing signals (whipsaws in choppy markets), add filters one at a time:
Try: "Require 2-Bar Trend Confirmation" - wait for 2 bars to confirm direction
Try: ADX filter with minimum threshold - only trade when trend strength is sufficient
Try: RSI pullback filter - only enter on pullbacks, not chasing
Try: Volume filter - require above-average volume
Add one filter, test for a week, evaluate. Repeat.
Step 5: Enable Advanced Features (Optional)
Once you're profitable with the core system, add:
Supertrend for additional trend confirmation
Candlestick patterns for reversal warnings
VWAP for institutional anchor reference
ORB for intraday breakout context
ZLSMA for low-lag trend following
Step 6: Optimize Settings
Every setting has a detailed tooltip explaining what it does and typical values. Hover over any input to read:
What the parameter controls
How it impacts trading
Suggested ranges for scalping, day trading, and swing trading
Start with defaults, then adjust based on your results and style.
Step 7: Set Up Alerts
Right-click chart → Add Alert → Condition: "Luxy Momentum v6" → Choose:
"✅UT Bot — Buy✅" for long entries
"❌UT Bot — Sell❌" for short entries
"Base Long/Short" for filtered MA cross signals
Optionally enable "Send real-time alert() on UT flip" in settings for immediate notifications.
Common Workflow Variations:
Conservative Trader:
UT signal + Base signal + Candlestick pattern + Bias AVG > 70%
Enter only at major support/resistance
Wider UT sensitivity, multiple filters
Aggressive Trader:
UT signal + Bias AVG > 60%
Enter immediately, no waiting
Tighter UT sensitivity, minimal filters
Swing Trader:
Focus on Daily/Weekly Bias alignment
Ignore intraday noise
Use ORB and PDH/PDL less (or not at all)
Wider stops, patient approach
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9. PERFORMANCE AND OPTIMIZATION
The indicator is optimized for speed, but with 15+ features running simultaneously, chart load time can add up. Here's how to keep it fast:
Biggest Performance Gains:
Disable Unused Timeframes: In "Time Frames" settings, turn OFF any timeframe you don't actively trade. Each disabled TF saves 10-15% calculation time. If you only day trade 5m, 15m, 1h, disable 1m, 2h, 4h.
Hide Bias Table on Daily+: If you only trade intraday, enable "Hide BIAS table on 1D or above". This skips ALL table calculations on higher timeframes.
Draw UT Visuals Only on Bar Close: Reduces intrabar rendering of SL/TP/Entry lines. Has ZERO impact on logic or alerts - purely visual optimization.
Additional Optimizations:
Turn off VWAP bands if you don't use them
Disable candlestick patterns if you don't trade them
Turn off Supertrend fill if you find it distracting (keep the line)
Reduce "Limit to 10 bars" for SL/TP lines to minimize line objects
Performance Features Built-In:
Smart Caching: Higher timeframe data (3-day bias, weekly bias, etc.) updates once per day, not every bar
Conditional Calculations: Volume filter only calculates when enabled. Swing filter only runs when enabled. Nothing computes if turned off.
Modular Design: Every component is independent. Turn off what you don't need without breaking other features.
Typical Load Times:
5m chart, all features ON, 7 timeframes: ~2-3 seconds
5m chart, core features only, 3 timeframes: ~1 second
1m chart, all features: ~4-5 seconds (many bars to calculate)
If loading takes longer, you likely have too many indicators on the chart total (not just this one).
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10. FAQ
Q: Can I use this for automated trading?
A: The indicator is designed for discretionary trading. While it has clear signals and alerts, it's not a mechanical system. Context and judgment are required.
Q: Does it repaint?
A: No. All signals respect bar close. UT Bot logic runs intrabar but signals only trigger on confirmed bars. Alerts fire correctly with no lookahead.
Q: How is this different from standard UT Bot indicators?
A: Standard UT Bot is just the ATR trailing line and flip signals. This implementation adds:
Multiple confirmation filters (swing, %, 2-bar, ZLSMA)
Smart composite stop loss system
R-multiple take profit system with freeze-on-touch
Integration with multi-timeframe Bias Table
Visual audit trail with checkmarks
Q: Do I need to use all the features?
A: Absolutely not. The indicator is modular. Many profitable traders use just UT Bot + Bias Table + Moving Averages. Start simple, add complexity only if needed.
Q: How do I know which settings to use?
A: Every single input has a detailed tooltip. Hover over any setting to see:
What it does
How it affects trading
Typical values for scalping, day trading, swing trading
Start with defaults, adjust gradually based on results.
Q: Can I use this on crypto 24/7 markets?
A: Yes. ORB will not work (no defined session), but everything else functions normally. Use "Day" anchor for VWAP instead of "Session".
Q: The Bias Table is blank or not showing.
A: Check:
"Show Table" is ON
Table position isn't overlapping another indicator's table (change position)
At least one row is enabled
"Hide BIAS table on 1D or above" is OFF (if on Daily+ chart)
Q: Why are candlestick patterns not appearing?
A: Patterns are relatively rare by design - they only appear at genuine reversal points. Check:
Pattern toggles are ON
"Min candle body %" isn't too high (try 0.05-0.10)
You're looking at a chart with actual reversals (not strong trending market)
Q: UT Bot is too sensitive/not sensitive enough.
A: Adjust "Sensitivity (Key×ATR)". Lower number = tighter stop, more signals. Higher number = wider stop, fewer signals. Read the tooltip for guidance.
Q: Can I get alerts for the Bias Table?
A: The Bias Table is a dashboard for visual analysis, not a signal generator. Set alerts on UT Bot or Base signals, then manually check Bias Table for confirmation.
Q: Does this work on stocks with low volume?
A: Yes, but turn OFF the volume filter. Low volume stocks will never meet relative volume requirements.
Q: How often should I check the Bias Table?
A: Before every entry. It takes 2 seconds to glance at the AVG column and headline rows. This one check can save you from fighting the trend.
Q: What if UT signal and Base signal disagree?
A: UT Bot is more aggressive (ATR trailing). Base signals are more conservative (MA cross + filters). If they disagree, either:
Wait for both to align (safest)
Take the UT signal but with smaller size (aggressive)
Skip the trade (conservative)
There's no "right" answer - depends on your risk tolerance.
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FINAL NOTES
The indicator gives you an edge. How you use that edge determines results.
For questions, feedback, or support, comment on the indicator page or message the author.
Happy Trading! 🎯
Trend
IndiprimeIndiprime – Enhanced with Demand/Supply Zones
Indiprime is a lightweight trend analyzer that identifies market direction and phase while now including Demand/Supply zones calculated using ATR and Pivot Points.
This enhanced version retains the core TradeIQ algorithm for trend detection but remains simplified for beginner and intermediate traders, without Text Suggestions or complex overlays.
Core Concept
• Detects trend direction and classifies market phases: Initial, Strong, Neutral, Reversal Risk
• Highlights potential Demand and Supply zones using ATR + Pivot calculations to indicate possible support/resistance areas
• Provides clear visual cues for easier market interpretation
Key Features
• Core trend and phase detection algorithm
• Newly added Demand/Supply zones (ATR + Pivot Points)
• Lightweight and fast processing
• Simplified inputs, easy to use for beginners
• No Text Suggestions (kept simple for clarity)
How It Works
1. Calculates directional bias with weighted moving averages
2. Measures momentum and classifies trend phase
3. Calculates Demand/Supply zones using ATR + Pivot Points
4. Displays zones visually alongside trend phase
Recommended Use
• For educational and market analysis purposes
• Helps traders understand key support/resistance areas alongside trend context
• Not an automated trading system; always combine with personal analysis and risk management
Multi-Language Note
This indicator may be published in multiple languages as separate scripts due to platform token limitations.
Each version uses the same core algorithm and visual Demand/Supply zones.
Invite-Only Note (if applicable)
This is an invite-only script.
Interested traders can request access from the author directly.
Disclaimer
• For educational and analytical use only
• Not financial advice
• Users must evaluate signals independently
• Past performance does not guarantee future results
TradeIQ Smart Market Direction [EN]TradeIQ Smart Market Direction
TradeIQ Smart Market Direction is an advanced market trend analyzer designed to help traders identify the dominant market direction, momentum strength, and potential reversal zones in real time.
This indicator converts complex technical data into a simple visual representation, making it easier for traders to interpret price behavior and market structure at a glance.
Core Concept
The system continuously analyzes multiple aspects of the market — trend, volatility, and momentum — to determine whether the market is trending or ranging.
It classifies market behavior into phases such as Initial Phase, Strong Phase, Neutral Phase, and Reversal Risk, helping traders understand the current position within the overall trend cycle.
Key Features
• Detects real-time market direction and trend phases
• Identifies early and late stages of trend development
• Adapts signal sensitivity based on volatility conditions
• Displays dynamic color zones and visual cues for clarity
• Generates text-based trading suggestions that interpret trend conditions automatically
• Fully customizable alerts and display settings
• Compatible with other trading tools or systems
Algorithm Overview
TradeIQ Smart Market Direction uses a hybrid analytical model combining trend-following and momentum-based components.
It evaluates the interaction between short- and mid-term moving averages, volatility filters, and momentum oscillators to assess strength and alignment of price movement.
The algorithm dynamically adjusts sensitivity based on recent volatility, filtering out minor price noise while preserving key trend signals.
When multiple conditions align, it confirms directional bias; when conflicting, it signals neutral or reversal risk.
This multi-layered approach allows the system to stay responsive during trend accelerations while avoiding false signals in ranging markets.
Smart Text Suggestion
The indicator includes an intelligent text suggestion engine.
It interprets the current trend direction and market phase to generate short, context-based messages that help traders quickly understand market conditions — e.g., whether the market is entering a strong uptrend, showing weakening momentum, or facing potential reversal risk.
This feature bridges the gap between raw technical analysis and actionable interpretation, reducing the need for manual signal analysis.
How It Works
1. Calculates directional bias using weighted moving averages
2. Measures momentum acceleration and deceleration across multiple lookback periods
3. Applies volatility filters to validate signal strength
4. Classifies the overall condition into one of several market phases
5. Generates real-time text guidance based on detected phase and trend strength
The result is a visual and textual framework that helps traders quickly interpret trend direction and potential turning points without lagging indicators or excessive noise.
Recommended Use
This indicator is intended as a market context and direction analyzer, not an automated trading system.
It can be used as a confirmation tool to align trade entries with the prevailing market environment or to identify high-risk reversal phases.
Multi-Language Note
This indicator is published in multiple languages as separate scripts due to platform token limitations.
Versions may include for English, for Thai, for Chinese, for Russian, etc.
Each version uses the same core algorithm but provides language-specific Text Suggestions for trader guidance.
Invite-Only Note (if applicable)
This is an invite-only script.
Traders interested in gaining access can contact the author directly through the provided link or message.
Disclaimer
This tool is provided for educational and analytical purposes only.
It is not intended to provide financial, investment, or trading advice.
Each trader should evaluate signals and analysis independently before making any trading decisions.
Past performance or behavior of technical indicators does not guarantee future results.
This script is part of the TradeIQ series, developed for traders who value clarity, precision, and real-time market awareness.
Supply & Demand Zones [QuantAlgo]🟢 Overview
The Supply & Demand (Support & Resistance) Zones indicator identifies price levels where significant buying and selling pressure historically emerged, using swing point analysis and pattern recognition to mark high-probability reversal and continuation areas. Unlike conventional support/resistance tools that draw arbitrary horizontal lines, this indicator can automatically detect structural zones, offering traders systematic entry and exit levels where institutional order flow likely congregates across any market or timeframe.
🟢 How to Use
# Zone Types:
Green/Demand Zones: Support areas where buying pressure historically emerged, representing potential long entry opportunities where price may bounce or consolidate before moving higher. These zones mark levels where buyers previously overcame sellers.
Red/Supply Zones: Resistance areas where selling pressure historically dominated, indicating potential short entry opportunities where price may reverse or stall before declining. These zones identify levels where sellers previously overwhelmed buyers.
# Zone Pattern Types:
Wick Rejection Zones: Zones created from candles with exceptionally long wicks showing violent price rejection. A demand rejection occurs when price drops sharply but closes well above the low, forming a long lower wick (relative to the total candle range) that demonstrates buyers aggressively defending that level. A supply rejection shows price spiking higher but closing well below the high, with the long upper wick proving sellers rejected that price aggressively. These zones often represent major institutional orders that absorbed significant market pressure. The rejection wick ratio setting controls how prominent the wick must be (higher ratios require more dramatic rejections and produce fewer but higher-quality zones).
Continuation Demand Zones: Areas where price rallied upward, paused in a brief consolidation base, then rallied again. This pattern confirms strong buying continuation (the consolidation represents profit-taking or minor pullbacks that failed to attract meaningful selling). When price returns to these zones, buyers who missed the initial rally often provide support, making them high-probability long entries within established uptrends. These zones follow the classic Rally-Base-Rally structure, demonstrating that buyers remain in control even during temporary pauses.
Reversal Demand Zones: Zones where price dropped, formed a consolidation base, then reversed into a rally. This structure marks potential trend reversals or major swing lows where buyers finally overwhelmed sellers after a decline. The base period represents accumulation by stronger hands, and these zones frequently appear at market bottoms or as significant pullback support within larger uptrends, signaling shifts in market control. These zones follow the Drop-Base-Rally pattern, showing the moment when selling pressure exhausted and buying interest emerged.
Continuation Supply Zones: Areas where price dropped, consolidated briefly, then dropped again. This pattern demonstrates strong selling continuation (the pause represents temporary buying attempts that failed to generate meaningful recovery). When price returns to these zones, sellers who missed the initial decline often provide resistance, creating short entry opportunities within established downtrends. These zones follow the Drop-Base-Drop structure, confirming that sellers maintain dominance even during temporary consolidations.
Reversal Supply Zones: Zones where price rallied upward, formed a consolidation base, then reversed into a decline. This formation identifies potential trend reversals or major swing highs where sellers overcame buyers after an advance. The base period often represents distribution by institutional participants, and these zones commonly appear at market tops or as key pullback resistance within larger downtrends, marking transfers of market control from buyers to sellers. These zones follow the Rally-Base-Drop pattern, capturing the transition point when buying exhaustion meets aggressive selling.
# Zone Mitigation Methods:
Wick Mitigation: Zones become invalidated immediately upon first contact by any wick. This assumes zones work only on their initial test, reflecting the belief that institutional orders concentrated at these levels get completely filled on first touch. Best for traders seeking only the highest-probability, untested zones and willing to accept that zones invalidate frequently in volatile markets. When price touches a zone boundary with even a single wick, that zone is considered "used up" and becomes mitigated.
Close Mitigation: Zones remain valid through wick penetration but become invalidated only when a candle closes through the zone boundary. This method allows price to briefly probe the zone with wicks while requiring actual commitment (a close) for invalidation. Suitable for traders who recognize that zones can withstand initial tests and prefer filtering out false breakouts caused by temporary volatility or liquidity hunts. A zone stays active as long as candles close within or outside it, regardless of wick penetration, until a close occurs beyond the boundary.
Full Body Mitigation: Zones stay valid until an entire candle body exists completely beyond the zone boundary, meaning both the open and close must be outside the zone. This approach maintains zone validity through partial penetrations, accommodating the reality that institutional zones can absorb considerable price action before exhausting. Ideal for volatile markets or traders who believe zones represent price ranges rather than precise levels, and who want zones to persist through aggressive but ultimately rejected breakout attempts. Only when both the open and close of a candle are beyond the zone does it become mitigated.
🟢 Pro Tips for Trading and Investing
→ Preset Selection: Choose presets matching your preferred timeframe - Scalping (M1-M30) for aggressive detection on minute charts, Intraday (H1-H12) for balanced filtering on hourly timeframes, or Swing Trading (1D+) for strict filtering on daily charts. Each preset automatically optimizes swing length, zone strength, and max zone counts for the selected timeframe.
→ Input Calibration: Adjust Swing Length based on market speed (lower values 3-7 for fast markets, higher values 12-20 for slower markets). Set Minimum Zone Strength according to asset volatility (0.05-0.15% for low-volatility assets, 0.25-0.5% for high-volatility assets). Tune Rejection Wick Ratio higher (0.6-0.8) for strict wick filtering or lower (0.3-0.5) to capture more subtle rejections.
→ Zone Pattern Toggle Strategy: Pattern types are mutually exclusive - enable Continuation OR Reversal patterns for each zone type, not both together. Recommended combinations: For trend trading, enable Rejection + Continuation (2-4 toggles total). For reversal trading, enable Rejection + Reversal (2-4 toggles). For scalping, enable only Rejection zones (1-2 toggles). Maximum 3-4 active toggles provides optimal chart clarity. A simple Wick Rejection toggle can also work on virtually any market and timeframe.
→ Mitigation Method Selection: Use Wick mitigation in clean trending markets for strict zone invalidation on first touch. Use Close mitigation in moderate volatility to filter out temporary spikes. Use Full Body mitigation in highly volatile markets to keep zones active through whipsaws and false breakouts.
→ Alert Configuration: Utilize built-in alerts for new zone creation, zone touches, and zone breaks. New zone alerts notify when fresh supply/demand areas form. Zone touch alerts signal potential entry opportunities as price reaches zones. Zone break alerts indicate when levels fail, signaling possible trend acceleration or structure changes.
Luxy Flexible Moving AveragesUltra-lightweight moving average suite supporting six calculation methods (EMA, SMA, WMA, VWMA, RMA, HMA).
Overview
Luxy Flexible Moving Averages is a performance-optimized indicator designed for traders who need clean, reliable moving average lines without the overhead of complex calculations or unnecessary features. This indicator prioritizes speed and visual clarity, making it ideal for traders who run multiple indicators simultaneously or work on lower-powered devices.
Unlike traditional moving average indicators that calculate all lines regardless of whether they are enabled, Luxy only processes the moving averages you actually need, resulting in near-instantaneous chart loading times.
What Makes This Different
The primary design philosophy behind Luxy Flexible Moving Averages is efficiency without compromise. The indicator includes four independently configurable moving average lines, each supporting six different calculation methods. Every calculation is conditionally executed, meaning that disabled lines consume zero processing power. This approach delivers exceptional performance even when paired with resource-intensive indicators like volume profiles, market structure tools, or custom scanners.
Features
The indicator provides four distinct moving average lines, each fully customizable:
Fast MA is typically used for short-term momentum and quick directional changes. Traders often configure this as an EMA with lengths between 5 and 20 bars, depending on their trading timeframe.
Medium MA serves as a middle-ground reference, often used to identify the intermediate trend or as a dynamic support and resistance level. This line commonly uses EMA or SMA calculations with lengths between 10 and 50bars.
Medium-Long MA acts as a visual bridge between short-term noise and long-term structure. Many traders disable this line entirely if they prefer a cleaner chart, but it can be useful for identifying larger trend phases. Typical configurations use SMA or RMA with lengths between 50 and one 150 bars.
Long MA represents the dominant trend or bias. This is often configured as a 200 period SMA, which is a widely-watched level across most markets and timeframes. Alternatively, traders may use RMA for a smoother visual appearance.
Each line supports six calculation methods:
EMA (Exponential Moving Average) applies exponentially decreasing weights to older prices, making it highly responsive to recent price action. This is the preferred method for momentum-based strategies and short-term trading.
SMA (Simple Moving Average ) treats all prices equally within the lookback period, resulting in a smoother line that is less reactive to sudden price spikes. This is commonly used for identifying long-term trends.
WMA (Weighted Moving Average) applies linearly decreasing weights, offering a middle ground between EMA and SMA. It responds faster than SMA but with less sensitivity than EMA.
VWMA (Volume-Weighted Moving Average) incorporates volume data into the calculation, giving more weight to bars with higher trading activity. This method is particularly useful in liquid markets where volume represents genuine participation.
RMA (Relative Moving Average, also known as Wilder's Smoothing) is a variant of EMA with a slower response curve. It is commonly used in oscillators like RSI and ADX, and provides very smooth trend lines on charts.
HMA (Hull Moving Average) is designed to reduce lag while maintaining smoothness. It is the most responsive option available in this indicator but can produce more false signals during choppy or sideways markets.
How It Works
The indicator operates on a conditional calculation model. When you load the indicator, it checks which moving average lines are enabled via the input settings. Only the enabled lines are calculated on each bar, and disabled lines are assigned a not-applicable value, preventing any processing overhead.
Each moving average is calculated using native TradingView functions, ensuring maximum compatibility and reliability across all asset classes and timeframes. The indicator does not use any security calls, loops, or external data requests, which are common sources of performance degradation in more complex indicators.
Recommended Configurations
The optimal moving average configuration depends on your trading style and timeframe. Below are general guidelines based on common trading approaches.
Scalping (1 minute to 5 minute charts)
Scalpers require fast-reacting moving averages that can identify micro-trends and momentum shifts within seconds. The recommended configuration prioritizes EMA or HMA for all lines, with very short lengths to capture quick moves.
For the Fast MA, use EMA with a length between 5 and 8. This line should react almost immediately to price changes and helps confirm entry timing during breakouts or pullbacks.
For the Medium MA , use EMA with a length between 10 and 15. This serves as your primary directional filter. When price is above this line, you look for long opportunities. When below, you look for shorts.
The Medium-Long MA is often disabled in scalping setups to reduce visual noise. If used, configure it as SMA between 40 and 80 to provide context on the broader 5-minute or 15-minute trend.
The Long MA can be set to SMA with a length between 100 and 150, or simply disabled. On very short timeframes, this line often provides more historical context than real-time utility.
Day Trading (5 minute to 1 hour charts)
Day traders benefit from a balanced approach that filters out noise while remaining responsive to intraday volatility. A common configuration combines EMA for short-term lines and SMA for long-term structure.
For the Fast MA , use EMA with a length between 8 and 12. This captures momentum without overreacting to every minor price swing.
For the Medium MA , use EMA with a length between 12 and 21. This is often used as a dynamic support or resistance level during trending sessions.
For the Medium-Long MA , configure SMA or RMA between 60 and one 120. This line helps identify whether the intraday trend aligns with the broader daily bias.
The Long MA is typically set to SMA with a length of 200. This is a critical level that many institutional traders watch, and price reactions around this line are often significant.
Swing Trading (4 hour to daily charts)
Swing traders operate on longer timeframes and need moving averages that filter out daily noise while highlighting multi-day or multi-week trends. SMA and RMA are commonly preferred for their smoothness, though EMA can be used for faster momentum entries.
For the Fast MA , use EMA or SMA with a length between 10 and 20. This line helps time entries during pullbacks within the larger trend.
For the Medium MA , use EMA or SMA with a length between 20 and 34. This often serves as a key decision point for whether a pullback is likely to reverse or continue.
For the Medium-Long MA , configure SMA between 100 and 180. This provides visual context on the broader weekly trend and can act as a significant support or resistance zone.
The Long MA should be SMA with a length of 200 or higher. On daily charts, the two-hundred-day moving average is one of the most widely-referenced indicators in global markets, and price behavior around this level is often predictable.
Using Moving Averages for Trend Identification
Moving averages are primarily used to determine trend direction and strength. The relationship between price and the moving average lines provides insight into market structure.
When price is trading above a moving average, the trend is generally considered bullish on that timeframe. When price is below, the trend is bearish. The steeper the slope of the moving average, the stronger the trend. A flat moving average indicates consolidation or a potential trend change.
Crossovers between moving averages are commonly used as trend confirmation signals. When a faster moving average crosses above a slower moving average, this suggests increasing bullish momentum. When the faster line crosses below, it suggests increasing bearish momentum. However, crossovers should not be used in isolation, as they can produce false signals during sideways markets.
Many traders use moving averages as dynamic support and resistance levels. During uptrends, price often pulls back to a key moving average before resuming higher. During downtrends, price often rallies to a moving average before resuming lower. These levels can be used to plan entries, exits, or stop-loss placement.
Smooth Cloud + ZigZag VPOC CORE v6📌 Description
The Smooth Cloud + ZigZag VPOC indicator is designed to help traders visualize market structure and potential confluence zones.
Smooth Cloud: Built from smoothed moving averages (EMA, RMA, or HMA), this cloud highlights the underlying short-term trend by shading bullish and bearish phases.
Pivots (ZigZag style): Marks confirmed swing highs and lows, helping to identify support/resistance and breakout areas without repainting.
VPOC (Volume Point of Control): Plots the price level with the highest traded volume, either from a rolling lookback or anchored to a custom date. This often acts as a magnet or reaction level.
ATR Bands: Optional dynamic bands based on volatility to frame potential extension zones.
Signals & Alerts: Generates long/short labels when price breaks pivot levels in line with trend filters, with optional confluence from HTF trend, VPOC, and ATR.
This tool combines trend context, structure, and volume confluence in a single view to support decision-making.
✅ Notes
This script is intended for technical analysis and educational use only.
It does not provide financial advice or guaranteed outcomes.
Signals are purely analytical and should be combined with independent risk management.
Smooth Cloud + ZigZag VPOC📝 Indicator Description
The Smooth Cloud + ZigZag VPOC Indicator is a custom tool that combines three well-known concepts into one study:
Smooth Cloud Trend Filter – built from two smoothed EMAs, this visual “cloud” highlights the prevailing trend direction.
When the fast line is above the slow line, the background cloud shades teal (bullish bias).
When the fast line is below the slow line, the cloud shades red (bearish bias).
Confirmed ZigZag Pivots – plots non-repainting swing highs and swing lows using pivot confirmation. This helps traders see important structural turning points and potential breakout zones.
VPOC Approximation (Volume Point of Control) – within a lookback window, the indicator marks the price level with the highest traded volume. This level often acts as a magnet for price or an area of confluence.
Signals & Alerts
A long signal appears when price is trending up, breaks above the last confirmed pivot high, and (optionally) is above the VPOC line.
A short signal appears when price is trending down, breaks below the last confirmed pivot low, and (optionally) is below the VPOC line.
Alerts can be enabled to notify when these conditions occur.
Customization
Inputs allow adjusting the EMA lengths, smoothing factor, pivot sensitivity, and VPOC lookback.
Users can toggle on/off the cloud fill, pivot markers, bar coloring, and VPOC line to match their charting style.
✅ Notes (for compliance)
This script is for technical analysis and educational purposes only.
It does not provide financial advice or guaranteed results.
Signals are intended to highlight trend direction and breakout areas — traders should always confirm with their own risk management and strategy.
ATR Support LineATR Support Line — Dynamic Volatility Trail
This indicator provides a dynamic trailing support line by combining an anchored moving average with an ATR-based volatility buffer. It is designed to adapt across different timeframes, making it useful for identifying trend support and managing risk.
Features
Flexible anchor length with multiple smoothing types (EMA, SMA, WMA, RMA, ZLEMA).
ATR length and multiplier to fine-tune volatility sensitivity.
Higher-timeframe interpolation for smoother transitions between candles.
Option to use confirmed higher-timeframe values (non-repainting mode).
How to Use
The plotted line acts as a dynamic support trail.
Price trading above the line indicates bullish market structure.
A break below the line may highlight weakening momentum or a potential shift in trend.
Can be applied on different timeframes to align higher-timeframe context with lower-timeframe entries.
Disclaimer
This script is intended for educational and research purposes only.
It is not financial advice. Trading involves significant risk, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Always perform your own analysis before making investment decisions.
TrendLock Pro 2 — Dual Trend Confirmation📊 TrendLock Pro 2 — Dual Trend Confirmation
🔒 Trade only when the trend is locked and confirmed
TrendLock Pro is a professional no-repaint indicator designed for traders who want to cut through market noise and only capture validated opportunities.
It combines two powerful filters:
TrendScope (current timeframe) → fast detection of momentum shifts through an intelligent RSI setup.
Flow Guard (higher timeframe) → directional filter that only confirms trades aligned with the macro trend.
👉 The result: you only enter when both trends agree , ensuring dual validation before every trade.
🚀 Key Features
✅ No Repaint : signals remain reliable once printed.
✅ Dual Validation : micro-trend (M1, M5…) confirmed by the macro-trend (M15, M30…).
✅ Smart Filters : reduces false signals against the main trend.
✅ Versatile : ideal for M1 scalping, intraday trading, or swing setups.
✅ Built-in Alerts : get notified only when confirmation is strong.
✅ Clear Visuals : green diamonds for confirmed LONGs, red diamonds for confirmed SHORTs.
🎯 Who is it for?
Scalpers seeking safer entries.
Day traders looking to avoid counter-trend traps.
Swing traders preferring cleaner, filtered setups.
💡 Usage Tips
📉 Using Heikin Ashi candles smooths signals and makes them easier to read.
🛡️ Always place your Stop Loss wisely: the indicator doesn’t predict the future but analyzes real-time multi-timeframe trends.
🎯 Avoid being too greedy with Take Profits — aim for balanced targets to maintain a strong win rate.
⚡ Two trends, one signal. Trade with confirmation.
Long Elite Squeeze (LES 2.1) NV/CDV AI LindsayLES 2.1 — Long Elite Squeeze
Creator: Hunter Hammond •: Elite × FineFir H.H (AI “Lindsay”)
Discord: elitexfinefir
LES (“Long Elite Squeeze”) is a momentum + flow-aware long strategy built for small-float, high-velocity stocks. It blends a classic squeeze engine (BB/KC), adaptive RVOL/RSI gating, VWAP slope, ADX trend filtering, WaveTrend timing, and new Net-Volume/CVD flow exits—all wrapped with on-chart HUDs, a trade tracker, trap detection, and a lightweight AI selector to adapt entries to live conditions.
Who it’s for (and where it thrives)
LES 2.1 is tuned for the morning session and stocks that can really move:
Top Pre-Market and Day Gainers
Highest or Top Volume on Day
Float: ≤ 40M
Price: ≤ $20
Volume: ≥ 5× the 30-day average (intraday RVOL pop)
Catalyst: ideally a fresh news driver / “day gainer”
Timeframe: 1-minute (designed & tuned for 1m). Works on 2m/3m/5m, but wasn’t specifically designed for them (see tuning tips below).
Evolution at a glance
LES 1.0 — The foundation
Squeeze engine using Bollinger vs. Keltner to detect expansion (“squeeze OFF”).
EMA – ATR offset line (dynamic risk anchor) with EMA as trend filter.
RSI guard for overheated moves.
RVOL confirmation using average volume lookback.
WaveTrend (WT + Signal) to time entries/exits.
Basic buy/sell logic + simple on-chart labels.
LES 2.0 — Quality-of-life & timing upgrades
AI Lindsay assistant v2 (periodic / contextual commentary).
VWAP Slope Detector with sensitivity modes (Loose → Very Strict).
Manual defaults pre-tuned for ease of use.
Double-EMA trailing (visual take-profit helper).
Improved on-chart commentary and Trade Summary (10:30am snapshot).
AI Version Suggester (V1/V2/V3 modes) with stickiness/cooldown.
Trap Detector Pro (sweep, VWAP reject, blow-off, etc.) with scored severity.
Trade Tracker HUD + Entry Checklist HUD.
Overall stability & UX polish.
LES 2.1 — Flow-based exit superpowers
New Flow Exit: integrates 1m Net Volume and 5m CVD-style pressure:
1m NetVol window (rolling sum of signed volume)
5m CVD window (downsampled, smoothed)
Debounce (consecutive red bars to avoid one-tick fakes)
Optional ATR Guard (only exit if the move is meaningful vs ATR)
Cooldown after a flow exit to avoid re-chop
Chart labels: “SELL (NV/CVD)” when flow triggers
Keeps you in good trends, but kicks you out when aggressive sellers actually show up.
How the engine works (plain English)
Market prep: We confirm trend & energy using EMA/ATR, RSI, RVOL, Squeeze OFF, and Price > VWAP.
Entry mode (V1/V2/V3):
V1 — Balanced trades (default “safe” behavior)
V2 — Fast trades (more aggressive when action heats up)
V3 — Trending trades (stricter; waits for strong slope & trend)
You can pick a version manually or let the AI Suggester switch modes based on slope/ADX/RVOL/acceleration (with a cooldown so it doesn’t flip-flop).
Entry timing: WaveTrend and squeeze momentum improve timing while VWAP slope avoids buying flat tape.
Risk anchor: The EMA – (ATR × Multiplier) “offset line” is your dynamic stop/line in the sand.
Exits:
Base exits (version-aware): WT crossback, momentum fade, price losing offsetLine or EMA.
Flow Exit (2.1): If 1m NetVol and 5m CVD both turn decisively red (with debounce and optional ATR guard), close—no arguing.
Entry rules (exactly what has to be true)
Buy (Core) — fires when all are true:
Not already in a trade
Close > EMA and Close > OffsetLine (offsetLine = EMA − ATR × Mult)
RVOL confirmed (meets dynamic RVOL multiplier)
RSI below the overbought ceiling (version-aware slack in V3)
Squeeze OFF (BBs expanded outside Keltner)
Price > VWAP (toggleable)
Extra for V3 (Trending trades):
VWAP slope gate passes (and, if set, VWAP must be green)
ADX strong (≥ 25 by design, ≥ 20 baseline)
Minimum slopePctPerBar met (default V3 expects ≥ 0.05%/bar)
AI Suggester (optional):
Scores V1/V2/V3 from conditions like ADX, VWAP slope, RVOL, intrabar acceleration, then locks a pick for aiSwitchCoolBars bars.
On-chart help:
Checklist HUD lights up ✅/❌ for each gate (EMA, ATR, RVOL, RSI, VWAP, Slope, etc.).
Trade Quality Rating (🌟x/10) appears on buy bars if enabled.
Exit rules (every sell condition)
Base sells (V1/V2):
WaveTrend crossback (signal crosses over WT) OR
Momentum fade (two darker squeeze momentum bars) OR
Close < OffsetLine OR Close < EMA
Base sells (V3):
Close < OffsetLine OR Close < EMA (trend-respecting; ignores WT/momentum so you’re not shaken out early)
Flow Exit (2.1, applies to all versions if enabled):
In trade AND Flow Exit enabled
1m NetVol window is red (and ≥ Min |NetVol|)
5m CVD (smoothed) is red
**Deb
*** FYI: Play with settings until it fits your style, everything thats set default when script is loaded is what I run currently. I made LES 2.1 more customizable than ever to meet every trades style and execution. LES 2.1 with Lindsay upgrade new AI trade tracking feature (when enabled) and risk management LES 2.1 is something special to meet many challenges a trader faces everyday.
Rsi TrendLines with Breakouts [KoTa]### RSI TrendLines with Breakouts Indicator: Detailed User Guide
The "RSI TrendLines with Breakouts " indicator is a custom Pine Script tool designed for TradingView. It builds on the standard Relative Strength Index (RSI) by adding dynamic trendlines based on RSI pivots (highs and lows) across multiple user-defined periods. These trendlines act as support and resistance levels on the RSI chart, and the indicator detects breakouts when the RSI crosses these lines, generating potential buy (long) or sell (short) signals. It also includes overbought/oversold thresholds and optional breakout labels. Below, I'll provide a detailed explanation in English, covering how to use it, its purpose, advantages and disadvantages, example strategies, and ways to enhance strategies with other indicators.
How to Use the Indicator
- The indicator uses `max_lines_count=500` to handle a large number of lines without performance issues, but on very long charts, you may need to zoom in for clarity.
1. **Customizing Settings**:
The indicator has several input groups for flexibility. Access them via the gear icon next to the indicator's name on the chart.
- **RSI Settings**:
- RSI Length: Default 14. This is the period for calculating the RSI. Shorter lengths (e.g., 7-10) make it more sensitive to recent price changes; longer (e.g., 20+) smooth it out for trends.
- RSI Source: Default is close price. You can change to open, high, low, or other sources like volume-weighted for different assets.
- Overbought Level: Default 70. RSI above this suggests potential overbuying.
- Oversold Level: Default 30. RSI below this suggests potential overselling.
- **Trend Periods**:
- You can enable/disable up to 5 periods (defaults: Period 1=3, Period 2=5, Period 3=10, Period 4=20, Period 5=50). Only enabled periods will draw trendlines.
- Each period detects pivots (highs/lows) in RSI using `ta.pivothigh` and `ta.pivotlow`. Shorter periods (e.g., 3-10) capture short-term trends; longer ones (20-50) show medium-to-long-term momentum.
- Inline checkboxes allow you to toggle display for each (e.g., display_p3=true by default).
- **Color Settings**:
- Resistance/Support Color: Defaults to red for resistance (up-trendlines from RSI highs) and green for support (down-trendlines from RSI lows).
- Labels for breakouts use green for "B" (buy/long) and red for "S" (sell/short).
- **Breakout Settings**:
- Show Prev. Breakouts: If true, displays previous breakout labels (up to "Max Prev. Breakouts Label" +1, default 2+1=3).
- Show Breakouts: Separate toggles for each period (e.g., show_breakouts3). When enabled, dotted extension lines project the trendline forward, and crossovers/crossunders trigger labels like "B3" (breakout above resistance for Period 3) or "S3" (break below support).
- Note: Divergence detection is commented out in the code. If you want to enable it, uncomment the relevant sections (e.g., show_divergence input) and adjust the lookback (default 5 bars) for spotting bullish/bearish divergences between price and RSI.
2. **Interpreting the Visuals**:
- **RSI Plot**: A blue line showing the RSI value (0-100). Horizontal dashed lines at 70 (red, overbought), 30 (green, oversold), and 50 (gray, midline).
- **Trendlines**: Solid lines connecting recent RSI pivots. Green lines (support) connect lows; red lines (resistance) connect highs. Only the most recent line per direction is shown per period to avoid clutter.
- **Breakout Projections**: Dotted lines extend the current trendline forward. When RSI crosses above a red dotted resistance, a "B" label (e.g., "B1") appears above, indicating a potential bullish breakout. Crossing below a green dotted support shows an "S" label below, indicating bearish.
- **Labels**: Current breakouts are bright (green/red); previous ones fade to gray. Use these as signal alerts.
- **Alerts**: The code includes commented-out alert conditions (e.g., for breakouts or RSI crossing levels). Uncomment and set them up in TradingView's alert menu for notifications.
3. **Best Practices**:
- Use on RSI-compatible timeframes (e.g., 1H, 4H, daily) for stocks, forex, or crypto.
- Combine with price chart: Trendlines are on RSI, so check if RSI breakouts align with price action (e.g., breaking a price resistance).
- Test on historical data: Backtest signals using TradingView's replay feature.
- Avoid over-customization initially—start with defaults (Periods 3 and 5 enabled) to understand behavior.
What It Is Used For
This indicator is primarily used for **momentum-based trend analysis and breakout trading on the RSI oscillator**. Traditional RSI identifies overbought/oversold conditions, but this enhances it by drawing dynamic trendlines on RSI itself, treating RSI as a "price-like" chart for trend detection.
- **Key Purposes**:
- **Identifying Momentum Trends**: RSI trendlines show if momentum is strengthening (upward-sloping support) or weakening (downward-sloping resistance), even if price is ranging.
- **Spotting Breakouts**: Detects when RSI breaks its own support/resistance, signaling potential price reversals or continuations. For example, an RSI breakout above resistance in an oversold zone might indicate a bullish price reversal.
- **Multi-Period Analysis**: By using multiple pivot periods, it acts like a multi-timeframe tool within RSI, helping confirm short-term signals with longer-term trends.
- **Signal Generation**: Breakout labels provide entry/exit points, especially in trending markets. It's useful for swing trading, scalping, or confirming trends in larger strategies.
- **Divergence (Optional)**: If enabled, it highlights mismatches between price highs/lows and RSI, which can predict reversals (e.g., bullish divergence: price lower low, RSI higher low).
Overall, it's ideal for traders who rely on oscillators but want more visual structure, like trendline traders applying price concepts to RSI.
Advantages and Disadvantages
**Advantages**:
- **Visual Clarity**: Trendlines make RSI easier to interpret than raw numbers, helping spot support/resistance in momentum without manual drawing.
- **Multi-Period Flexibility**: Multiple periods allow analyzing short- and long-term momentum simultaneously, reducing noise from single-period RSI.
- **Breakout Signals**: Automated detection of breakouts provides timely alerts, with labels and projections for proactive trading. This can improve entry timing in volatile markets.
- **Customization**: Extensive inputs (periods, colors, breakouts) make it adaptable to different assets/timeframes. The stateful management of lines/labels prevents chart clutter.
- **Complementary to Price Action**: Enhances standard RSI by adding trend context, useful for confirming divergences or overbought/oversold trades.
- **Efficiency**: Uses efficient arrays and line management, supporting up to 500 lines for long charts without lagging TradingView.
**Disadvantages**:
- **Lagging Nature**: Based on historical pivots, signals may lag in fast-moving markets, leading to late entries. Shorter periods help but increase whipsaws.
- **False Signals**: In ranging or sideways markets, RSI trendlines can produce frequent false breakouts. It performs better in trending conditions but may underperform without filters.
- **Over-Reliance on RSI**: Ignores volume, fundamentals, or price structure—breakouts might not translate to price moves if momentum decouples from price.
- **Complexity for Beginners**: Multiple periods and settings can overwhelm new users; misconfiguration (e.g., too many periods) leads to noisy charts.
- **No Built-in Risk Management**: Signals lack stop-loss/take-profit logic; users must add these manually.
- **Divergence Limitations**: The basic (commented) divergence detection is simplistic and may miss hidden divergences or require tuning.
In summary, it's powerful for momentum traders but should be used with confirmation tools to mitigate false positives.
Example Strategies
Here are one LONG (buy) and one SHORT (sell) strategy example using the indicator. These are basic; always backtest and use risk management (e.g., 1-2% risk per trade, stop-loss at recent lows/highs).
**LONG Strategy Example: Oversold RSI Support Breakout**
- **Setup**: Use on a daily chart for stocks or crypto. Enable Periods 3 and 5 (short- and medium-term). Set oversold level to 30.
- **Entry**: Wait for RSI to be in oversold (<30). Look for a "B" breakout label (e.g., "B3" or "B5") when RSI crosses above a red resistance trendline projection. Confirm with price forming a higher low or candlestick reversal (e.g., hammer).
- **Stop-Loss**: Place below the recent price low or the RSI support level equivalent in price terms (e.g., 5-10% below entry).
- **Take-Profit**: Target RSI reaching overbought (70) or a 2:1 risk-reward ratio. Exit on a bearish RSI crossunder midline (50).
- **Example Scenario**: In a downtrending stock, RSI hits 25 and forms a support trendline. On a "B5" breakout, enter long. This captures momentum reversals after overselling.
- **Rationale**: Breakout above RSI resistance in oversold signals fading selling pressure, potential for price uptrend.
**SHORT Strategy Example: Overbought RSI Resistance Breakout**
- **Setup**: Use on a 4H chart for forex pairs. Enable Periods 10 and 20. Set overbought level to 70.
- **Entry**: Wait for RSI in overbought (>70). Enter on an "S" breakout label (e.g., "S3" or "S4") when RSI crosses below a green support trendline projection. Confirm with price showing a lower high or bearish candlestick (e.g., shooting star).
- **Stop-Loss**: Above the recent price high or RSI resistance level (e.g., 5-10% above entry).
- **Take-Profit**: Target RSI hitting oversold (30) or a 2:1 risk-reward. Exit on bullish RSI crossover midline (50).
- **Example Scenario**: In an uptrending pair, RSI peaks at 75 with a resistance trendline. On "S4" breakout, enter short. This targets momentum exhaustion after overbuying.
- **Rationale**: Break below RSI support in overbought indicates weakening buying momentum, likely price downturn.
Enhancing Strategy Validity with Other Indicators
To increase the reliability of strategies based on this indicator, combine it with complementary tools for confirmation, filtering false signals, and adding context. This creates multi-indicator strategies that reduce whipsaws and improve win rates. Focus on indicators that address RSI's weaknesses (e.g., lagging, momentum-only). Below are examples of different indicators, how to integrate them, and sample strategies.
1. **Moving Averages (e.g., SMA/EMA)**:
- **How to Use**: Overlay 50/200-period EMAs on the price chart. Use RSI breakouts only in the direction of the trend (e.g., long only if price > 200 EMA).
- **Strategy Example**: Trend-Following Long – Enter on "B" RSI breakout if price is above 200 EMA and RSI > 50. This filters reversals in uptrends. Add MACD crossover for entry timing. Advantage: Aligns momentum with price trend, reducing counter-trend trades.
2. **Volume Indicators (e.g., Volume Oscillator or OBV)**:
- **How to Use**: Require increasing volume on RSI breakouts (e.g., OBV making higher highs on bullish breakouts).
- **Strategy Example**: Volume-Confirmed Short – On "S" breakout, check if volume is rising and OBV breaks its own trendline downward. Enter short only if confirmed. This validates breakouts with real market participation, avoiding low-volume traps.
3. **Other Oscillators (e.g., MACD or Stochastic)**:
- **How to Use**: Use for divergence confirmation or overbought/oversold alignment. For instance, require Stochastic (14,3,3) to also breakout from its levels.
- **Strategy Example**: Dual-Oscillator Reversal Long – Enable divergence in the indicator. Enter on bullish RSI divergence + "B" breakout if MACD histogram flips positive. Exit on MACD bearish crossover. This strengthens reversal signals by cross-verifying momentum.
4. **Price Action Tools (e.g., Support/Resistance or Candlestick Patterns)**:
- **How to Use**: Map RSI trendlines to price levels (e.g., if RSI resistance breaks, check if price breaks a key resistance).
- **Strategy Example**: Price-Aligned Breakout Short – On "S" RSI breakout in overbought, confirm with price breaking below a drawn support line or forming a bearish engulfing candle. Use Fibonacci retracements for targets. This ensures momentum translates to price movement.
5. **Volatility Indicators (e.g., Bollinger Bands or ATR)**:
- **How to Use**: Avoid trades during low volatility (e.g., Bollinger Band squeeze) to filter ranging markets. Use ATR for dynamic stops.
- **Strategy Example**: Volatility-Filtered Long – Enter "B" breakout only if Bollinger Bands are expanding (increasing volatility) and RSI is oversold. Set stop-loss at 1.5x ATR below entry. This targets high-momentum breakouts while skipping choppy periods.
**General Tips for Building Enhanced Strategies**:
- **Layering**: Start with RSI breakout as the primary signal, add 1-2 confirmations (e.g., EMA trend + volume).
- **Backtesting**: Use TradingView's strategy tester to quantify win rates with/without additions.
- **Risk Filters**: Incorporate overall market sentiment (e.g., via VIX) or avoid trading near news events.
- **Timeframe Alignment**: Use higher timeframes for trend (e.g., daily EMA) and lower for entries (e.g., 1H RSI breakout).
- **Avoid Overloading**: Too many indicators cause paralysis; aim for synergy (e.g., trend + momentum + volume).
This indicator is a versatile tool, but success depends on context and discipline. If you need code modifications or specific backtests, provide more details!
RSI Cloud v1.0 [PriceBlance] RSI Cloud v1.0 — Ichimoku-style Cloud on RSI(14), not on price.
Recalibrated baselines: EMA9 (Tenkan) for speed, WMA45 (Kijun) for stability.
Plus ADX-on-RSI to grade strength so you know when momentum persists or fades.
1. Introduction
RSI Cloud v1.0 applies an Ichimoku Cloud directly on RSI(14) to reveal momentum regimes earlier and cleaner than price-based views. We replaced Tenkan with EMA9 (faster, more responsive) and Kijun with WMA45 (slower, more stable) to fit a bounded oscillator (0–100). Forward spans (+26) and a lagging line (−26) provide a clear framework for trend bias and transitions.
To qualify signals, the indicator adds ADX computed on RSI—highlighting whether strength is weak, strong, or very strong, so you can decide when to follow, fade, or stand aside.
2. Core Mapping (Hook + Bullets)
At a glance: Ichimoku on RSI(14) with recalibrated baselines for a bounded oscillator.
Source: RSI(14)
Tenkan → EMA9(RSI) (fast, responsive)
Kijun → WMA45(RSI) (slow, stable)
Span A: classic Ichimoku midline, displaced +26
Span B: classic Ichimoku baseline, displaced +26
Lagging line: RSI shifted −26
3. Key Benefits (Why traders care)
Momentum regimes on RSI: position vs. Cloud = bull / bear / transition at a glance.
Cleaner confirmations: EMA9/WMA45 pairing cuts noise vs. raw 30/70 flips.
Earlier warnings: Cloud breaks on RSI often lead price-based confirmations.
4. ADX on RSI (Enhanced Strength Normalization)
Grade strength inside the RSI domain using ADX from ΔRSI:
ADX ≤ 20 → Weak (transparency = 60)
ADX ≤ 40 → Strong (transparency = 15)
ADX > 40 → Very strong (transparency = 0)
Use these tiers to decide when to trust, fade, or ignore a signal.
5. How to Read (Quick rules)
Bias / Regime
Bullish: RSI above Cloud and RSI > WMA45
Bearish: RSI below Cloud and RSI < WMA45
Neutral / Transition: all other cases
6. Settings (Copy & use)
RSI Length: 14 (default)
Tenkan: EMA9 on RSI · Kijun: WMA45 on RSI
Displacement: +26 (Span A/B) · −26 (Lagging)
Theme: PriceBlance Dark/Light
Visibility toggles: Cloud, Baselines, Lagging, labels/panel, Overbought/Oversold, Divergence, ADX-on-RSI (via transparency coloring)
7. Credits & License
Author/Brand: PriceBlance
Version: v1.0 (Free)
Watermark: PriceBlance • RSI Cloud v1.0
Disclaimer: Educational content; not financial advice.
8. CTA
If this helps, please ⭐ Star and Follow for updates & new tools.
Feedback is welcome—comment what you’d like added next (alerts, presets, visuals).
Trend Heat Meter by JaeheePurpose
A compact, overlay gauge that shows where the current close sits within the last 50 bars’ high-low range. It converts price position into a 0–100% “heat” scale and renders a vertical gradient from Frozen (low end) to Overheated (high end).
How it works
• Looks back 50 bars to get highest(high, 50) and lowest(low, 50).
• Normalizes the current close into a percentile: (close − low) / (high − low) * 100.
• Draws a vertical cold→hot bar at the right side of the chart, with a pointer and a fixed-width percentage readout (two decimals) to avoid jitter.
• Labels the extremes as Overheated (top) and Frozen (bottom).
• The script is an overlay and does not modify candles or generate orders.
What makes it different
• Pure position metric: No EMA smoothing or oscillation math. It’s a direct percentile of price inside a rolling range, so interpretation is immediate.
• Jitter-free readout: Fixed-width numeric formatting keeps the value visually stable as price ticks.
• High signal legibility: A single, color-coded “thermometer” avoids multi-plot clutter and works well on any chart style.
• Non-repainting logic: Uses only in-bar values and a rolling 50-bar window; no future bars are referenced.
Inputs
• Use Black Text (White→Black): Switches label/pointer text from white to black for dark or light chart themes.
(Length and visual rows are internally set to 50 and 21 for a consistent footprint.)
Practical use
Trend context
• >70% = price is trading near the upper segment of its recent range → bullish pressure / “hot.”
• <30% = price is trading near the lower segment of its recent range → bearish pressure / “cold.”
Confluence
• Combine with your entry method (structure breaks, OB/FVG, KZ sessions, etc.).
– Prefer long setups when the meter stays >50% and rising.
– Prefer short setups when the meter stays <50% and falling.
Risk management
• Treat extreme reads (>85% or <15%) as potential exhaustion zones inside ranges; wait for confirmation before fading.
Timeframes & markets
• Works on any timeframe and symbol. Large-cap, liquid instruments typically provide the cleanest read.
Notes and limitations
• The meter shows relative position, not momentum or volatility. Pair it with your preferred filters for full trade qualification.
• It does not produce buy/sell signals, alerts, or TP/SL levels.
• Visual table draws only on the last bar for efficiency.
Compatibility
• Pine Script® v6
• Overlay: true
Disclaimer
This script is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Trading involves risk. Test on a demo and use proper risk management.
Trap LineTrap Line W — Weekly Trend Barrier (Closed-source)
Overview
Trap Line W is a trend-following overlay that plots a single weekly baseline to define the market’s higher-timeframe regime. Price above the line indicates a bullish regime; price below the line indicates a bearish regime. The goal is to promote regime discipline—staying aligned with the dominant direction and avoiding late, emotionally driven entries. Core parameters are fixed to ensure consistent behavior across symbols.
What it does (principles, not secrets)
• Builds a smoothed weekly baseline designed to approximate the higher-timeframe trend path.
• Uses higher-timeframe aggregation so regime assessments align with closed weekly candles.
• Acts as a simple, binary bias filter: long-only above, short/avoid longs below (framework, not advice).
Inputs
• No user-tweakable inputs. Parameters are fixed to reduce overfitting and improve repeatability.
How to read it
• Above the line ⇒ bullish regime.
• Below the line ⇒ bearish regime.
• A confirmed weekly close through the line suggests a potential regime transition; intrawEEK moves may fade.
Practical use cases
• Bias gating: enable/disable long or short playbooks based on the weekly regime.
• Portfolio overlay: apply to a watchlist; prefer allocations aligned with the weekly regime.
• Risk context: in a bullish regime, tolerate pullbacks selectively; in a bearish regime, be conservative with counter-trend exposure.
• Timeframe bridging: weekly sets bias; lower timeframes handle entries/exits.
Best practices
• Wait for the weekly close before declaring a regime flip.
• Combine with market structure (HH/HL vs. LH/LL), volume behavior, and higher-timeframe S/R.
• Prefer time-based candles and liquid instruments for clearer behavior.
Charting & data notes
• Values derive from the weekly timeframe and finalize on the weekly close; interim values may update during formation.
• Use standard time-based candles. Avoid interpreting signals on Heikin Ashi, Renko, Kagi, Point & Figure, or Range charts.
Common pitfalls
• Front-running the weekly close can cause false regime flips.
• Overtrading counter-trend near the line often has lower expectancy.
• Ignoring liquidity/news risk can lead to whipsaws around the baseline.
Who it’s for
• Swing and position traders needing a clear, rules-based regime filter.
• Systematic traders who prefer a simple, fixed-parameter bias overlay.
Limitations & disclosures
• Closed-source; for educational and analytical use only.
• Not financial advice. Markets involve risk; past performance is not indicative of future results.
Suggested screenshot captions
• “Bullish regime: weekly close above Trap Line W; pullbacks respecting the line.”
• “Bearish regime: weekly close below Trap Line W; rallies capped near the line.”
Normalized WMA Oscillator | OquantNormalized WMA Oscillator | Oquant
The Normalized WMA Oscillator is a trend-momentum indicator designed to help traders visualize the relative position of a Weighted Moving Average (WMA) within its recent price range.
What is a WMA and How It Works:
A Weighted Moving Average (WMA) is a type of moving average that gives more weight to recent price data, making it more responsive to price changes compared to a simple moving average. Each price point in the lookback period is multiplied by a weighting factor, with the most recent prices having the highest weights. The WMA helps traders identify potential trends more quickly.
This indicator applies min-max normalization to the standard WMA, scaling its values between 0 and 1 over a configurable lookback period. This allows traders to see whether the WMA is near its recent highs, lows, or midpoint, regardless of the absolute price level.
Key Features:
WMA Source Input: Choose price source for wma calculation.
Customizable WMA Length: Adjust the sensitivity of the WMA.
Min-Max Normalization Length: Smooth the scaling of WMA values between 0 and 1.
Signal Thresholds: Configurable upper and lower thresholds to indicate potential entries.
Visual Alerts: Color-coded oscillator and candles plot for bullish (green) and bearish (purple) signals.
Alerts Ready: Built-in alert conditions for crossovers and crossunders of the oscillator.
How It Works:
Calculate the WMA on the selected source.
Normalize its value using the minimum and maximum WMA values over the specified lookback period.
Generate long signals when the normalized WMA moves above the upper threshold, and short signals when it moves below the lower threshold.
Plot the oscillator and candles in green for bullish signals and purple for bearish signals.
Inputs:
Source: Data used for WMA calculation.
WMA Length: Period for Weighted Moving Average.
Min-Max Length: Lookback period for min-max scaling.
Upper Threshold: Level above which a long signal is considered.
Lower Threshold: Level below which a short signal is considered.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This indicator is intended for educational and informational purposes only. Trading/investing involves risk, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Always test and evaluate indicators/strategies before applying them in live markets. Use at your own risk.
Bayesian Trend Navigator [QuantAlgo]🟢 Overview
The Bayesian Trend Navigator uses Bayesian statistics to continuously update trend probabilities by combining long-term expectations (prior beliefs) and short-term observations (likelihood evidence), rather than relying solely on recent price data like many conventional indicators. This mathematical framework produces robust directional signals that naturally balance responsiveness with stability, making it suitable for traders and investors seeking statistically-grounded trend identification across diverse market environments and asset types.
🟢 How It Works
The indicator operates on Bayesian inference principles, a statistical method for updating beliefs when new evidence emerges. The system begins by establishing a prior belief - a long-term trend expectation calculated from historical price behavior. This represents the "baseline hypothesis" about market direction before considering recent developments.
Simultaneously, the algorithm collects recent market evidence through short-term trend analysis, representing the likelihood component. This captures what current price action suggests about directional momentum independent of historical context.
The core Bayesian engine then combines these elements using conjugate normal distributions and precision weighting. It calculates prior precision (inverse variance) and likelihood precision, combining them to determine a posterior precision. The resulting posterior mean represents the mathematically optimal trend estimate given both historical patterns and current reality. This posterior calculation includes intervals derived from the posterior variance, providing probabilistic confidence bounds around the trend estimate.
Finally, volatility-based standard deviation bands create adaptive boundaries around the Bayesian estimate. The trend line adjusts within these constraints, generating color transitions between bullish (green) and bearish (red) states when the posterior calculation crosses these probabilistic thresholds.
🟢 How to Use
Green/Bullish Trend Line: Posterior probability favoring upward momentum, indicating statistically favorable conditions for long positions (buy)
Red/Bearish Trend Line: Posterior probability favoring downward momentum, signaling mathematically supported timing for short positions (sell)
Rising Green Line: Strengthening bullish posterior as new evidence reinforces upward beliefs, showing increasing probabilistic confidence in trend continuation with favorable long entry conditions
Declining Red Line: Intensifying bearish posterior with accumulating downside evidence, indicating growing statistical certainty in downtrend persistence and optimal short positioning opportunities
Flattening Trends: Diminishing posterior confidence regardless of color suggests equilibrium between prior beliefs and contradictory evidence, potentially signaling consolidation or insufficient statistical clarity for high-conviction trades
🟢 Pro Tips for Trading and Investing
→ Preset Configuration Strategy: Deploy presets based on your trading horizon - Scalping preset maximizes evidence weight (0.8) for rapid Bayesian updates on 1-15 minute charts, Default preset balances prior and likelihood for general applications, while Swing Trading preset equalizes weights (0.5/0.5) for stable inference on hourly and daily timeframes.
→ Prior Weight Adjustment: Calibrate prior weight according to market regime - increase values (0.5-0.7) in stable trending markets where historical patterns remain predictive, decrease values (0.2-0.3) during regime changes or news-driven volatility when recent evidence should dominate the posterior calculation.
→ Evidence Period Tuning: Modify the evidence period based on information flow velocity. Use shorter periods (5-8 bars) for assets with continuous price discovery like cryptocurrencies, medium periods (10-15) for liquid stocks, and longer periods (15-20) for slower-moving markets to ensure adequate likelihood sample size.
→ Likelihood Weight Optimization: Adjust likelihood weight inversely to market noise levels. Higher values (0.7-0.8) work well in clean trending conditions where recent data is reliable, while lower values (0.4-0.6) help during choppy periods by maintaining stronger reliance on established prior beliefs.
→ Multi-Timeframe Bayesian Confluence: Apply the indicator across multiple timeframes, using higher timeframes (Daily/Weekly) to establish prior belief direction and lower timeframes (Hourly/15-minute) for likelihood-driven entry timing, ensuring posterior probabilities align across temporal scales for maximum statistical confidence.
→ Standard Deviation Multiplier Management: Adapt the multiplier to match current uncertainty levels. Use tighter multipliers (1.0-1.5) during low-volatility consolidations to capture early trend emergence, and wider multipliers (2.0-2.5) during high-volatility events to avoid premature signals caused by statistical noise rather than genuine posterior shifts.
→ Variance-Based Position Sizing: Monitor the implicit posterior variance through trend line stability - smooth consistent movements indicate low uncertainty warranting larger positions, while erratic fluctuations suggest high statistical uncertainty calling for reduced exposure until clearer probabilistic convergence emerges.
→ Alert-Based Probabilistic Execution: Utilize trend change alerts to capture every statistically significant posterior shift from bullish to bearish states or vice versa without constantly monitoring the charts.
ATR Volatility and Trend AnalysisATR Volatility and Trend Analysis
Unlock the power of the Average True Range (ATR) with the ATR Volatility and Trend Analysis indicator. This comprehensive tool is designed to provide traders with a multi-faceted view of market dynamics, combining volatility analysis, dynamic support and resistance levels, and trend detection into a single, easy-to-use indicator.
How It Works
The ATR Volatility and Trend Analysis indicator is built upon the core concept of the ATR, a classic measure of market volatility. It expands on this by providing several key features:
Dynamic ATR Bands: The indicator plots three sets of upper and lower bands around the price. These bands are calculated by multiplying the current ATR value by user-defined multipliers. They act as dynamic support and resistance levels, widening during volatile periods and contracting during calm markets.
Volatility Breakout Signals: Identify potential breakouts with precision. The indicator generates a signal when the current ATR value surges above its own moving average by a specified threshold, indicating a significant increase in volatility that could lead to a strong price move.
Trend Detection: The indicator determines the market trend by analyzing both price action and ATR behavior. A bullish trend is signaled when the price is above its moving average and volatility is increasing. Conversely, a bearish trend is signaled when the price is below its moving average and volatility is increasing.
How to Use the ATR Multi-Band Indicator
Identify Support and Resistance: Use the ATR bands as key levels. Price approaching the outer bands may indicate overbought or oversold conditions, while a break of the bands can signal a strong continuation.
Confirm Breakouts: Look for a volatility breakout signal to confirm the strength behind a price move. A breakout from a consolidation range accompanied by a volatility signal is a strong indicator of a new trend.
Trade with the Trend: Use the background coloring and trend signals to align your trades with the dominant market direction. Enter long positions during confirmed bullish trends and short positions during bearish trends.
Set Up Alerts: The indicator includes alerts for band crosses, trend changes, and volatility breakouts, ensuring you never miss a potential trading opportunity.
What makes it different?
While many indicators use ATR, the ATR Volatility and Trend Analysis tool is unique in its integration of multiple ATR-based concepts into a single, cohesive system. It doesn't just show volatility; it interprets it in the context of price action to deliver actionable trend and breakout signals, making it a complete solution for ATR-based analysis.
Disclaimer
This indicator is designed as a technical analysis tool and should be used in conjunction with other forms of analysis and proper risk management.
Past performance does not guarantee future results, and traders should thoroughly test any strategy before implementing it with real capital.
Multi-MA Trend Indicator with ATR by nkChartsThe MMA-ATR is a powerful all-in-one tool that combines multi-timeframe Moving Averages with ATR-based Stop Loss & Take Profit levels. It is designed to help traders quickly assess trend direction, volatility, and potential trade levels in one clean visual setup.
Key Features
Multi-MA Trend Detection
Plots 5 customizable moving averages (choose from EMA, SMA, RMA, WMA, VWMA).
Automatic color coding: Bullish (green), Bearish (red), Neutral (gray).
MA Trend Table with:
MA values
Current chart trend
Higher timeframe (Daily) trend confirmation
ATR-Based Trade Levels
Dynamic Stop Loss (SL) and Take Profit (TP) levels based on ATR multipliers.
Separate visual lines for long and short setups.
ATR Table with:
ATR value for the current chart timeframe
ATR value for the Daily timeframe
Customizations
Choose MA type, length, and price source.
Customize bullish, bearish, and neutral colors.
Adjustable table position and text size.
Fully configurable ATR length, multipliers, and colors.
How to Use
Add the indicator to your chart.
Use the MA Trend Table to identify short-term and higher timeframe trend direction.
Refer to ATR-based SL/TP levels to manage risk and potential profit targets.
Combine both to filter entries and improve trade timing.
Best For
Swing traders and intraday traders who rely on trend confirmation and volatility-based risk management.
Traders looking for a multi-timeframe confirmation system that reduces noise.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This indicator is for educational purposes only. It does not provide financial advice or guarantee profits. Always perform your own analysis before making trading decisions.
QuantumFlowEN
What it is
QuantumFlow - blends liquidity-sweep reversals with ATR-normalized momentum continuation, gated by a light regime filter. is a non-repainting, on-close indicator that fuses two complementary engines:
Sweep-Reversal (SR): seeks liquidity sweeps (wick > ATR×X) around prior swing extremes, then waits for a micro BOS (break of short-term structure) and alignment with a VWAP±σ channel and Donchian midline.
Momentum-Continuation (MC): normalizes rate-of-change by ATR to detect momentum bursts with hysteresis, so continuation entries don’t flip/flop in chop.
A light Regime layer (Kaufman Efficiency Ratio) controls when signals are allowed at all.
On top of that, you can optionally require HTF EMA filter, volume expansion, session gating, and volatility guards. All signals are computed on bar close; there is no lookahead.
Why it’s different
Rather than a single trigger, QuantumFlow combines context (regime/trend), location (sweep → BOS near VWAP band), and impulse (ATR-normalized momentum with hysteresis). The exact thresholds and sequencing are tuned and encapsulated in presets, so the UI stays minimal while keeping behavior consistent.
How to use
Choose a Preset (Very Conservative → Very Aggressive).
Conservative/Balanced for choppier FX/indices; Aggressive for crypto scalps.
(Optional) Keep Use HTF EMA ON for additional trend bias on intraday charts.
Leave Use Sweep-Reversal and Use Momentum-Continuation both ON at first; later you can test them separately.
Enable Volume filter and, if needed, Session window to match your market.
Use signals as contextual prompts (BUY/SELL markers). Entries, risk and exits are up to your plan; a typical approach is structure-based invalidation (beyond the sweep/BOS anchor) and partials vs VWAP/Donchian.
Presets (quick guide)
Very Conservative / Conservative — fewer signals, stronger context; good for higher TFs or sideways regimes.
Balanced — default mix.
Aggressive / Very Aggressive — more permissive; suitable for liquid, trendy sessions (e.g., crypto London/US overlaps).
Notes & limitations
Signals are generated on close only, but any execution still depends on your brokerage/venue fills.
Hidden internal thresholds (regime/momentum/structure) are intentionally not exposed to keep behavior stable and to protect the method’s edge.
Risk disclosure
This script is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Markets involve risk; past performance does not guarantee future results. Always validate on your instruments/timeframes and use an independent risk plan (position sizing, max daily loss, invalidators).
RU
Что это
QuantumFlow — сочетает развороты после снятия ликвидности и импульсные продолжения, нормированные ATR, под контролем режима. Индикатор без перерисовки (сигналы на закрытии бара), который объединяет два блока:
Sweep-Reversal (SR): поиск снятия ликвидности (длинные хвосты относительно ATR) у предыдущих экстремумов → короткий BOS по микроструктуре → проверка расположения относительно VWAP±σ и середины канала Дончиана.
Momentum-Continuation (MC): импульс через ROC, нормированный ATR, с гистерезисом — чтобы продолжения не «дребезжали» во флэте.
Лёгкий слой Regime (коэффициент эффективности Кауфмана) решает, когда вообще разрешать сигналы.
Дополнительно доступны фильтры HTF EMA, объёма, сессий и волатильности. Все проверки выполняются на закрытии бара, без заглядывания вперёд.
Чем отличается
QuantumFlow не опирается на один триггер: он совмещает контекст (режим/тренд), локацию (sweep → BOS рядом с VWAP-полосой) и импульс (моментум с нормировкой и гистерезисом). Точные пороги и порядок проверок инкапсулированы в пресеты, поэтому интерфейс остаётся минимальным, а поведение — стабильным.
Как пользоваться
Выберите Preset (от Very Conservative до Very Aggressive).
Conservative/Balanced — для более «рваных» режимов, старших ТФ;
Aggressive — для скальпа на ликвидных сессиях (крипто: Лондон/США).
(Опционально) Оставьте Use HTF EMA включённым для доп. тренд-фильтра на интрадей.
Сначала держите Sweep-Reversal и Momentum-Continuation включёнными; позже можно тестировать по отдельности.
Включите фильтр объёма и при необходимости сессии.
Относитесь к меткам BUY/SELL как к контекстным подсказкам. Точка входа, риск и выход — по вашему плану: популярный вариант — инвалидатор за уровнем sweep/BOS, частичная фиксация к VWAP/Donchian.
Пресеты (кратко)
Very Conservative / Conservative — меньше сигналов, строже контекст; удобно для старших ТФ и боковиков.
Balanced — профиль «по умолчанию».
Aggressive / Very Aggressive — более частые сигналы; под трендовые и ликвидные часы.
Важно
Сигналы формируются на закрытии, но исполнение зависит от вашей площадки/ликвидности.
Внутренние пороги Regime/Momentum/Structure намеренно не вынесены в UI для стабильности поведения и сохранения уникальности методики.
Дисклеймер по рискам
Скрипт носит образовательный характер и не является инвестиционной рекомендацией. Торговля связана с риском; прошлые результаты не гарантируют будущие. Проверяйте работу на своих инструментах/ТФ и используйте независимый риск-план (сайзинг, дневной лимит, инвалидаторы).
Trendlines Breakouts Pro V1.2 - 4TP [Wukong Algo]Trendlines Breakouts Pro
Trading method “High Tight Trendline Breakout”. This is a simple but effective and flexible method that can support many other methods such as: support and resistance, supply and demand, volume profile...
Automatically connect TradingView and MetaTrader 5 (MT5) for automatic trading and order management via PineConnector
The system includes a risk management grid including the levels: Stop Loss (SL), Break-even (BE), Trail Trigger, Trailing Stop, TP1 (1/4), TP2 (2/4), TP3 (3/4), TP4 (4/4). This grid helps you easily monitor and manage orders on TradingView in parallel with automatic order management on MT5.
Focus on tight capital and risk management, reduce emotion and stress when trading
Suitable for all markets: Forex, Gold, Crypto, Stocks, as long as you use MT5 and TradingView
If you do not need to trade automatically via MT5, the Trendlines Breakokuts Pro can also be used as an effective indicator in visual order management on TradingView charts, helps maintain discipline and good trading psychology (less Stress or FOMO)
Trendlines Breakouts Pro System User Guide
Step 1 - Draw trendline AB. Just click to select 2 points A, B on the chart
This is a straight line at the border of a chart pattern or support/resistance zone on the chart that you determine has high potential when it is broken, the price will have strong momentum and you will enter the order (Entry). The trendline AB can be a diagonal line or a horizontal line.
Step 2 - Entry Window: Set the time allowed for transactions
You can choose the earliest and latest time allowed for trading signals, called Entry Window. This means that the system will not allow trading outside the Entry Window. This option allows you to manage trading times as you wish, avoiding bad times for trading such as sideways, choppy, high volatility, news
Step 3 - Set up the input parameters for trading
You choose the direction you want to wait for trading: Wait Long (Buy), Wait Short (Sell), Turn Off, Hidden
You enter the ID of your PineConnector account if you want to trade automatically from TradingView to MT5
You enter the order parameters: Lotsize per order, Stop Loss (SL%), BE(%), Trail Trigger (%), TP1(%), TP2(%), TP3(%), TP4(%)
You enter the safe filter parameters for Entry: max distance from entry to swing high/low, max distance from entry to trendline's breakpoint C, max entries per trendlines
See more details in the screenshots
Step 4 - Set up automatic trading from TradingView via MT5
If you do not need automatic trading in MT5, skip this step. Entry signals and risk management grids will still be displayed on the TradingView chart for you to see, but there is no connection and automatic trading signal shooting and automatic order management from TradingView to MT5 via PineConnector.
We need to create an Alert in TradingView and attach it to this Indicator so that the Alert's trading signals are transmitted via MetaTrader 5 (MT5) via PineConnector.
When trading, you need to turn on 3 software at the same time to be able to connect to each other to operate: TradingView, MetaTrader 5 (MT5), PineConnector
See more details in the screenshots
Step 5 - Complete setup, and wait for trading signals
You have completed the setup steps for the Indicator, ready when there is a trading signal
You do not need to sit in front of the screen all day if you do not want. The system has been set up to execute and manage orders automatically.
Of course, sometimes you should still check your transaction status, in case of unexpected problems such as lost internet connection.
If you still have questions about this Indicator, please email tuanwukongvn@gmail.com for support.
Z-Score Trend Channels [BackQuant]Z-Score Trend Channels
A self-contained price-statistics framework that turns a rolling z-score into price channels, bias states, and trade markers. Run either trend-following or mean-reversion from the same tool with clear, on-chart context.
What it is
A rolling statistical map that measures how far price is from its recent average in standard-deviation units (z-score).
Adaptive channels drawn in price space from fixed z thresholds, so the rails breathe with volatility.
A simple trend proxy from z-score momentum to separate trending from ranging conditions.
On-chart signals for pullback entries, stretched extremes, and practical exits.
Core idea (plain English math)
Rolling mean and volatility - Over a lookback you get the average price and its standard deviation.
Z-score - How many standard deviations the current price is above or below its average: z = (price - mean) / stdev. z near 0 means near average; positive is above; negative is below.
Noise control - An EMA smooths the raw z to reduce jitter and false flickers.
Channels back in price - Fixed z levels are converted back to price to form the upper, lower, and extreme rails.
Trend proxy - A smoothed change in z is used as a lightweight trend-strength line. Positive strength with positive z favors uptrend; negative strength with negative z favors downtrend.
What you see on the chart
Channels and fills - Mean, upper, lower, and optional extreme lines. The area mean->upper tints with the bearish color, mean->lower tints with the bullish color.
Background tint (optional) - Soft green, red, or neutral based on detected trend state.
Signals - Bullish Entry (triangle up) when z exits the oversold zone upward; Bearish Entry (triangle down) when z exits the overbought zone downward; Extreme markers (diamonds) at the extreme bands with a one-bar turn.
Table - Current z, trend state, trend strength, distance to bands, market state tag, and a quick volatility regime label.
Edge labels - MEAN, OB, and OS labels slightly projected forward with level values.
Inputs you will actually use
Z-Score Period - Lookback for mean and stdev. Larger = slower and steadier rails, smaller = more reactive.
Smoothing Period - EMA on z. Lower = earlier but choppier flips; higher = later but cleaner.
Price Source - Default hlc3. Choose close if you prefer session-close logic.
Upper and Lower Thresholds - Default around +2.0 and -2.0. Tighten for more signals, widen for fewer and stronger.
Extreme Upper and Lower - Deeper stretch guards, e.g., +/- 2.5.
Strength Period - EMA on z momentum. Sets how fast the trend proxy flips.
Trend Threshold - Minimum absolute z to accept a directional bias.
Visual toggles - Channels, signals, background tint, stats table, colors, and optional last-bar trend label.
How to use it: trend-following playbook
Read the state - Uptrend when z > Trend Threshold and trend strength > 0. Downtrend when z < -Trend Threshold and trend strength < 0. Neutral otherwise.
Entries - In an uptrend, prefer Bullish Entry signals that fire near the lower channel. In a downtrend, prefer Bearish Entry signals that fire near the upper channel.
Stops - Conservative: beyond the extreme channel on your side. Tighter: just outside the standard band that framed the signal.
Exits - For longs, exit or trim on a cross back through z = 0 or a clean tag of the upper threshold. For shorts, mirror with z = 0 up-cross or tag of the lower threshold. You can also reduce if trend strength flips against you.
Adds - In strong trends, additional signals near your side’s band can be add points. Avoid adding once z hovers near the opposite band for several bars.
How to use it: mean-reversion playbook
Find stretch - Standard reversions: Bullish Entry when z leaves the oversold zone upward; Bearish Entry when z leaves the overbought zone downward. Aggressive reversions: Extreme markers at extreme bands with a one-bar turn.
Entries - Take the signal as price exits the zone. Prefer setups where trend strength is near zero or tilting against the prior push.
Targets - First target is the mean line. A runner can aim for the opposite standard channel if momentum keeps flipping.
Stops - Outside the extreme band beyond your entry. If fading without extremes, place risk just beyond the opposite standard band.
Filters - Optional: skip counter-trend fades against a very strong trend state unless your risk is tight and predefined.
Reading the stats table
Current Z-Score - Magnitude and sign of displacement now.
Trend State - Uptrend, Downtrend, or Ranging.
Trend Strength - Smoothed z momentum. Higher absolute values imply stronger directional conviction.
Distance to Upper/Lower - Percent distance from price to each band, useful for sizing targets or judging room left.
Market State - Overbought, Oversold, Extreme OB, Extreme OS, or Normal.
Volatility Regime - High, Normal, or Low relative to recent distribution. Expect bands to widen in High and tighten in Low.
Parameter guidance (conceptual)
Z-Score Period - Choose longer for a structural mean, shorter for a reactive mean.
Smoothing Period - Lower for earlier but noisier reads; higher for slower but steadier reads.
Thresholds - Start around +/- 2.0. Tighten for scalping or quiet ranges. Widen for noisy or fast markets.
Trend Threshold and Strength Period - Raise to avoid weak, transient bias. Lower to capture earlier regime shifts.
Practical examples
Trend pullback long - State shows Uptrend. Price tests the lower channel; z dips near or below the lower threshold; a Bullish Entry prints. Stop just below extreme lower; first target mean; keep a runner if trend strength stays positive.
Mean-revert short - State is Ranging. z tags the extreme upper, an Extreme Bearish marker prints, then a Bearish Entry prints on the leave. Stop above extreme upper; target the mean; consider a runner toward the lower channel if strength turns negative.
Potential Questions you might have
Why z-score instead of fixed offsets - Because the bands adapt with volatility. When the tape gets quiet the rails tighten, when it runs hot the rails expand. Your entries stay normalized.
Do I need both modes - No. Many users run only trend pullbacks or only mean-reversions. The tool lets you toggle what you need and keep the chart readable.
Multi-timeframe workflow - A common approach is to set bias from a higher timeframe’s trend state and execute on a lower timeframe’s signals that align with it.
Summary
Z-Score Trend Channels gives you an adaptive mean, volatility-aware rails, a simple trend lens, and clear signals. Trade the trend by buying pullbacks in green and selling pullbacks in red, or fade stretched extremes back to the mean with defined risk. One framework, two strategies, consistent logic.
SuperSmoother MA OscillatorSuperSmoother MA Oscillator - Ehlers-Inspired Lag-Minimized Signal Framework
Overview
The SuperSmoother MA Oscillator is a crossover and momentum detection framework built on the pioneering work of John F. Ehlers, who introduced digital signal processing (DSP) concepts into technical analysis. Traditional moving averages such as SMA and EMA are prone to two persistent flaws: excessive lag, which delays recognition of trend shifts, and high-frequency noise, which produces unreliable whipsaw signals. Ehlers’ SuperSmoother filter was designed to specifically address these flaws by creating a low-pass filter with minimal lag and superior noise suppression, inspired by engineering methods used in communications and radar systems.
This oscillator extends Ehlers’ foundation by combining the SuperSmoother filter with multi-length moving average oscillation, ATR-based normalization, and dynamic color coding. The result is a tool that helps traders identify market momentum, detect reliable crossovers earlier than conventional methods, and contextualize volatility and phase shifts without being distracted by transient price noise.
Unlike conventional oscillators, which either oversimplify price structure or overload the chart with reactive signals, the SuperSmoother MA Oscillator is designed to balance responsiveness and stability. By preprocessing price data with the SuperSmoother filter, traders gain a signal framework that is clean, robust, and adaptable across assets and timeframes.
Theoretical Foundation
Traditional MA oscillators such as MACD or dual-EMA systems react to raw or lightly smoothed price inputs. While effective in some conditions, these signals are often distorted by high-frequency oscillations inherent in market data, leading to false crossovers and poor timing. The SuperSmoother approach modifies this dynamic: by attenuating unwanted frequencies, it preserves structural price movements while eliminating meaningless noise.
This is particularly useful for traders who need to distinguish between genuine market cycles and random short-term price flickers. In practical terms, the oscillator helps identify:
Early trend continuations (when fast averages break cleanly above/below slower averages).
Preemptive breakout setups (when compressed oscillator ranges expand).
Exhaustion phases (when oscillator swings flatten despite continued price movement).
Its multi-purpose design allows traders to apply it flexibly across scalping, day trading, swing setups, and longer-term trend positioning, without needing separate tools for each.
The oscillator’s visual system - fast/slow lines, dynamic coloration, and zero-line crossovers - is structured to provide trend clarity without hiding nuance. Strong green/red momentum confirms directional conviction, while neutral gray phases emphasize uncertainty or low conviction. This ensures traders can quickly gauge the market state without losing access to subtle structural signals.
How It Works
The SuperSmoother MA Oscillator builds signals through a layered process:
SuperSmoother Filtering (Ehlers’ Method)
At its core lies Ehlers’ two-pole recursive filter, mathematically engineered to suppress high-frequency components while introducing minimal lag. Compared to traditional EMA smoothing, the SuperSmoother achieves better spectral separation - it allows meaningful cyclical market structures to pass through, while eliminating erratic spikes and aliasing. This makes it a superior preprocessing stage for oscillator inputs.
Fast and Slow Line Construction
Within the oscillator framework, the filtered price series is used to build two internal moving averages: a fast line (short-term momentum) and a slow line (longer-term directional bias). These are not plotted directly on the chart - instead, their relationship is transformed into the oscillator values you see.
The interaction between these two internal averages - crossovers, separation, and compression - forms the backbone of trend detection:
Uptrend Signal : Fast MA rises above the slow MA with expanding distance, generating a positive oscillator swing.
Downtrend Signal : Fast MA falls below the slow MA with widening divergence, producing a negative oscillator swing.
Neutral/Transition : Lines compress, flattening the oscillator near zero and often preceding volatility expansion.
This design ensures traders receive the information content of dual-MA crossovers while keeping the chart visually clean and focused on the oscillator’s dynamics.
ATR-Based Normalization
Markets vary in volatility. To ensure the oscillator behaves consistently across assets, ATR (Average True Range) normalization scales outputs relative to prevailing volatility conditions. This prevents the oscillator from appearing overly sensitive in calm markets or too flat during high-volatility regimes.
Dynamic Color Coding
Color transitions reflect underlying market states:
Strong Green : Bullish alignment, momentum expanding.
Strong Red : Bearish alignment, momentum expanding.
These visual cues allow traders to quickly gauge trend direction and strength at a glance, with expanding colors indicating increasing conviction in the underlying momentum.
Interpretation
The oscillator offers a multi-dimensional view of price dynamics:
Trend Analysis : Fast/slow line alignment and zero-line interactions reveal trend direction and strength. Expansions indicate momentum building; contractions flag weakening conditions or potential reversals.
Momentum & Volatility : Rapid divergence between lines reflects increasing momentum. Compression highlights periods of reduced volatility and possible upcoming expansion.
Cycle Awareness : Because of Ehlers’ DSP foundation, the oscillator captures market cycles more cleanly than conventional MA systems, allowing traders to anticipate turning points before raw price action confirms them.
Divergence Detection : When oscillator momentum fades while price continues in the same direction, it signals exhaustion - a cue to tighten stops or anticipate reversals.
By focusing on filtered, volatility-adjusted signals, traders avoid overreacting to noise while gaining early access to structural changes in momentum.
Strategy Integration
The SuperSmoother MA Oscillator adapts across multiple trading approaches:
Trend Following
Enter when fast/slow alignment is strong and expanding:
A fast line crossing above the slow line with expanding green signals confirms bullish continuation.
Use ATR-normalized expansion to filter entries in line with prevailing volatility.
Breakout Trading
Periods of compression often precede breakouts:
A breakout occurs when fast lines diverge decisively from slow lines with renewed green/red strength.
Exhaustion and Reversals
Oscillator divergence signals weakening trends:
Flattening momentum while price continues trending may indicate overextension.
Traders can exit or hedge positions in anticipation of corrective phases.
Multi-Timeframe Confluence
Apply the oscillator on higher timeframes to confirm the directional bias.
Use lower timeframes for refined entries during compression → expansion transitions.
Technical Implementation Details
SuperSmoother Algorithm (Ehlers) : Recursive two-pole filter minimizes lag while removing high-frequency noise.
Oscillator Framework : Fast/slow MAs derived from filtered prices.
ATR Normalization : Ensures consistent amplitude across market regimes.
Dynamic Color Engine : Aligns visual cues with structural states (expansion and contraction).
Multi-Factor Analysis : Combines crossover logic, volatility context, and cycle detection for robust outputs.
This layered approach ensures the oscillator is highly responsive without overloading charts with noise.
Optimal Application Parameters
Asset-Specific Guidance:
Forex : Normalize with moderate ATR scaling; focus on slow-line confirmation.
Equities : Balance responsiveness with smoothing; useful for capturing sector rotations.
Cryptocurrency : Higher ATR multipliers recommended due to volatility.
Futures/Indices : Lower frequency settings highlight structural trends.
Timeframe Optimization:
Scalping (1-5min) : Higher sensitivity, prioritize fast-line signals.
Intraday (15m-1h) : Balance between fast/slow expansions.
Swing (4h-Daily) : Focus on slow-line momentum with fast-line timing.
Position (Daily-Weekly) : Slow lines dominate; fast lines highlight cycle shifts.
Performance Characteristics
High Effectiveness:
Trending environments with moderate-to-high volatility.
Assets with steady liquidity and clear cyclical structures.
Reduced Effectiveness:
Flat/choppy conditions with little directional bias.
Ultra-short timeframes (<1m), where noise dominates.
Integration Guidelines
Confluence : Combine with liquidity zones, order blocks, and volume-based indicators for confirmation.
Risk Management : Place stops beyond slow-line thresholds or ATR-defined zones.
Dynamic Trade Management : Use expansions/contractions to scale position sizes or tighten stops.
Multi-Timeframe Confirmation : Filter lower-timeframe entries with higher-timeframe momentum states.
Disclaimer
The SuperSmoother MA Oscillator is an advanced trend and momentum analysis tool, not a guaranteed profit system. Its effectiveness depends on proper parameter settings per asset and disciplined risk management. Traders should use it as part of a broader technical framework and not in isolation.
MSFusion- MultiScoreFusionThis Pine Script strategy, MSFusion - MultiScoreFusion, combines Ichimoku components and Hull Moving Average (HMA) signals to generate a composite score for each bar.
It evaluates several conditions—such as price crossing above HMA55, Tenkan and Kijun lines, and price position relative to the Ichimoku cloud—and assigns scores to each.
The script displays a label with the total score and a tooltip listing the contributing conditions when a strong bullish signal is detected. This approach helps traders quickly assess market momentum and trend strength using multiple technical criteria.