Ticker vs IndexI was exploring a simple idea how I can visualize the ticker performance against the underlying Index (or any other ticker) performance.
how it works:
When the line is moving up (blue zone), the ticker is performing better than the underlying index (e.g. SPX)(configurable).
When the line is moving down (red zone), the ticker is performing worse than the underlying index.
How to use it:
Use as confirmation always in conjunction with other (main) indicators, avoid "buy" when indicator is in the red zone
Also, crossing over the zero line is often an indication for an upcoming upward move
Try to different SMA length - default is 20 but 10 was often showing better results
(No financial advise, for testing purposes only)
Search in scripts for "文华财经tick价格"
Ticker Industry and Competitor LookupThe Ticker Industry and Competitor Lookup is a comprehensive indicator that provides instant access to industry classification data and competitive intelligence for any ticker symbol. Built using the advanced SIC_TICKER_DATA library, this tool delivers professional-grade sector analysis with enterprise-level performance. It's a simple yet great tool for competitor research, sector studies, portfolio diversification, and investment decision-making.
This indicator is a simple tool built on based on our SIC_TICKER_DATA library to demonstrate the use cases of the library. In this case, you enter a ticker and it displays the sector, SIC or Standard Industrial Classification which is a SEC identifier, and more importantly, the competitors that are listed to be in the exact same SIC by SEC.
There isn't much to say about the indicator itself but we strongly recommend checking out the SIC_TICKER_DATA library we just published to learn more about the types of indicators you can build using it.
TICK high/low/emaTeal = Highest Tick of the period
Red = Lowest tick of the period
Yellow ema of ohlc/4
Tick Marubozu StrategyStrategy Concept:
This strategy identifies Marubozu candles on a tick chart (customizable pip size) with high volume to signal strong market momentum.
Bearish Marubozu → Strong selling pressure → Enter a SELL trade
Bullish Marubozu → Strong buying pressure → Enter a BUY trade
Entry Conditions:
Marubozu Definition:
Open price ≈ High for a bearish Marubozu (minimal wick at the top).
Open price ≈ Low for a bullish Marubozu (minimal wick at the bottom).
Customizable body size (in pips).
High Volume Confirmation:
The volume of the Marubozu candle must be above the moving average of volume (e.g., 20-period SMA).
Trade Direction:
Bearish Marubozu with High Volume → SELL
Bullish Marubozu with High Volume → BUY
Exit Conditions:
Time-Based Expiry: Since it's for binary options, the trade duration is pre-defined (e.g., 1-minute expiry).
Reversal Candle: If a strong opposite Marubozu appears, it may indicate a trend shift.
TICK Strength Background ShadeThis indicator shades the background of each candle based on the strength off the current TICK.US chart. User can define the strength levels, which are by default set to 1-299 (lightest), 300-599, and 600+ (darkest). Best used on lower timeframe charts to help identify whether or not to remain in a trend, or if a trend is possibly reversing when you start to see the opposite color begin to appear following a trend.
TICK gapUsed with the "Cumulative TICK", highlights a gap up candle in yellow and a gap down candle in white, then plots a line 500 points away, signalling a counter trend entry.
Multi-ticker Daily Pivot AlertDescription:
The Big Tech Daily Pivot Alert is a powerful TradingView indicator designed to monitor daily pivot points for major tech and market-leading tickers. It provides real-time alerts when prices approach their daily pivot levels, helping traders identify potential trading opportunities during the U.S. market hours.
Key Features:
Multi-Ticker Monitoring: Tracks the daily pivot points for top tech and market tickers, including NVDA, TSLA, AMZN, NFLX, SPY, QQQ, GOOGL, MSFT, META, and AAPL.
Daily Pivot Calculations: Uses yesterday's high, low, and close prices to calculate the pivot point for each ticker.
Real-Time Alerts: Sends instant alerts when the open, high, low, or current price is near the pivot point (within 0.25% tolerance).
Time-Sensitive Alerts: Operates exclusively during U.S. market hours (6:00 AM to 1:00 PM PST) on weekdays (Monday to Friday).
Customizable Alert Format: Alerts are sent as JSON payloads for seamless integration with platforms like Discord or other webhook-supported systems.
How It Works:
The indicator calculates the daily pivot point for each ticker using the formula:
Pivot Point = (High + Low + Close) / 3
It continuously monitors the open, high, low, and current prices of each ticker on a 1-minute timeframe.
If any value approaches the pivot point within a configurable threshold (default: 0.25%), it triggers an alert with detailed information for all tickers meeting the criteria.
Who Should Use It:
Day Traders: Spot potential price reversal or breakout levels based on pivot point testing.
Swing Traders: Identify key levels of support and resistance to inform trading decisions.
Tech and Market Enthusiasts: Stay updated on critical price levels for major tech and market tickers.
Instructions:
Add the indicator to your chart.
Configure your webhook endpoint to receive alerts (e.g., Discord or Slack).
Monitor alerts for actionable opportunities when prices test pivot points.
Rolling Calmar Ratio with Ref Ticker V1.0 [ADRIDEM]Overview
The Rolling Calmar Ratio with Ref Ticker script is designed to offer a comprehensive view of the Calmar ratios for a selected reference ticker and the current ticker. This script helps investors compare risk-adjusted returns between two assets over a rolling period, providing insights into their relative performance and risk. Below is a detailed presentation of the script and its unique features.
Unique Features of the New Script
Reference Ticker Comparison : Allows users to compare the Calmar ratio of the current ticker with a reference ticker, providing a relative performance analysis. Default ticker is BTCUSDT but can be changed.
Customizable Rolling Window : Enables users to set the length for the rolling window, adapting to different market conditions and timeframes. The default value is 252 bars, which approximates one year of trading days, but it can be adjusted as needed.
Smoothing Option : Includes an option to apply a smoothing simple moving average (SMA) to the Calmar ratios, helping to reduce noise and highlight trends. The smoothing length is customizable, with a default value of 14 bars.
Visual Indicators : Plots the smoothed Calmar ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, with distinct colors for easy comparison. Additionally, a horizontal line helps identify key levels.
Dynamic Background Color : Adds a gray-blue transparent background between the Calmar ratio levels of 0 and 1, highlighting the critical region where risk-adjusted returns are assessed.
Originality and Usefulness
This script uniquely combines the analysis of Calmar ratios for a reference ticker and the current ticker, providing a comparative view of their risk-adjusted returns. The inclusion of a customizable rolling window and smoothing option enhances its adaptability and usefulness in various market conditions.
Signal Description
The script includes several features that highlight potential insights into the risk-adjusted returns of the assets:
Reference Ticker Calmar Ratio : Plotted as a red line, this represents the smoothed Calmar ratio for the user-selected reference ticker.
Current Ticker Calmar Ratio : Plotted as a white line, this represents the smoothed Calmar ratio for the current ticker.
Horizontal Lines and Background Color : A line at 0 helps to quickly identify the regions of positive and negative risk-adjusted returns.
These features assist in identifying relative performance differences and confirming the strength or weakness of risk-adjusted returns between the two tickers.
Detailed Description
Input Variables
Length for Rolling Window (`length`) : Defines the range for calculating the rolling Calmar ratio. Default is 252.
Smoothing Length (`smoothing_length`) : The number of periods for the smoothing SMA. Default is 14.
Reference Ticker (`ref_ticker`) : The ticker symbol for the reference asset. Default is "BINANCE:BTCUSDT".
Functionality
Calmar Ratio Calculation : The script calculates the cumulative returns and maximum drawdown for both the reference ticker and the current ticker. These values are used to compute the Calmar ratio.
```pine
ref_cumulativeReturn = (ref_close / ta.valuewhen(ta.lowest(ref_close, length) == ref_close, ref_close, 0)) - 1
ref_rollingMax = ta.highest(ref_close, length)
ref_drawdown = (ref_close - ref_rollingMax) / ref_rollingMax
ref_maxDrawdown = ta.lowest(ref_drawdown, length)
ref_calmarRatio = ref_cumulativeReturn / math.abs(ref_maxDrawdown)
current_cumulativeReturn = (close / ta.valuewhen(ta.lowest(close, length) == close, close, 0)) - 1
current_rollingMax = ta.highest(close, length)
current_drawdown = (close - current_rollingMax) / current_rollingMax
current_maxDrawdown = ta.lowest(current_drawdown, length)
current_calmarRatio = current_cumulativeReturn / math.abs(current_maxDrawdown)
```
Smoothing : A simple moving average is applied to the Calmar ratios to smooth the data.
```pine
smoothed_ref_calmarRatio = ta.sma(ref_calmarRatio, smoothing_length)
smoothed_current_calmarRatio = ta.sma(current_calmarRatio, smoothing_length)
```
Plotting : The script plots the smoothed Calmar ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, along with a horizontal line.
```pine
plot(smoothed_ref_calmarRatio, title="Ref Ticker Calmar Ratio", color=color.rgb(255, 82, 82, 50), linewidth=2)
plot(smoothed_current_calmarRatio, title="Current Ticker Calmar Ratio", color=color.white, linewidth=2)
h0 = hline(0, "Zero Line", color=color.gray)
fill(h0, h1, color=color.rgb(33, 150, 243, 90), title="Background")
```
How to Use
Configuring Inputs : Adjust the detection length and smoothing length as needed. Set the reference ticker to the desired asset for comparison.
Interpreting the Indicator : Use the plotted Calmar ratios and horizontal line to assess the relative risk-adjusted returns of the reference and current tickers.
Signal Confirmation : Look for differences in the Calmar ratios to identify potential performance advantages or weaknesses. The horizontal line helps to highlight key levels of risk-adjusted returns.
This script provides a detailed comparative view of risk-adjusted returns, aiding in more informed decision-making by highlighting key differences between the reference ticker and the current ticker.
Rolling Sortino Ratio with Ref Ticker V1.0 [ADRIDEM]Overview
The Rolling Sortino Ratio with Ref Ticker script is designed to offer a comprehensive view of the Sortino ratios for a selected reference ticker and the current ticker. This script helps investors compare risk-adjusted returns between two assets over a rolling period, providing insights into their relative performance and risk. Below is a detailed presentation of the script and its unique features.
Unique Features of the New Script
Reference Ticker Comparison : Allows users to compare the Sortino ratio of the current ticker with a reference ticker, providing a relative performance analysis. Default ticker is BTCUSDT but can be changed.
Customizable Rolling Window : Enables users to set the length for the rolling window, adapting to different market conditions and timeframes. The default value is 252 bars, which approximates one year of trading days, but it can be adjusted as needed.
Smoothing Option : Includes an option to apply a smoothing simple moving average (SMA) to the Sortino ratios, helping to reduce noise and highlight trends. The smoothing length is customizable, with a default value of 4 bars.
Visual Indicators : Plots the smoothed Sortino ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, with distinct colors for easy comparison. Additionally, horizontal lines and a shaded background help identify key levels.
Dynamic Background Color : Adds a gray-blue transparent background between the Sortino ratio levels of 0 and 1, highlighting the critical region where risk-adjusted returns are assessed.
Originality and Usefulness
This script uniquely combines the analysis of Sortino ratios for a reference ticker and the current ticker, providing a comparative view of their risk-adjusted returns. The inclusion of a customizable rolling window and smoothing option enhances its adaptability and usefulness in various market conditions.
Signal Description
The script includes several features that highlight potential insights into the risk-adjusted returns of the assets:
Reference Ticker Sortino Ratio : Plotted as a red line, this represents the smoothed Sortino ratio for the user-selected reference ticker.
Current Ticker Sortino Ratio : Plotted as a white line, this represents the smoothed Sortino ratio for the current ticker.
Horizontal Lines and Background Color : Lines at 0 and 1, along with a shaded background between these levels, help to quickly identify the regions of positive and strong risk-adjusted returns.
These features assist in identifying relative performance differences and confirming the strength or weakness of risk-adjusted returns between the two tickers.
Detailed Description
Input Variables
Length for Rolling Window (`length`) : Defines the range for calculating the rolling Sortino ratio. Default is 252.
Smoothing Length (`smoothing_length`) : The number of periods for the smoothing SMA. Default is 4.
Annual Risk-Free Rate (`riskFreeRate`) : The annual risk-free rate used in the Sortino ratio calculation. Default is 0.02 (2%).
Reference Ticker (`ref_ticker`) : The ticker symbol for the reference asset. Default is "BINANCE:BTCUSDT".
Functionality
Sortino Ratio Calculation : The script calculates the daily returns, mean return, and downside deviation for both the reference ticker and the current ticker. These values are used to compute the annualized Sortino ratio.
```pine
ref_dailyReturn = ta.change(ref_close) / ref_close
ref_meanReturn = ta.sma(ref_dailyReturn, length)
ref_downsideDeviation = ta.stdev(math.min(ref_dailyReturn, 0), length)
ref_annualizedReturn = ref_meanReturn * length
ref_annualizedDownsideDev = ref_downsideDeviation * math.sqrt(length)
ref_sortinoRatio = (ref_annualizedReturn - riskFreeRate) / ref_annualizedDownsideDev
```
Smoothing : A simple moving average is applied to the Sortino ratios to smooth the data.
```pine
smoothed_ref_sortinoRatio = ta.sma(ref_sortinoRatio, smoothing_length)
smoothed_current_sortinoRatio = ta.sma(current_sortinoRatio, smoothing_length)
```
Plotting : The script plots the smoothed Sortino ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, along with horizontal lines and a shaded background.
```pine
plot(smoothed_ref_sortinoRatio, title="Ref Ticker Sortino Ratio", color=color.rgb(255, 82, 82, 50), linewidth=2)
plot(smoothed_current_sortinoRatio, title="Current Ticker Sortino Ratio", color=color.white, linewidth=2)
h0 = hline(0, "Zero Line", color=color.gray)
h1 = hline(1, "One Line", color=color.gray)
fill(h0, h1, color=color.rgb(33, 150, 243, 90), title="Background")
```
How to Use
Configuring Inputs : Adjust the detection length, smoothing length, and risk-free rate as needed. Set the reference ticker to the desired asset for comparison.
Interpreting the Indicator : Use the plotted Sortino ratios and background shading to assess the relative risk-adjusted returns of the reference and current tickers.
Signal Confirmation : Look for differences in the Sortino ratios to identify potential performance advantages or weaknesses. The background shading helps to highlight key levels of risk-adjusted returns.
This script provides a detailed comparative view of risk-adjusted returns, aiding in more informed decision-making by highlighting key differences between the reference ticker and the current ticker.
Rolling Sharpe Ratio with Ref Ticker V1.0 [ADRIDEM]Overview
The Rolling Sharpe Ratio with Ref Ticker script is designed to offer a comprehensive view of the Sharpe ratios for a selected reference ticker and the current ticker. This script helps investors compare risk-adjusted returns between two assets over a rolling period, providing insights into their relative performance and risk. Below is a detailed presentation of the script and its unique features.
Unique Features of the New Script
Reference Ticker Comparison : Allows users to compare the Sharpe ratio of the current ticker with a reference ticker, providing a relative performance analysis. Default ticker is BTCUSDT but can be changed.
Customizable Rolling Window : Enables users to set the length for the rolling window, adapting to different market conditions and timeframes. The default value is 252 bars, which approximates one year of trading days, but it can be adjusted as needed.
Smoothing Option : Includes an option to apply a smoothing simple moving average (SMA) to the Sharpe ratios, helping to reduce noise and highlight trends. The smoothing length is customizable, with a default value of 4 bars.
Visual Indicators : Plots the smoothed Sharpe ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, with distinct colors for easy comparison. Additionally, horizontal lines and a shaded background help identify key levels.
Dynamic Background Color : Adds a gray-blue transparent background between the Sharpe ratio levels of 0 and 1, highlighting the critical region where risk-adjusted returns are assessed.
Originality and Usefulness
This script uniquely combines the analysis of Sharpe ratios for a reference ticker and the current ticker, providing a comparative view of their risk-adjusted returns. The inclusion of a customizable rolling window and smoothing option enhances its adaptability and usefulness in various market conditions.
Signal Description
The script includes several features that highlight potential insights into the risk-adjusted returns of the assets:
Reference Ticker Sharpe Ratio : Plotted as a red line, this represents the smoothed Sharpe ratio for the user-selected reference ticker.
Current Ticker Sharpe Ratio : Plotted as a white line, this represents the smoothed Sharpe ratio for the current ticker.
Horizontal Lines and Background Color : Lines at 0 and 1, along with a shaded background between these levels, help to quickly identify the regions of positive and strong risk-adjusted returns.
These features assist in identifying relative performance differences and confirming the strength or weakness of risk-adjusted returns between the two tickers.
Detailed Description
Input Variables
Length for Rolling Window (`length`) : Defines the range for calculating the rolling Sharpe ratio. Default is 252.
Smoothing Length (`smoothing_length`) : The number of periods for the smoothing SMA. Default is 4.
Annual Risk-Free Rate (`riskFreeRate`) : The annual risk-free rate used in the Sharpe ratio calculation. Default is 0.02 (2%).
Reference Ticker (`ref_ticker`) : The ticker symbol for the reference asset. Default is "BINANCE:BTCUSDT".
Functionality
Sharpe Ratio Calculation : The script calculates the daily returns, mean return, and standard deviation for both the reference ticker and the current ticker. These values are used to compute the annualized Sharpe ratio.
```pine
ref_dailyReturn = ta.change(ref_close) / ref_close
ref_meanReturn = ta.sma(ref_dailyReturn, length)
ref_stdDevReturn = ta.stdev(ref_dailyReturn, length)
ref_annualizedReturn = ref_meanReturn * length
ref_annualizedStdDev = ref_stdDevReturn * math.sqrt(length)
ref_sharpeRatio = (ref_annualizedReturn - riskFreeRate) / ref_annualizedStdDev
```
Smoothing : A simple moving average is applied to the Sharpe ratios to smooth the data.
```pine
smoothed_ref_sharpeRatio = ta.sma(ref_sharpeRatio, smoothing_length)
smoothed_current_sharpeRatio = ta.sma(current_sharpeRatio, smoothing_length)
```
Plotting : The script plots the smoothed Sharpe ratios for both the reference ticker and the current ticker, along with horizontal lines and a shaded background.
```pine
plot(smoothed_ref_sharpeRatio, title="Ref Ticker Sharpe Ratio", color=color.rgb(255, 82, 82, 50), linewidth=2)
plot(smoothed_current_sharpeRatio, title="Current Ticker Sharpe Ratio", color=color.white, linewidth=2)
h0 = hline(0, "Zero Line", color=color.gray)
h1 = hline(1, "One Line", color=color.gray)
fill(h0, h1, color=color.rgb(33, 150, 243, 90), title="Background")
```
How to Use
Configuring Inputs : Adjust the detection length, smoothing length, and risk-free rate as needed. Set the reference ticker to the desired asset for comparison.
Interpreting the Indicator : Use the plotted Sharpe ratios and background shading to assess the relative risk-adjusted returns of the reference and current tickers.
Signal Confirmation : Look for differences in the Sharpe ratios to identify potential performance advantages or weaknesses. The background shading helps to highlight key levels of risk-adjusted returns.
This script provides a detailed comparative view of risk-adjusted returns, aiding in more informed decision-making by highlighting key differences between the reference ticker and the current ticker.
Market Internals (TICK, ADD, VOLD, TRIN, VIX)OVERVIEW
This script allows you to perform data transformations on Market Internals, across exchanges, and specify signal parameters, to more easily identify sentiment extremes.
Notable transformations include:
1. Cumulative session values
2. Directional bull-bear Ratios and Percent Differences
3. Data Normalization
4. Noise Reduction
This kind of data interaction is very useful for understanding the relationship between two mutually exclusive metrics, which is the essence of Market Internals: Up vs. Down. Even so, they are not possible with symbol expressions alone. And the kind of symbol expression needed to produce baseline data that can be reliably transformed is opaque to most traders, made worse by the fact that prerequisite symbol expressions themselves are not uniform across symbols. It's very nuanced, and if this last bit was confusing … exactly.
All this to say, rather than forcing that burden onto you, I've baked the baseline symbol expressions into the indicator so: 1) the transform functions consistently ingest the baseline data in the correct format and 2) you don't have to spend time trying to figure it all out. Trading is hard. There's no need to make it harder.
INPUTS
Indicator
Allows you to specify the base Market Internal and Exchange data to use. The list of Market Internals is simplified to their fundamental representation (TICK, ADD, VOLD, TRIN, VIX, ABVD, TKCD), and the list of Exchange data is limited to the most common (NYSE, NASDAQ, All US Stocks). There are also options for basic exchange combinations (Sum or Average of NYSE & NASDAQ).
Mode
Short for "Plot Mode", this is where you specify the bars style (Candles, Bars, Line, Circles, Columns) and the source value (used for single value plots and plot color changes).
Scale
This is the first and second data transformation grouped together. The default is to show the origin data as it might appear on a chart. You can then specify if each bar should retain it's unique value (Bar Value) or be added to a running total (Cumulative). You can also specify if you would like the data to remain unaltered (Raw) or converted to a directional ratio (Ratio) or a percentage (Percent Diff). These options determine the scale of the plot.
Both Ratio and Percent Diff. convert a given symbol into a positive or negative number, where positive numbers are bullish and negative numbers are bearish.
Ratio will divide Bull values by Bear values, then further divide -1 by the quotient if it is less than 1. For example, if "0.5" was the quotient, the Ratio would be "-2".
Percent Diff. subtracts Bear values from Bull values, then divides that difference by the sum of Bull and Bear values multiplied by 100. If a Bull value was "3" and Bear value was "7", the difference would be "-4", the sum would be "10", and the Percent Diff. would be "-40", as the difference is both bearish and 40% of total.
Ratio Norm. Threshold
This is the third data transformation . While quotients can be less than 1, directional ratios are never less than 1. This can lead to barcode-like artifacts as plots transition between positive and negative values, visually suggesting the change is much larger than it actually is. Normalizing the data can resolve this artifact, but undermines the utility of ratios. If, however, only some of the data is normalized, the artifact can be resolved without jeopardizing its contextual usefulness.
The utility of ratios is how quickly they communicate proportional differences. For example, if one side is twice as big as the other, "2" communicates this efficiently. This necessarily means the numerical value of ratios is worth preserving. Also, below a certain threshold, the utility of ratios is diminished. For example, an equal distribution being represented as 0, 1, 1:1, 50/50, etc. are all equally useful. Thus, there is a threshold, above which we want values to be exact, and below which the utility of linear visual continuity is more important. This setting accounts for that threshold.
When this setting is enabled, a ratio will be normalized to 0 when 1:1, scaled linearly toward the specified threshold when greater than 1:1, and then retain its exact value when the threshold is crossed. For example, with a threshold of "2", 1:1 = 0, 1.5:1 = 1, 2:1 = 2, 3:1 = 3, etc.
With all this in mind, most traders will want to set the ratios threshold at a level where accuracy becomes more important than visual continuity. If this level is unknown, "2" is a good baseline.
Reset cumulative total with each new session
Cumulative totals can be retained indefinitely or be reset each session. When enabled, each session has its own cumulative total. When disabled, the cumulative total is maintained indefinitely.
Show Signal Ranges
Because everything in this script is designed to make identifying sentiment extremes easier, an obvious inclusion would be to not only display ranges that are considered extreme for each Market Internal, but to also change the color of the plot when it is within, or beyond, that range. That is exactly what this setting does.
Override Max & Min
While the min-max signal levels have reasonable defaults for each symbol and transformation type, the Override Max and Override Min options allow you to … (wait for it) … override the max … and min … signal levels. This may be useful should you find a different level to be more suitable for your exact configuration.
Reduce Noise
This is the fourth data transformation . While the previous Ratio Norm. Threshold linearly stretches values between a threshold and 0, this setting will exponentially squash values closer to 0 if below the lower signal level.
The purpose of this is to compress data below the signal range, then amplify it as it approaches the signal level. If we are trying to identify extremes (the signal), minimizing values that are not extreme (the noise) can help us visually focus on what matters.
Always keep both signal zones visible
Some traders like to zoom in close to the bars. Others prefer to keep a wider focus. For those that like to zoom in, if both signals were always visible, the bar values can appear squashed and difficult to discern. For those that keep a wider focus, if both signals were not always visible, it's possible to lose context if a signal zone is vertically beyond the pane. This setting allows you to decide which scenario is best for you.
Plot Colors
These define the default color, within signal color, and beyond signal color for Bullish and Bearish directions.
Plot colors should be relative to zero
When enabled, the plot will inherit Bullish colors when above zero and Bearish colors when below zero. When disabled and Directional Colors are enabled (below), the plot will inherit the default Bullish color when rising, and the default Bearish color when falling. Otherwise, the plot will use the default Bullish color for all directions.
Directional colors
When the plot colors should be relative to zero (above), this changes the opacity of a bars color if moving toward zero, where "100" percent is the full value of the original color and "0" is transparent. When the plot colors are NOT relative to zero, the plot will inherit Bullish colors when rising and Bearish colors when falling.
Differentiate RTH from ETH
Market Internal data is typically only available during regular trading hours. When this setting is enabled, the background color of the indicator will change as a reminder that data is not available outside regular trading hours (RTH), if the chart is showing electronic trading hours (ETH).
Show zero line
Similar to always keeping signal zones visible (further up), some traders prefer zooming in while others prefer a wider context. This setting allows you to specify the visibility of the zero line to best suit your trading style.
Linear Regression
Polynomial regressions are great for capturing non-linear patterns in data. TradingView offers a "linear regression curve", which this script is using as a substitute. If you're unfamiliar with either term, think of this like a better moving average.
Symbol
While the Market Internal symbol will display in the status line of the indicator, the status line can be small and require more than a quick glance to read properly. Enabling this setting allows you to specify if / where / how the symbol should display on the indicator to make distinguishing between Market Internals more efficient.
Speaking of symbols, this indicator is designed for, and limited to, the following …
TICK - The TICK subtracts the total number of stocks making a downtick from the total number of stocks making an uptick.
ADD - The Advance Decline Difference subtracts the total number of stocks below yesterdays close from the total number of stocks above yesterdays close.
VOLD - The Volume Difference subtracts the total declining volume from the total advancing volume.
TRIN - The Arms Index (aka. Trading Index) divides the ratio of Advancing Stocks / Volume by the ratio of Declining Stocks / Volume. Given the inverse correlation of this index to market movement, when transforming it to a Ratio or Percent Diff., its values are inverted to preserve the bull-bear sentiment of the transformations.
VIX - The CBOE Volatility Index is derived from SPX index option prices, generating a 30-day forward projection of volatility. Given the inverse correlation of this index to market movement, when transforming it to a Ratio or Percent Diff., its values are inverted and normalized to the sessions first bar to preserve the bull-bear sentiment of the transformations. Note: If you do not have a Cboe CGIF subscription , VIX data will be delayed and plot unexpectedly.
ABVD - The Above VWAP Difference is an unofficial index measuring all stocks above VWAP as a percent difference. For the purposes of this indicator (and brevity), TradingViews PCTABOVEVWAP has has been shortened to simply be ABVD.
TKCD - The Tick Cumulative Difference is an unofficial index that subtracts the total number of market downticks from the total number of market upticks. Where "the TICK" (further up) is a measurement of stocks ticking up and down, TKCD is a measurement of the ticks themselves. For the purposes of this indicator (and brevity), TradingViews UPTKS and DNTKS symbols have been shorted to simply be TKCD.
INSPIRATION
I recently made an indicator automatically identifying / drawing daily percentage levels , based on 4 assumptions. One of these assumptions is about trend days. While trend days do not represent the majority of days, they can have big moves worth understanding, for both capitalization and risk mitigation.
To this end, I discovered:
• Article by Linda Bradford Raschke about Capturing Trend Days.
• Video of Garrett Drinon about Trend Day Trading.
• Videos of Ryan Trost about How To Use ADD and TICK.
• Article by Jason Ruchel about Overview of Key Market Internals.
• Including links to resources outside of TradingView violates the House Rules, but they're not hard to find, if interested.
These discoveries inspired me adopt the underlying symbols in my own trading. I also found myself wanting to make using them easier, the net result being this script.
While coding everything, I also discovered a few symbols I believe warrant serious consideration. Specifically the Percent Above VWAP symbols and the Up Ticks / Down Ticks symbols (referenced as ABVD and TKCD in this indicator, for brevity). I found transforming ABVD or TKCD into a Ratio or Percent Diff. to be an incredibly useful and worthy inclusion.
ABVD is a Market Breadth cousin to Brian Shannon's work, and TKCD is like the 3rd dimension of the TICKs geometry. Enjoy.
Compare (RSI) Ticker 3x by fikiraHi!
Here I've created an indicator which compares 1 Ticker with 1 or 2 other Tickers.
The basis is RSI (Source & Length is adjustable), but the main objective is NOT to concentrate on the RSI, but on the comparison between the 2 or 3 Tickers.
I've used RSI because in this way high priced Tickers (for example BTC, now $8500) can easily be compared with low priced Tickers (for example BTT, now $0,00042)
In this example I have NEO/USDT (Binance) as my initial Ticker, you can see the candlesticks of NEO/USDT.
In the "Compare" indicator, the 'close' of NEO appears as a white line.
The second line (blue) is a chosen second Ticker, in this case BTC/USDT (Binance)
In "Settings" > "Inputs" you can enable/disable the second or third Ticker
- The second Ticker has multiple choices
- The third you can type any Ticker you want, for example CRYPTOCAP:BNB, BINANCE:ETHUSDT, NASDAQ_DLY:NDX or whatever,
just start typing and you'll see the possibilities (You also can choose between "Cryptocurrencies", "Index", "Forex", ...)
You can also plot 2 EMA's, a Short and a Long period (Length is adjustable).
The EMA's have the same colour as the Tickers (Ticker 1 = white, 2 = blue, 3 = red, of course all adjustable)
- EMA Ticker 1 crossover Ticker 2/3 > Green cloud
- EMA Ticker 1 crossunder Ticker 2/3 > Red cloud
For example:
NEO/USDT (1, white) & BTC/USDT (2, blue) with Long Period EMA
NEO/USDT (1, white) & BNB/USDT (3, red) with Long Period EMA
NEO/USDT (1, white) & BNB/USDT (3, red) with Short Period EMA
When the second chosen Ticker is the same as the first Ticker, of course you will be seeing lines
(because there is no difference between the 2 Tickers, the EMA is visible though)
Example :
Both BTC/USDT
(The second indicator is my "Compare (RSI) MACD", a MACD of this indicator, which in this case is obviously flat)
Volume Delta Compare [Ticks ~ LTF data]
The "Volume Delta Compare " publication shows 2 different techniques to show into-depth details of Volume, using Tick and Lower-Time-Frame (LTF) data.
🔶 USAGE
Check for divergences between price and volume movement
Check details (why and when a ΔV developed)
Or if you want to see a lot of data stacked on each other )
🔶 CONCEPTS
🔹 Tick vs. LTF data
a Tick is an measure of (upward or downward) movement in price OR volume.
We can use this data by using varip in the code.
Advantage:
• Detail, detail, detail
• Accurate, per tick
Disadvantage:
• Only realtime
• Can reset 'easily' -> loss of data
• Will reset when settings are changed
LTF data, through the request.security_lower_tf() function, measures the OHLCV data per LTF bar
Advantage:
• Access to history when loading a chart
• No 'loss' of data when chart resets
Disadvantage:
• Less detailed
• Less accurate
This script makes it possible to compare the 2 techniques and enables you to show different values.
🔹 Values
There are mainly 3 important values:
• UP volume (uV): volume when price rises
• DOWN volume (dV): volume when price falls
• NEUTRAL volume (nV): volume when price stays the same
From this, additional data is calculated:
• Volume Delta (ΔV): uV minus dV
• Cumulative Delta Volume (cΔV): sum of ΔV
One typical nV is at open: at that moment there isn't a base price to compare with,
so when the first trade doesn't fully fill the first supply (up or down), volume will rise, but price just is 'open', no movement -> no uV or dV.
• Tick data: every volume changement per tick will be added to the concerning variable (uV, dV or nV)
• LTF data: every volume changement of each bar will be added to the concerning variable (uV, dV or nV)
-> this can easily give a difference, for example (Tick vs. 1 minute LTF), when most of the ticks caused a rise of price, but at the last few seconds, a few ticks causes the close to come below open, with Tick data this could give more UP Volume, while LTF data will show 1 value of DOWN Volume.
🔶 EXAMPLES
🔹 Details
In these examples you can see:
• grey line: Total volume (higher precision)
• UP/DOWN/NEUTRAL Volume
• green columns: uV
• orange columns: dV
• blue pillars: nV
• coloured stepline: reflects ΔV
• close > open and positive ΔV -> green
• close > open but negative ΔV -> fuchsia
• close < open and negative ΔV -> orange
• close < open but positive ΔV -> bright lime green
• Right side -> indication of used data (Tick/LTF data) + last ΔV
• labels (can be disabled)
Above 0 (only with Tick data): data from EVERY tick (ΔV ):
• first the amount of Volume (0 when the amount is very minimal)
• between brackets: price movement
Below 0:
• Σ V: sum of uV, dV and nV, for that bar
• Σ up: sum of uV for that bar
• Σ dn: sum of dV for that bar
• Σ nt: sum of nV for that bar
• Σ P: sum of price movement, for that bar (only at Tick data)
(At the right you'll see a new bar just started)
Here is a detail of the first second at opening:
🔹 Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD)
Difference CVD based on Tick vs. LTF data :
(horizontal lines added for reference)
🔶 FEATURES
🔹 Minimal plotting of na values
Data window and status line only show what is applicable (tick or LTF data) to diminish clutter of data values:
The Tick option has a label above 0 which includes details of every Tick.
If data is added every tick, that label on a 10 minute chart will be filled beyond limitations pretty quickly (string max_length = 4096 limit).
To prevent the script stopping to execute, at a certain limit, this label will stop updating and show the message "Too much data".
The label below the 0-line won't reach that limit, so it will keep on updating.
Timeframes closer to 1 second will have less risk to reach that 4096 limit. Details will remain to show in this case.
🔹 Automatic label colour adaption when changing between dark/light mode values
Label background/text-colour will adapt according to the dark/light-mode by using chart.fg_color / chart.bg_color
🔶 SETTINGS
🔹 Data from: Ticks vs. LTF data
🔹 LTF: Lower Time-Frame for when LTF option is chosen: 1, 5, 10, 15, 30 Seconds or 1 minute
🔹 Also start when bar already has data: only for tick data -> when disabled calculations only start on a new bar.
🔹 CVD, Only show Cumulative Delta Volume: enable to just display CVD
🔹 Colours: colour at the right is for price/volume direction divergences
🔹 Label: choose what you want to display + size labels
🔹 0-line: The label under the 0-line sometimes goes below the chart. this can be adjusted with this setting.
IndexogramIndexogram is a platform designed to help traders analyze the Commitment of Traders (COT) report data. It specifically focuses on the Rate Of Change (ROC) of the COT data, visualized using a unique polyline plotting technique.
Commitments of Traders % Rate Of Change (%ROC):
The COT %ROC indicates the momentum of trader positions over a specified period. This measure is crucial for understanding shifts in market sentiment and potential future price movements.
Unique Polyline Plotting Technique:
Unlike traditional line or bar charts, the polyline plotting technique used in Indexogram offers a more nuanced and detailed view of the %ROC data.
Multiple Ticker Monitoring:
Indexogram allows the setup of up to five different tickers. Traders can assign different weightages to these tickers, enabling a customized and weighted view of their %ROC data. This feature is beneficial for tracking a diversified portfolio or comparing different assets.
Average ROI Plot:
An additional feature is the Average ROI plot, which provides the average return on investment (ROI) of the five selected tickers. This plot helps traders quickly assess the overall performance of their monitored assets.
Strategy for Traders
Diversified Monitoring:
By setting up five different tickers with varying weightages, traders can diversify their monitoring efforts across different assets or markets. This diversification helps in reducing risk and identifying opportunities in different sectors or asset classes.
Weightage Customization:
Assign weightages based on market conditions or personal trading strategy. For example, if a trader believes that commodities are likely to outperform equities in the near term, they can assign a higher weightage to commodities-related tickers.
Analyzing %ROC Trends:
Use the polyline plots to identify significant %ROC trends. A rising %ROC might indicate increasing momentum and a potential buying opportunity, while a falling %ROC could signal decreasing momentum and a potential selling opportunity.
Average ROI Analysis:
Use the Average ROI plot to gauge the overall performance of the selected assets. If the average ROI is positive and trending upwards, it indicates a generally favorable market condition for the monitored assets.
Tactical Adjustments:
Regularly review and adjust the selected tickers and their weightages based on changing market conditions, news, and personal insights. This flexibility allows traders to adapt their strategy in response to new information.
Important Notes:
Indexogram is a tool to identify potential tradings, not a guaranteed predictor of future price movements.
composite_ticker_cleanerLibrary "composite_ticker_cleaner"
Extract a clean symbol from a composite ticker. E.g., (BINANCE:BTCUSD+KRAKEN:BTCUSD)/2 as input will return BTCUSD or BINANCE:BTCUSD
composite_ticker_cleaner_extract_first(symbol, keepexchange)
Extract the first symbol out of the supplied string (usually ticker.standard(syminfo.tickerid) )
Parameters:
symbol : string input string to search in
keepexchange : bool (optional) Keep exchange in the returned ticker? By default, we only return the symbol without the exchange.
Returns: first occurrence of a symbol
composite_ticker_cleaner_extract_first(keepexchange)
Extract the first symbol out of the current tickerid (as provided by ticker.standard(syminfo.tickerid) )
Parameters:
keepexchange : bool (optional) Keep exchange in the returned ticker? By default, we only return the symbol without the exchange.
Returns: first occurrence of a symbol in the current tickerid
This is inspired by the work I did on this indicator:
I needed a similar functionality in another script, so instead of duplicating code, I thought generalizing the process in a library could be helpful for me and others, and will be easier to maintain and upgrade with new features if I need to.
Market Internals [Makit0] MARKET INTERNALS INDICATOR v0.5beta
Market Internals are suitable for day trade equity indices, named SPY or /ES, please do your own research about what they are and how to use them
This scripts plots the NYSE market internals charts as an indicator for an easy and full visualization of market internal structure all in one chart, useful for SPY and /ES trading
Description of the Market Internals
- TICK: NYSE stocks ticking up vs stocks ticking down, extreme values may point to trend continuation on trending days or reversal in non trending days, example of extreme values can be 800 and 1000
- ADD: NYSE stocks going up vs stocks going down, if price auctions around the zero line may be a non trend day, otherwise may be a trend day
- VOLD: NYSE volume of stocks up vs volume of stocks going down, identify clearly where the volume is going, as example if volume is flowing down may be a good idea no to place longs
- TRIN: NYSE up stocks vs down stocks ratio divided by up volume vs down volume ratio. A value of 1 indicates parity, below that the strength is on the long side, above the strength is in the short side.
A basic use of market internals may be looking for divergences, for example:
- /ES is trading in a range but ADD and VOLD are trending up nonstop, may /ES will break the range to the upside
- /ES is trading in a range and ADD and VOLD are trading around the zero line but got an extreme reading on TICK, may be a non trending day and the TICK extreme reading is at one of the extremes of the /ES range, may be a good probability trade to fade that move
- /ES is trading in a trend to the downside, ADD and VOLD too, you catch a good portion of the move but are fearful to flat and miss more gains, you see in the TICK a lot of extreme values below -800 so your're confident in the continuation of the downtrend, until the TICK goes beyond -1000 and you use that signal to go flat
Market internals give you context and confirmation, price in /ES may be trending but if market internals do not confirm the move may a reversal is on its way
Price is an advertise, you can see the real move in the structure below, in the behavior of the individual components of the market, those are the real questions:
- How many stocks are going up/down (ADD)
- How many volume is flowing up/down (VOLD)
- How many stocks are ticking up/down (TICK)
- What is the overall volume breath of the market (TRIN)
FEATURES:
- Plot one of the four basic market internal indices: TICK, ADD, VOLD and TRIN
- Show labels with values beyond an user defined threshold
- Show ZERO line
- Show user defined Dotted and Dashed lines
- Show user defined moving average
SETTINGS:
- Market internal: ticker to plot in the indicator, four options to choose from (TICK, ADD, VOLD and TRIN)
- Labels threshold: all values beyond this will be ploted as labels
- Dot lines at: two dotted lines will be plotted at this value above and below the zero line
- Dash lines at: two dashed lines will be plotted at this value above and below the zero line
- MA type: two options avaiable SMA (Simple Moving Average) or EMA (Exponential Moving Average)
- MA length: number of bars to calculate the moving average
- Show zero line: show or hide zero line
- Show dot line: show or hide dotted lines
- Show dash line: show or hide dashed lines
- Show labels: show or hide labels
GOOD LUCK AND HAPPY TRADING
$TICK & TICKQ Sentiment IndicatorThe USI:TICK & USI:TICKQ Sentiment Indicator is a versatile tool for traders analyzing the NYSE Tick Index ( USI:TICK ) or Nasdaq Tick Index ( USI:TICKQ ) to gauge market sentiment. It provides clear visual signals, a customizable moving average, and statistical insights to identify bullish and bearish conditions in real-time.
Key Features:
Sentiment Signals: Green triangle (▲) labels at a user-defined level (default: +1200) when the Tick closes above zero, and red triangle (▼) labels (default: -1200) when below zero, indicating bullish or bearish sentiment.
Adjustable Moving Average: Plots a customizable moving average (SMA, EMA, WMA, VWMA, SMMA, HullMA) with user-defined length (default: 14) to smooth Tick data and highlight trends.
Close Statistics: Displays the percentage of positive and negative Tick closes over a user-specified lookback period (default: 100) in a customizable table (position and font size adjustable).
Threshold Lines: Includes reference lines at +800/-800 (gold) and +1000/-1000 (red) to mark key Tick levels, plus a zero line (gray, dashed) for context.
Customizable Display: Adjust symbol sizes (tiny, small, normal, large, huge), table position (top-right, top-left, etc.), and table font size for a tailored chart experience.
How to Use:
Apply the indicator to a USI:TICK or USI:TICKQ chart (e.g., TVC:TICK, TVC:TICKQ) on an intraday timeframe (e.g., 1-minute, 5-minute).
In the settings:
Set the TICK Symbol to your broker’s NYSE Tick ( USI:TICK ) or Nasdaq Tick ( USI:TICKQ ) symbol.
Adjust Top Level and Bottom Level (default: +1200/-1200) to position sentiment signals at chart edges.
Set Moving Average Length and Type to suit your analysis.
Configure Lookback Period for close percentage calculations.
Customize Dot Size , Table Position , and Table Font Size for optimal visibility.
Monitor green/red triangles for sentiment, the moving average for trends, and the table for statistical insights.
Notes:
This indicator is designed for both USI:TICK (NYSE Tick) and USI:TICKQ (Nasdaq Tick, NQ Tick), allowing analysis of either market’s breadth.
Ensure your chart’s timeframe supports USI:TICK or USI:TICKQ data.
Adjust Top Level / Bottom Level if symbols don’t appear at chart edges due to scaling.
Labels may stack with frequent signals; contact the developer for customization to limit frequency.
No symbol appears if the Tick closes at 0; a neutral marker can be added upon request.
Ideal For:
Day traders and scalpers using USI:TICK or USI:TICKQ to gauge market breadth.
Analysts seeking customizable visualizations and statistical insights for Tick data.
Created by northfieldwhale.
RSI over screener (any tickers)█ OVERVIEW
This screener allow you to watch up to 240 any tickers you need to check RSI overbought and oversold using multiple periods, including the percentage of RSIs of different periods being overbought/oversold, as well as the average between these multiple RSIs.
█ THANKS
LuxAlgo for his RSI over multi length
I made function for this RSI and screener based on it.
allanster for his amazing idea how to split multiple symbols at once using a CSV list of ticker IDs
█ HOW TO USE
- hide chart:
- add 6 copies of screener
- change list number at settings from 1 to 6
- add you tickers
Screener shows signals when RSI was overbought or oversold and become to 0, this signal you may use to enter position(check other market condition before enter).
At settings you cam change Prefics, Appendix and put you tickers.
limitations are:
- max 40 tickers for one list
- max 4096 characters for one list
- tickers list should be separated by comma and may contains one space after the comma
By default it shows almost all BINANCE USD-M USDT tickers
Also you can adjust table for your screen by changing width of columns at settings.
If you have any questions or suggestions write comment or message.
Futures Engulfing Candle Size Strategy (Ticks, TP/SL)The Futures Candle Size Strategy is designed to identify and trade significant price movements in the futures market based on candle size. It is optimized for futures instruments like ES, NQ, or CL, where precise tick-level calculations are essential. The strategy includes a customizable take profit and stop loss in ticks and operates only within a specified time window (e.g., 7:00 AM to 9:15 AM CST).
Key Features:
Candle Size Threshold: Trades are triggered when the candle's high-to-low range exceeds the defined threshold in ticks.
Time Filter: Limits trades to the most active market hours, specifically between 7:00 AM and 9:15 AM CST.
Take Profit and Stop Loss: Customizable exit levels in ticks to manage risk and lock in profits.
Long and Short Trades: Automatically places buy or sell orders based on the candle's direction (bullish or bearish).
Alerts: Sends alerts whenever a trade is triggered, helping you stay informed in real-time.
How It Works:
The strategy calculates the size of each candle in ticks and compares it to the user-defined threshold.
If the candle size meets or exceeds the threshold within the specified time range, it triggers a long or short trade.
The trade automatically exits when the price hits the take profit or stop loss levels.
120x ticker screener (composite tickers)In specific circumstances, it is possible to extract data, far above the 40 `request.*()` call limit for 1 single script .
The following technique uses composite tickers . Changing tickers needs to be done in the code itself as will be explained further.
⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯
🔶 PRINCIPLE
Standard example:
c1 = request.security('MTLUSDT' , 'D', close)
This will give the close value from 1 ticker (MTLUSDT); c1 for example is 1.153
Now let's add 2 tickers to MTLUSDT; XMRUSDT and ORNUSDT with, for example, values of 1.153 (I), 143.4 (II) and 0.8242 (III) respectively.
Just adding them up 'MTLUSDT+XMRUSDT+ORNUSDT' would give 145.3772 as a result, which is not something we can use...
Let's multiply ORNUSDT by 100 -> 14340
and multiply MTLUSDT by 1000000000 -> 1153000000 (from now, 10e8 will be used instead of 1000000000)
Then we make the sum.
When we put this in a security call (just the close value) we get:
c1 = request.security('MTLUSDT*10e8+XMRUSDT*100+ORNUSDT', 'D', close)
'MTLUSDT*10e8+XMRUSDT*100+ORNUSDT' -> 1153000000 + 14340 + 0.8242 = 1153014340.8242 (a)
This (a) will be split later on, for example:
1153014330.8242 / 10e8 = 1.1530143408242 -> round -> in this case to 1.153 (I), multiply again by 10e8 -> 1153000000.00 (b)
We subtract this from the initial number:
1153014340.8242 (a)
- 1153000000.0000 (b)
–––––––––––––––––
14340.8242 (c)
Then -> 14340.8242 / 100 = 143.408242 -> round -> 143.4 (II) -> multiply -> 14340.0000 (d)
-> subtract
14340.8242 (c)
- 14340.0000 (d)
––––––––––––
0.8242 (III)
Now we have split the number again into 3 tickers: 1.153 (I), 143.4 (II) and 0.8242 (III)
⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯
In this publication the function compose_3_() will make a composite ticker of 3 tickers, and the split_3_() function will split these 3 tickers again after passing 1 request.security() call.
In this example:
t46 = 'BINANCE:MTLUSDT', n46 = 10e8 , r46 = 3, t47 = 'BINANCE:XMRUSDT', n47 = 10e1, r47 = 1, t48 = 'BINANCE:ORNUSDT', r48 = 4 // T16
•••
T16= compose_3_(t48, t47, n47, t46, n46)
•••
= request.security(T16, res, )
•••
= split_3_(c16, n46, r46, n47, r47, r48)
🔶 CHANGING TICKERS
If you need to change tickers, you only have to change the first part of the script, USER DEFINED TICKERS
Back to our example, at line 26 in the code, you'll find:
t46 = 'BINANCE:MTLUSDT', n46 = 10e8 , r46 = 3, t47 = 'BINANCE:XMRUSDT', n47 = 10e1, r47 = 1, t48 = 'BINANCE:ORNUSDT', r48 = 4 // T16
( t46 , T16 ,... will be explained later)
You need to figure out how much you need to multiply each ticker, and the number for rounding, to get a good result.
In this case:
'BINANCE:MTLUSDT', multiply number = 10e8, round number is 3 (example value 1.153)
'BINANCE:XMRUSDT', multiply number = 10e1, round number is 1 (example value 143.4)
'BINANCE:ORNUSDT', NO multiply number, round number is 4 (example value 0.8242)
The value with most digits after the decimal point by preference is placed to the right side (ORNUSDT)
If you want to change these 3, how would you do so?
First pick your tickers and look for the round values, for example:
'MATICUSDT', example value = 0.5876 -> round -> 4
'LTCUSDT' , example value = 77.47 -> round -> 2
'ARBUSDT' , example value = 1.0231 -> round -> 4
Value with most digits after the decimal point -> MATIC or ARB, let's pick ARB to go on the right side, LTC at the left of ARB, and MATIC at the most left side.
-> 'MATICUSDT', LTCUSDT', ARBUSDT'
Then check with how much 'LTCUSDT' and 'MATICUSDT' needs to be multiplied to get this: 5876 0 7747 0 1.0231
'MATICUSDT' -> 10e10
'LTCUSDT' -> 10e3
Replace:
t46 = 'BINANCE:MTLUSDT', n46 = 10e8 , r46 = 3, t47 = 'BINANCE:XMRUSDT', n47 = 10e1, r47 = 1, t48 = 'BINANCE:ORNUSDT', r48 = 4 // T16
->
t46 = 'BINANCE:MATICUSDT', n46 = 10e10 , r46 = 4, t47 = 'BINANCE:LTCUSDT', n47 = 10e3, r47 = 2, t48 = 'BINANCE:ARBUSDT', r48 = 4 // T16
DO NOT change anything at t46, n46,... if you don't know what you're doing!
Only
• tickers ('BINANCE:MTLUSDT', 'BINANCE:XMRUSDT', 'BINANCE:ORNUSDT', ...),
• multiply numbers (10e8, 10e1, ...) and
• round numbers (3, 1, 4, ...)
should be changed.
There you go!
🔶 LIMITATIONS
🔹 The composite ticker fails when 1 of the 3 isn't in market in the weekend, while the other 2 are.
That is the reason all tickers are crypto. I think it is possible to combine stock,... tickers, but they have to share the same market hours.
🔹 The number cannot be as large as you want, the limit lays around 15-16 digits.
This means when you have for example 123, 45.67 and 0.000000000089, you'll get issues when composing to this:
-> 123045670.000000000089 (21 digits)
Make sure the numbers are close to each other as possible, with 1 zero (or 2) in between:
-> 1.230045670089 (13 digits by doing -> (123 * 10e-3) + (45.67 * 10e-7) + 0.000000000089)
🔹 This script contains examples of calculated values, % change, SMA, RMA and RSI.
These values need to be calculated from HTF close data at current TF (timeframe).
This gives challenges. For example the SMA / %change is not a problem (same values at 1h TF from Daily data).
RMA , RSI is not so easy though...
Daily values are rather similar on a 2-3h TF, but 1h TF and lower is quite different.
At the moment I haven't figured out why, if someone has an idea, don't hesitate to share.
The main goal of this publication is 'composite tickers ~ request.security()' though.
🔹 When a ticker value changes substantially (x10, x100), the multiply number needs to be adjusted accordingly.
🔶 SETTINGS
SHOW SETS
SET
• Length : length of SMA, RMA and RSI
• HTF : Higher TimeFrame (default Daily)
TABLE
• Size table : \ _ Self-explanatory
• Include exchange name : /
• Sort : If exchange names are shown, the exchanges will be sorted first
COLOURS
• CH%
• RSI
• SMA (RMA)
DEBUG
Remember t46 , T16 ,... ?
This can be used for debugging/checking
ALWAYS DISABLE " sort " when doing so.
Example:
Set string -> T1 (tickers FIL, CAKE, SOL)
(Numbers are slightly different due to time passing by between screen captures)
Placing your tickers at the side panel makes it easy to compare with the printed label below the table (right side, 332201415014.45 ),
together with the line T1 in the script:
t1 = 'BINANCE:FILUSDT' , n1 = 10e10, r1 = 4, t2 = 'BINANCE:CAKEUSDT' , n2 = 10e5 , r2 = 3, t3 = 'BINANCE:SOLUSDT' , r3 = 2 // T1
FIL : 3.322
CAKE: 1.415
SOL : 14.56
Now it is easy to check whether the tickers are placed close enough to each other, with 1-2 zero's in between.
If you want to check a specific ticker, use " Show Ticker" , see out initial example:
Set string -> T16
Show ticker -> 46 (in the code -> t46 = 'BINANCE:MTLUSDT')
(Set at 0 to disable " check string " and NONE to disable " Set string ")
-> Debug/check/set away! 😀
🔶 OTHER TECHNIQUES
• REGEX ( Regular expression ) and str.match() is used to delete the exchange name from the ticker, in other words, everything before ":" is deleted by following regex:
exch(t) => incl_exch ? t : str.match(t, "(?<=:) +")
• To sort, array.sort_indices() is used (line 675 in the code), just as in my first "sort" publication Sort array alphabetically - educational
aSort = arrT.copy()
sort_Indices = array.sort_indices(id= aSort, order= order.ascending)
• Numbers and text colour will adjust automatically when switching between light/dark mode by using chart.fg_color / chart.bg_color
🔹 DISCLAIMER
Please don't ask me for custom screeners, thank you.
CDC ActionZone Multi-TF,Mult-Ticker with alert() [P-O-Concept]This is proof-of-concept for using single screen displaying triggering signal of multiple stock/crypto
This source code is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public License 2.0 at mozilla.org
1. Original CDC Action Zone v3 2020 by © piriya33
Source of original indicator :
2. Table concept/part of code is pulled from Portfolio Tracker
***************************************************************************
CDC Action Zone is based on a simple EMA crossover between EMA12 and EMA26
The zones are defined by the relative position of price in relation to the two EMA lines
Different zones can be use to activate / deactivate other trading strategies
The strategy can also be used on its own with acceptable result, buy on the first green candle
and sell on the first red candle
***************************************************************************
Hint Color Meaning :
Green = FastMA > SlowMA and Price is above FastMA
Blue = FastMA < SlowMA and Price is above both MA
LightBlue = FastMA < SlowMA and Price is between both MA
Red = FastMA < SlowMA and Price is below FastMA
Orange = FastMA > SlowMA and Price is below both MA
Yellow = FastMA > SlowMA and Price is between both MA
Blue/LightBlue/Orange/Yellow should be used with another indicator (such as divergent or so)
Cautions:
- This indicator is not meant to be used as "Signal" or "Trading System"
- This indicator provide a quick-glimpse to multiple ticker in same screen. You'll still have to see indications using original CDC Action Zone (If you're using with CDC System), or combining with another indicator (For shorter tf or scalping, or short/long cover)
- Up to 10 Tickers / Timeframe + Current ticker
Alert Creation Guideline
If this indicator will be used as alert. The timeframe for ticker should be set to "same as" the chart you're using, ie, to set alert on 4h, it should be created in 4h-timeframe (Alert is fired on bar close, using 1D-TABLE in 4H-CHART may trigger alert up to 6 times. else if using in 4H-TABLE in 1D-CHART the alert may not trigger at all)
Considering using ohlc4, hlc3, hl2 for market with no session
PS. Send me a message if you see any bug. (especially if using JSON, I have no chance to test with multiple alert at same tick.)
Multi-Exchange Volume (30 Tickers) by kurtsmock + BV + rVolauthor: kurtsmock
Fully Customizable ticker set. Up to 30 Tickers. Bitcoin set as default.
-- IMPORTANT NOTE: --
30 Exchanges are a lot. It can take a while to load. You can fully customize this indicator to your liking. Here's how:
1. Load indicator
2. Open Settings
3. Uncheck the switch box for exchanges you want unincluded
4. At the bottom of the settings menu click "Defaults" and hit "Save as Default"
5. To turn them all back on, hit "Reset Settings" in that same "Defaults" menu and click "Save as Default" again.
Also, you don't have to use this with Bitcoin. This works with any asset, just change the ticker in the settings.
There's a lot going on with this indicator so the following is descriptions and instructions to help you better understand what's going on here. Thanks!
Goal:
- To provide a mechanism for assets on multiple exchanges to have their volume evaluated together
Edge:
- Having better and more complete volume information
Notes:
- The Default Exchanges for this indicator are highest volume bitcoin exchanges, but may contain "fake volume"
- Indicator is set for Bitcoin by default. However, you can change the tickers to reflect any asset you want
////// rVol //////
Goal:
- To understand how much volume is being executed relative to the same candle on previous days/periods
Edge:
- Higher rVol implies higher volatility and market interest.
- High rVol = higher than average volume . Markets move on volume so higher than average volume indicates increased market activity/volatility
- rVol is an indirect measure of active or anticipated volatility
Definitions:
- rVol: The volume of a period compared to the Average Volume of that same period in past sessions
- Important to note it does NOT add up the last 10 (default) candles, but rather the last 10 candles at session intervals.
- Example:
-- On a Tuesday, 1h chart it will add up the last ten Tuesday, 9:00 am candles, not including the current, active candle.
-- It then averages those lookback candles.
-- It then plots the percentage relationship between the most recent candle and the average of the lookback candles
-- Avg Vol of Lookback candles = 5000,
-- Volume of most recent candle = 4000: Output = rVol = 80:
-- Volume of most recent candle was 80% of the average volume in the 9 am time period of the last ten Tuesdays in the 9 am, 1h period
Notes:
- rVol does not add current candle volume into lookback sum. So, you set lookback to be: (not including the current day)
- rVol is on a switch. So, if you want to see rVol instead of volume, hit the switch in the settings
- If you want to see both, load 2 instances of the indicator.
////// Better-er Volume //////
Goal:
To Identify:
- When a candle closes at the highest volume * range relative to the lookback period and close > open
- When a candle closes at the highest volume * range relative to the lookback period and close < open
- When a candle closes at the highest volume / price relative to the lookback period
Edge:
- Identifies beginnings of price expansion, climax of price expansion, breakouts, pivots, and take profit points on the volume chart
Notes:
- Based generally on Barry Taylor's "Better Volume" indicator and ideas from Pascal Willain's book "Value in Time."
- Better-er Volume rules are applied to both Total Volume or rVol.
-- When rVol is displayed Better-er Volume is applied to rVol
-- When Total Volume is displayed Better-er Volume is applied to Total Volume
// Plot Key: //
Green Triangle Up = Often marks the beginning and/or end of price expansion to the upside
Red Triangle Up = Often marks the beginning and/or end of price expansion to the downside
Yellow Square = High Volume but Tight Range. Implies a Battle of Bulls and Bears. High Liquidity area. Provided Liquidity is not enough to move price. Thick Limit Order Book.
Purple Triangle Up or Down = Implies high market participation. Typically at the end of expansion when very significant s/r is hit
category: volume Volatility
tags: Volume rVol relativevolume Bitcoin cryptocurrency bettervolume
Many More Volume Indicators Coming Out Soon!
Gold Futures 2M 5M Tick Move Indicator📢 Gold Futures Tick Move Indicator 🚀
Customizable Tick-Based Trading Alerts & Visualization
🔹 Overview:
The Gold Futures Tick Move Indicator is designed for traders who rely on tick-based price movements to detect significant market activity. This indicator identifies strong momentum moves, triggers customizable buy and sell signals, and provides clear trade range visualizations with take profit and stop loss levels.
🔹 Key Features:
✅ Customizable Tick Threshold – Adjust the number of ticks needed to trigger a buy/sell signal (default: 65 ticks).
✅ Take Profit & Stop Loss Levels – Automatically calculates and plots exit levels (default: 75 TP, 40 SL).
✅ Buy/Sell Alerts – Get real-time alerts when a candle moves beyond the defined tick threshold.
✅ Custom Colors for Trade Signals – Buy (teal #008080), Sell (hot pink #FF69B4).
✅ Trade Range Visualization – Background colors highlight long & short positions for better clarity.
✅ Candle Highlighting – Turns white when a tick-based signal is detected.
🔹 How It Works:
1️⃣ Set your tick movement threshold – Define how many ticks the price must move to trigger a trade signal.
2️⃣ Customize Take Profit & Stop Loss – Modify exit levels to match your strategy.
3️⃣ Wait for a Signal – If the price moves beyond the defined tick range, the indicator plots a Buy (teal) or Sell (hot pink) signal.
4️⃣ Monitor Trade Zones – Trade ranges are highlighted in teal or pink for quick visualization.
5️⃣ Receive Alerts – Set up TradingView alerts to be notified of trade opportunities.
🔹 Who is This For?
💰 Gold Futures Traders looking to capitalize on price momentum
📈 Scalpers & Day Traders seeking precise tick-based entries
🎯 Algo Traders who want automated alerts & visual cues