TFS: Volume Oscillator Backtest This is the second part of TFS trading strategy. The concept of this
indicator is similar to that of On-Balance Volume indicator (OBV). It
is calculated according to these rules:
If Close > Open, Volume is positive
If Close < Open, Volume is negative
If Close = Open, Volume is neutral
Then you take the 7-day MA of the results.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Strategy!
TFS: Volume Oscillator Strategy This is the second part of TFS trading strategy. The concept of this
indicator is similar to that of On-Balance Volume indicator (OBV). It
is calculated according to these rules:
If Close > Open, Volume is positive
If Close < Open, Volume is negative
If Close = Open, Volume is neutral
Then you take the 7-day MA of the results.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
Senkou Span Cross Strategy [Krypt]A simple trading strategy oriented towards cryptocurrencies that uses log-space Ichimoku clouds
Long position: when Senkou Span A crosses over Senkou Span B
Short position: when Senkou Span A crosses under Senkou Span B
The indicator used in this strategy is available as a standalone script:
TFS: Tether Line Backtest Tether line indicator is the first component of TFS trading strategy.
It was named this way because stock prices have a tendency to cluster
around it. It means that stock prices tend to move away from the midpoint
between their 50-day highs and lows, then return to that midpoint at some
time in the future. On a chart, it appears as though the stock price is
tethered to this line, and hence the name.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
TFS: Tether Line Strategy Tether line indicator is the first component of TFS trading strategy.
It was named this way because stock prices have a tendency to cluster
around it. It means that stock prices tend to move away from the midpoint
between their 50-day highs and lows, then return to that midpoint at some
time in the future. On a chart, it appears as though the stock price is
tethered to this line, and hence the name.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
T3 Averages Backtest This indicator plots the moving average described in the January, 1998 issue
of S&C, p.57, "Smoothing Techniques for More Accurate Signals", by Tim Tillson.
This indicator plots T3 moving average presented in Figure 4 in the article.
T3 indicator is a moving average which is calculated according to formula:
T3(n) = GD(GD(GD(n))),
where GD - generalized DEMA (Double EMA) and calculating according to this:
GD(n,v) = EMA(n) * (1+v)-EMA(EMA(n)) * v,
where "v" is volume factor, which determines how hot the moving average’s response
to linear trends will be. The author advises to use v=0.7.
When v = 0, GD = EMA, and when v = 1, GD = DEMA. In between, GD is a less aggressive
version of DEMA. By using a value for v less than1, trader cure the multiple DEMA
overshoot problem but at the cost of accepting some additional phase delay.
In filter theory terminology, T3 is a six-pole nonlinear Kalman filter. Kalman
filters are ones that use the error — in this case, (time series - EMA(n)) —
to correct themselves. In the realm of technical analysis, these are called adaptive
moving averages; they track the time series more aggres-sively when it is making large
moves. Tim Tillson is a software project manager at Hewlett-Packard, with degrees in
mathematics and computer science. He has privately traded options and equities for 15 years.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
T3 Averages Strategy This indicator plots the moving average described in the January, 1998 issue
of S&C, p.57, "Smoothing Techniques for More Accurate Signals", by Tim Tillson.
This indicator plots T3 moving average presented in Figure 4 in the article.
T3 indicator is a moving average which is calculated according to formula:
T3(n) = GD(GD(GD(n))),
where GD - generalized DEMA (Double EMA) and calculating according to this:
GD(n,v) = EMA(n) * (1+v)-EMA(EMA(n)) * v,
where "v" is volume factor, which determines how hot the moving average’s response
to linear trends will be. The author advises to use v=0.7.
When v = 0, GD = EMA, and when v = 1, GD = DEMA. In between, GD is a less aggressive
version of DEMA. By using a value for v less than1, trader cure the multiple DEMA
overshoot problem but at the cost of accepting some additional phase delay.
In filter theory terminology, T3 is a six-pole nonlinear Kalman filter. Kalman
filters are ones that use the error — in this case, (time series - EMA(n)) —
to correct themselves. In the realm of technical analysis, these are called adaptive
moving averages; they track the time series more aggres-sively when it is making large
moves. Tim Tillson is a software project manager at Hewlett-Packard, with degrees in
mathematics and computer science. He has privately traded options and equities for 15 years.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
Stochastic RSI Backtest This strategy used to calculate the Stochastic RSI
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Statistical Volatility - Extreme Value Method Backtest This indicator used to calculate the statistical volatility, sometime
called historical volatility, based on the Extreme Value Method.
Please use this link to get more information about Volatility.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Statistical Volatility - Extreme Value Method This indicator used to calculate the statistical volatility, sometime
called historical volatility, based on the Extreme Value Method.
Please use this link to get more information about Volatility.
Smoothed RSI Backtest ver.2 This is new version of RSI oscillator indicator, developed by John Ehlers.
The main advantage of his way of enhancing the RSI indicator is smoothing
with minimum of lag penalty.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Smoothed RSI Strategy ver.2 This is new version of RSI oscillator indicator, developed by John Ehlers.
The main advantage of his way of enhancing the RSI indicator is smoothing
with minimum of lag penalty.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
Smoothed RSI Backtest This is new version of RSI oscillator indicator, developed by John Ehlers.
The main advantage of his way of enhancing the RSI indicator is smoothing
with minimum of lag penalty.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Smoothed RSI Strategy This is new version of RSI oscillator indicator, developed by John Ehlers.
The main advantage of his way of enhancing the RSI indicator is smoothing
with minimum of lag penalty.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
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.
RSI based on ROC Backtest This is the new-age indicator which is version of RSI calculated upon
the Rate-of-change indicator.
The name "Relative Strength Index" is slightly misleading as the RSI
does not compare the relative strength of two securities, but rather
the internal strength of a single security. A more appropriate name
might be "Internal Strength Index." Relative strength charts that compare
two market indices, which are often referred to as Comparative Relative Strength.
And in its turn, the Rate-of-Change ("ROC") indicator displays the difference
between the current price and the price x-time periods ago. The difference can
be displayed in either points or as a percentage. The Momentum indicator displays
the same information, but expresses it as a ratio.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
RSI based on ROC Strategy This is the new-age indicator which is version of RSI calculated upon
the Rate-of-change indicator.
The name "Relative Strength Index" is slightly misleading as the RSI
does not compare the relative strength of two securities, but rather
the internal strength of a single security. A more appropriate name
might be "Internal Strength Index." Relative strength charts that compare
two market indices, which are often referred to as Comparative Relative Strength.
And in its turn, the Rate-of-Change ("ROC") indicator displays the difference
between the current price and the price x-time periods ago. The difference can
be displayed in either points or as a percentage. The Momentum indicator displays
the same information, but expresses it as a ratio.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.
Relative Volatility Index Backtest The RVI is a modified form of the relative strength index (RSI).
The original RSI calculation separates one-day net changes into
positive closes and negative closes, then smoothes the data and
normalizes the ratio on a scale of zero to 100 as the basis for the
formula. The RVI uses the same basic formula but substitutes the
10-day standard deviation of the closing prices for either the up
close or the down close. The goal is to create an indicator that
measures the general direction of volatility. The volatility is
being measured by the 10-days standard deviation of the closing prices.
You can change long to short in the Input Settings
WARNING:
- For purpose educate only
- This script to change bars colors.
Relative Volatility Index Strategy The RVI is a modified form of the relative strength index (RSI).
The original RSI calculation separates one-day net changes into
positive closes and negative closes, then smoothes the data and
normalizes the ratio on a scale of zero to 100 as the basis for the
formula. The RVI uses the same basic formula but substitutes the
10-day standard deviation of the closing prices for either the up
close or the down close. The goal is to create an indicator that
measures the general direction of volatility. The volatility is
being measured by the 10-days standard deviation of the closing prices.
WARNING:
- This script to change bars colors.