Adaptive MACD Deluxe [AlgoAlpha]OVERVIEW
This script is an advanced rework of the classic MACD indicator, designed to be more adaptive, visually informative, and customizable. It enhances the original MACD formula using a dynamic feedback loop and a correlation-based weighting system that adjusts in real-time based on how deterministic recent price action is. The signal line is flexible, offering several smoothing types including Heiken Ashi, while the histogram is color-coded with gradients to help users visually identify momentum shifts. It also includes optional normalization by volatility, allowing MACD values to be interpreted as relative percentage moves, making the indicator more consistent across different assets and timeframes.
CONCEPTS
This version of MACD introduces a deterministic weight based on R-squared correlation with time, which modulates how fast or slow the MACD adapts to price changes. Higher correlation means smoother, slower MACD responses, and low correlation leads to quicker reaction. The momentum calculation blends traditional EMA math with feedback and damping components to create a smoother, less noisy series. Heiken Ashi is optionally used for signal smoothing to better visualize short-term trend bias. When normalization is enabled, the MACD is scaled by an EMA of the high-low range, converting it into a bounded, volatility-relative indicator. This makes extreme readings more meaningful across markets.
FEATURES
The script offers six distinct options for signal line smoothing: EMA, SMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, VWMA, and a custom Heiken Ashi mode based on the MACD series. Each option provides a different response speed and smoothing behavior, allowing traders to match the indicator’s behavior to their strategy—whether it's faster reaction or reduced noise.
Normalization is another key feature. When enabled, MACD values are scaled by a volatility proxy, converting the indicator into a relative percentage. This helps standardize the MACD across different assets and timeframes, making overbought and oversold readings more consistent and easier to interpret.
Threshold zones can be customized using upper and lower boundaries, with inner zones for early warnings. These zones are highlighted on the chart with subtle background fills and directional arrows when MACD enters or exits key levels. This makes it easier to spot strong or weak reversals at a glance.
Lastly, the script includes multiple built-in alerts. Users can set alerts for MACD crossovers, histogram flips above or below zero, and MACD entries into strong or weak reversal zones. This allows for hands-free monitoring and quick decision-making without staring at the chart.
USAGE
To use this script, choose your preferred signal smoothing type, enable normalization if you want MACD values relative to volatility, and adjust the threshold zones to fit your asset or timeframe. Use the colored histogram to detect changes in momentum strength—brighter colors indicate rising strength, while faded colors imply weakening. Heiken Ashi mode smooths out noise and provides clearer signals, especially useful in choppy conditions. Use alert conditions for crossover and reversal detection, or monitor the arrow markers for entries into potential exhaustion zones. This setup works well for trend following, momentum trading, and reversal spotting across all market types.
震盪指標
MACD Full [Titans_Invest]MACD Full — A Smarter, More Flexible MACD.
Looking for a MACD with real customization power?
We present one of the most complete public MACD indicators available on TradingView.
It maintains the classic MACD structure but is enhanced with 20 fully customizable long entry conditions and 20 short entry conditions , giving you precise control over your strategy.
Plus, it’s fully automation-ready, making it ideal for quantitative systems and algorithmic trading.
Whether you're a discretionary trader or a bot developer, this tool is built to seamlessly adapt to your style.
⯁ WHAT IS THE MACD❓
The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) is a technical analysis indicator developed by Gerald Appel. It measures the relationship between two moving averages of a security’s price to identify changes in momentum, direction, and strength of a trend. The MACD is composed of three components: the MACD line, the signal line, and the histogram.
⯁ HOW TO USE THE MACD❓
The MACD is calculated by subtracting the 26-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) from the 12-period EMA. A 9-period EMA of the MACD line, called the signal line, is then plotted on top of the MACD line. The MACD histogram represents the difference between the MACD line and the signal line.
Here are the primary signals generated by the MACD:
Bullish Crossover: When the MACD line crosses above the signal line, indicating a potential buy signal.
Bearish Crossover: When the MACD line crosses below the signal line, indicating a potential sell signal.
Divergence: When the price of the security diverges from the MACD, suggesting a potential reversal.
Overbought/Oversold Conditions: Indicated by the MACD line moving far away from the signal line, though this is less common than in oscillators like the RSI.
⯁ ENTRY CONDITIONS
The conditions below are fully flexible and allow for complete customization of the signal.
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🔹 CONDITIONS TO BUY 📈
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• Signal Validity: The signal will remain valid for X bars .
• Signal Sequence: Configurable as AND or OR .
🔹 MACD > Signal Smoothing
🔹 MACD < Signal Smoothing
🔹 Histogram > 0
🔹 Histogram < 0
🔹 Histogram Positive
🔹 Histogram Negative
🔹 MACD > 0
🔹 MACD < 0
🔹 Signal > 0
🔹 Signal < 0
🔹 MACD > Histogram
🔹 MACD < Histogram
🔹 Signal > Histogram
🔹 Signal < Histogram
🔹 MACD (Crossover) Signal
🔹 MACD (Crossunder) Signal
🔹 MACD (Crossover) 0
🔹 MACD (Crossunder) 0
🔹 Signal (Crossover) 0
🔹 Signal (Crossunder) 0
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🔸 CONDITIONS TO SELL 📉
______________________________________________________
• Signal Validity: The signal will remain valid for X bars .
• Signal Sequence: Configurable as AND or OR .
🔸 MACD > Signal Smoothing
🔸 MACD < Signal Smoothing
🔸 Histogram > 0
🔸 Histogram < 0
🔸 Histogram Positive
🔸 Histogram Negative
🔸 MACD > 0
🔸 MACD < 0
🔸 Signal > 0
🔸 Signal < 0
🔸 MACD > Histogram
🔸 MACD < Histogram
🔸 Signal > Histogram
🔸 Signal < Histogram
🔸 MACD (Crossover) Signal
🔸 MACD (Crossunder) Signal
🔸 MACD (Crossover) 0
🔸 MACD (Crossunder) 0
🔸 Signal (Crossover) 0
🔸 Signal (Crossunder) 0
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🤖 AUTOMATION 🤖
• You can automate the BUY and SELL signals of this indicator.
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⯁ UNIQUE FEATURES
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Signal Validity: The signal will remain valid for X bars
Signal Sequence: Configurable as AND/OR
Condition Table: BUY/SELL
Condition Labels: BUY/SELL
Plot Labels in the Graph Above: BUY/SELL
Automate and Monitor Signals/Alerts: BUY/SELL
Signal Validity: The signal will remain valid for X bars
Signal Sequence: Configurable as AND/OR
Table of Conditions: BUY/SELL
Conditions Label: BUY/SELL
Plot Labels in the graph above: BUY/SELL
Automate & Monitor Signals/Alerts: BUY/SELL
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📜 SCRIPT : MACD Full
🎴 Art by : @Titans_Invest & @DiFlip
👨💻 Dev by : @Titans_Invest & @DiFlip
🎑 Titans Invest — The Wizards Without Gloves 🧤
✨ Enjoy!
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o Mission 🗺
• Inspire Traders to manifest Magic in the Market.
o Vision 𐓏
• To elevate collective Energy 𐓷𐓏
Quad Rotation - StochasticThis Indicator is a step up from the Triad Rotation Indicator previously made, as it has 4 Stochastic signals rather then 3.
It can be used mainly to identify potential reversal periods. If the Instrument becomes overbought, or oversold with all 4 stochastics a horizontal highlight will appear, either green or red. Green indicates the instrument is oversold, and may reverse soon, meaning you should take a buying positions, and red indicates an overbought position, where you may want to sell due to a reversal downward.
Additionally, you can set an alarm if all 4 stochastic indicators signal overbought or oversold. This will help reduce your need to watch each instrument, and reduce the likelihood of overtrading.
If you have comments regarding this indicator, if you found it helpful, or would like other improvements feel free to email me. If you are looking for other custom indicators, also feel free to email me. Email: thejak77@aol.com. This is an email rarely monitored, so please be patient, thank you!
All the best, and stay profitable!
Bilateral Filter For Loop [BackQuant]Bilateral Filter For Loop
The Bilateral Filter For Loop is an advanced technical indicator designed to filter out market noise and smooth out price data, thus improving the identification of underlying market trends. It employs a bilateral filter, which is a sophisticated non-linear filter commonly used in image processing and price time series analysis. By considering both spatial and range differences between price points, this filter is highly effective at preserving significant trends while reducing random fluctuations, ultimately making it suitable for dynamic trend-following strategies.
Please take the time to read the following:
Key Features
1. Bilateral Filter Calculation:
The bilateral filter is the core of this indicator and works by applying a weight to each data point based on two factors: spatial distance and price range difference. This dual weighting process allows the filter to preserve important price movements while reducing the impact of less relevant fluctuations. The filter uses two primary parameters:
Spatial Sigma (σ_d): This parameter adjusts the weight applied based on the distance of each price point from the current price. A larger spatial sigma means more smoothing, as further away values will contribute more heavily to the result.
Range Sigma (σ_r): This parameter controls how much weight is applied based on the difference in price values. Larger price differences result in smaller weights, while similar price values result in larger weights, thereby preserving the trend while filtering out noise.
The output of this filter is a smoothed version of the original price series, which eliminates short-term fluctuations, helping traders focus on longer-term trends. The bilateral filter is applied over a rolling window, adjusting the level of smoothing dynamically based on both the distance between values and their relative price movements.
2. For Loop Calculation for Trend Scoring:
A for-loop is used to calculate the trend score based on the filtered price data. The loop compares the current value to previous values within the specified window, scoring the trend as follows:
+1 for upward movement (when the filtered value is greater than the previous value).
-1 for downward movement (when the filtered value is less than the previous value).
The cumulative result of this loop gives a continuous trend score, which serves as a directional indicator for the market's momentum. By summing the scores over the window period, the loop provides an aggregate value that reflects the overall trend strength. This score helps determine whether the market is experiencing a strong uptrend, downtrend, or sideways movement.
3. Long and Short Conditions:
Once the trend score has been calculated, it is compared against predefined threshold levels:
A long signal is generated when the trend score exceeds the upper threshold, indicating that the market is in a strong uptrend.
A short signal is generated when the trend score crosses below the lower threshold, signaling a potential downtrend or trend reversal.
These conditions provide clear signals for potential entry points, and the color-coding helps traders quickly identify market direction:
Long signals are displayed in green.
Short signals are displayed in red.
These signals are designed to provide high-confidence entries for trend-following strategies, helping traders capture profitable movements in the market.
4. Trend Background and Bar Coloring:
The script offers customizable visual settings to enhance the clarity of the trend signals. Traders can choose to:
Color the bars based on the trend direction: Bars are colored green for long signals and red for short signals.
Change the background color to provide additional context: The background will be shaded green for a bullish trend and red for a bearish trend. This visual feedback helps traders to stay aligned with the prevailing market sentiment.
These features offer a quick visual reference for understanding the market's direction, making it easier for traders to identify when to enter or exit positions.
5. Threshold Lines for Visual Feedback:
Threshold lines are plotted on the chart to represent the predefined long and short levels. These lines act as clear markers for when the market reaches a critical threshold, triggering a potential buy (long) or sell (short) signal. By showing these threshold lines on the chart, traders can quickly gauge the strength of the market and assess whether the trend is strong enough to warrant action.
These thresholds can be adjusted based on the trader's preferences, allowing them to fine-tune the indicator for different market conditions or asset behaviors.
6. Customizable Parameters for Flexibility:
The indicator offers several parameters that can be adjusted to suit individual trading preferences:
Window Period (Bilateral Filter): The window size determines how many past price values are used to calculate the bilateral filter. A larger window increases smoothing, while a smaller window results in more responsive, but noisier, data.
Spatial Sigma (σ_d) and Range Sigma (σ_r): These values control how sensitive the filter is to price changes and the distance between data points. Fine-tuning these parameters allows traders to adjust the degree of noise reduction applied to the price series.
Threshold Levels: The upper and lower thresholds determine when the trend score crosses into long or short territory. These levels can be customized to better match the trader's risk tolerance or asset characteristics.
Visual Settings: Traders can customize the appearance of the chart, including the line width of trend signals, bar colors, and background shading, to make the indicator more readable and aligned with their charting style.
7. Alerts for Trend Reversals:
The indicator includes alert conditions for real-time notifications when the market crosses the defined thresholds. Traders can set alerts to be notified when:
The trend score crosses the long threshold, signaling an uptrend.
The trend score crosses the short threshold, signaling a downtrend.
These alerts provide timely information, allowing traders to take immediate action when the market shows a significant change in direction.
Final Thoughts
The Bilateral Filter For Loop indicator is a robust tool for trend-following traders who wish to reduce market noise and focus on the underlying trend. By applying the bilateral filter and calculating trend scores, this indicator helps traders identify strong uptrends and downtrends, providing reliable entry signals with minimal market noise. The customizable parameters, visual feedback, and alerting system make it a versatile tool for traders seeking to improve their timing and capture profitable market movements.
Thus following all of the key points here are some sample backtests on the 1D Chart
Disclaimer: Backtests are based off past results, and are not indicative of the future.
INDEX:BTCUSD
INDEX:ETHUSD
CRYPTO:SOLUSD
Trending Indicator: Price % of Pivots# Price % of Pivots Indicator
## Overview
A trend-following indicator that measures current price position relative to recent pivot highs and lows as percentages, providing normalized trend analysis across all timeframes and instruments.
## Key Features
- **Real-time trend table** with live signal updates (Strong Bullish/Bearish, Leaning Bullish/Bearish, Neutral)
- **Dual percentage tracking**: Price % of high pivot and low pivot % of current price
- **Universal compatibility** - works on any timeframe and asset class
- **Faster than some other trend indicators** - catches trend changes earlier with less lag
## Trading Signals
- **Bullish bias**: When price % of high pivot > low pivot % of price
- **Bearish bias**: When low pivot % of price > price % of high pivot
- **Customizable thresholds** (default 99%) with alert system
- **Color-coded backgrounds** for immediate visual confirmation
## Configuration
- Adjustable pivot lookback period (5-100 bars)
- Customizable left/right bars for pivot confirmation
- Threshold settings from 50-110% with 0.5% increments
- Full color customization for all elements
## Advantages
- **Speed**: More responsive than traditional ATR-based indicators
- **Clarity**: Clean percentage-based display with professional info table
- **Alerts**: Multiple conditions for automated and manual trading
- **Versatility**: Effective for day trading, swing trading, and multi-timeframe analysis
Perfect for traders seeking a fast, reliable trend indicator that works consistently across all markets and timeframes.
VWAP + ADX Trend FilterVWAP + ADX Trend Identifier (Intraday)”
🔹 Description:
Write a short, clear summary like:
“This script combines VWAP and ADX to help identify intraday trend trades. Buy and sell signals appear when price crosses VWAP with ADX strength above a threshold, confirming directional bias.”
You can also include:
Best suited for NIFTY / BNIFTY
Ideal timeframe: 5–15 min
For educational or personal use
🔹 Visibility:
Public: Anyone can find it on TradingView. Must follow Pine Script Publishing Rules.
Invite-only: Useful if you want to share with selected people (like clients or premium users).
Private: Only you can see and use it.
📌 Important Tips for Publishing:
Market Zone Analyzer[BullByte]Understanding the Market Zone Analyzer
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1. Purpose of the Indicator
The Market Zone Analyzer is a Pine Script™ (version 6) indicator designed to streamline market analysis on TradingView. Rather than scanning multiple separate tools, it unifies four core dimensions—trend strength, momentum, price action, and market activity—into a single, consolidated view. By doing so, it helps traders:
• Save time by avoiding manual cross-referencing of disparate signals.
• Reduce decision-making errors that can arise from juggling multiple indicators.
• Gain a clear, reliable read on whether the market is in a bullish, bearish, or sideways phase, so they can more confidently decide to enter, exit, or hold a position.
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2. Why a Trader Should Use It
• Unified View: Combines all essential market dimensions into one easy-to-read score and dashboard, eliminating the need to piece together signals manually.
• Adaptability: Automatically adjusts its internal weighting for trend, momentum, and price action based on current volatility. Whether markets are choppy or calm, the indicator remains relevant.
• Ease of Interpretation: Outputs a simple “BULLISH,” “BEARISH,” or “SIDEWAYS” label, supplemented by an intuitive on-chart dashboard and an oscillator plot that visually highlights market direction.
• Reliability Features: Built-in smoothing of the net score and hysteresis logic (requiring consecutive confirmations before flips) minimize false signals during noisy or range-bound phases.
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3. Why These Specific Indicators?
This script relies on a curated set of well-established technical tools, each chosen for its particular strength in measuring one of the four core dimensions:
1. Trend Strength:
• ADX/DMI (Average Directional Index / Directional Movement Index): Measures how strong a trend is, and whether the +DI line is above the –DI line (bullish) or vice versa (bearish).
• Moving Average Slope (Fast MA vs. Slow MA): Compares a shorter-period SMA to a longer-period SMA; if the fast MA sits above the slow MA, it confirms an uptrend, and vice versa for a downtrend.
• Ichimoku Cloud Differential (Senkou A vs. Senkou B): Provides a forward-looking view of trend direction; Senkou A above Senkou B signals bullishness, and the opposite signals bearishness.
2. Momentum:
• Relative Strength Index (RSI): Identifies overbought (above its dynamically calculated upper bound) or oversold (below its lower bound) conditions; changes in RSI often precede price reversals.
• Stochastic %K: Highlights shifts in short-term momentum by comparing closing price to the recent high/low range; values above its upper band signal bullish momentum, below its lower band signal bearish momentum.
• MACD Histogram: Measures the difference between the MACD line and its signal line; a positive histogram indicates upward momentum, a negative histogram indicates downward momentum.
3. Price Action:
• Highest High / Lowest Low (HH/LL) Range: Over a defined lookback period, this captures breakout or breakdown levels. A closing price near the recent highs (with a positive MA slope) yields a bullish score, and near the lows (with a negative MA slope) yields a bearish score.
• Heikin-Ashi Doji Detection: Uses Heikin-Ashi candles to identify indecision or continuation patterns. A small Heikin-Ashi body (doji) relative to recent volatility is scored as neutral; a larger body in the direction of the MA slope is scored bullish or bearish.
• Candle Range Measurement: Compares each candle’s high-low range against its own dynamic band (average range ± standard deviation). Large candles aligning with the prevailing trend score bullish or bearish accordingly; unusually small candles can indicate exhaustion or consolidation.
4. Market Activity:
• Bollinger Bands Width (BBW): Measures the distance between BB upper and lower bands; wide bands indicate high volatility, narrow bands indicate low volatility.
• Average True Range (ATR): Quantifies average price movement (volatility). A sudden spike in ATR suggests a volatile environment, while a contraction suggests calm.
• Keltner Channels Width (KCW): Similar to BBW but uses ATR around an EMA. Provides a second layer of volatility context, confirming or contrasting BBW readings.
• Volume (with Moving Average): Compares current volume to its moving average ± standard deviation. High volume validates strong moves; low volume signals potential lack of conviction.
By combining these tools, the indicator captures trend direction, momentum strength, price-action nuances, and overall market energy, yielding a more balanced and comprehensive assessment than any single tool alone.
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4. What Makes This Indicator Stand Out
• Multi-Dimensional Analysis: Rather than relying on a lone oscillator or moving average crossover, it simultaneously evaluates trend, momentum, price action, and activity.
• Dynamic Weighting: The relative importance of trend, momentum, and price action adjusts automatically based on real-time volatility (Market Activity State). For example, in highly volatile conditions, trend and momentum signals carry more weight; in calm markets, price action signals are prioritized.
• Stability Mechanisms:
• Smoothing: The net score is passed through a short moving average, filtering out noise, especially on lower timeframes.
• Hysteresis: Both Market Activity State and the final bullish/bearish/sideways zone require two consecutive confirmations before flipping, reducing whipsaw.
• Visual Interpretation: A fully customizable on-chart dashboard displays each sub-indicator’s value, regime, score, and comment, all color-coded. The oscillator plot changes color to reflect the current market zone (green for bullish, red for bearish, gray for sideways) and shows horizontal threshold lines at +2, 0, and –2.
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5. Recommended Timeframes
• Short-Term (5 min, 15 min): Day traders and scalpers can benefit from rapid signals, but should enable smoothing (and possibly disable hysteresis) to reduce false whipsaws.
• Medium-Term (1 h, 4 h): Swing traders find a balance between responsiveness and reliability. Less smoothing is required here, and the default parameters (e.g., ADX length = 14, RSI length = 14) perform well.
• Long-Term (Daily, Weekly): Position traders tracking major trends can disable smoothing for immediate raw readings, since higher-timeframe noise is minimal. Adjust lookback lengths (e.g., increase adxLength, rsiLength) if desired for slower signals.
Tip: If you keep smoothing off, stick to timeframes of 1 h or higher to avoid excessive signal “chatter.”
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6. How Scoring Works
A. Individual Indicator Scores
Each sub-indicator is assigned one of three discrete scores:
• +1 if it indicates a bullish condition (e.g., RSI above its dynamically calculated upper bound).
• 0 if it is neutral (e.g., RSI between upper and lower bounds).
• –1 if it indicates a bearish condition (e.g., RSI below its dynamically calculated lower bound).
Examples of individual score assignments:
• ADX/DMI:
• +1 if ADX ≥ adxThreshold and +DI > –DI (strong bullish trend)
• –1 if ADX ≥ adxThreshold and –DI > +DI (strong bearish trend)
• 0 if ADX < adxThreshold (trend strength below threshold)
• RSI:
• +1 if RSI > RSI_upperBound
• –1 if RSI < RSI_lowerBound
• 0 otherwise
• ATR (as part of Market Activity):
• +1 if ATR > (ATR_MA + stdev(ATR))
• –1 if ATR < (ATR_MA – stdev(ATR))
• 0 otherwise
Each of the four main categories shares this same +1/0/–1 logic across their sub-components.
B. Category Scores
Once each sub-indicator reports +1, 0, or –1, these are summed within their categories as follows:
• Trend Score = (ADX score) + (MA slope score) + (Ichimoku differential score)
• Momentum Score = (RSI score) + (Stochastic %K score) + (MACD histogram score)
• Price Action Score = (Highest-High/Lowest-Low score) + (Heikin-Ashi doji score) + (Candle range score)
• Market Activity Raw Score = (BBW score) + (ATR score) + (KC width score) + (Volume score)
Each category’s summed value can range between –3 and +3 (for Trend, Momentum, and Price Action), and between –4 and +4 for Market Activity raw.
C. Market Activity State and Dynamic Weight Adjustments
Rather than contributing directly to the netScore like the other three categories, Market Activity determines how much weight to assign to Trend, Momentum, and Price Action:
1. Compute Market Activity Raw Score by summing BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume individual scores (each +1/0/–1).
2. Bucket into High, Medium, or Low Activity:
• High if raw Score ≥ 2 (volatile market).
• Low if raw Score ≤ –2 (calm market).
• Medium otherwise.
3. Apply Hysteresis (if enabled): The state only flips after two consecutive bars register the same high/low/medium label.
4. Set Category Weights:
• High Activity: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Low Activity: Trend = 25 %, Momentum = 20 %, Price Action = 55 %.
• Medium Activity: Use the trader’s base weight inputs (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 % by default).
D. Calculating the Net Score
5. Normalize Base Weights (so that the sum of Trend + Momentum + Price Action always equals 100 %).
6. Determine Current Weights based on the Market Activity State (High/Medium/Low).
7. Compute Each Category’s Contribution: Multiply (categoryScore) × (currentWeight).
8. Sum Contributions to get the raw netScore (a floating-point value that can exceed ±3 when scores are strong).
9. Smooth the netScore over two bars (if smoothing is enabled) to reduce noise.
10. Apply Hysteresis to the Final Zone:
• If the smoothed netScore ≥ +2, the bar is classified as “Bullish.”
• If the smoothed netScore ≤ –2, the bar is classified as “Bearish.”
• Otherwise, it is “Sideways.”
• To prevent rapid flips, the script requires two consecutive bars in the new zone before officially changing the displayed zone (if hysteresis is on).
E. Thresholds for Zone Classification
• BULLISH: netScore ≥ +2
• BEARISH: netScore ≤ –2
• SIDEWAYS: –2 < netScore < +2
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7. Role of Volatility (Market Activity State) in Scoring
Volatility acts as a dynamic switch that shifts which category carries the most influence:
1. High Activity (Volatile):
• Detected when at least two sub-scores out of BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume equal +1.
• The script sets Trend weight = 50 % and Momentum weight = 35 %. Price Action weight is minimized at 15 %.
• Rationale: In volatile markets, strong trending moves and momentum surges dominate, so those signals are more reliable than nuanced candle patterns.
2. Low Activity (Calm):
• Detected when at least two sub-scores out of BBW, ATR, KCW, and Volume equal –1.
• The script sets Price Action weight = 55 %, Trend = 25 %, and Momentum = 20 %.
• Rationale: In quiet, sideways markets, subtle price-action signals (breakouts, doji patterns, small-range candles) are often the best early indicators of a new move.
3. Medium Activity (Balanced):
• Raw Score between –1 and +1 from the four volatility metrics.
• Uses whatever base weights the trader has specified (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %).
Because volatility can fluctuate rapidly, the script employs hysteresis on Market Activity State: a new High or Low state must occur on two consecutive bars before weights actually shift. This avoids constant back-and-forth weight changes and provides more stability.
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8. Scoring Example (Hypothetical Scenario)
• Symbol: Bitcoin on a 1-hour chart.
• Market Activity: Raw volatility sub-scores show BBW (+1), ATR (+1), KCW (0), Volume (+1) → Total raw Score = +3 → High Activity.
• Weights Selected: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Trend Signals:
• ADX strong and +DI > –DI → +1
• Fast MA above Slow MA → +1
• Ichimoku Senkou A > Senkou B → +1
→ Trend Score = +3
• Momentum Signals:
• RSI above upper bound → +1
• MACD histogram positive → +1
• Stochastic %K within neutral zone → 0
→ Momentum Score = +2
• Price Action Signals:
• Highest High/Lowest Low check yields 0 (close not near extremes)
• Heikin-Ashi doji reading is neutral → 0
• Candle range slightly above upper bound but trend is strong, so → +1
→ Price Action Score = +1
• Compute Net Score (before smoothing):
• Trend contribution = 3 × 0.50 = 1.50
• Momentum contribution = 2 × 0.35 = 0.70
• Price Action contribution = 1 × 0.15 = 0.15
• Raw netScore = 1.50 + 0.70 + 0.15 = 2.35
• Since 2.35 ≥ +2 and hysteresis is met, the final zone is “Bullish.”
Although the netScore lands at 2.35 (Bullish), smoothing might bring it slightly below 2.00 on the first bar (e.g., 1.90), in which case the script would wait for a second consecutive reading above +2 before officially classifying the zone as Bullish (if hysteresis is enabled).
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9. Correlation Between Categories
The four categories—Trend Strength, Momentum, Price Action, and Market Activity—often reinforce or offset one another. The script takes advantage of these natural correlations:
• Bullish Alignment: If ADX is strong and pointed upward, fast MA is above slow MA, and Ichimoku is positive, that usually coincides with RSI climbing above its upper bound and the MACD histogram turning positive. In such cases, both Trend and Momentum categories generate +1 or +2. Because the Market Activity State is likely High (given the accompanying volatility), Trend and Momentum weights are at their peak, so the netScore quickly crosses into Bullish territory.
• Sideways/Consolidation: During a low-volatility, sideways phase, ADX may fall below its threshold, MAs may flatten, and RSI might hover in the neutral band. However, subtle price-action signals (like a small breakout candle or a Heikin-Ashi candle with a slight bias) can still produce a +1 in the Price Action category. If Market Activity is Low, Price Action’s weight (55 %) can carry enough influence—even if Trend and Momentum are neutral—to push the netScore out of “Sideways” into a mild bullish or bearish bias.
• Opposing Signals: When Trend is bullish but Momentum turns negative (for example, price continues up but RSI rolls over), the two scores can partially cancel. Market Activity may remain Medium, in which case the netScore lingers near zero (Sideways). The trader can then wait for either a clearer momentum shift or a fresh price-action breakout before committing.
By dynamically recognizing these correlations and adjusting weights, the indicator ensures that:
• When Trend and Momentum align (and volatility supports it), the netScore leaps strongly into Bullish or Bearish.
• When Trend is neutral but Price Action shows an early move in a low-volatility environment, Price Action’s extra weight in the Low Activity State can still produce actionable signals.
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10. Market Activity State & Its Role (Detailed)
The Market Activity State is not a direct category score—it is an overarching context setter for how heavily to trust Trend, Momentum, or Price Action. Here’s how it is derived and applied:
1. Calculate Four Volatility Sub-Scores:
• BBW: Compare the current band width to its own moving average ± standard deviation. If BBW > (BBW_MA + stdev), assign +1 (high volatility); if BBW < (BBW_MA × 0.5), assign –1 (low volatility); else 0.
• ATR: Compare ATR to its moving average ± standard deviation. A spike above the upper threshold is +1; a contraction below the lower threshold is –1; otherwise 0.
• KCW: Same logic as ATR but around the KCW mean.
• Volume: Compare current volume to its volume MA ± standard deviation. Above the upper threshold is +1; below the lower threshold is –1; else 0.
2. Sum Sub-Scores → Raw Market Activity Score: Range between –4 and +4.
3. Assign Market Activity State:
• High Activity: Raw Score ≥ +2 (at least two volatility metrics are strongly spiking).
• Low Activity: Raw Score ≤ –2 (at least two metrics signal unusually low volatility or thin volume).
• Medium Activity: Raw Score is between –1 and +1 inclusive.
4. Hysteresis for Stability:
• If hysteresis is enabled, a new state only takes hold after two consecutive bars confirm the same High, Medium, or Low label.
• This prevents the Market Activity State from bouncing around when volatility is on the fence.
5. Set Category Weights Based on Activity State:
• High Activity: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Low Activity: Trend = 25 %, Momentum = 20 %, Price Action = 55 %.
• Medium Activity: Use trader’s base weights (e.g., Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %).
6. Impact on netScore: Because category scores (–3 to +3) multiply by these weights, High Activity amplifies the effect of strong Trend and Momentum scores; Low Activity amplifies the effect of Price Action.
7. Market Context Tooltip: The dashboard includes a tooltip summarizing the current state—e.g., “High activity, trend and momentum prioritized,” “Low activity, price action prioritized,” or “Balanced market, all categories considered.”
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11. Category Weights: Base vs. Dynamic
Traders begin by specifying base weights for Trend Strength, Momentum, and Price Action that sum to 100 %. These apply only when volatility is in the Medium band. Once volatility shifts:
• High Volatility Overrides:
• Trend jumps from its base (e.g., 40 %) to 50 %.
• Momentum jumps from its base (e.g., 30 %) to 35 %.
• Price Action is reduced to 15 %.
Example: If base weights were Trend = 40 %, Momentum = 30 %, Price Action = 30 %, then in High Activity they become 50/35/15. A Trend score of +3 now contributes 3 × 0.50 = +1.50 to netScore; a Momentum +2 contributes 2 × 0.35 = +0.70. In total, Trend + Momentum can easily push netScore above the +2 threshold on its own.
• Low Volatility Overrides:
• Price Action leaps from its base (30 %) to 55 %.
• Trend falls to 25 %, Momentum falls to 20 %.
Why? When markets are quiet, subtle candle breakouts, doji patterns, and small-range expansions tend to foreshadow the next swing more effectively than raw trend readings. A Price Action score of +3 in this state contributes 3 × 0.55 = +1.65, which can carry the netScore toward +2—even if Trend and Momentum are neutral or only mildly positive.
Because these weight shifts happen only after two consecutive bars confirm a High or Low state (if hysteresis is on), the indicator avoids constantly flipping its emphasis during borderline volatility phases.
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12. Dominant Category Explained
Within the dashboard, a label such as “Trend Dominant,” “Momentum Dominant,” or “Price Action Dominant” appears when one category’s absolute weighted contribution to netScore is the largest. Concretely:
• Compute each category’s weighted contribution = (raw category score) × (current weight).
• Compare the absolute values of those three contributions.
• The category with the highest absolute value is flagged as Dominant for that bar.
Why It Matters:
• Momentum Dominant: Indicates that the combined force of RSI, Stochastic, and MACD (after weighting) is pushing netScore farther than either Trend or Price Action. In practice, it means that short-term sentiment and speed of change are the primary drivers right now, so traders should watch for continued momentum signals before committing to a trade.
• Trend Dominant: Means ADX, MA slope, and Ichimoku (once weighted) outweigh the other categories. This suggests a strong directional move is in place; trend-following entries or confirming pullbacks are likely to succeed.
• Price Action Dominant: Occurs when breakout/breakdown patterns, Heikin-Ashi candle readings, and range expansions (after weighting) are the most influential. This often happens in calmer markets, where subtle shifts in candle structure can foreshadow bigger moves.
By explicitly calling out which category is carrying the most weight at any moment, the dashboard gives traders immediate insight into why the netScore is tilting toward bullish, bearish, or sideways.
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13. Oscillator Plot: How to Read It
The “Net Score” oscillator sits below the dashboard and visually displays the smoothed netScore as a line graph. Key features:
1. Value Range: In normal conditions it oscillates roughly between –3 and +3, but extreme confluences can push it outside that range.
2. Horizontal Threshold Lines:
• +2 Line (Bullish threshold)
• 0 Line (Neutral midline)
• –2 Line (Bearish threshold)
3. Zone Coloring:
• Green Background (Bullish Zone): When netScore ≥ +2.
• Red Background (Bearish Zone): When netScore ≤ –2.
• Gray Background (Sideways Zone): When –2 < netScore < +2.
4. Dynamic Line Color:
• The plotted netScore line itself is colored green in a Bullish Zone, red in a Bearish Zone, or gray in a Sideways Zone, creating an immediate visual cue.
Interpretation Tips:
• Crossing Above +2: Signals a strong enough combined trend/momentum/price-action reading to classify as Bullish. Many traders wait for a clear crossing plus a confirmation candle before entering a long position.
• Crossing Below –2: Indicates a strong Bearish signal. Traders may consider short or exit strategies.
• Rising Slope, Even Below +2: If netScore climbs steadily from neutral toward +2, it demonstrates building bullish momentum.
• Divergence: If price makes a higher high but the oscillator fails to reach a new high, it can warn of weakening momentum and a potential reversal.
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14. Comments and Their Necessity
Every sub-indicator (ADX, MA slope, Ichimoku, RSI, Stochastic, MACD, HH/LL, Heikin-Ashi, Candle Range, BBW, ATR, KCW, Volume) generates a short comment that appears in the detailed dashboard. Examples:
• “Strong bullish trend” or “Strong bearish trend” for ADX/DMI
• “Fast MA above slow MA” or “Fast MA below slow MA” for MA slope
• “RSI above dynamic threshold” or “RSI below dynamic threshold” for RSI
• “MACD histogram positive” or “MACD histogram negative” for MACD Hist
• “Price near highs” or “Price near lows” for HH/LL checks
• “Bullish Heikin Ashi” or “Bearish Heikin Ashi” for HA Doji scoring
• “Large range, trend confirmed” or “Small range, trend contradicted” for Candle Range
Additionally, the top-row comment for each category is:
• Trend: “Highly Bullish,” “Highly Bearish,” or “Neutral Trend.”
• Momentum: “Strong Momentum,” “Weak Momentum,” or “Neutral Momentum.”
• Price Action: “Bullish Action,” “Bearish Action,” or “Neutral Action.”
• Market Activity: “Volatile Market,” “Calm Market,” or “Stable Market.”
Reasons for These Comments:
• Transparency: Shows exactly how each sub-indicator contributed to its category score.
• Education: Helps traders learn why a category is labeled bullish, bearish, or neutral, building intuition over time.
• Customization: If, for example, the RSI comment says “RSI neutral” despite an impending trend shift, a trader might choose to adjust RSI length or thresholds.
In the detailed dashboard, hovering over each comment cell also reveals a tooltip with additional context (e.g., “Fast MA above slow MA” or “Senkou A above Senkou B”), helping traders understand the precise rule behind that +1, 0, or –1 assignment.
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15. Real-Life Example (Consolidated)
• Instrument & Timeframe: Bitcoin (BTCUSD), 1-hour chart.
• Current Market Activity: BBW and ATR both spike (+1 each), KCW is moderately high (+1), but volume is only neutral (0) → Raw Market Activity Score = +2 → State = High Activity (after two bars, if hysteresis is on).
• Category Weights Applied: Trend = 50 %, Momentum = 35 %, Price Action = 15 %.
• Trend Sub-Scores:
1. ADX = 25 (above threshold 20) with +DI > –DI → +1.
2. Fast MA (20-period) sits above Slow MA (50-period) → +1.
3. Ichimoku: Senkou A > Senkou B → +1.
→ Trend Score = +3.
• Momentum Sub-Scores:
4. RSI = 75 (above its moving average +1 stdev) → +1.
5. MACD histogram = +0.15 → +1.
6. Stochastic %K = 50 (mid-range) → 0.
→ Momentum Score = +2.
• Price Action Sub-Scores:
7. Price is not within 1 % of the 20-period high/low and slope = positive → 0.
8. Heikin-Ashi body is slightly larger than stdev over last 5 bars with haClose > haOpen → +1.
9. Candle range is just above its dynamic upper bound but trend is already captured, so → +1.
→ Price Action Score = +2.
• Calculate netScore (before smoothing):
• Trend contribution = 3 × 0.50 = 1.50
• Momentum contribution = 2 × 0.35 = 0.70
• Price Action contribution = 2 × 0.15 = 0.30
• Raw netScore = 1.50 + 0.70 + 0.30 = 2.50 → Immediately classified as Bullish.
• Oscillator & Dashboard Output:
• The oscillator line crosses above +2 and turns green.
• Dashboard displays:
• Trend Regime “BULLISH,” Trend Score = 3, Comment = “Highly Bullish.”
• Momentum Regime “BULLISH,” Momentum Score = 2, Comment = “Strong Momentum.”
• Price Action Regime “BULLISH,” Price Action Score = 2, Comment = “Bullish Action.”
• Market Activity State “High,” Comment = “Volatile Market.”
• Weights: Trend 50 %, Momentum 35 %, Price Action 15 %.
• Dominant Category: Trend (because 1.50 > 0.70 > 0.30).
• Overall Score: 2.50, posCount = (three +1s in Trend) + (two +1s in Momentum) + (two +1s in Price Action) = 7 bullish signals, negCount = 0.
• Final Zone = “BULLISH.”
• The trader sees that both Trend and Momentum are reinforcing each other under high volatility. They might wait one more candle for confirmation but already have strong evidence to consider a long.
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Disclaimer
This indicator is strictly a technical analysis tool and does not constitute financial advice. All trading involves risk, including potential loss of capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Traders should:
• Always backtest the “Market Zone Analyzer ” on their chosen symbols and timeframes before committing real capital.
• Combine this tool with sound risk management, position sizing, and, if possible, fundamental analysis.
• Understand that no indicator is foolproof; always be prepared for unexpected market moves.
Goodluck
-BullByte!
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Relative Imbalance Flow Tracker🚀 RIFT: Relative Imbalance Flow Tracker
A totally unique RSI envelope system that uses dual moving averages and color-coded dominance to show potential reversal zones before they happen. No standard Bollinger Bands. No gray confusion. Just clean, smart, visual logic.
🧠 How It Works
RSI is calculated and optionally smoothed (RMA/EMA/SMA/WMA).
Two RSI-based MAs are plotted:
- Fast MA (e.g. 16) = reactive
- Slow MA (e.g. 32) = steady
Each MA gets its own envelope based on a % distance.
If fast envelope dominates (outside the slow one), it lights up. Otherwise, they fade and cancel each other visually.
🎨 Color Logic
🔴 Upper Band (Red) = Overbought danger zone
When fast upper > slow upper, it's a warning flare.
🟢 Lower Band (Green) = Oversold bounce zone
When fast lower < slow lower, bulls may step in.
🟠 RSI Line Orange = Mixed signals
RSI is between the two MAs—no one's in control.
🟢 - RSI Line Green = RSI > both MAs = strong momentum
🔴 - RSI Line Red = RSI < both MAs = bearish pressure
🔍 How to Read It
- Red Band + Green RSI = uptrend stalling
- Green Band + Red RSI = selloff slowing
- No Fill = Envelopes overlapping, no edge
- RSI flips from green/red to orange = tug-of-war
⚙️ Why It’s Useful
- Gives early reversal clues before RSI tags extreme levels.
- Filters out fakeouts by showing when RSI can’t reach the “target zone.”
- Dynamic: adapts with trend strength and volatility via envelope width.
- Fully customizable: lengths, smoothing, envelope %, colors, fills.
💡 Quick Visual Tips
🔴 - Red Band visible but RSI stalls? = Likely reversal.
🟢 - Green Band shows up and RSI flips green? = Go time.
🟠 - RSI turns orange + no fills? = Sit out or scalp light.
Triad RotationHey guys, this is the first indicator I've created. I have done some selective testing to validate the calculations against the FullStochastic indicators using the same settings.
From my review it looks to match correctly, but please do your own due diligence to verify this indicator matches your needs and strategy.
This indicator was designed closely with the Quad rotation strategy, where you use multiple stochastic indicators to identify overbought and oversold conditions.
Once all the stochastics are determined to be over/under the overbought/oversold threshold, the section will be highlighted red or green based on which condition is met. Green indicates a potential period to buy, and red indicates a potential period to sell.
P.S. I pair this with the MACD indicator to determine momentum of to aid in determining entry and exits, along with support and resistance levels. Thus far, I am an unprofitable trader, so this strategy may change. Again do your own due diligence to design a strategy that works for you.
DMI-LuminateIndicator Description: DMI-Luminate (DMI-LMT)
DMI-Luminate is an enhanced version of the Directional Movement Index (DMI) indicator that combines multiple moving averages for smoothing and offers various options to customize the calculation of ADX, +DM, -DM, DX, and ADXR. It is ideal for traders looking to analyze trend strength and equilibrium points between buyers and sellers.
Components and Features
+DM and -DM: Indicators measuring positive and negative directional movement, helping identify trend direction.
DX (Directional Movement Index): Measures the relative difference between +DM and -DM, indicating the current trend strength.
ADX (Average Directional Index): A smoothed line showing trend strength regardless of direction. Values above 25 generally indicate a strong trend.
ADXR (Average Directional Movement Rating): A moving average of ADX that detects trend strength changes with less sensitivity.
Equilibrium Points: Visual markers (blue circles) that appear when +DM and -DM cross, signaling potential reversals or changes in trend strength.
Customizable Settings
DM Length: The period used to calculate directional movements.
ADX Smoothing: The smoothing period for ADX.
MA Type Universal: Select the moving average type used for smoothing calculations. Options include SMA, EMA, WMA, ALMA, T3, and advanced averages like DNA⚡ and RNA🐢.
T3 Hot Factor: Parameter to adjust the intensity of the T3 moving average (when selected).
Show Lines: Toggle the display of ADX, ADXR, DX, and +DM/-DM lines as you prefer.
Show Equilibrium Points: Enable to visualize crossing points between +DM and -DM.
Background Color and Offset: Customize the background color and offset for better visibility.
How to Use
Trend Identification
Watch the ADX line to gauge trend strength. When ADX is above 25, the trend is considered strong. The +DM and -DM lines indicate if the trend is bullish (+DM > -DM) or bearish (-DM > +DM).
Entry/Exit Signals
Use the equilibrium points (blue circles) to identify potential reversals or changes in trend dynamics based on +DM and -DM crossings.
Moving Average Selection
Experiment with different moving averages to smooth the data and tailor the indicator to your trading style and asset. Faster averages like EMA react better in volatile markets, while SMMA and ALMA suit more stable conditions.
Using ADXR
ADXR offers a smoother view of trend strength to avoid false signals during sideways markets.
Visual Customization
Adjust colors and background to improve readability, especially across different chart themes.
Recommendations
Combine DMI-Luminate with other indicators (e.g., volume, RSI, chart patterns) to confirm entries and exits.
Adjust DM Length and ADX Smoothing according to the timeframe you trade.
Use different moving average types to find the setup that works best for your asset and strategy.
RSI Reversal (instelbare RRR)made by Laila
(Indicator in the making)
How does it work?
Using RSI to decide:
If the RSI drops below 30 (oversold), it opens a buy (long) position.
If the RSI rises above 70 (overbought), it opens a sell (short) position.
Setting risk and reward:
You choose how much of the price you're willing to risk, for example 1%.
You also set how much reward you want, like 2 times the risk (2:1).
So if the entry price is 100:
Stop loss would be at 99 (1% down),
Take profit would be at 102 (2% up).
The strategy handles everything automatically:
When the RSI condition is met, it enters a trade.
It immediately sets both TP and SL levels.
The trade closes automatically when either TP or SL is hit.
DI+ Trend Tracker & Prediction (v6) DI+ Trend Tracker & Prediction – Pine Script v6
🔍 Overview
This custom TradingView indicator focuses exclusively on the +DI (Positive Directional Indicator) component of the ADX (Average Directional Index) system. It tracks recent DI+ values, analyzes trend strength and direction, and applies a simple predictive model to estimate DI+ for the next trading day.
🧠 Key Features
✅ 1. DI+ History Table (Last 4 Days)
Displays DI+ values for the past 4 completed bars.
Helps traders observe momentum and directional strength in a structured view.
📈 2. Percentage Change Calculations
Daily % Change: Shows change between the current DI+ and the previous day.
Average % Change (3 Days): Measures average change over the last 3 sessions to identify the directional consistency.
🔮 3. Predictive DI+ Estimation
Uses a linear regression (ta.linreg) over the last 4 DI+ values to estimate the next day’s DI+ reading.
This is a simple "AI-style" statistical model, providing a forecast for tomorrow’s directional strength.
📉 4. Buy/Sell Signal Generation
Buy Signal: Triggered when DI+ rises steadily over 3 days.
Sell Signal: Triggered when DI+ drops steadily over 3 days.
These signals are shown both in the table and directly on the chart with triangle markers.
📋 5. Clean Table Display
The indicator uses a top-right table to clearly present:
4-day DI+ history
Daily and average percentage changes
Predicted DI+ value
Current signal
DI+ for today
🔧 Inputs
ADX Length: Period for the DI+ calculation (default: 14)
ADX Smoothing: Smoothing period for the ADX and DMI components (default: 14)
🎯 Use Case
This indicator is ideal for:
Traders who focus on trend strength and directional movement.
Those seeking a quantitative edge by forecasting DI+.
Anyone wanting a visual cue system without overly complex strategy rules.
📌 Notes
This indicator does not include full ADX or DI− components.
It is meant for signal analysis, trend confirmation, and forecasting, not full strategy backtesting.
FX 2025 - Triple EMA Entrada y Cierre ÚnicaCruce de emas 9/21/50, se recomienda combinar con los indicadores de volumen y macd
EMA 9: Represents very short-term price movement.
EMA 21: Smoother and shows short-term trend.
EMA 50: Reflects the medium-term trend.
Common signals:
Bullish crossover: When the EMA 9 crosses above the EMA 21 (and preferably also the EMA 50), it’s seen as a buy signal.
Bearish crossover: When the EMA 9 crosses below the EMA 21 or 50, it may signal a sell or correction.
ML Super Divergence + ADX ConfirmationThe "ML Super Divergence + ADX Confirmation" indicator is a powerful tool designed for technical traders who want to combine machine learning-inspired divergence signals with the ADX (Average Directional Index) trend strength indicator for more reliable trade signals.
This script is written in Pine Script v6 and is suitable for use on TradingView charts. It visually highlights potential buy and sell opportunities and also generates alerts when conditions are met.
📈 Core Components:
1. ADX System (Average Directional Index):
Measures trend strength, not direction.
Calculated using a 14-period (user-configurable) setting.
DI+ (Positive Directional Index) and DI− (Negative Directional Index) are used to gauge bullish and bearish pressure.
Signals are only valid when ADX > threshold (e.g., 20), ensuring that the trend is strong enough to act upon.
2. Simulated ML Super Divergence Signal:
This is a placeholder for actual ML-based divergence detection.
For demonstration, it simulates:
Bullish divergence: when RSI crosses above 30 and OBV (On-Balance Volume) is rising.
Bearish divergence: when RSI crosses below 70 and OBV is falling.
This approximation helps visualize how real ML divergence signals could be integrated.
✅ Buy Signal Conditions:
A buy signal is plotted when:
A bullish divergence is detected.
DI+ is greater than DI− (i.e., bullish directional strength).
ADX is above the minimum threshold (confirming a strong trend).
📍 Visual cue: Green upward triangle below the price bar.
🔔 Alert Triggered: "Buy Signal: ML Super Divergence + DI+ + ADX Confirmation"
❌ Sell Signal Conditions:
A sell signal is plotted when:
A bearish divergence is detected.
DI− is greater than DI+ (i.e., bearish directional strength).
ADX is above the threshold.
📍 Visual cue: Red dot above the price bar.
🔔 Alert Triggered: "Sell Signal: ML Super Divergence + DI- + ADX Confirmation"
SMI-DarknessIndicator Description: SMI-Darkness
The SMI-Darkness is an indicator based on the Stochastic Momentum Index (SMI), designed to help identify the strength and direction of an asset's trend, as well as potential buy and sell signals. It displays a smoothed SMI using multiple moving average options to customize the indicator’s behavior according to the user’s trading style.
Main Features
Smoothed SMI: Calculates the traditional SMI and smooths it using a user-configurable moving average, improving signal clarity.
Signal Line: Displays a smoothed signal line to identify crossovers with the SMI, generating potential entry or exit points.
Histogram: Shows the difference between the smoothed SMI and the signal line, visually highlighting trend strength. Blue bars indicate buying strength, while yellow bars indicate selling strength.
Horizontal Lines: Includes overbought (+40) and oversold (-40) levels, plus a neutral zero level to aid interpretation.
Indicator Parameters
SMI Short Period: Sets the short period used to calculate the SMI (default 5). Lower periods make the indicator more sensitive.
SMI Signal Period: Sets the period to smooth the signal line (default 5). Adjust to control the signal line's smoothness.
Moving Average Type: Choose the moving average type to smooth the SMI and signal line. Options include:
SMA (Simple Moving Average)
SMMA (Smoothed Moving Average)
EMA (Exponential Moving Average)
WMA (Weighted Moving Average)
HMA (Hull Moving Average)
JMA (Jurik Moving Average) — Note: This is not an original or proprietary moving average but a publicly available open-source version created by TradingView users.
VWMA (Volume-Weighted Moving Average)
KAMA (Kaufman Adaptive Moving Average)
How to Use
Trend Identification: Observe the position of the smoothed SMI relative to the signal line and the histogram values.
When the histogram is positive (blue bars), momentum is bullish.
When the histogram is negative (yellow bars), momentum is bearish.
Buy and Sell Signals:
A crossover of the smoothed SMI above the signal line may indicate a buy signal.
A crossover of the smoothed SMI below the signal line may indicate a sell signal.
Overbought/Oversold Levels:
SMI values above +40 suggest potential overbought conditions, signaling caution on long positions.
Values below -40 suggest potential oversold conditions, indicating possible buying opportunities.
Customization: Adjust the parameters to balance sensitivity and noise, choosing the moving average type that best fits your trading style.
Parabolic Run Detector (With Weighted Caution)This indicator, Parabolic Run Detector (With Weighted Caution), is designed to help traders identify moments of strong directional movement (I call it a run) in asset prices, especially those that exhibit a parabolic character. It uses a combination of log-scale price slopes, RSI momentum, and Ichimoku cloud structure (via the very useful Tenkan-Kijun "clamp") to evaluate whether a price move has both strength and sustainability. When certain thresholds are met, it marks the beginning of a potential run with a green circle below the price chart, helping traders spot entries early in high-momentum conditions.
In addition to identifying the start of a run, the indicator also looks for end-of-run caution signals. These are marked with orange circles, indicating potential exhaustion or overextension. The caution logic doesn’t require all conditions to trigger at once — instead, it uses a weighted scoring system based on RSI extension, slowing price momentum (second derivative), and the widening of the Ichimoku clamp. If these conditions cross a confidence threshold within a set number of bars after a run begins, the caution signal fires. This allows traders to stay alert to reversal or consolidation risks without being prematurely spooked by noise. So, choose to ignore them, but they are there for you to assess.
You can fine-tune sensitivity with a set of adjustable parameters, including minimum slope values, RSI reversion awareness (bias weight), clamp thresholds, and spacing between signals. So play around to see what works best for you! For advanced users, the option to toggle between static or dynamically calculated RSI baselines and adapt Ichimoku settings for crypto vs. legacy markets adds another layer of contextual accuracy. Whether you're trading Bitcoin on a 4-hour chart or scanning equities on a daily timeframe, this tool helps bring clarity to trend acceleration and potential fatigue, all while minimizing visual clutter and giving you intuitive visual cues.
Let me know what you think.
Multi time frame combination signal1. Concept and originality
This indicator was developed with the aim of displaying signals of multiple time frames and moving averages of the fixed time frame different from the current chart. When buying and selling, if you use basic signals such as MACD, RSI, TSI, etc. on a certain time frame, you may miss shorter or longer-term trends. In addition, if a long-term upswing sign occurs and you want to search for a short-term pullback, you may want to use multiple signals of different time frames in combination. Therefore, I aimed to display signals of shorter and longer time frames simultaneously on one chart in addition to the current time frame. Furthermore, I considered a comosite signal that combines each basic signal and moving average line, and combines arbitrary signals of multiple arbitrary time frames in a single indicator.
2. Function
This indicator provides a composite signal that combines multiple basic indicators (MACD, RSI, TSI) and moving average lines on three arbitrary time frames. Other auxiliary functions include Bollinger bands, Ichimoku cloud, Fair Value Gap (FVG), and Order Block (OB). The three time frames can be set independently for each signal.
2.1 Combination signal
When you check "Show combination signal", the signals that combine each checked basic indicator with "and" will be displayed. If you want to combine each basic indicator with "or", uncheck "Combination signal" and check all the indicators you want to use. Each indicator can also be combined with a moving average. The indicators that can be combined with "Combination signal" are MACD, RSI, TSI and moving average. Bollinger bands, Ichimoku Kinko Hyo, Fair Value Gap (FVG) and Order Block (OB) are displayed alone and cannot be incorporated into "Combination signal".
When you check "Show short/middle/long term signal", the checked signals will be displayed on the chart with ▲ or ▼. ▲ indicates crossover and ▼ indicates crossunder. Short is displayed small and long is displayed large. The short/middle/long time frames can be set separately. It is not necessary that the short is shorter than the middle or long.
2.2 MACD signal
Check "Show MACD signal" to display the MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) signal. Check "Show short/middle/long term signal" to display the signal of the checked time frame with ▲ or ▼ on the chart. Short is displayed small, and long is displayed large. The short/middle/long time frames can be set separately. Short does not necessarily have to be shorter than middle or long. EMA is usually used for the moving average of MACD, but this indicator allows you to select the type of moving average from SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, and VWMA. You can enter the base period for Long, Short, and Signal. This period is the period for the selected time frame. Check "Use impulse MACD" to suppress signals in range markets. In this case, "Long length", "Short length", and "Signal length" are ignored and the value of "Impulse MACD length" is applied. Please note that some functions do not work properly on charts that do not provide volume.
2.3 RSI signal
Check "Show RSI signal" to display the RSI (Relative Strength Index) signal. Check "Show short/middle/long term signal" to display the signal of the checked time frame on the chart with ▲ or ▼. Short is displayed small, and long is displayed large. Short/middle/long time frames can be set separately. Short does not necessarily have to be shorter than middle and long. You can enter the overbought and oversold thresholds in the range of 0 to 100. You can enter the base period of the signal. Check "Use VRSI" to add volume to the RSI. Check "Use Stochastic RSI" to display the Stochastic RSI signal. In this case, the base period of the RSI signal is ignored. For Stochastic RSI, you can enter the type of moving average, the period for smoothing, and the base period. These values are ignored by the normal RSI and VRSI. Please note that some functions do not work properly on charts for which volume is not provided.
2.4 TSI signal
Checking "Show TSI signal" displays the TSI (True Strength Index) signal. Checking "Show short/middle/long term signal" displays the signals of the checked time frame as ▲ or ▼ on the chart. Short is displayed small, and long is displayed large. The short/middle/long time frames can be set separately. Short does not necessarily have to be shorter than the middle and long. You can enter the overbought and oversold thresholds in the range of -100 to 100. You can enter the base period for Long, Short, and Signal. You can select the type of moving average from SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, and VWMA. Please note that some functions do not work properly on charts for which volume is not provided.
2.5 Moving average
Check "Show moving average" to display the moving average for the specified time frame. The time frame can be set to match the chart time frame or fixed. The type of moving average can be selected from SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, and VWMA. Check each "Show MA" to display the moving average on the chart. Up to five moving averages can be displayed. Check each "Above MA" or "Below MA" to add the "and" condition in "Combination signal" whether the price is above or below the moving average.
2.6 Bollinger band
Check "Show bollinger band" to display the Bollinger band. You can enter the time frame, type of moving average, base period, and standard deviation. The type of moving average can be selected from SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, and VWMA. This auxiliary function is independent and is not taken into account in "Combination signal".
2.7 Ichimoku cloud
Check "Show Ichimoku cloud" to display the Ichimoku cloud. You can enter the time frame, base period, leading line and lagging line periods. This auxiliary function is independent and is not taken into account in "Combination signal".
2.8 Fair Value Gap
Check "Show fair value gap" to display the Fair Value Gap. Check "Show short/middle/long term signal" to display the Fair Value Gap zone of the checked time frame as a gray square on the chart. You can set the threshold value to suppress the display and whether or not to display the label. This auxiliary function is independent and is not taken into account in "Combination signal".
2.9 Order Block
Check "Show order block" to display the Order Block. Check "Show short/middle/long term signal" to display the Order Block zone of the checked time frame as a green or red square on the chart. You can set the threshold value to suppress the display and whether or not to display the label. This auxiliary function is independent and does not contribute to the "Combination signal".
Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator [Alpha Extract]The Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator combines the smoothing characteristics of Heikin-Ashi candlesticks with mean reversion analysis to create a powerful momentum oscillator. This indicator applies Heikin-Ashi transformation twice - first to price data and then to the oscillator itself - resulting in smoother signals while maintaining sensitivity to trend changes and potential reversal points.
🔶 CALCULATION
Heikin-Ashi Transformation: Converts regular OHLC data to smoothed Heikin-Ashi values
Component Analysis: Calculates trend strength, body deviation, and price deviation from mean
Oscillator Construction: Combines components with weighted formula (40% trend strength, 30% body deviation, 30% price deviation)
Double Smoothing: Applies EMA smoothing and second Heikin-Ashi transformation to oscillator values
Signal Generation: Identifies trend changes and crossover points with overbought/oversold levels
Formula:
HA Close = (Open + High + Low + Close) / 4
HA Open = (Previous HA Open + Previous HA Close) / 2
Trend Strength = Normalized consecutive HA candle direction
Body Deviation = (HA Body - Mean Body) / Mean Body * 100
Price Deviation = ((HA Close - Price Mean) / Price Mean * 100) / Standard Deviation * 25
Raw Oscillator = (Trend Strength * 0.4) + (Body Deviation * 0.3) + (Price Deviation * 0.3)
Final Oscillator = 50 + (EMA(Raw Oscillator) / 2)
🔶 DETAILS Visual Features:
Heikin-Ashi Candlesticks: Smoothed oscillator representation using HA transformation with vibrant teal/red coloring
Overbought/Oversold Zones: Horizontal lines at customizable levels (default 70/30) with background highlighting in extreme zones
Moving Averages: Optional fast and slow EMA overlays for additional trend confirmation
Signal Dashboard: Real-time table showing current oscillator status (Overbought/Oversold/Bullish/Bearish) and buy/sell signals
Reference Lines: Middle line at 50 (neutral), with 0 and 100 boundaries for range visualization
Interpretation:
Above 70: Overbought conditions, potential selling opportunity
Below 30: Oversold conditions, potential buying opportunity
Bullish HA Candles: Green/teal candles indicate upward momentum
Bearish HA Candles: Red candles indicate downward momentum
MA Crossovers: Fast EMA above slow EMA suggests bullish momentum, below suggests bearish momentum
Zone Exits: Price moving out of extreme zones (above 70 or below 30) often signals trend continuation
🔶 EXAMPLES
Mean Reversion Signals: When the oscillator reaches extreme levels (above 70 or below 30), it identifies potential reversal points where price may revert to the mean.
Example: Oscillator reaching 80+ levels during strong uptrends often precedes short-term pullbacks, providing profit-taking opportunities.
Trend Change Detection: The double Heikin-Ashi smoothing helps identify genuine trend changes while filtering out market noise.
Example: When oscillator HA candles change from red to teal after oversold readings, this confirms potential trend reversal from bearish to bullish.
Moving Average Confirmation: Fast and slow EMA crossovers on the oscillator provide additional confirmation of momentum shifts.
Example: Fast EMA crossing above slow EMA while oscillator is rising from oversold levels provides strong bullish confirmation signal.
Dashboard Signal Integration: The real-time dashboard combines oscillator status with directional signals for quick decision-making.
Example: Dashboard showing "Oversold" status with "BUY" signal when HA candles turn bullish provides clear entry timing.
🔶 SETTINGS
Customization Options:
Calculation: Oscillator period (default 14), smoothing factor (1-50, default 2)
Levels: Overbought threshold (50-100, default 70), oversold threshold (0-50, default 30)
Moving Averages: Toggle display, fast EMA length (default 9), slow EMA length (default 21)
Visual Enhancements: Show/hide signal dashboard, customizable table position
Alert Conditions: Oversold bounce, overbought reversal, bullish/bearish MA crossovers
The Heikin-Ashi Mean Reversion Oscillator provides traders with a sophisticated momentum tool that combines the smoothing benefits of Heikin-Ashi analysis with mean reversion principles. The double transformation process creates cleaner signals while the integrated dashboard and multiple confirmation methods help traders identify high-probability entry and exit points during both trending and ranging market conditions.
Vix_Fix Enhanced MTF [Cometreon]The VIX Fix Enhanced is designed to detect market bottoms and spikes in volatility, helping traders anticipate major reversals with precision. Unlike standard VIX Fix tools, this version allows you to control the standard deviation logic, switch between chart styles, customize visual outputs, and set up advanced alerts — all with no repainting.
🧠 Logic and Calculation
This indicator is based on Larry Williams' VIX Fix and integrates features derived from community requests/advice, such as inverse VIX logic.
It calculates volatility spikes using a customizable standard deviation of the lows and compares it to a moving high to identify potential reversal points.
All moving average logic is based on Cometreon's proprietary library, ensuring accurate and optimized calculations on all 15 moving average types.
🔷 New Features and Improvements
🟩 Custom Visual Styles
Choose how you want your VIX data displayed:
Line
Step Line
Histogram
Area
Column
You can also flip the orientation (bottom-up or top-down), change the source ticker, and tailor the display to match your charting preferences.
🟩 Multi-MA Standard Deviation Calculation
Customize the standard deviation formula by selecting from 15 different moving averages:
SMA (Simple Moving Average)
EMA (Exponential Moving Average)
WMA (Weighted Moving Average)
RMA (Smoothed Moving Average)
HMA (Hull Moving Average)
JMA (Jurik Moving Average)
DEMA (Double Exponential Moving Average)
TEMA (Triple Exponential Moving Average)
LSMA (Least Squares Moving Average)
VWMA (Volume-Weighted Moving Average)
SMMA (Smoothed Moving Average)
KAMA (Kaufman’s Adaptive Moving Average)
ALMA (Arnaud Legoux Moving Average)
FRAMA (Fractal Adaptive Moving Average)
VIDYA (Variable Index Dynamic Average)
This gives you fine control over how volatility is measured and allows tuning the sensitivity for different market conditions.
🟩 Full Control Over Percentile and Deviation Conditions
You can enable or disable lines for standard deviation and percentile conditions, and define whether you want to trigger on over or under levels — adapting the indicator to your exact logic and style.
🟩 Chart Type Selection
You're no longer limited to candlestick charts! Now you can use Vix_Fix with different chart formats, including:
Candlestick
Heikin Ashi
Renko
Kagi
Line Break
Point & Figure
🟩 Multi-Timeframe Compatibility Without Repainting
Use a different timeframe from your chart with confidence. Signals remain stable and do not repaint. Perfect for spotting long-term reversal setups on lower timeframes.
🟩 Alert System Ready
Configure alerts directly from the indicator’s panel when conditions for over/under signals are met. Stay informed without needing to monitor the chart constantly.
🔷 Technical Details and Customizable Inputs
This indicator includes full control over the logic and appearance:
1️⃣ Length Deviation High - Adjusts the lookback period used to calculate the high deviation level of the VIX logic. Shorter values make it more reactive; longer values smooth out the signal.
2️⃣ Ticker - Choose a different chart type for the calculation, including Heikin Ashi, Renko, Kagi, Line Break, and Point & Figure.
3️⃣ Style VIX - Change the visual style (Line, Histogram, Column, etc.), adjust line width, and optionally invert the display (bottom-to-top).
📌 Fill zones for deviation and percentile are active only in Line and Step Line modes
4️⃣ Use Standard Deviation Up / Down - Enable the overbought and oversold zone logic based on upper and lower standard deviation bands.
5️⃣ Different Type MA (for StdDev) - Choose from 15 different moving averages to define the calculation method for standard deviation (SMA, EMA, HMA, JMA, etc.), with dedicated parameters like Phase, Sigma, and Offset for optimized responsiveness.
6️⃣ BB Length & Multiplier - Adjust the period and multiplier for the standard deviation bands, similar to how Bollinger Bands work.
7️⃣ Show StdDev Up / Down Line - Enable or disable the visibility of upper and lower standard deviation boundaries.
8️⃣ Use Percentile & Length High - Activate the percentile-based logic to detect extreme values in historical volatility using a customizable lookback length.
9️⃣ Highest % / Lowest % - Set the high and low percentile thresholds (e.g., 85 for high, 99 for low) that will be used to trigger over/under signals.
🔟 Show High / Low Percentile Line - Toggle the visual display of the percentile boundaries directly on the chart for clearer signal reference.
1️⃣1️⃣ Ticker Settings – Customize parameters for special chart types such as Renko, Heikin Ashi, Kagi, Line Break, and Point & Figure, adjusting reversal, number of lines, ATR length, etc.
1️⃣2️⃣ Timeframe – Enables using SuperTrend on a higher timeframe.
1️⃣3️⃣ Wait for Timeframe Closes -
✅ Enabled – Displays Vix_Fix smoothly with interruptions.
❌ Disabled – Displays Vix_Fix smoothly without interruptions.
☄️ If you find this indicator useful, leave a Boost to support its development!
Every feedback helps to continuously improve the tool, offering an even more effective trading experience. Share your thoughts in the comments! 🚀🔥
RSI TrendSignal🔍 **Smart RSI System – Free & Open Source**
A powerful RSI-based indicator designed for traders who want clarity, simplicity, and filtered signals that *actually mean something*.
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### 🎯 Key Features:
✅ Classic RSI with custom smoothing
✅ Optional Bollinger Bands over RSI
✅ Built-in Divergence Detection (Regular Bullish/Bearish)
✅ Dynamic Buy/Sell Conditions based on RSI + MA cross
✅ STAR signals for high-conviction entries (Overbought/Oversold + strength filter)
✅ ATR-based strength filter and custom visualizations
✅ Works great on **crypto**, **forex**, or **indices**
✅ Fully open-source and beginner-friendly!
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### 📊 Recommended Timeframes:
15min, 1H, 4H, Daily – test and adjust settings for your style.
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### ⚙️ How to Use:
1. Watch for **Buy/Sell** shapes when RSI confirms crossover with smoothed MA.
2. **STAR signals** are stronger – when RSI is above 70 or below 30 with momentum separation.
3. Divergences (optional) can confirm reversals.
4. Use ATR plot or your own trailing stop logic for exit strategy.
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🔔 Alerts are built-in and ready to use.
📌 You can connect them to bots, webhooks, or Telegram (see alert templates in the script).
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🧠 **Built by a trader, for traders.**
Use this as a base and build your own version – or just trade it as is.
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💬 **Feedback / Questions / Want to talk?**
Feel free to message me on Telegram:
👉 (t.me/Ario_pinescript_pogramer)
This is a clean version of RSI TrendSignal with improved alerts.
It uses RSI cross with a smoothed moving average to generate filtered buy/sell signals.
No external links or bots. Fully compliant with TradingView rules.
📺 Demo & Tutorial coming soon on my YouTube channel – stay tuned
EMA 12/21 Crossover with ATR-based SL/TP📈 Ultimate Scalper v2
Strategy Type: Trend-Pullback Scalping
Indicators Used: EMA (12/21), MACD Histogram, ADX, ATR
Platform: TradingView (Pine Script v5)
Author:
🎯 Strategy Overview
The Ultimate Scalper v2 is a scalping strategy that catches pullbacks within short-term trends using a dynamic combination of 12/21 EMA bands, MACD Histogram crossovers, and ADX for trend confirmation. It uses ATR-based stop-loss and take-profit levels, making it suitable for volatility-sensitive environments.
🧠 Logic Breakdown
🔍 Trend Detection
Uses the 12 EMA and 21 EMA to identify the short-term trend:
Uptrend: EMA 12 > EMA 21 and ADX > threshold
Downtrend: EMA 12 < EMA 21 and ADX > threshold
The ADX (default: 25) filters out low-momentum environments.
📉 Pullback Identification
Once a trend is detected:
A pullback is flagged when the MACD Histogram moves against the trend (below 0 in uptrend, above 0 in downtrend).
An entry signal is triggered when the histogram crosses back through zero (indicating momentum is resuming in the trend direction).
🟢 Entry Conditions
Long Entry:
EMA 12 > EMA 21
ADX > threshold
MACD Histogram was below 0 and crosses above 0
Short Entry:
EMA 12 < EMA 21
ADX > threshold
MACD Histogram was above 0 and crosses below 0
❌ Exit Logic (ATR-based)
The strategy calculates stop-loss and take-profit levels using ATR at the time of entry:
Stop-Loss: Entry Price −/+ ATR × Multiplier
Take-Profit: Entry Price ± ATR × 2 × Multiplier
Default ATR Multiplier: 1.0
⚙️ Customizable Inputs
ADX Threshold: Minimum trend strength for trades (default: 25)
ATR Multiplier: Controls SL/TP distance (default: 1.0)
📊 Visuals
EMA 12 and EMA 21 band can be added manually for visual reference.
Entry and exit signals are plotted via TradingView’s built-in backtesting engine.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This is a backtesting strategy, not financial advice. Performance varies across markets and timeframes. Always combine with additional confluence or risk management when going live.