Asia & UK Sessions H/LThis will show you the Highs and Lows of the Asia and UK sessions on the same day.
Cykle
ECG PRICE - mauricioofsousa📉 ECG PRICE – The Price Electrocardiogram
(explained for traders, scientists, and complete beginners)
🔍 1. WHAT IS THE ECG PRICE?
The ECG PRICE protocol is a market-reading system based on the RSI, but with a surgical twist:
👉 You don’t just calculate RSI from price.
👉 You adjust the price using the RSI, and then calculate RSI over this adjusted price.
This creates a filtered, amplified signal that behaves like a heart monitor for price, detecting micro-impulses and subtle market movements long before they show up in the standard RSI.
🧬 2. CORE IDEA
Just like a real ECG amplifies and reveals electrical rhythms hidden inside the heartbeat,
the ECG PRICE amplifies micro-deformations hidden inside the price’s momentum.
It works in three stages:
Compute the regular RSI
Use the RSI to adjust the price (creating an electrocardiographic price)
Compute a second RSI over this modified price
The result is a meta-derived oscillator—more sensitive, more precise, and better at detecting structural changes.
🧩 3. TECHNICAL BREAKDOWN
3.1. First RSI (classic)
The script calculates:
average gains
average losses
relative strength (RS)
and then the standard 0–100 RSI
This is the “normal heart rate monitor” everyone uses.
3.2. Creating the “Adjusted Price”
adjustedPrice = close * (rsi / 100)
This means:
➡️ When RSI is high (strong buying momentum), price is amplified.
➡️ When RSI is low (strong selling momentum), price is compressed.
This converts raw price into a bio-electrical signal, where the price itself is modulated by its own internal momentum.
It’s the financial equivalent of ECG gain adjustment.
3.3. RSI of the Adjusted Price
Now the script calculates a new RSI from this modified price.
That is the actual ECG PRICE.
This second-order oscillator becomes extremely sensitive to:
micro-momentum shifts
early trend fading
volatility shocks
micro-divergences
institutional pressure waves
It reads the electrical pattern behind the price rather than the superficial movement.
🟩🟥 4. Diagnostic Lines of the Protocol
35 (green dotted)
Pre-oversold fatigue zone.
65 (red dotted)
Pre-overbought exhaustion zone.
30 (white solid)
Classic oversold.
70 (white solid)
Classic overbought.
Together they create two diagnostic corridors:
1. Medical corridor (30–70):
Standard RSI clinical range.
2. Electrical corridor (35–65):
The ECG-sensitive zone where micro-shifts appear first.
🧠 5. In Engineering Language (MGO style)
The ECG PRICE is essentially:
A nonlinear second-order oscillator where the RSI feeds back into price, creating a recursive momentum-modulated signal.
It functions like a:
bioinformational modulator
feedback-driven wave processor
impulse amplifier
micro-PID sensitivity enhancer
Very similar to the informational-wave transformations inside the MGO pipeline.
👨⚕️📉 6. Explained for a Total Beginner
Imagine the price is a heart.
The normal RSI shows if the heart is beating fast or slow.
But the ECG PRICE takes that heartbeat…
feeds it back into the heart…
and then measures the new heartbeat.
This creates a much more sensitive exam that detects problems before the normal test would.
💡 7. What It Gives You in Practice
earlier reversal signals
better trend-fatigue detection
clearer micro-divergences
a clean RSI with reduced noise
a smoother momentum curve
advanced behavioral readings before breakouts
It’s an upgrade.
A second-layer RSI that “hears” the inner electrical impulses of price.
Gann Square of 144 (Master Price & Time)🔹 What this tool does
Draws a 144-unit square in price & time (0 → 144)
Plots all key horizontal & vertical levels:
0, 18, 36, 48, 54, 72, 90, 96, 108, 126, 144
Highlights the main 1/2 level (72) as thick midline
Marks 1/3 and 2/3 (48 & 96) as special harmonic levels
Draws internal diagonals (0–144, 144–0 and sub-squares)
Plots an 8-ray Gann fan from the 0-point (0 → 36 / 72 / 108 / 144 etc.)
Keeps price–time ratio consistent inside the box:
the 1×1 angle has a fixed slope = price_per_bar
The idea: once the square is calibrated to a major swing, you can study how price respects these angles and harmonic zones over time.
🔧 Inputs & how to set it up correctly
Choose your timeframe
Works best on Daily and Weekly charts.
Use one timeframe consistently when calibrating the square.
Start offset (bars back)
Start offset (bars back) shifts the whole square left/right.
Increase the value to move the square further into the past, decrease it to move it closer to the current bars.
Box width (bars)
Box width (bars) = how many bars the square spans horizontally.
Bigger value = projects the structure further into the future.
Example: 288 bars ≈ 2×144 units in time, 720 bars for longer-term projection, etc.
Bottom price
Bottom price is your 0-level in price.
Usually set this to a major swing low (cycle low, bear market low, important pivot).
The bottom-left corner of the square conceptually sits at:
(start_offset_bar, bottom_price)
Price per bar (slope 1×1) (if your version has this input)
This defines the slope of the 1×1 angle (main Gann angle).
Recommended way to set it:
Pick a major impulsive move from Swing Low → Swing High.
Measure:
Price range = High − Low
Number of bars between them.
Compute:
price_per_bar = price_range / number_of_bars
Use that as your 1×1 value in the input.
Now the main diagonal from 0 to 144 represents the true Gann 1×1 for that swing.
Important: The 1×1 angle is mathematically correct (price-per-bar), even if it does not always look like a perfect 45° line visually in TradingView due to chart scaling.
📖 How to read the Square of 144
Horizontal levels
0 = anchor price (bottom)
18, 36, 48, 54, 72, 90, 96, 108, 126, 144 = key price harmonics
72 (1/2) often acts as major support/resistance
48 & 96 (1/3 and 2/3) are strong “vibration” levels
Vertical levels
Same units but in time (bars).
When important pivots in price occur near these verticals, you get time–price confluence.
Midlines (1/2)
The thick horizontal and vertical lines at 72 mark the center of the square.
Crossings around these often signal important cycle turns.
1/3 & 2/3 zones (48–54 and 90–96)
These narrow bands are powerful reversal / decision zones.
Price often reacts strongly there or accelerates if they break.
Gann fan from 0-point
These rays represent major trends:
1×1 equivalent (main diagonal)
Faster & slower angles (e.g. 2×1, 1×2, etc depending on configuration)
If price breaks one fan angle cleanly, it often “falls” or “climbs” toward the next one.
🎯 Practical use cases
Project future support/resistance zones based on a major low.
See where price is in the square: early in the cycle (0–36), mid (around 72), or late (108–144).
Watch how price respects:
midlines (72),
1/3 and 2/3 bands (48–54, 90–96),
and the fan angles from 0.
Combine with your own price action / Fibonacci / trend tools – this is not a signal generator, but a time–price map.
⚠️ Notes & limitations
This tool is for educational & analytical purposes only.
It does not generate buy/sell signals.
Visual 45° angles in TradingView can change when you zoom or rescale the chart.
→ The script keeps the internal price-per-bar logic stable, even if the drawing looks steeper/flatter when zooming.
Always confirm zones with price action, volume, and higher timeframe context.
London Killzone High/Low (live → lock & extend @07:59 UTC-5)London Killzone High/Low (live → lock & extend @07:59 UTC-5)London Killzone High/Low (live → lock & extend @07:59 UTC-5)
Tokyo Session High/Low (live → lock & extend @02:59 UTC-5)Tokyo Session High/Low (live → lock & extend @02:59 UTC-5)Tokyo Session High/Low (live → lock & extend @02:59 UTC-5)
NY KZ High/Low (live → lock @10:00 UTC-5)NY KZ High/Low (live → lock @10:00 UTC-5) NY KZ High/Low (live → lock @10:00 UTC-5)
GMH : Tech Bubble Good Morning Holding
Simulating How to Ride the Bubble — and Jump Out Before the Crash
Be careful! Most simulation results show that this strategy sometimes underperforms a simple buy-and-hold, because it gives away positions during deep retracements and buys back at higher thresholds.
Humans often struggle with cutting losses. When the pain becomes too much, they lose the confidence needed to execute even a reasonable strategy.
But in terms of mentality, this approach reduces long-term portfolio volatility. It helps investors feel more at peace, especially during real market crashes like the tech bubble in 2021.
How to use : Select TimeFrame 4HR on trading view
PLANBXPRESS PSYCHOLOGICAL LEVEL ENTRY MODELThis Indicator merges multiple professional trading concepts into one visual tool — helping traders identify momentum shifts, entry zones, and daily trading plans with volume confirmation.
It automatically detects trend direction, generates dynamic take-profit & stop-loss levels, and overlays key daily reference points such as VWAP, pivot, support, and resistance zones based on ATR and trend context.
⚙️ Main Components
1️⃣ Signal System
Detects trend bias using SMA-based logic.
Generates entry price, TP1–TP3, and SL dynamically from recent impulse ranges.
Updates signals automatically when trend bias changes or previous targets are hit.
Visual levels are drawn directly on the chart.
2️⃣ Volume Analysis
Compares current volume against a moving average (SMA).
Classifies volume as:
🟢 Strong (above 1.5× average)
🟡 Average
🔴 Weak (below 0.8× average)
Displays the current volume strength and trend bias in an on-chart table.
3️⃣ Auto Day Plan
Uses multi-timeframe ATR calculations to define:
Support / Resistance zones
Pivot & Balance areas
Daily VWAP
Auto Targets (ATR-based expansion levels)
Adapts automatically to selected base timeframe (1H, 4H, or Daily).
4️⃣ Trend Context
Dual EMA system (50 & 200) to confirm bullish/bearish structure.
Aligns expected direction with VWAP & pivot location for context-aware bias.
🎯 What You Get on Chart
📈 Automatic LONG/SHORT signals
🎯 TP1, TP2, TP3, and SL levels
📊 Volume strength meter
🧭 VWAP, pivot, support/resistance & balance zones
🎨 Clean visual layout for intraday and swing traders
🧩 Inputs
Parameter Description
lenImpulse Impulse range length
smaLen SMA length for trend bias
levelRatio SL/TP ratio multiplier
volLen Volume SMA length
baseTF Base timeframe for zones/VWAP
atrMult1 / atrMult2 ATR multipliers for target levels
fwdBars Extension range for future projection
💡 How to Use
Add the script to your chart and choose your preferred timeframe.
Observe signal direction (📈 LONG / 📉 SHORT) and TP/SL levels.
Confirm entries when:
Trend aligns with VWAP direction, and
Volume category shows Strong or Average.
Use Auto Day Plan levels (pivot, balance, VWAP) as intraday reaction zones.
Previous Day OHLC with Fib LevelThe Previous Day OHLC indicator is designed to help traders identify key price levels from the previous trading session. These levels often act as important zones of support, resistance, and market reaction points during the current day’s price action.
This indicator automatically plots the Previous Day’s Open, High, Low, and Close on any intraday timeframe, making it a powerful tool for day traders, scalpers, and swing traders who rely on market structure and session behavior.
Vertical Lines on Selected DatesThis Pine Script indicator allows a user to place vertical lines on a chart at specific dates and times. It provides three separate input sections, each dedicated to one targeted date. For each of the three dates, the user can select the exact timestamp and customize the line’s color, width, and style directly from the indicator’s settings panel.
Behind the scenes, the script converts the selected visual style (solid, dashed, or dotted) into the appropriate internal line style using a helper function. When the live chart time crosses each chosen timestamp, the script detects that crossover and draws a vertical line on that exact bar. The line extends both upward to the high and downward to the low of the chart, creating a full-height marker.
Overall, the indicator functions as a simple visual marking tool for highlighting important moments in time—such as events, sessions, or personal reminders—without affecting any price analysis. The flexibility of color, width, and style allows each vertical line to stand out uniquely, and because the script uses detection logic on a per-bar basis, each line is drawn only once at the appropriate moment.
Long Term indicator for financial marketsIts the indicator that i have made for my friends following the learnings which i have learnt over the last few years for momentum traders
OPPLIGER SMA Stufen-TP Strategie (200/100/50/25) mit Reentry✔️ 5.- transaction costs
✔️ 7% Stop-Loss
✔️ 3 Take-Profit SMA-levels
✔️ Reentry via SMA100 correction
✔️ Reentry via SMA25/SMA50 crossover
✔️ New REENTRY rule after Stop-Loss
→ only if SMA stack is bullish AND the 3rd & 4th candle after SL are above SMA25
SMA Stufen-TP Strategie (200/100/50/25) mit ReentryStrategy Description for TradingView: Multi-SMA Momentum & Reentry System
This Pine Script strategy, named "SMA Stufen-TP Strategie (200/100/50/25) mit Reentry," is a Long-Only trend-following system designed to capitalize on upward momentum and capture significant gains while incorporating sophisticated logic for reentry after corrections.
The system relies on four Simple Moving Averages (SMAs): SMA 200, SMA 100, SMA 50, and SMA 25. These indicators are used to define the trend structure, trigger entries, and set dynamic, layered Take-Profit (TP) levels.
Entry Rules
The strategy has one main entry and two specific reentry triggers:
Main Entry (Standard Trend): A long position is opened when the price crosses above the SMA 200. This acts as the initial signal for a strong, long-term uptrend.
Reentry 1 (Medium Correction): This reentry is sought after an official exit (Stop Loss or Take Profit). It is permitted if the SMA 100 is above the SMA 200 and two conditions are met: the price previously dipped below the SMA 100 during the correction, and it now closes two consecutive bars above the SMA 100. This targets a confirmed bounce within an overall bullish structure.
Reentry 2 (Deep Correction/Momentum Shift): This triggers during a deep correction where all shorter SMAs (100, 50, 25) are below the SMA 200. Reentry occurs when the SMA 25 crosses above the SMA 50, signaling a powerful short-term momentum shift that precedes a larger recovery.
Exit and Take-Profit Logic
Exits are governed by a prioritized system including a fixed Stop Loss and three dynamic Take-Profit stages.
A. Stop Loss (Highest Priority)
The primary risk control is a fixed Stop Loss at -10% below the entry price. This is always the first exit condition checked.
B. Layered Take-Profits (TP)
Profits are secured using a step-wise mechanism that trails the price using the shorter SMAs, but only after specific profit thresholds are met. This ensures that the strategy provides ample room for a strong rally while securing gains as the trend matures.
TP Stage 1: Activated when the price first crosses above the SMA 100. The position is closed if the profit reaches 10% or more and the price closes two consecutive bars below the SMA 100.
TP Stage 2: Activated when the price first crosses above the SMA 50. The position is closed if the profit reaches 20% or more and the price closes two consecutive bars below the SMA 50.
TP Stage 3: Activated when the price first crosses above the SMA 25. The position is closed if the profit reaches 40% or more and the price closes two consecutive bars below the SMA 25.
The exit priority ensures that the tightest active stop is used: Stop Loss takes precedence, followed by TP 3 (the highest profit and tightest trail), then TP 2, and finally TP 1.
YCGH ATH DrawdownHow the Indicator Measures Drawdown from ATH
The indicator continuously tracks and calculates the percentage decline from the all-time high (ATH) using a systematic approach.
ATH Tracking Mechanism
Dynamic ATH Calculation: The script maintains a persistent variable that stores the highest price ever reached. On each bar, it compares the current high with the stored ATH using ath := math.max(ath, high), updating the ATH whenever a new peak is reached.
VIX Calm vs Choppy (Bar Version, VIX High Threshold)This indicator tracks market stability by measuring how long the VIX stays below or above a chosen intraday threshold. Instead of looking at VIX closes, it uses VIX high, so even a brief intraday spike will flip the regime into “choppy.”
The tool builds a running clock of consecutive bars spent in each regime:
Calm regime: VIX high stays below the threshold
Choppy regime: VIX high hits or exceeds the threshold
Calm streaks plot as positive bars (light blue background).
Choppy streaks plot as negative bars (dark pink background).
This gives a clean picture of how long the market has been stable vs volatile — useful for trend traders, breakout traders, and anyone who watches risk-on/risk-off conditions. A table shows the current regime and streak length for quick reference.
YCGH Drawdown PercentilesWhat This Indicator Does?
The Drawdown Percentiles indicator tracks how far below the all-time high (ATH) a stock or asset is currently trading, then displays statistical percentiles of historical drawdowns in a customizable table.
Percentile Analysis: It collects up to 5,000 historical bars of drawdown data, sorts them, and calculates user-selected percentiles (default: 10th, 30th, 50th) to show where current drawdowns rank historically.
Visual Display: A table shows each percentile threshold with color-coded drawdown values, helping you quickly assess whether the current drawdown is typical or extreme compared to historical patterns.
Practical Use Cases
Risk Assessment: Identify if current drawdowns fall within normal ranges or represent extreme conditions requiring position adjustments.
Entry/Exit Timing: Use percentile rankings to time entries during historically shallow drawdowns (better conditions) and reduce exposure during deep drawdowns.
Strategy Comparison: Compare drawdown patterns across different assets or trading strategies to evaluate risk-adjusted performance.
BTCUSD / (inverted)DXY RatioShows relation between INVERTED DXY and BITCOIN ( blue line ) . With EMA-smoothing ( red line ).
Relative Strength HSIWe add the relative strength indicator. We try to maximize the alpha,
when there is price divergence, we should notice.
RSI with Zone Colors//@version=6
indicator(title="RSI with Zone Colors", shorttitle="RSI+", format=format.price, precision=2, timeframe="", timeframe_gaps=true)
//// ==== INPUT SETTINGS ====
rsiLength = input.int(14, title="RSI Length", minval=1)
source = input.source(close, title="Source")
ob_level = input.int(70, title="Overbought Level")
os_level = input.int(30, title="Oversold Level")
//// ==== RSI CALCULATION ====
change = ta.change(source)
up = ta.ma(math.max(change, 0), rsiLength)
down = ta.ma(-math.min(change, 0), rsiLength)
rsi = down == 0 ? 100 : 100 - (100 / (1 + up / down))
//// ==== COLOR BASED ON ZONES ====
rsiColor = rsi > ob_level ? color.red : rsi < os_level ? color.green : #2962FF
//// ==== PLOT RSI ====
plot(rsi, title="RSI", color=rsiColor, linewidth=2)
//// ==== ZONE LINES ====
hline(ob_level, "Overbought", color=#787B86)
hline(50, "Middle", color=color.new(#787B86, 50))
hline(os_level, "Oversold", color=#787B86)
//// ==== FILL ZONES ====
zoneColor = rsi > ob_level ? color.new(color.red, 85) : rsi < os_level ? color.new(color.green, 85) : na
fill(plot(ob_level, display=display.none), plot(rsi > ob_level ? rsi : ob_level, display=display.none), color=zoneColor, title="OB Fill")
fill(plot(os_level, display=display.none), plot(rsi < os_level ? rsi : os_level, display=display.none), color=zoneColor, title="OS Fill")
//// ==== COLOR CANDLE WHEN RSI IN ZONE ====
barcolor(rsi > ob_level ? color.red : rsi < os_level ? color.green : na)
RSI with Zone ColorsRSI with zone cooler highlight for everyone
🔹 Short description (for the “Description” box)
RSI with Zone Colors
This indicator plots a classic RSI and highlights the overbought / oversold zones with clear colors.
The RSI line changes color when it enters each zone, the zones are softly filled in the RSI pane, and the price candles on the main chart are recolored whenever RSI is overbought or oversold.
It’s designed to make momentum shifts easy to see at a glance on any symbol or timeframe.
⸻
🔹 What the script does (explanation)
1. Custom RSI calculation
• Uses the price source you choose (close by default) and the RSI length you set.
• Calculates average up-moves and down-moves, then builds a classic RSI value from 0–100.
2. Configurable levels
• Overbought Level (default 70)
• Oversold Level (default 30)
• Midline at 50 is drawn automatically.
3. RSI line color by zone
• Above OB level → RSI line becomes red (overbought zone).
• Below OS level → RSI line becomes green (oversold zone).
• Between the two levels → blue (normal zone).
4. Zone lines
• Horizontal lines at Overbought, Oversold, and 50 are plotted to clearly mark each region.
5. Zone fills
• The space around the overbought area is filled with a soft red background.
• The space around the oversold area is filled with a soft green background.
• Transparency is used so the RSI line stays visible.
6. Candle colors on the main chart
• When RSI is overbought, price candles are colored red.
• When RSI is oversold, price candles are colored green.
• In the normal zone, candles keep their default color.
→ This lets you see RSI conditions directly on the price chart without looking down at the indicator pane all the time.
⸻
🔹 How to use (for “How to use / Strategy idea” section)
You can copy-paste and tweak this:
How to use
• Apply this indicator to any symbol and timeframe.
• Adjust RSI Length, Overbought Level, and Oversold Level to match your trading style (for example 14 / 80 / 20 for stronger filters).
• Use the red overbought zone to look for potential exhaustion after strong up moves.
• Use the green oversold zone to look for potential exhaustion after strong down moves.
• Candle colors on the main chart help you see when RSI is extended without taking your eyes off price.
• This script is meant as a visual aid, not a complete trading system. Combine it with your own trend, structure, and risk-management rules.
⸻
🔹 Optional disclaimer (short)
This script is for educational and informational purposes only and is not financial advice. Always test any idea on a demo account before using it with real capital.
DCA Position vs Cash HoldingThis indicator visualizes the performance of a simulated dollar-cost averaging (DCA) strategy compared to simply holding cash. It models the cumulative position size and value of buying a fixed dollar amount of the asset per candle over a configurable lookback period.
🔍 What It Shows:
Simulates buying $1 (or any amount) of the asset per candle
Tracks the total units accumulated and their current market value
Plots the difference between the DCA position value and total cash spent
Highlights when DCA buyers are underwater — a potential contrarian buy zone
📈 How to Use:
Values above zero indicate DCA outperformance vs cash
Values below zero signal structural drawdown — often a high-conviction bulk-buy opportunity
Use as a sentiment overlay to time discretionary adds or confirm regime shifts
⚙️ Inputs:
Lookback Window: Number of candles used to simulate DCA accumulation
DCA Amount: Dollar value purchased per candle
This tool is ideal for traders seeking to quantify accumulation efficiency, identify cycle inflection points, and visualize sentiment-weighted cost basis dynamics.






















