Seasonality Calculation Tool by Luis Trompeter

While the Seasonality Indicator displays the historical seasonal curve, this tool goes one step further by examining how reliable and consistent that curve truly is.
The tool checks whether a seasonal pattern is strong, distorted by a few outlier years, or statistically meaningful. It calculates the average return within the selected seasonal window and highlights how accurate or robust the pattern has been over the evaluated period.
To support manual confirmation and deeper analysis, the tool also visualizes the seasonal windows directly on the chart. This allows traders to review past occurrences and backtest the pattern themselves to validate the quality of the signal.
The Seasonality Calculation Tool is an ideal complement to the main Seasonality Indicator, helping traders identify high-quality, data-driven seasonal tendencies and avoid misleading or weak seasonal patterns.
Usage
This script is intended to be used exclusively on the daily timeframe, as all calculations rely on daily candle data.
The settings are intuitive and easy to adjust, allowing users to quickly evaluate any seasonal window displayed by the Seasonality Indicator.
Invite-only script
Only users approved by the author can access this script. You'll need to request and get permission to use it. This is typically granted after payment. For more details, follow the author's instructions below or contact luistrompeter directly.
TradingView does NOT recommend paying for or using a script unless you fully trust its author and understand how it works. You may also find free, open-source alternatives in our community scripts.
Author's instructions
Disclaimer
Invite-only script
Only users approved by the author can access this script. You'll need to request and get permission to use it. This is typically granted after payment. For more details, follow the author's instructions below or contact luistrompeter directly.
TradingView does NOT recommend paying for or using a script unless you fully trust its author and understand how it works. You may also find free, open-source alternatives in our community scripts.