Hull is its extremely responsive and smooth moving average created by Alan Hull in 2005. Minimal lag and smooth curves made HMA extremely popular TA tool. alanhull.com Script was made to regroup multiple hull variants in one indicator,maintaining flexible customization and intuitive visualization Option to chose between 3 Hull variations Option to chose...
A custom version of Profitable Moving Average Crossover that shows the last estimations on profit for each crossover type and allows to set date range for analysis.
While moving averages are a good way to visualize price action, they are, in general, very poor indicators to trade against. Usually, the lowest prices occur before the cross over of multiple moving averages, while the best profits occur just before the crossunders of the moving averages. This study captures the buy signals before the cross overs and sells just...
To save space on a chart's maximum indicator count, this single indicator includes: - Three Hull Moving Averages, Defaulted to 13, 26, and 55 Periods. - Customizable Time-Frame for Each HMA. - Customizable Triple Weighted MA Smoothing for Jagged Lines from Higher Time-Frame - Alert Conditions for Price Cross Over/Under the HMAs.
Here is the study version of our recent Double RSI strategy based on a Hull RSI and ALMA RSI. The study version includes alerts for signals generated by both RSI's. It also includes an option to allow repeat signals, as well as tons of plotting options, etc. If interested in a 3 day trial, feel free to send a message and check out our website ProfitProgrammers.com !
This is an RSI that is smoothed with a faster Hull Moving Average. The upper pink and bottom teal lines represent the 95th and 5th percentiles of Hull RSI values over a window of user-defined length. The two percentile bands function identically to the traditional upper and lower bounds used in the standard RSI setup. Buy signals are plotted as the vertical...
This is an update to the idea of The Kahlman smoother makes the signal more precise (by one candle).
Here we are using Hull Moving Average crossovers as an experiment in trend detection. The Hull Moving Average (HMA) is an extremely fast and smooth moving average. Credit to alexgrover & RicardoSantos:
Keltner Channels around Hull Moving Average Script shared upon request. No guarantees on accuracy.
Based on Everget's Parabolic WMA and Mladen MT5 Hull MA. Power = 1 behaves the same as a standard HMA , > 1 speeds it up, < 1 slows it down
This is a typical hull moving average that is colored based on if the average is increasing or decreasing.
This Hull MA uses the default settings of the built-in MA. The basic idea is that we are in a buy setup when hull is below price, and a sell setup when hull is above price. The indicator is extended with slightly change in contrast when moving average is declining and it plot the ma/price crossovers: green dot when a buy setup is appearing, and red dot when a sell...
This is Average True Range indicator, but it is smoothed with Hull MA ( not WMA etc ) It is set to overlay the candles so looks different from normal ATR but i assure you it is ATR Script open so you can see for yourself. perhaps different settings are better, Help me test it, and suggest improvements thankyou
Multi SMA EMA WMA HMA 4x7 Moving Averages with Bollinger Bands MAX MTF by RagingRocketBull 2019 Version 1.0 All available MAX MTF versions are listed below (They are very similar and I don't want to publish them as separate indicators): ver 1.0: 4x7 = 28 MTF MAs + 28 Levels + 3 BB = 59 < 64 ver 2.0: 5x6 = 30 MTF MAs + 30 Levels + 3 BB = 63 < 64 ver 3.0: 3x10 = 30...
Implementation of the "Dickinson Moving Average" from the r/algotrading post by Nathan Dickinson Quoted from the author of the Dickinson Moving Average: "I was experimenting with the “zero lag” code from John Ehlers and the Hull Moving Average and noticed that they seemed to respond in complementary ways when properly set up. With the right starting values,...
Source for Exponential Hull Moving Average (EHMA) formula: Raudys, Aistis & Lenčiauskas, Vaidotas & Malčius, Edmundas. (2013). Moving Averages for Financial Data Smoothing. Communications in Computer and Information Science. 403. 34-45. 10.1007/978-3-642-41947-8_4. The Exponential Hull Moving Average is nearly identical to the Hull MA, but EMA used instead of...