VWAP Deviation Oscillator [BackQuant]VWAP Deviation Oscillator
Introduction
The VWAP Deviation Oscillator turns VWAP context into a clean, tradeable oscillator that works across assets and sessions. It adapts to your workflow with four VWAP regimes plus two rolling modes, and three deviation metrics: Percent, Absolute, and Z-Score. Colored zones, optional standard deviation rails, and flexible plot styles make it fast to read for both trend following and mean reversion.
What it does
This tool measures how far price is from a chosen VWAP and expresses that gap as an oscillator. You can view the deviation as raw price units, percent, or standardized Z-Score. The plot can be a histogram or a line with optional fills and sigma bands, so you can quickly spot polarity shifts, overbought and oversold conditions, and strength of extension.
VWAP modes track a session VWAP that resets (4H, Daily, Weekly) or a rolling VWAP that updates continuously over a fixed number of bars or days.
Deviation modes let you choose the lens: Percent, Absolute, or Z-Score. Each highlights different aspects of stretch and mean pressure.
Visual encoding uses a 10-zone color palette to grade the magnitude of deviation on both sides of zero.
Volatility guards compute mode-specific sigma so thresholds are stable even when volatility compresses.
Why this works
VWAP is a high signal anchor used by institutions to gauge fair participation. Deviations around VWAP cluster in regimes: mild oscillations within a band, decisive pushes that signal imbalance, and standardized extremes that often precede either continuation or snapback. Expressing that distance as a single time series adds clarity: bias is the oscillator’s sign, risk context is its magnitude, and regime is the way it behaves around sigma lines.
How to use it
Trend following
Favor the side of the zero line. Bullish when the oscillator is above zero and making higher swing highs. Bearish when below zero and making lower swing lows. Use +1 sigma and +2 sigma in your mode as strength tiers. Pullbacks that hold above zero in uptrends, or below zero in downtrends, are often continuation entries.
Mean reversion
Fade stretched readings when structure supports it. Look for tests of +2 sigma to +3 sigma that fail to progress and roll back toward zero, or the mirror on the downside. Z-Score mode is best when you want standardized gates across assets. Percent mode is intuitive for intraday scalps where a given percent stretch tends to mean revert.
Session playbook
Use Daily or Weekly VWAP for intraday or swing context. Rolling modes help when the asset lacks clean session boundaries or when you want a continuous anchor that adapts to liquidity shifts.
Key settings
VWAP computation
VWAP Mode = 4 Hours, Daily, Weekly, Rolling (Bars), Rolling (Days). Session modes reset the VWAP when a new session begins. Rolling modes compute VWAP over a fixed trailing window.
Rolling (Lookback: Bars) controls the trailing bar count when using Rolling (Bars).
Rolling (Lookback: Days) converts days to bars at runtime and uses that trailing span.
Use Close instead of HLC3 switches the price reference. HLC3 is smoother. Close makes the anchor track settlement more tightly.
Deviation measurement
Deviation Mode
Percent : 100 * (Price / VWAP - 1). Good for uniform scaling across instruments.
Absolute : Price - VWAP. Good when price units themselves matter.
Z-Score : Standardizes the absolute residual by its own mean and standard deviation over Z/Std Window . Ideal for cross-asset comparability and regime studies.
Z/Std Window sets the mean and standard deviation window for Z-Score mode.
Volatility controls
Percent Mode Volatility Lookback estimates sigma for percent deviations.
Absolute Mode Volatility Lookback estimates sigma for absolute deviations.
Minimum Sigma Guard (pct pts) prevents the percent sigma from collapsing to near zero in extremely quiet markets.
Visualization
Plot Type = Histogram or Line. Histogram emphasizes impulse and polarity changes. Line emphasizes trend waves and divergences.
Positive Color / Negative Color define the palette for line mode. Histogram uses a 10-bucket gradient automatically.
Show Standard Deviations plots symmetric rails at ±1, ±2, ±3 sigma in the current mode’s units.
Fill Line Oscillator and Fill Opacity add a soft bias band around zero for line mode.
Line Width affects both the oscillator and the sigma rails.
Reading the zones
The oscillator’s color and height map deviation to nine graded buckets on each side of zero, with deeper greens above and deeper reds below. In Percent and Absolute modes, those buckets are scaled by their mode-specific sigma. In Z-Score mode the bucket edges are fixed at 0.5, 1.0, 2.0, and 2.8.
0 to +1 sigma weak positive bias, usually rotational.
+1 to +2 sigma constructive impulse. Pullbacks that hold above zero often continue.
+2 to +3 sigma strong expansion. Watch for either trend continuation or exhaustion tells.
Beyond +3 sigma statistical extreme. Requires structure to avoid fading too soon.
Mirror logic applies on the negative side.
Suggested workflows
Trend continuation checklist
Pick a session VWAP that matches your timeframe, for example Daily for intraday or Weekly for position trades.
Wait for the oscillator to hold the correct side of zero and for a sequence of higher swing lows in the oscillator (uptrend) or lower swing highs (downtrend).
Buy pullbacks that stabilize between zero and +1 sigma in an uptrend. Sell rallies that stabilize between zero and -1 sigma in a downtrend.
Use the next sigma band or a prior price swing as your target reference.
Mean reversion checklist
Switch to Z-Score mode for standardized thresholds.
Identify tests of ±2 sigma to ±3 sigma that fail to extend while price meets support or resistance.
Enter on a polarity change through the prior histogram bar or a small hook in line mode.
Fade back to zero or to the opposite inner band, then reassess.
Notes on the three modes
Percent is easy to reason about when you care about proportional stretch. It is well suited to intraday and multi-asset dashboards.
Absolute tracks cash distance from VWAP. This is useful when instruments have tight ticks and you plan risk in price units.
Z-Score standardizes the residual and is best for quant studies, cross-asset comparisons, and threshold research that must be scale invariant.
What the alerts can tell you
Polarity changes at zero can mark the start or end of a leg.
Crosses of ±1 sigma identify overbought or oversold in the current mode’s units.
Zone changes signal an upgrade or downgrade in deviation strength.
Troubleshooting and edge cases
If your instrument has long flat periods, keep Minimum Sigma Guard above zero in Percent mode so the rails do not vanish.
In Rolling modes, very short windows will respond quickly but can whip around. Session modes smooth this by resetting at well known boundaries.
If Z-Score looks erratic, increase Z/Std Window to stabilize the estimate of mean and sigma for the residual.
Final thoughts
VWAP is the anchor. The deviation oscillator is the narrative. By separating bias, magnitude, and regime into a simple stream you can execute faster and review cleaner. Pick the VWAP mode that matches your horizon, choose the deviation lens that matches your risk framework, and let the color graded zones guide your decisions.
Wyszukaj w skryptach "histogram"
Capiba Directional Momentum Oscillator (ADX-based)
🇬🇧 English
Summary
The Capiba ADX is a momentum oscillator that transforms the classic ADX (Average Directional Index) into a much more intuitive visual tool. Instead of analyzing three separate lines (ADX, DI+, DI-), this indicator consolidates the strength and direction of the trend into a single histogram that oscillates around the zero line.
The result is a clear and immediate reading of market sentiment, allowing traders to quickly identify who is in control—buyers or sellers—and with what intensity.
How to Interpret and Use the Indicator
The operation of the Capiba ADX is straightforward:
Green Histogram (Above Zero): Indicates that buying pressure (DI+) is in control. The height of the bar represents the magnitude of the bullish momentum. Taller green bars suggest a stronger uptrend.
Red Histogram (Below Zero): Indicates that selling pressure (DI-) is in control. The "depth" of the bar represents the magnitude of the bearish momentum. Lower (more negative) red bars suggest a stronger downtrend.
Zero Line (White): This is the equilibrium point. Crossovers through the zero line signal a potential shift in trend control.
Crossover Above: Buyers are taking control.
Crossover Below: Sellers are taking control.
Reference Levels (Momentum Strength)
The indicator plots three fixed reference levels to help gauge the intensity of the move:
0 Line: Equilibrium.
100 Line: Signals significant directional momentum. When the histogram surpasses this level, the trend (whether bullish or bearish) is gaining considerable strength.
200 Line: Signals very strong directional momentum, or even potential exhaustion conditions. Moves that reach this level are powerful but may also precede a consolidation or reversal.
Usage Strategy
Trend Confirmation: Use the indicator to confirm the direction of your analysis. If you are looking for long positions, the Capiba ADX should ideally be green and, preferably, rising.
Strength Identification: Watch for the histogram to cross the 100 and 200 levels to validate the strength of a breakout or an established trend.
Entry/Exit Signals: A zero-line crossover can be used as a primary entry or exit signal, especially when confirmed by other technical analysis tools.
Acknowledgements
This indicator is the result of adapting knowledge and open-source codes shared by the vibrant TradingView community.
MacD Alerts MACD Triggers (MTF) — Buy/Sell Alerts
What it is
A clean, multi-timeframe MACD indicator that gives you separate, ready-to-use alerts for:
• MACD Buy – MACD line crosses above the Signal line
• MACD Sell – MACD line crosses below the Signal line
It keeps the familiar MACD lines + histogram, adds optional 4-color histogram logic, and marks crossovers with green/red dots. Works on any symbol and any timeframe.
How signals are generated
• MACD = EMA(fast) − EMA(slow)
• Signal = SMA(MACD, length)
• Buy when crossover(MACD, Signal)
• Sell when crossunder(MACD, Signal)
• You can compute MACD on the chart timeframe or lock it to another timeframe (e.g., 1h MACD on a 4h chart).
Key features
• MTF engine: choose Use Current Chart Resolution or a custom timeframe.
• Separate alert conditions: publish two alerts (“MACD Buy” and “MACD Sell”)—ideal for different notifications or webhooks.
• Visuals: MACD/Signal lines, optional 4-color histogram (trend & above/below zero), and crossover dots.
• Heikin Ashi friendly: runs on whatever candle type your chart uses. (Tip below if you want “regular” candles while viewing HA.)
Settings (Inputs)
• Use Current Chart Resolution (on/off)
• Custom Timeframe (when the above is off)
• Show MACD & Signal / Show Histogram / Show Dots
• Color MACD on Signal Cross
• Use 4-color Histogram
• Lengths: Fast EMA (12), Slow EMA (26), Signal SMA (9)
How to set alerts (2 minutes)
1. Add the script to your chart.
2. Click ⏰ Alerts → + Create Alert.
3. Condition: choose this indicator → MACD Buy.
4. Options: Once per bar close (recommended).
5. Set your notification method (popup/email/webhook) → Create.
6. Repeat for MACD Sell.
Webhook tip: send JSON like
{"symbol":"{{ticker}}","time":"{{timenow}}","signal":"BUY","price":"{{close}}"}
(and “SELL” for the sell alert).
Good to know
• Symbol-agnostic: use it on crypto, stocks, indices—no symbol is hard-coded.
• Timeframe behavior: alerts are evaluated on bar close of the MACD timeframe you pick. Using a higher TF on a lower-TF chart is supported.
• Heikin Ashi note: if your chart uses HA, the calculations use HA by default. To force “regular” candles while viewing HA, tweak the code to use ticker.heikinashi() only when you want it.
• No repainting on close: crossover signals are confirmed at bar close; choose Once per bar close to avoid intra-bar noise.
Disclaimer
This is a tool, not advice. Test across timeframes/markets and combine with risk management (position sizing, SL/TP). Past performance ≠ future results.
ANDROMEDA - TrendSyncANDROMEDA - TrendSync
Pedro Canto - Portfolio Manager | CGA/CGE
OVERVIEW
Trend Sync is a multi-layered trend-following indicator designed to help traders identify high-probability trend continuation setups while avoiding low-quality entries caused by overbought or oversold market conditions.
This indicator combines the power of Moving Averages (MA), MACD , and a visual RSI-based filter to validate both trend direction and timing for entries. It's goal is simple: filter out noise and highlight only the most technically relevant buy and sell signals based on objective momentum and trend criteria.
---
WALKTHROUGH
This indicator is built for traders seeking to operate in the direction of established trends. It's core principle is to identify and validate current trend conditions, and then signal entry opportunities during pullbacks to key moving averages.
Trend identification is achieved through the alignment of two moving averages. When these MAs are crossed and angled in the same direction, they confirm that a trend is in progress. To double-confirm trend direction, the MACD histogram is used—only. When both the MAs and MACD are aligned in the same direction, then the trend is considered valid.
Once all trend criteria are met, a dynamic coloring system is activated to visually reinforce the trend across the candles and moving averages.
To avoid poor entries during market exhaustion, an RSI-based filter is used. This short-term RSI highlights overbought or oversold zones, helping traders filter trades in extreme price conditions.
Only when the trend is validated and price pulls back to one of the MAs will a buy/sell signal be triggered, aligning momentum, price action and timing into a single actionable setup.
This combination ensures that each component plays a specific role:
i) Moving Averages define the trend
ii) MACD validates it
iii) RSI filters noise
iv) Intrabar price action triggers entries
This synchronism helps improve decision-making and entry timing, especially for swing and intraday traders.
---
USE CASES
- Identifying trend continuation setups
- Filtering false signals during consolidation phases
- Avoiding trades in overbought or oversold zones
- Enhancing entry timing for both swing and intraday strategies
- Providing visual confirmation of trend strength and momentum alignment
---
KEY FEATURES
1. Dual Moving Average Setup
The indicator allows full customization of two moving averages (MA1 and MA2), supporting both EMA and SMA types. The slope of the longer MA (MA2) acts as an essential trend filter, ensuring signals are only generated when the market shows clear directional bias.
2. MACD Histogram Trend Confirmation
A classic MACD Histogram calculation is used to validate the momentum of the prevailing trend.
- Bullish Trend: Histogram > 0
- Bearish Trend: Histogram < 0
This step filters out counter-trend signals and ensures trades are aligned with momentum.
3. Intrabar Price Trigger
Unlike standard crossover systems, this indicator waits for intrabar price action to trigger entries:
- Buy Signal: Price crosses below one of the MAs during an uptrend (dip-buy logic)
- Sell Signal: Price crosses above one of the MAs during a downtrend (rally-sell logic)
This intrabar trigger improves entry timing and helps capture retracement-based opportunities.
4. RSI Visual Filter
A short-term RSI is plotted and color-coded to visually highlight overbought and oversold conditions, acting as a discretionary filter for users to avoid low-probability trades during exhaustion points.
5. Dynamic Coloring System
Bar Colors:
- Blue: Bullish trend
- Red: Bearish trend
- Orange: RSI Overbought/Oversold zones
MA Colors:
- Blue for bullish conditions
- Red for bearish conditions
- Gray for neutral/no-trend phases
6. Signal Markers and Alerts
Clear visual buy and sell markers are plotted directly on the chart.
Additionally, the indicator includes real-time alerts for both Buy and Sell signals, helping traders stay informed even when away from the screen.
---
INPUTS AND CUSTOMIZATION OPTIONS
- Moving Average Types: EMA or SMA for both MA1 and MA2.
- MACD Settings: Customizable fast, slow, and signal periods.
- RSI Settings: Source, length, and overbought/oversold levels fully adjustable.
- Color Customization: Adjust RSI zone colors to suit your chart theme.
---
DISCLAIMER
This indicator is a technical analysis tool designed for educational and informational purposes only. It should not be used as a standalone trading system. Always combine it with sound risk management, price action analysis, and, where applicable, fundamental context.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Momentum Trajectory Suite📈 Momentum Trajectory Suite
🟢 Overview
Momentum Trajectory Suite is a multi-faceted indicator designed to help traders evaluate trend direction, volatility conditions, and behavioral sentiment in a single consolidated view.
By combining a customizable Trajectory EMA, adaptive Bollinger Bands, and a Greed vs. Fear heatmap, this tool empowers traders to identify directional bias, measure momentum strength, and spot potential reversals or continuation setups.
🧠 Concept
This indicator merges three classic techniques:
Trend Analysis: Trajectory EMA highlights the prevailing directional momentum by smoothing price action over a customizable period.
Volatility Envelopes: Bollinger Bands adapt to dynamic price swings, showing overbought/oversold extremes and periods of contraction or expansion.
Behavioral Sentiment: A Greed vs. Fear heatmap combines RSI and MACD Histogram readings to visualize when markets are dominated by buying enthusiasm or selling pressure.
The combination is designed to help traders interpret market context more effectively than using any single component alone.
🛠️ How to Use the Indicator
Trajectory EMA:
Use the blue EMA line to assess overall trend direction.
Price closing above the EMA may indicate bullish momentum; closing below may indicate bearish bias.
Buy/Sell Signals:
Green circles appear when price crosses above the EMA (potential long entry).
Red circles appear when price crosses below the EMA (potential exit or short entry).
Bollinger Bands:
Monitor upper/lower bands for overbought and oversold price extremes.
Narrowing bands may signal upcoming volatility expansion.
Greed vs. Fear Heatmap:
Green histogram bars indicate bullish sentiment when RSI exceeds 60 and MACD Histogram is positive.
Red histogram bars indicate bearish sentiment when RSI is below 40 and MACD Histogram is negative.
Gray bars indicate neutral or mixed conditions.
Background Color Zones:
The chart background shifts to green when EMA slope is positive and red when negative, providing quick directional cues.
All inputs are adjustable in settings, including EMA length, Bollinger Band parameters, and oscillator configurations.
📊 Interpretation
Bullish Conditions:
Price above the Trajectory EMA, background green, and Greed heatmap active.
May signal trend continuation and increased buying pressure.
Bearish Conditions:
Price below the Trajectory EMA, background red, and Fear heatmap active.
May signal momentum breakdown or potential continuation to the downside.
Volatility Clues:
Wide Bollinger Bands = trending, volatile market.
Narrow Bollinger Bands = low volatility and possible breakout setup.
Signal Confirmation:
Consider combining signals (e.g., EMA crossover + Greed/Fear heatmap + Bollinger Band touch) for higher-confidence entries.
📝 Notes
The script does not repaint or use future data.
Suitable for multiple timeframes (intraday to daily).
May be combined with other confirmation tools or price action analysis.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Trading carries risk and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always perform your own due diligence before making trading decisions.
Macd, Wt Cross & HVPMacd Wt Cross & HVP – Advanced Multi-Signal Indicator
This script is a custom-designed multi-signal indicator that brings together three proven concepts to provide a complete view of market momentum, reversals, and volatility build-ups. It is built for traders who want to anticipate key market moves, not just react to them.
Why This Combination ?
While each tool has its strengths, their combined use creates powerful signal confluence.
Instead of juggling multiple indicators separately, this script synchronizes three key perspectives into a single, intuitive display—helping you trade with greater clarity and confidence.
1. MACD Histogram – Momentum and Trend Clarity
At the core of the indicator is the MACD histogram, calculated as the difference between two exponential moving averages (EMAs).
Color-coded bars represent momentum direction and intensity:
Green / blue bars: bullish momentum
Red / pink bars: bearish momentum
Color intensity shows acceleration or weakening of trend.
This visual makes it easy to detect trend shifts and momentum divergence at a glance.
2. WT Cross Signals – Early Reversal Detection
Overlaid on the histogram are green and red dots, based on the logic of the WaveTrend oscillator cross:
Green dots = potential bullish cross (buy signal)
Red dots = potential bearish cross (sell signal)
These signals are helpful for identifying reversal points during both trending and ranging phases.
3. Historical Volatility Percentile (HVP) – Volatility Compression Zones
Behind the histogram, purple vertical zones highlight periods of low historical volatility, based on the HVP:
When volatility compresses below a specific threshold, these zones appear.
Such periods are often followed by explosive price moves, making them prime areas for pre-breakout positioning.
By integrating HVP, the script doesn’t just tell you where the trend is—it tells you when the trend is likely to erupt.
How to Use This Script
Use the MACD histogram to confirm the dominant trend and its strength.
Watch for WT Cross dots as potential entry/exit signals in alignment or divergence with the MACD.
Monitor HVP purple zones as warnings of incoming volatility expansions—ideal moments to prepare for breakout trades.
Best results occur when all three elements align, offering a high-probability trade setup.
What Makes This Script Original?
Unlike many mashups, this script was not created by simply merging indicators. Each component was carefully integrated to serve a specific, complementary purpose:
MACD detects directional bias
WT Cross adds precision timing
HVP anticipates volatility-based breakout timing
This results in a strategic tool for traders, useful on multiple timeframes and adaptable to different trading styles (trend-following, breakout, swing).
Price OI Division Price OI Division Indicator
Overview
The Price OI Division indicator (`P_OI_D`) is a custom TradingView script designed to analyze the relationship between price momentum and open interest (OI) momentum. It visualizes the divergence between these two metrics using a modified MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) approach, normalized to percentage values. The indicator is plotted as a histogram and two lines (MACD and Signal), with color-coded signals for easier interpretation.
Key Features
- Normalized Price MACD : Compares short-term and long-term price momentum.
- OI-Adjusted MACD : Incorporates open interest data to reflect market positioning.
- Divergence Histogram : Highlights the difference between price and OI momentum.
- Signal Line : Smoothed EMA of the divergence for trend confirmation.
- Threshold Lines : Horizontal reference lines at ±10% and 0 for quick visual analysis.
Interpretation Guide
- Bullish Signal :
Histogram turns red (positive & increasing).
MACD (red line) crosses above Signal (blue line).
Divergence above +10% indicates extreme bullish conditions.
- Bearish Signal :
Histogram turns green (negative & increasing).
MACD (lime line) crosses below Signal (maroon line).
Divergence below -10% indicates extreme bearish conditions.
- Neutral/Reversal :
Histogram fading (teal/pink) suggests weakening momentum.
Crossings near the Zero Line may signal trend shifts.
Usage Notes
Asset Compatibility : Works best with futures/perpetual contracts where OI data is available.
Timeframe : Suitable for all timeframes, but align `fastLength`/`slowLength` with your strategy.
Data Limitations : Relies on exchange-specific OI symbols (e.g., `BTC:USDT.P_OI`). Verify data availability for your asset.
Confirmation : Pair with volume analysis or support/resistance levels for higher accuracy.
Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational purposes only. Trading decisions should not be based solely on this tool. Always validate signals with additional analysis and risk management.
Custom RSI & MACD Momentum Entry SignalsIndicator Explanation: Custom RSI & MACD Momentum Entry Signals
Introduction
The "Custom RSI & MACD Momentum Entry Signals" indicator combines the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) to generate precise long and short entry signals. This indicator offers a powerful combination of overbought/oversold zones, momentum analysis, and RSI-EMA crossovers to assist traders in making better decisions.
How the Indicator Works
1. RSI Calculation and EMA
The RSI is calculated based on the closing price with an adjustable period (default: 14).
An Exponential Moving Average (EMA) of the RSI (default: 9) is plotted to identify RSI trend changes.
When the RSI crosses its EMA upwards, it signals a bullish impulse. Conversely, a downward cross indicates a bearish impulse.
2. MACD Calculation and Momentum Shifts
The MACD line is derived from the difference between a fast EMA (default: 12) and a slow EMA (default: 26).
The Signal line is the EMA of the MACD line (default: 9).
The MACD histogram represents the difference between the MACD line and the Signal line.
Momentum shifts are detected as follows:
Weakening Bearish: Histogram is negative but increasing (less bearish pressure).
Strengthening Bullish: Histogram is positive and rising.
Weakening Bullish: Histogram is positive but decreasing.
Strengthening Bearish: Histogram is negative and falling.
Signal Generation
Long Signals
A Long signal is triggered when all of the following conditions are met:
The RSI was previously below 30 (oversold condition).
MACD momentum shifts from "strengthening bearish" to "weakening bearish" or turns bullish.
The RSI crosses its EMA upwards.
A green upward arrow is displayed below the bar, and the background is lightly shaded green for additional visualization.
Short Signals
A Short signal is triggered when all of the following conditions are met:
The RSI was previously above 70 (overbought condition).
MACD momentum shifts from "strengthening bullish" to "weakening bullish" or turns bearish.
The RSI crosses its EMA downwards.
A red downward arrow is displayed above the bar, and the background is lightly shaded red for additional visualization.
Visual Elements
RSI and EMA:
The RSI is shown in purple.
The RSI EMA is shown in blue.
Horizontal lines at 30 (oversold) and 70 (overbought) provide additional context.
MACD:
The MACD line is displayed in blue.
The Signal line is displayed in orange.
The zero line is added for easier interpretation.
Signals:
Green arrows: Long signals.
Red arrows: Short signals.
Background color: Light green for long conditions, light red for short conditions.
Use Cases
This indicator is ideal for:
Trend Followers: Combining RSI and MACD allows traders to identify entry points during impulsive trend shifts.
Swing Traders: Long and short signals can be used at reversal points to capture short-term price movements.
Momentum Traders: By considering MACD momentum, the indicator provides additional confidence in signal generation.
Customizable Settings
The indicator provides flexible input options:
RSI Period (default: 14)
RSI EMA Period (default: 9)
MACD Parameters: Fast, slow, and signal EMAs can be adjusted.
Conclusion
The Custom RSI & MACD Momentum Entry Signals indicator is a powerful tool for traders looking to combine RSI and MACD to identify high-probability entry signals. With clear visualization and precise signal generation, traders can make decisions more efficiently and capitalize on market movements.
3 Timeframe MACD3 Timeframe MACD Indicator
This indicator provides a multi-timeframe visualization of the MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence), enabling traders to analyze momentum and trend signals effectively across different timeframes.
Key Features:
Multi-Timeframe Capability:
Timeframe 1: Automatically uses the chart's current timeframe and displays the MACD Histogram along with the MACD line and Signal line.
Timeframe 2: A user-defined timeframe (default: 4 hours) displays both the MACD line and Signal line for trend and crossover analysis.
Timeframe 3: Another user-defined timeframe (default: 1 day) also displays the MACD line and Signal line, with increased line thickness for emphasis.
Dynamic Histogram Plot:
Timeframe 1's histogram is color-coded:
Green shades for positive values (brighter for increasing momentum).
Red shades for negative values (darker for increasing negative momentum).
Customizable MACD Parameters:
Adjustable Fast Length, Slow Length, and Signal Length to tailor the MACD calculation to specific trading styles or assets.
Clear and Distinct Visualizations:
Timeframe 1 includes the MACD Histogram with MACD and Signal lines for a detailed momentum view.
Timeframes 2 and 3 highlight the MACD and Signal lines in distinct colors for easy differentiation.
Use Case:
Ideal for traders seeking to monitor momentum changes (via Histogram) and trend/crossover signals (via MACD and Signal lines) across the current and two higher/lower timeframes.
Enhances decision-making by providing multi-timeframe confluence for trend-following or countertrend strategies.
This indicator is particularly useful for traders looking for a streamlined way to incorporate multi-timeframe analysis into their trading workflow.
BRT MACD CustomBRT MACD Custom — Adaptive and Flexible MACD for Multi-Timeframe Analysis
The BRT MACD Custom is an advanced version of the traditional MACD indicator, offering additional flexibility and adaptability for multi-timeframe trading. This custom script allows traders to adjust the calculation parameters for MACD to suit their specific trading strategy, timeframe, and market conditions.
Key Features
Multi-Timeframe Support
Unlike the standard MACD, this indicator lets you choose a specific timeframe (different from the chart timeframe) for calculating MACD values. This feature provides more flexibility in analyzing market trends on multiple timeframes without changing the main chart.
Example: You can analyze MACD on a 15-minute timeframe even when your chart is set to 1-minute, giving you broader market insights.
Customizable EMA and Signal Settings
Users can adjust the fast and slow EMA lengths as well as the signal smoothing to better align with their preferred trading strategies. The script allows switching between the two popular types of moving averages — SMA or EMA — for both the MACD and the signal line.
Volatility-Based Adaptive EMA
The script includes an adaptive mechanism for EMA calculation. When the selected timeframe closes, the indicator dynamically adjusts the calculation, ensuring the MACD values respond quickly to market volatility. This makes the indicator more reactive compared to static MACD implementations.
Shift Options for MACD, Signal, and Histogram
The indicator allows shifting the MACD, signal line, and histogram values by one or more bars. This can be useful for backtesting and simulating strategies where you anticipate future price movements.
Signal Alerts for Long and Short Trades
The script generates visual signals when certain conditions are met, indicating potential long or short trade opportunities. These signals are based on MACD and histogram crossovers:
Long Signal: Triggered when MACD is above the signal line and both are rising.
Short Signal: Triggered when MACD is below the signal line and both are falling.
Custom Plotting
The MACD line, signal line, and histogram are plotted on the chart for easy visualization. The histogram changes colors to reflect positive or negative momentum:
Green shades when MACD is above the signal line.
Red shades when MACD is below the signal line.
Applications in Trading
The BRT MACD Custom is ideal for traders who need flexibility in their technical analysis. Its multi-timeframe capabilities and customizable moving averages make it suitable for day trading, swing trading, and long-term investing across a variety of markets.
Scalping: Use the 1-minute or 5-minute timeframe to identify short-term trends while calculating MACD on a higher timeframe such as 15 or 30 minutes.
Swing Trading: Apply the indicator on 1-hour or 4-hour charts to detect mid-term trends.
Long-Term Investing: Analyze daily or weekly charts with longer EMA periods to confirm market direction before making large investments.
REVE Cohorts - Range Extension Volume Expansion CohortsREVE Cohorts stands for Range Extensions Volume Expansions Cohorts.
Volume is divided in four cohorts, these are depicted in the middle band with colors and histogram spikes.
0-80 percent i.e. low volumes; these get a green color and a narrow histogram bar
80-120 percent, normal volumes, these get a blue color and a narrow histogram bar
120-200 percent, high volume, these get an orange color and a wide histogram bar
200 and more percent is extreme volume, maroon color and wide bar.
All histogram bars have the same length. They point to the exact candle where the volume occurs.
Range is divided in two cohorts, these are depicted as candles above and below the middle band.
0-120 percent: small and normal range, depicted as single size, square candles
120 percent and more, wide range depicted as double size, rectangular candles.
The range candles are placed and colored according to the Advanced Price Algorithm (published script). If the trend is up, the candles are in the uptrend area, which is above the volume band, , downtrend candles below in the downtrend area. Dark blue candles depict a price movement which confirms the uptrend, these are of course in the uptrend area. In this area are also light red candles with a blue border, these depict a faltering price movement countering the uptrend. In the downtrend area, which is below the volume band, are red candles which depict a price movement confirming the downtrend and light blue candles with a red border depicting price movement countering the downtrend. A trend in the Advanced Price Algorithm is in equal to the direction of a simple moving average with the same lookback. The indicator has the same lagging.as this SMA.
Signals are placed in the vacated spaces, e.g. during an uptrend the downtrend area is vacated.
There are six signals, which arise as follows:
1 Two blue triangles up on top of each other: high or extreme volume in combination with wide range confirming uptrend. This indicates strong and effective up pressure in uptrend
2 Two pink tringles down on top of each other: high or extreme volume in combination with wide range down confirming downtrend. This indicates strong and effective down pressure in downtrend
3 Blue square above pink down triangle down: extreme volume in combination with wide range countering uptrend. This indicates a change of heart, down trend is imminent, e.g. during a reversal pattern. Down Pressure in uptrend
4 Pink square below blue triangle up: extreme volume in combination with wide range countering downtrend. This indicates a change of heart, reversal to uptrend is imminent. Up Pressure in downtrend
5 single blue square: a. extreme volume in combination with small range confirming uptrend, b. extreme volume in combination with small range countering downtrend, c. high volume in combination with wide range countering uptrend. This indicates halting upward price movement, occurs often at tops or during distribution periods. Unresolved pressure in uptrend
6 Single pink square: a extreme volume in combination with small range confirming downtrend, b extreme volume in combination with small range countering uptrend, c high volume in combination with wide range countering downtrend. This indicated halting downward price movement. Occurs often at bottoms or during accumulation periods. Unresolved pressure in downtrend.
The signals 5 and 6 are introduced to prevent flipping of signals into their opposite when the lookback is changed. Now signals may only change from unresolved in directional or vice versa. Signals 3 and 4 were introduced to make sure that all occurrences of extreme volume will result in a signal. Occurrences of wide volume only partly lead to a signal.
Use of REVE Cohorts.
This is the indicator for volume-range analyses that I always wanted to have. Now that I managed to create it, I put it in all my charts, it is often the first part I look at, In my momentum investment system I use it primarily in the layout for following open positions. It helps me a lot to decide whether to close or hold a position. The advantage over my previous attempts to create a REVE indicator (published scripts), is that this version is concise because it reports and classifies all possible volumes and ranges, you see periods of drying out of volume, sequences of falter candles, occurrences of high morning volume, warning and confirming signals.. The assessment by script whether some volume should be considered low, normal, high or extreme gives an edge over using the standard volume bars.
Settings of REVE Cohorts
The default setting for lookback is ‘script sets lookback’ I put this in my indicators because I want them harmonized, the script sets lookback according to timeframe. The tooltip informs which lookback will be set at which timeframe, you can enable a feedback label to show the current lookback. If you switch ‘script sets lookback’ off, you can set your own preferred user lookback. The script self-adapts its settings in such a way that it will show up from the very first bar of historical chart data, it adds volume starting at the fourth bar.
You can switch off volume cohorts, only range candles will show while the middle band disappears. Signals will remain if volume is present in the data. Some Instruments have no volume data, e.g. SPX-S&P 500 Index,, then only range candles will be shown.
Colors can be adapted in the inputs. Because the script calculates matching colors with more transparency it is advised to use 100 percent opacity in these settings.
Take care, Eykpunter
Coral Trend Pullback Strategy (TradeIQ)Description:
Strategy is taken from the TradeIQ YouTube video called "I Finally Found 80% Win Rate Trading Strategy For Crypto".
Check out the full video for further details/clarification on strategy entry/exit conditions.
The default settings are exactly as TradeIQ described in his video.
However I found some better results by some tweaking settings, increasing R:R ratio and by turning off confirmation indicators.
This would suggest that perhaps the current confirmation indicators are not the best options. I'm happy to try add some other optional confirmation indicators if they look to be more effective.
Recommended timeframe: 1H
Strategy incorporates the following features:
Risk management:
Configurable X% loss per stop loss
Configurable R:R ratio
Trade entry:
Based on strategy conditions below
Trade exit:
Based on strategy conditions below
Backtesting:
Configurable backtesting range by date
Trade drawings:
Each entry condition indicator can be turned on and off
TP/SL boxes drawn for all trades. Can be turned on and off
Trade exit information labels. Can be turned on and off
NOTE: Trade drawings will only be applicable when using overlay strategies
Alerting:
Alerts on LONG and SHORT trade entries
Debugging:
Includes section with useful debugging techniques
Strategy conditions
Trade entry:
LONG
C1: Coral Trend is bullish
C2: At least 1 candle where low is above Coral Trend since last cross above Coral Trend
C3: Pullback happens and price closes below Coral Trend
C4: Coral Trend colour remains bullish for duration of pullback
C5: After valid pullback, price then closes above Coral Trend
C6: Optional confirmation indicators (choose either C6.1 or C6.2 or NONE):
C6.1: ADX and DI (Single indicator)
C6.1.1: Green line is above red line
C6.1.2: Blue line > 20
C6.1.3: Blue trending up over last 1 candle
C6.2: Absolute Strengeh Histogram + HawkEye Volume Indicator (Two indicators combined)
C6.2.1: Absolute Strengeh Histogram colour is blue
C6.2.2: HawkEye Volume Indicator colour is green
SHORT
C1: Coral Trend is bearish
C2: At least 1 candle where high is below Coral Trend since last cross below Coral Trend
C3: Pullback happens and price closes above Coral Trend
C4: Coral Trend colour remains bearish for duration of pullback
C5: After valid pullback, price then closes below Coral Trend
C6: Optional confirmation indicators (choose either C6.1 or C6.2 or NONE):
C6.1: ADX and DI (Single indicator)
C6.1.1: Red line is above green line
C6.1.2: Blue line > 20
C6.1.3: Blue trending up over last 1 candle
C6.2: Absolute Strengeh Histogram + HawkEye Volume Indicator (Two indicators combined)
C6.2.1: Absolute Strengeh Histogram colour is red
C6.2.2: HawkEye Volume Indicator colour is red
NOTE: All the optional confirmation indicators cannot be overlayed with Coral Trend so feel free to add each separately to the chart for visual purposes
Trade exit:
Stop Loss: Calculated by recent swing low over previous X candles (configurable with "Local High/Low Lookback")
Take Profit: Calculated from R:R multiplier * Stop Loss size
Credits
Strategy origin: TradeIQ's YouTube video called "I Finally Found 80% Win Rate Trading Strategy For Crypto"
It combines the following indicators for trade entry conditions:
Coral Trend Indicator by @LazyBear (Main indicator)
Absolute Strength Histogram | jh by @jiehonglim (Optional confirmation indicator)
Indicator: HawkEye Volume Indicator by @LazyBear (Optional confirmation indicator)
ADX and DI by @BeikabuOyaji (Optional confirmation indicator)
Vertical LinesThis script plots vertical lines on charts or indicators. Unfortunately pinescript is lacking a vertical line plotting function. Vertical lines are useful to mark events, such as crossover of levels, indicators signals or as a time marker.
After searching the internet for a long time and trying different scripts, this script is the simplest and visually the best. You would think that plotting a vertical line would be relatively easy, it is not! I thank the unknow author for sharing this solution and now I will share it on tradingview to make it readily available to anybody that needs it.
RSI crossover signals are used as an example in this script. When the RSI crosses over 70 or below 30, the script plots a red or green vertical line.
The script plots a vertical line as a histogram bar. The histogram bar must have a height.
Setting the height near infinity like 1e20 will cover all the ranges from top to bottom in most charts, but doesn't work all the time. If the chart range is small in values, the line is not plotted or the chart is visually compressed because the top of the bar is also a data point in the chart. Another solution is to find the highest point in the chart and multiply it by a number from 2 to 10 to set the top of the histogram bar. But this solution doesn't work if the line is drawn in the indicator window. additionally if the chart or indicator includes negative values, a histogram bar with a negative height must be concatenated to the histogram bar with a positive height to cover the positive and negative range.
It would seem intuitive to include a vertical plot function since it is very useful and pinescript already has a horizontal line plot function called Hline. But pinescript is becoming less intuitive, and redundant. A case in point is Version 4 variable declaration and naming, it less intuitive and more redundant than previous versions. I beg Tradingview to adopt a more refined scripting language such as Matlab or Python for charting purposes. These languages can be easily ported to other analysis programs for AI or statistical analysis.
MACD - STOCH - RSI This indicator combines the
- MACD w/ Volume Conditions
- STOCHASTIC
- RSI
All into one place, to help find confluences between popular convergence / divergence indicators.
It's primary use is the histogram of the MACD.
The colors change whether or not the current bar is higher or lower than the previous.
Lighter shade signifies the bars are getting smaller.
You can also enable a feature which will change the color of the histogram depending on the volume.
There are 2 conditions which can be met which signify ' Increasing Volume ' and ' Above Average Volume '.
If the MACD is above 0,
Light Blue signifies increasing volume.
Dark Blue signifies above average volume
If the MACD is below 0,
Light Purple signifies increasing volume.
Dark Purple signifies above average volume.
Having volume conditions within the histogram are meant to act as confluence. For example, if the histogram is
rising and light blue or dark blue bars are shown, this could hint towards a larger move to the upside if previous
upswings on the histogram were only green.
Increased volume near the peak of a move can also signify lots of orders coming into the market in hopes
of reversing the current trend or starting a correction.
formula:
Avg of volume over past 10 bars * 1.5 = increasing volume
Avg of volume over past 10 bars * 2 = Above Average Volume
--
The RSI and STOCHASTIC have been run through a custom function which moves the values. The middle line is now 0.
Where on most RSI and STOCHASTIC indicators the middle line can be considered 50, with overbought levels nearing 70
and oversold levels around 30.
On the M.S.R , the RSI overbought levels are by default 20, and oversold -20.
I've done this because for myself it was easier to understand RSI was becoming oversold if it went below 0, not 50.
The same function also applies to the STOCHASTIC indicator.
The RSI and STOCHASTIC can also be displayed together to help see the conditions of both indicators at once.
--
ADX/DI Trend Strengthpink line = directional with price, bull strength
black line = counter-directional with price, bear strength
histogram = trend strength confirmation
high pink + high histogram = strong bull
high pink + low histogram = weak bull
high black+ high histogram = strong bear
high black + low histogram = weak bear
MACD Color Trawler (by ChartArt)This version of the MACD indicator is 'trawling' (checking) if the MACD histogram and the zero line crossing with the MACD line are both positive or negative. The idea behind this is to show areas with higher or lower risk.
Features:
1. Enable the bar color
2. Enable the background color
3. Change zero line value
FYI:
"The MACD-Histogram is an indicator of an indicator. In fact, MACD is also an indicator of an indicator. This means that the MACD-Histogram is the fourth derivative of price."
First derivative: 12-day EMA and 26-day EMA
Second derivative: MACD (12-day EMA less the 26-day EMA)
Third derivative: MACD signal line (9-day EMA of MACD)
Fourth derivative: MACD-Histogram (MACD less MACD signal line)
Source: stockcharts.com
[CT] Trend Pulse Oscillator Trend Pulse Oscillator is a clean, responsive trend and momentum oscillator that measures directional pressure by comparing a fast EMA to a slow EMA, then normalizing that spread by ATR so the reading stays consistent across different symbols and volatility regimes. Instead of relying on percentile bands or fixed overbought, oversold logic from legacy oscillators, this indicator converts the EMA spread into a smooth 0–100 signal that behaves like a “trend intensity meter,” where 50 acts as the neutral midpoint, values above 50 reflect bullish dominance, and values below 50 reflect bearish dominance. Because the core input is the distance between two EMAs, it naturally tracks trend alignment, and because it is volatility-normalized, it avoids becoming overly sensitive during high volatility or too sluggish during quiet conditions.
The engine begins by calculating a fast EMA and a slow EMA on your selected source, then computing the spread between them. That spread alone can be misleading across markets because the same raw distance means different things in low volatility versus high volatility environments, so the script divides the spread by ATR to create a normalized value that represents how meaningful the trend separation is relative to typical movement. Once the spread is normalized, the indicator applies a bounded mapping using an arctangent transform, which is a stable way to compress extreme values while preserving sensitivity near the midpoint. This produces a smooth oscillator that stays in a predictable 0–100 range without hard clamping, and it keeps the transitions realistic even when price accelerates strongly. The Speed setting is the main sensitivity control, where higher values make the oscillator respond faster and flip states more quickly, and lower values slow the response, reduce noise, and produce fewer regime changes.
A signal line is then applied to the oscillator using an EMA, creating a two-line framework that is easy to trade. The oscillator line represents the current trend pressure state, while the signal line represents the smoothed baseline of that pressure. The primary decision point is the relationship between the oscillator and the signal, where oscillator above signal indicates improving bullish pressure and oscillator below signal indicates improving bearish pressure. This relationship is also used to drive the visual state of the indicator so the chart feedback matches the current bias. The indicator additionally computes a Pulse histogram as the difference between the oscillator and the signal line, which helps you quickly see when momentum is expanding or contracting. When the histogram grows in the bullish direction, pressure is strengthening above the baseline, and when it contracts toward zero, pressure is fading and conditions are becoming more balanced.
The visual layer is built to make bias and transitions obvious without clutter. You can enable a fill between the oscillator and the signal line that changes color based on whether the oscillator is above or below the signal, so the “state” is visible even at a glance. The Pulse histogram can be shown to highlight the size of the separation between the oscillator and the signal, which is useful for spotting early momentum shifts, confirming continuation, or identifying when a move is losing energy. The indicator includes standard level guides with a midpoint at 50 and optional overbought and oversold thresholds, which can help you contextualize stronger pushes away from neutral. These levels are best treated as context rather than automatic reversal triggers, because this tool is designed to track trend pressure first, and it can remain elevated or depressed for extended periods during strong directional moves.
For traders who like a unified view, there is an optional setting to color price bars based on the oscillator state relative to the signal line. When enabled, candles will reflect bullish bias when the oscillator is above the signal and bearish bias when below, aligning your chart’s candle colors with the same logic driving the oscillator’s state. This makes it easy to stay consistent with your bias filter without constantly checking the panel. The indicator also includes alert conditions focused on the core events traders care about, including oscillator crosses of the signal line, crosses of the 50 midpoint, and crosses of the overbought and oversold levels, so you can automate notifications for regime shifts, momentum changes, and stronger pressure conditions.
In practical use, Trend Pulse Oscillator is most effective as a bias and timing tool. When the oscillator holds above 50 and repeatedly stays above its signal line, it reflects persistent bullish pressure where pullbacks are more likely to be continuation opportunities. When the oscillator holds below 50 and stays below its signal line, it reflects persistent bearish pressure where rallies are more likely to be corrective. The most valuable information often comes from how cleanly the oscillator can stay on the correct side of its signal and whether the Pulse histogram expands during breaks and contractions, because that combination helps separate real trend continuation from choppy rotation.
[CT] Adaptive Trend Pressure (Percentile) Adaptive Trend Pressure (Percentile) is a centered, percentile-based trend and momentum pressure gauge designed to show you whether price is behaving more like it is pushing into the upper end of its recent distribution or slipping toward the lower end. Instead of using a fixed lookback oscillator formula, it builds an adaptive “range” from percentile bands that constantly adjust to the market’s recent behavior. That makes the reading more context-aware than many traditional oscillators, because the indicator is measuring where current price sits relative to an evolving statistical envelope rather than a static high/low window. The output is a pressure value that naturally expands when price action is persistently pressing toward the upper percentile band and contracts or turns negative when price is leaning toward the lower percentile band, which helps you read both direction and the quality of participation behind that direction.
The core engine starts by modeling a dynamic band around price using a volatility component. Volatility is measured with standard deviation over a short window, then scaled by a multiplier, and that volatility-adjusted value is added to and subtracted from the selected source to create an upper and lower “series.” Those two series are then run through a percentile calculation over the chosen trend length and sensitivity setting. The indicator finds the upper percentile of the upper series and the lower percentile of the lower series, creating an adaptive envelope that reflects both price location and recent volatility conditions. Once those percentile boundaries are established, the script converts the current source into a normalized oscillator by measuring how far it is between the lower and upper percentiles. That produces a bounded 0–100 reading that rises when price is persistently positioned near the top of the envelope and falls when price is positioned near the bottom, and it avoids distortions by protecting against division by extremely small ranges.
To make the output easier to trade, the indicator converts the 0–100 oscillator into a centered pressure line by subtracting 50. This creates a clean zero-line framework where positive pressure means the market is behaving with an upper-distribution bias and negative pressure means the market is behaving with a lower-distribution bias. The zero line becomes the primary regime divider and is intentionally simple to interpret in real time. When pressure stays above zero, you are generally seeing conditions consistent with bullish control, and when it stays below zero, you are generally seeing conditions consistent with bearish control. Because it is centered, you can also quickly judge the intensity of pressure by how far the histogram extends away from zero, which helps separate shallow drift from meaningful push.
A signal line is included and is computed as an EMA of the centered pressure value. This line is meant to smooth out the raw fluctuations and give you a second reference for timing and confirmation. When pressure is above the signal line, momentum is improving relative to its recent baseline, and when pressure is below the signal line, momentum is weakening. Crosses of pressure through the signal can be used as earlier timing cues, while the zero-line framework can be used as the higher-level bias filter. In practice, many traders will treat sustained pressure above zero as the directional environment and then use the signal relationship to help choose entries on pullbacks or to recognize when momentum is fading.
The indicator also includes optional zone guides that frame where “higher pressure” and “lower pressure” tend to become more meaningful. These zones are centered values, so the default upper zone corresponds to the same concept as an oscillator reading above roughly 75 on a 0–100 scale, and the default lower zone corresponds to roughly 25 on a 0–100 scale. When pressure pushes into the upper zone, it suggests the market is not only bullish-biased but doing so with stronger persistence, and when pressure pushes into the lower zone, it suggests stronger bearish persistence. The zone fill is a visual context rather than a standalone signal, and it is best used to identify when momentum is extended, when a trend is accelerating, or when mean-reversion risk may start rising, depending on your style.
By default, the plot is a histogram so you can read pressure as a “push” above or below zero. The histogram coloring can be enabled to make positive bars appear green and negative bars appear red, which reinforces the centered framework and keeps your attention on regime and intensity. If you prefer a cleaner look, you can switch to a line display while keeping the same calculations underneath. There is also an optional setting to color the actual price bars to match the histogram direction, which makes the bias visible on the main chart at a glance. When enabled, candles will adopt the bullish color when pressure is at or above zero and the bearish color when pressure is below zero, giving you a consistent visual alignment between the oscillator’s pressure state and the price action you are trading.
This tool is best used as a trend context and momentum pressure filter rather than a single, one-off trigger. In uptrends, you will often see pressure hold above zero with brief dips that fail to sustain below, and those dips commonly align with pullbacks that resolve back into the trend. In downtrends, pressure commonly holds below zero with brief rallies that fail to sustain above. The most important information is usually not the first cross, but whether the indicator can stay on the correct side of zero and how confidently it can push toward or into the upper or lower zone. When combined with your existing structure work, it can help you decide when to press trades in the direction of momentum and when to reduce risk as pressure fades or flips regime.
15-Minute Squeeze Scalper (Traffic Light Edition)Overview This is a highly optimized version of the famous Squeeze Momentum Indicator, customized specifically for 15-minute scalping .
While the original indicator is powerful, the default colors can be confusing for new traders. I have recoded this to function as a simple "Traffic Light" system to help you identify periods of inaction vs. periods of high-probability breakouts.
How it Works This tool identifies when the market is "quiet" (low volatility) and getting ready to explode. It uses Bollinger Bands and Keltner Channels to measure this energy.
The "Traffic Light" Visuals
🔴 RED Cross (Center Line): STOP / WAIT
Meaning: The Squeeze is ON. The market is coiling tight.
Action: Do not trade yet. Wait for the energy to release. The longer the line of red dots, the bigger the potential move.
🟢 GREEN Cross (Center Line): GO / ACTION
Meaning: The Squeeze has FIRED. Volatility is expanding.
Action: Look at the Histogram to determine the direction of the trade.
📊 Histogram Bars:
Lime/Green: Bullish Momentum (Trade Long).
Red/Maroon: Bearish Momentum (Trade Short).
The 15-Minute Scalping Strategy
Identify the Squeeze: Look for a series of Red Crosses on the zero line.
Wait for the Fire: Wait for the first Green Cross to appear.
Confirm Direction:
If the Cross turns Green AND the Histogram is above zero: LONG.
If the Cross turns Green AND the Histogram is below zero: SHORT.
Alerts Included I have added custom alerts so you don't have to stare at the screen:
"Squeeze Fired": Alerts you instantly when the Red Cross changes to Green.
"Momentum Long/Short": Alerts you when momentum flips direction.
Smart Signals [Vdubus]Smart Signals
Concept & Philosophy
Smart Signals is a "Regime-Filtered" oscillator designed to solve the biggest problem with standard indicators: Counter-trend noise.
Most oscillators (like Stochastic or RSI) are "dumb" to market context—they will signal "Sell" continuously during a strong uptrend simply because the price is high. Smart Signals fixes this by first determining the Market Regime (Bullish or Bearish) and then strictly filtering out any signal that contradicts that trend.
It creates a "Tiered" trading system that separates standard trend-following entries from high-probability "Sniper" entries (Hidden Divergence), all presented in a clean, color-blind-friendly visual interface.
Core Functions
1. The "Sheriff" (Trend Filter)
At the heart of the indicator is a heavy, modified Hull Moving Average (HMA 200) that acts as the trend baseline.
Bullish Regime: When the baseline is sloping UP, the indicator enters "Buy Only" mode. All Sell signals are mathematically deleted.
Bearish Regime: When the baseline is sloping DOWN, the indicator enters "Sell Only" mode. All Buy signals are mathematically deleted.
The Math: It uses a custom difference-weighted formula (wmaHalf = Length / 1) to create a stable, chop-resistant trend anchor.
2. Dual-Signal Engine
The indicator scans for two distinct types of entries simultaneously:
♦ Standard Signals (Blue/Red Diamonds):
Logic: A classic Stochastic pullback (Cross 20/80) aligned with the trend.
Use Case: These are frequent "Bread and Butter" trend entries. They are excellent for scaling into a position or adding to a winner as the trend continues.
Location: Plotted at the top (Sell) and bottom (Buy) edges of the panel.
+ Sniper Signals (Gold Crosses):
Logic: Hidden Divergence. The script detects when Price holds structure (Higher Low) while Momentum resets (Lower Low). This is a "Slingshot" setup.
Use Case: These are rare, high-conviction entries. They often mark the end of a complex correction and the resumption of the main trend.
Location: Plotted on the Zero Line to indicate structural strength.
3. Smart Momentum Histogram
The histogram visualizes the "Energy" of the move (MACD 21, 34, 7), but with a twist. It is color-coded to the signal priority:
Gold Bars: A Sniper (Divergence) setup is active.
Solid Blue/Red Bars: A Standard Signal is active.
Faded Blue/Red Bars: The trend is active, but momentum is resetting (waiting mode).
Gray Bars: Counter-trend noise (Ignore).
How to Trade It
Check the "Road": Look at the general color of the histogram columns.
Blue Columns: Look for Longs.
Red Columns: Look for Shorts.
The "Sniper" Entry: Wait for a Gold Cross (+) on the zero line. This is your primary signal to enter a trade with normal risk.
The "Pyramid" Entry: If the trend continues and you see Blue/Red Diamonds (♦) appear at the edges, these are safe places to add to your position.
The Exit: Since this is a trend-following tool, exit when the histogram color flips (e.g., from Blue to Red/Gray), or use your own support/resistance targets.
Alerts Configuration
The indicator comes with a full suite of alerts for automation:
Gold Buy / Gold Sell: Notifies you only for the high-probability Hidden Divergence setups.
Standard Buy / Standard Sell: Notifies you for every trend pullback.
ANY BUY / ANY SELL: A combo alert that triggers on either signal type (useful for simplifying your alert limits).
Accessibility
Color Blind Friendly: The default palette uses High-Contrast Blue (#2962FF) and Soft Red (#FF5252) instead of standard Green/Red, ensuring visibility for all users.
Zero Clutter: No text labels or confusing lines. Just clear, distinct shapes (Diamonds and Crosses) at fixed locations.
VAM Pro (Multi-Model) [Final]Volatility Adjusted Momentum (VAM) Pro+ is a professional quantitative tool designed to measure trend strength by normalizing momentum against market volatility. Standard momentum indicators often fail during high-volatility periods because they treat every price change the same regardless of market noise. This indicator solves that problem by scaling price changes based on their statistical significance using Z-Score logic. This Pro+ version is specifically optimized for Scalping and Intraday Trading by introducing advanced volatility estimators and mathematical horizon adjustments that superior to classic standard deviation models.
The indicator allows you to choose the most suitable volatility model for your specific asset class. The Parkinson Volatility model is highly recommended for Crypto markets because it uses the High-Low range instead of just close prices, effectively capturing intraday wicks and liquidation spikes that standard deviation often misses. For Equities and Forex, the Garman-Klass model is the most efficient choice as it utilizes the full Open-High-Low-Close data set to account for opening gaps and professional trading ranges.
The mathematical core of the script features a strict Horizon Adjustment based on the Square Root of Time rule. This aligns the one-bar volatility risk with your chosen momentum lookback period to ensure a mathematically consistent calculation. By default, the script uses Logarithmic Returns to maintain scale invariance, which is critical for assets with high percentage swings like Cryptocurrencies. To trade with VAM Pro, look for the histogram color and its relation to the Zero line. A Green histogram indicates positive volatility-adjusted momentum where bulls are dominant, while a Red histogram shows bearish dominance. Values reaching the +2.0 or -2.0 Sigma levels represent statistically extreme moves that often act as exhaustion points or precede strong mean-reversion opportunities. When the histogram crosses the yellow signal line, it provides an early warning that the current momentum is fading.
Investment involves risk. The Volatility Adjusted Momentum (VAM) Pro+ is an analytical tool and does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any security. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Market conditions can change rapidly, and technical indicators may produce false signals. Always perform your own due diligence, use proper risk management, and consult with a certified financial advisor before making any trading decisions. The author assumes no responsibility for any financial losses incurred through the use of this script.
[RoyalNeuron] RSI-SMA [WidowMaker v1.0]Hey everyone,👋
This is WidowMaker v1.0 — my free take on a really clean, zero-lag smoothed RSI that actually helps you see momentum without all the noise.
What makes it different:
- Smoothed RSI (you pick SMA or EMA) so it doesn’t whipsaw as much as the default one
- Green line when momentum is rising, red when it’s falling — super easy to read at a glance
- Histogram turns solid green for strong upward push, solid red when things are fading
- Very faint green background in oversold (buy zone) and faint red in overbought (caution zone)
Quick way to use it:
- Green line + solid green histogram near the bottom (oversold) → good spot for longs
- Red line + solid red histogram near the top (overbought) → time to think about shorts or taking profit
I made it because I was tired of cluttered indicators that look cool but don’t help much in real trading.
I am thinking of an updated version, still thinking of what to add so that to add value.
Would love your honest feedback — like it, use it, tell me what you’d add. More free tools on the way!
Cheers,
RoyalNeuron 👑
RSI, Smoothed RSI, Momentum, Oscillator, Overbought, Oversold, Histogram, Green Red, Free, Alerts
BTC - RVPM: Run Velocity & Probability MapBTC – RVPM: Run Velocity & Probability Map | RM
Strategic Context: Understanding Price Runs
A "Price Run" (also known as a streak or consecutive sessions) is a foundational concept in time-series analysis that measures the duration of a price movement without a significant counter-signal. While common indicators like RSI or MACD measure magnitude or momentum, they often ignore the Persistence of the trend. Historically, markets move through cycles of expansion and mean-reversion. A Price Run represents a period of "Unidirectional Flow" — a fingerprint of institutional accumulation or systematic distribution. However, standard "run-counting" is often too simplistic for the volatile crypto markets.
What Makes RVPM Special?
Most community run-counters are binary; they simply tell you if X days were green or red. The RVPM distinguishes itself through three proprietary layers:
• The Intensity Filter: It doesnt just count days; it counts effort . By ignoring "flat" days through a percentage-return threshold, it filters out noise that would otherwise skew the statistical probability.
• Dynamic Benchmarking: Instead of using an arbitrary number (like "7 days"), the RVPM looks back at 200 bars of history to find the local "Persistence Ceiling." It adapts to the current volatility regime of Bitcoin.
• The Velocity Score: It transform simple counts into a -100 to +100 histogram, allowing traders to see momentum "decaying" (e.g., dropping from 90 to 70) even if the price continues to rise.
The 3 Pillars of the Engine
1. Velocity Mapping (Persistence Histogram)
The histogram calculates the density of directional effort within a defined window. It functions as the "Pulse" of the trend, mapping market behavior into three distinct zones:
• High Velocity Zone (> 80 or < -80): Institutional Expansion. This identifies a "clean" move where one side of the market possesses total structural control. In this zone, the trend is efficient, and counter-signals are immediately absorbed.
• The Neutral Zone (Near Zero): Momentum Equilibrium. When the histogram fluctuates near the zero line, the market is in a "Recharge Phase." Neither bulls nor bears are achieving persistent dominance. Tactically, this is the "Waiting Room" where range-bound chop is likely, and traders should wait for a new "Expansion" spike before committing.
• Velocity Decay: The Exhaustion Warning. Velocity Decay occurs when the indicator moves from an extreme (e.g., +95) back toward the zero line (e.g., +50) while the price is still rising. This is a "Persistence Divergence." It tells you that while the trend is still moving, the consistency of the bars is fragmenting. The "fuel" is being depleted, and the trend is transitioning from an "Institutional Expansion" into a "Speculative Exhaustion."
2. n-of-m Consistency (The Pips)
The "Pips" (Circles) mark when a specific consistency threshold is met (e.g., 5 out of 7 bars in one direction). This identifies "Leaky Trends" that are still statistically dominated by one side of the ledger.
3. Statistical Exhaustion (The Arrows)
The Dark Red (Top) and Dark Green (Bottom) triangles represent the engine's "Mean-Reversion Signal." The calculation is based on a Relative Maximum Streak (RMS) logic: the script tracks the current linear, consecutive bar count (ignoring bars that fail the Intensity Filter) and continuously benchmarks this against the highest streak recorded over the last 200 bars ( ta.highest(streak, 200) ). The triangles are triggered specifically when the current run reaches 80% of this historical record (the "Anomaly Threshold"). Mathematically, this identifies a move that is statistically pushing against its half-year limit. By using this dynamic threshold rather than a fixed number, the "Extreme" signal automatically tightens during low-volatility regimes and expands during high-volatility expansions, ensuring the signal only appears when the "statistical rubber band" is at a true breaking point.
Operational Interface: The RVPM Dashboard
The Status Dashboard (Top Right) serves as a real-time monitor for momentum health, providing a clean summary of the underlying persistence data:
• Current STREAK: The active, consecutive count of bars meeting the Intensity Filter. It is dynamically color-coded (Cyan/Bullish or Red/Bearish) to provide an instant read on trend seniority.
• WINDOW Consistency: Measures the Momentum Density (the n-of-m value). A value of "6" in a "7-bar" window indicates a high-conviction regime that is successfully absorbing pullbacks without losing its primary trajectory.
Tactical Playbook: The Mean-Reversion Rule
Price action typically follows a "Rubber Band" effect. The further it is stretched without a break, the more "unstable" the trend becomes as the pool of available buyers or sellers is depleted.
• The Setup: Wait for the Triangle Arrows to appear.
• The Logic: The move has reached a 200-day anomaly. A "Liquidity Vacuum" is forming on the opposite side.
• The Action: This is a high-probability Mean-Reversion signal. It is a tactical time to take profits or look for a sharp snap-back move toward the 20-period moving average or the "Institutional Mean."
Settings & Parameters
• Window Length (m): The lookback window used to calculate the Velocity Score.
• Required Days (n): The minimum number of directional bars needed within the window to trigger a "Consistency Pip."
• Intensity Filter (%): The minimum % change required for a bar to be counted toward a run.
• Lookback Period: The historical window (Default: 200 bars) used to calculate the "Maximum Streak" records for exhaustion alerts.
Timeframe Recommendation
The RVPM is best viewed on the Daily (1D) timeframe. This filters out intraday noise and provides the most reliable statistical mapping for macro exhaustion points.
Credits & Verification
The RVPM logic aligns with institutional "Persistence" models and Glassnode's Price Stretch benchmarks. By benchmarking against a rolling 200-day window, the indicator automatically adapts to changing market volatility.
Risk Disclaimer & No Financial Advice
The information, data, and analytical models provided in this publication are for educational and informational purposes only. This script does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Trading cryptocurrencies and other financial instruments carries a high degree of risk, and statistical anomalies or "Extreme Runs" do not guarantee future price action. Past performance is never indicative of future results. Every trader is responsible for their own due diligence and risk management. Rob Maths and the associated entities are not liable for any financial losses incurred through the use of this tool. Always consult with a certified financial professional before making significant investment decisions.
Tags:
bitcoin, btc, persistence, streaks, price-runs, momentum, mean-reversion, exhaustion, Rob Maths






















