SMI
Rova MTF SMI MinuteStochastic Momentum Index is used to find oversold and overbought zones. It also helps to figure out whether to enter short trade or long trade.
Red Shade in the Top indicates that the stock is oversold and the Blue shade in the bottom indicates overbought.
The lighter color indicates that the trend is continuing while the darker color indicates the trend is reversing.
This indicator shows 3 Stochastic Momentum Index of 3 different Time Frames (with 1 minute as their base resolution) in one windows.
Stochastic Momentum IndexStochastic Momentum Index indicator script. This indicator was originally developed by William Blau (Stocks & Commodities V. 11:1 (11-18)).
Inverse Fisher Transform on SMI (Stochastic Momentum Index)Inverse Fisher Transform on SMI (Stochastic Momentum Index)
About John EHLERS:
From California, USA, John is a veteran trader. With 35 years trading experience he has seen it all. John has an engineering background that led to his technical approach to trading ignoring fundamental analysis (with one important exception).
John strongly believes in cycles. He’d rather exit a trade when the cycle ends or a new one starts. He uses the MESA principle to make predictions about cycles in the market and trades one hundred percent automatically.
In the show John reveals:
• What is more appropriate than trading individual stocks
• The one thing he relies upon in his approach to the market
• The detail surrounding his unique trading style
• What important thing underpins the market and gives every trader an edge
About INVERSE FISHER TRANSFORM:
The purpose of technical indicators is to help with your timing decisions to buy or
sell. Hopefully, the signals are clear and unequivocal. However, more often than
not your decision to pull the trigger is accompanied by crossing your fingers.
Even if you have placed only a few trades you know the drill.
In this article I will show you a way to make your oscillator-type indicators make
clear black-or-white indication of the time to buy or sell. I will do this by using the
Inverse Fisher Transform to alter the Probability Distribution Function (PDF) of
your indicators. In the past12 I have noted that the PDF of price and indicators do
not have a Gaussian, or Normal, probability distribution. A Gaussian PDF is the
familiar bell-shaped curve where the long “tails” mean that wide deviations from
the mean occur with relatively low probability. The Fisher Transform can be
applied to almost any normalized data set to make the resulting PDF nearly
Gaussian, with the result that the turning points are sharply peaked and easy to
identify. The Fisher Transform is defined by the equation
1)
Whereas the Fisher Transform is expansive, the Inverse Fisher Transform is
compressive. The Inverse Fisher Transform is found by solving equation 1 for x
in terms of y. The Inverse Fisher Transform is:
2)
The transfer response of the Inverse Fisher Transform is shown in Figure 1. If
the input falls between –0.5 and +0.5, the output is nearly the same as the input.
For larger absolute values (say, larger than 2), the output is compressed to be no
larger than unity. The result of using the Inverse Fisher Transform is that the
output has a very high probability of being either +1 or –1. This bipolar
probability distribution makes the Inverse Fisher Transform ideal for generating
an indicator that provides clear buy and sell signals.
SMI Ergodic Oscillator Backtest ver.2 The SMI Ergodic Indicator is the same as the True Strength Index (TSI) developed by
William Blau, except the SMI includes a signal line. The SMI uses double moving averages
of price minus previous price over 2 time frames. The signal line, which is an EMA of the
SMI, is plotted to help trigger trading signals. Adjustable guides are also given to fine
tune these signals. The user may change the input (close), method (EMA), period lengths
and guide values.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
SMI Ergodic Oscillator Strategy ver.2 The SMI Ergodic Indicator is the same as the True Strength Index (TSI) developed by
William Blau, except the SMI includes a signal line. The SMI uses double moving averages
of price minus previous price over 2 time frames. The signal line, which is an EMA of the
SMI, is plotted to help trigger trading signals. Adjustable guides are also given to fine
tune these signals. The user may change the input (close), method (EMA), period lengths
and guide values.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
SMI Ergodic Oscillator Backtest The SMI Ergodic Indicator is the same as the True Strength Index (TSI) developed by
William Blau, except the SMI includes a signal line. The SMI uses double moving averages
of price minus previous price over 2 time frames. The signal line, which is an EMA of the
SMI, is plotted to help trigger trading signals. Adjustable guides are also given to fine
tune these signals. The user may change the input (close), method (EMA), period lengths
and guide values.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
SMI Ergodic Oscillator Strategy The SMI Ergodic Indicator is the same as the True Strength Index (TSI) developed by
William Blau, except the SMI includes a signal line. The SMI uses double moving averages
of price minus previous price over 2 time frames. The signal line, which is an EMA of the
SMI, is plotted to help trigger trading signals. Adjustable guides are also given to fine
tune these signals. The user may change the input (close), method (EMA), period lengths
and guide values.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
SMI Ergodic Oscillator The SMI Ergodic Indicator is the same as the True Strength Index (TSI) developed by
William Blau, except the SMI includes a signal line. The SMI uses double moving averages
of price minus previous price over 2 time frames. The signal line, which is an EMA of the
SMI, is plotted to help trigger trading signals. Adjustable guides are also given to fine
tune these signals. The user may change the input (close), method (EMA), period lengths
and guide values.
You can use in the xPrice any series: Open, High, Low, Close, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4 and ect...
Stochastic Momentum IndexStochastic Momentum Index
William Blau "Momentum, Direction, and Divergence",
John Wiley and Sons, Inc. 1995, ISBN 0-471-02729-4, page 29:
SM(q) = close - 0.5*(HH(q) + LL(q))
SMI(q, r, s) = 100*(EMA(EMA(SM(q), r)), s)/(0.5*EMA(EMA(HH(q)-LL(q)), r), s)
[M] MACD + SMI
MACD + SMI -2.23% Ergodic
When leaving the zone, MACD is painted in different colors, while in the area - is gray.
In the settings you can disable shading in gray or SMI -2.23% .
Works on the major currency pairs, the rest has not been tested. Because it did for me)
//Google translate
----------------------
МАКД+SMI Ergodic
При выходе из зоны, MACD окрашивается в разные цвета, при нахождении в зоне - остается серым.
В настройках есть возможность отключить закрашивание в серый или SMI -2.23% .
Работает на основных валютных парах, на остальных не тестировался, потому что делал для себя)
Stochastic Momentum IndexThis is an implementation of the Stochastic Momentum Index from William Blau's his article in Stocks & Commodities .
This also allows the use of various different kinds of moving averages for the signal line. Options for this argument are:
sma (simple moving average)
ema (exponential moving average)
wma (weighted moving average)
trima (triangular moving average)
zlema (zero-lag exponential moving average)
dema (double exponential moving average)
tema (triple exponential moving average)
hma (hull moving average)
Stochastic Momentum Index (SMI)Stochastic Momentum Index (SMI) or Stoch MTM is used to find oversold and overbought zones. It also helps to figureout whether to enter short trade or long trade.
Red Shade in the Top indicates that the stock is oversold and the Green shade in the bottom indicates overbought.
Strategy:
Enter Long once the Overbought Zone ended and there's a crossover below -35.
Exit Long once the oversold zone is ended and there's a crossover.
Enter Short once the oversold zone is ended and there's a crossover above 35.
Exit Short once the Overbought Zone ended and there's a crossover.
Backup: Always use with another indicator because there will be multiple up and down movement in one Trend.
SMI BarsUses SMI (Stochastic Momentum Index) to set bar colors:
When SMI above overbought, bar color is red.
When SMI is between 0 and overbought, bar color is maroon
When SMI is between oversold and 0, bar color is green
When SMI is below oversold, bar color is lime.
When SMI crosses above or below 0, bar color is orange.
JKSW Strength momentum index v2Based on increasing and decreasing strength, this indicator will give a good indication of when a short or long opportunity is available.
Smart Money Index (SMI)Smart money index (SMI) or smart money flow index is a technical analysis indicator demonstrating investors sentiment.
The index was invented and popularized by money manager Don Hays. The indicator is based on intra-day price patterns.
The main idea is that the majority of traders (emotional, news-driven) overreact at the beginning of the trading day
because of the overnight news and economic data. There is also a lot of buying on market orders and short covering at the opening.
Smart, experienced investors start trading closer to the end of the day having the opportunity to evaluate market performance.
Therefore, the basic strategy is to bet against the morning price trend and bet with the evening price trend. The SMI may be calculated
for many markets and market indices (S&P 500, DJIA, etc.)
The SMI sends no clear signal whether the market is bullish or bearish. There are also no fixed absolute or relative readings signaling
about the trend. Traders need to look at the SMI dynamics relative to that of the market. If, for example, SMI rises sharply when the
market falls, this fact would mean that smart money is buying, and the market is to revert to an uptrend soon. The opposite situation
is also true. A rapidly falling SMI during a bullish market means that smart money is selling and that market is to revert to a downtrend
soon. The SMI is, therefore, a trend-based indicator.
Some analysts use the smart money index to claim that precious metals such as gold will continually maintain value in the future.