Contract Interest Turnover T3 [T69]Overview
--------
Contract Interest Turnover (CIT) estimates how “churny” a crypto derivatives market is by comparing the amount traded in a bar to the base stock of outstanding contracts (open interest). It normalizes both Volume and Open Interest (OI) by Price (Close), then plots a Turnover Rate = (Volume/Close) ÷ (OI/Close) as colored columns. Higher values = faster contract recycling (strong momentum / hype potential).
Features
--------
- Auto-fetch OI: Pulls OI via request.security(_OI, …) when the exchange/symbol exposes an OI stream on TradingView.
- Price-normalized comparison: Converts both Volume and OI into comparable notional terms by dividing each by Close.
- Turnover columns with threshold: Color the columns green once Turnover ≥ your set threshold; gray otherwise.
- Status-line readouts: Displays normalized Volume and OI values for quick sanity checks.
- Crypto-aware timeframe: Uses chart TF for crypto; forces daily OI when not crypto to avoid noisy intraday pulls.
How to Use
----------
1. Add the script on a perpetual/futures symbol that has OI on TradingView (e.g., BTC perps where an _OI feed exists).
2. Watch the Turnover Rate bars: spikes above your threshold flag sessions where contracts are actively flipping.
3. Interpret spikes as a signal of movement or activity — it does not specify price direction, only that the market is engaged and contracts are being traded more intensely than usual.
Configuration
-------------
- Interest Turnover Threshold (default 1.0): colors columns green when Turnover ≥ threshold. Tune per market’s typical churn profile.
Under the Hood (Formulas & Logic)
---------------------------------
- Fetch OI
oiClose ← request.security(ticker.standard(syminfo.tickerid) + "_OI", timeframe, close) with ignore_invalid_symbol = true.
If none is found, the script throws a clear runtime error.
- Normalize to price
vol_norm = volume / close
oi_norm = oiClose / close
This converts both to a common notional basis so their ratio is meaningful even as price changes.
- Turnover Rate
turnover = vol_norm / oi_norm
Interpretation: fraction/multiples of the outstanding contract base traded in the bar. Color = green if turnover ≥ threshold.
Why Open Interest ≈ “Float” Proxy
---------------------------------
In stocks, float ≈ shares the public can trade. In derivatives, there are no “shares,” so Open Interest acts as the live stock of active contracts. It’s the best proxy for “what’s available in play” because it counts open positions that persist across bars. Using Volume ÷ OI mirrors stock float-turnover logic: how fast the tradable base is being recycled each period.
Why Normalize by Price
----------------------
Derivatives volume and OI may be reported in contracts, not notional value. One contract’s economic weight changes with price (especially on inverse contracts). Dividing both Volume and OI by Close:
- Puts them on a comparable notional footing.
- Prevents false spikes purely from price moves.
- Makes Turnover comparable across time even as price trends.
Advanced Tips
-------------
- Calibrate threshold: Start from the 80th–90th percentile of the last 60–90 bars of Turnover; set the threshold a touch below that to surface early heat.
- Add OI-delta: Layer an OI change histogram (current − prior) to separate new positioning from pure churn.
- Linear vs inverse: For linear (USDT-margined) contracts, the normalization still works and keeps visuals consistent; for inverse, it’s essential.
Limitations
-----------
- Data availability: Works only if your symbol exposes an _OI feed on TradingView; otherwise it errors out.
- Exchange conventions: Volume units differ by venue (contracts, coin, notional). Normalization mitigates, but cross-symbol comparisons still need caution.
- Intrabar gaps: OI is typically end-of-bar; rapid intrabar shifts won’t appear until the bar closes.
Notes
-----
- Designed primarily for crypto derivatives. For non-crypto, the script blanks OI to avoid misleading plots and uses a daily TF when needed.
Credit
------
- Concept & data: Built for TradingView data feeds.
- Acknowledgment: Credit to TradingView default indicator as requested.
- Source: This write-up reflects the logic present in your uploaded script.
Disclaimer
----------
Markets move; indicators simplify. Use with position sizing, hard stops, and catalyst awareness. The Turnover Rate flags activity, not direction.
Search in scripts for "西布罗姆vs伯恩利"
TURT Donchian Ladder v3.13How to trade TURT+ with the v3.13 script
1) Pick the system & arm the entry
• In the script, choose System = S1 (20D) or S2 (55D).
The HUD always shows both rails for reference, but the ladder (Entry/+Adds) uses the system you pick.
• Your Entry is shown as Pivot + 0.1×N (rounded).
• Place a stop-limit “parent” order at that Entry price. (Classic Turtle uses an entry stop; I suggest a tight limit offset so you don’t chase a blow-through.)
• Initial stop = N2 = Entry − 2×N (rounded). Put that in immediately.
If you like only confirming on a bar close, leave confirmClose = true and place the parent after the close that breaks out. If you want intrabar fills, set confirmClose = false and keep the stop-limit active intraday.
2) Size it the way you planned
• Set acctEquity / riskCapPct / posCapUSD / entryFrac / entryRiskFrac / sizingMode.
• HUD gives Rec Entry Qty (when flat) and, once in, it shows:
• Next Rung (price)
• Suggested AddShares (honors RiskCap & PosCap)
• Proj Stop if Add (ratcheted N2)
• A limiter note (RiskCap or PosCap) if you’re constrained.
3) After entry fills, stage the ADDs (only at fixed +N steps)
• Adds are NOT “every Donchian break.” You add only at:
• Add-1 = Entry + 0.5×N
• Add-2 = Entry + 1.0×N
• Add-3 = Entry + 1.5×N (optional)
• Use the HUD’s Suggested AddShares for each rung (it respects your RiskCap/PosCap).
• Place stop-limit orders for each add (either immediately as a contingent OTO chain that arms only after Entry fills, or you arm each add when price approaches—your choice).
• On each add fill, ratchet the catastrophic stop for the entire position to Last-Add − 2×N (the script and HUD show Proj Stop if Add so you know where it will land). Never move it lower.
Pro tip: If your broker supports OTO/OTOCO:
• OTO parent = Entry stop-limit.
• On fill, fire an OCO with the N2 stop (no target), and also stage child stop-limits for Add-1 / Add-2 / Add-3 with the correct sizes. If your broker can’t chain that deep, just use the script’s alerts (Entry/Add-1/Add-2/Add-3/Exits) to place/adjust orders quickly.
4) Exits (two layers)
• Catastrophic (always on): the N2 stop you’re ratcheting (Last-Add − 2×N).
• Trend exits (runner):
• S1: 10-low close (HUD shows it).
• S2: 20-low close (HUD shows it).
• Profit-taking (optional): sell ~50% at +2.5R to +3R vs current N2; let the runner trail with 10-low/20-low. You can keep N2 as a hard backstop.
5) Should you pre-set everything or buy live?
Both work; pick the style that fits you:
Preset (Turtle-pure, rules-based)
• ✅ You won’t miss the breakout; minimal discretion.
• ✅ Broker handles fills even if you’re away.
• ⚠️ You may get the occasional intraday “poke” (use confirmClose + place after close if you want fewer).
Buy on break manually
• ✅ Lets you check tape/volume or any extra gates before clicking.
• ⚠️ Higher chance of slippage or of simply missing the trigger.
A nice hybrid: place the Entry order, then arm Add-1/2/3 when price is nearing each rung and the HUD shows Suggested AddShares > 0 (green risk read).
⸻
6) Quick checklist per trade
1. System: S1 or S2?
2. Levels: Entry / Add-1 / Add-2 / Add-3 / 10-low / 20-low / N2 (rounded).
3. Sizing: confirm RiskCap/PosCap; HUD shows Suggested AddShares and limiter.
4. Orders:
• Parent Entry stop-limit.
• N2 stop (rounded).
• Stage adds (stop-limits) with sizes from HUD.
5. On fill: ratchet stop to Last-Add − 2×N; adjust remaining adds and sizes.
⸻
7) Example with your MU position (pattern)
• You’re already in: set entryQty and entryPman in the inputs to match your fill.
• HUD now focuses on Next Rung, Suggested AddShares, and Proj Stop if Add.
• If Suggested AddShares = 0 and limiter says RiskCap or PosCap, you’ll still see the next rung price and Proj Stop if Add so you can decide whether to override.
⸻
Bottom line
• Entry: buy the Donchian breakout + 0.1N with a stop-limit (Turtle style).
• Adds: only at +0.5N steps, sized by HUD; not on every future Donchian break.
• Stops: keep (and ratchet) the N2 catastrophic; trail runner on 10-low / 20-low.
If you want, tell me your broker/platform and I’ll map this to exact order ticket types (stop-limit/OTO/OCO) and a tiny checklist you can keep next to your screen.
Deadband Hysteresis Supertrend [BackQuant]Deadband Hysteresis Supertrend
A two-stage trend tool that first filters price with a deadband baseline, then runs a Supertrend around that baseline with optional flip hysteresis and ATR-based adverse exits.
What this is
A hybrid of two ideas:
Deadband Hysteresis Baseline that only advances when price pulls far enough from the baseline to matter. This suppresses micro noise and gives you a stable centerline.
Supertrend bands wrapped around that baseline instead of raw price. Flips are further gated by an extra margin so side changes are more deliberate.
The goal is fewer whipsaws in chop and clearer regime identification during trends.
How it works (high level)
Deadband step — compute a per-bar “deadband” size from one of four modes: ATR, Percent of price, Ticks, or Points. If price deviates from the baseline by more than this amount, move the baseline forward by a fraction of the excess. If not, hold the line.
Centered Supertrend — build upper and lower bands around the baseline using ATR and a user factor. Track the usual trailing logic that tightens a band while price moves in its favor.
Flip hysteresis — require price to exceed the active band by an extra flip offset × ATR before switching sides. This adds stickiness at the boundary.
Adverse exit — once a side is taken, trigger an exit if price moves against the entry by K × ATR .
If you would like to check out the filter by itself:
What it plots
DBHF baseline (optional) as a smooth centerline.
DBHF Supertrend as the active trailing band.
Candle coloring by trend side for quick read.
Signal markers 𝕃 and 𝕊 at flips plus ✖ on adverse exits.
Inputs that matter
Price Source — series being filtered. Close is typical. HL2 or HLC3 can be steadier.
Deadband mode — ATR, Percent, Ticks, or Points. This defines the “it’s big enough to matter” zone.
ATR Length / Mult (DBHF) — only used when mode = ATR. Larger values widen the do-nothing zone.
Percent / Ticks / Points — alternatives to ATR; pick what fits your market’s convention.
Enter Mult — scales the deadband you must clear before the baseline moves. Increase to filter more noise.
Response — fraction of the excess applied to baseline movement. Higher responds faster; lower is smoother.
Supertrend ATR Period & Factor — traditional band size controls; higher factor widens and flips less often.
Flip Offset ATR — extra ATR buffer required to flip. Useful in choppy regimes.
Adverse Stop K·ATR — per-trade danger brake that forces an exit if price moves K×ATR against entry.
UI — toggle baseline, supertrend, signals, and bar painting; choose long and short colors.
How to read it
Green regime — candles painted long and the Supertrend running below price. Pullbacks toward the baseline that fail to breach the opposite band often resume higher.
Red regime — candles painted short and the Supertrend running above price. Rallies that cannot reclaim the band may roll over.
Frequent side swaps — reduce sensitivity by increasing Enter Mult, using ATR mode, raising the Supertrend factor, or adding Flip Offset ATR.
Use cases
Bias filter — allow entries only in the direction of the current side. Use your preferred triggers inside that bias.
Trailing logic — treat the active band as a dynamic stop. If the side flips or an adverse K·ATR exit prints, reduce or close exposure.
Regime map — on higher timeframes, the combination baseline + band produces a clean up vs down template for allocation decisions.
Tuning guidance
Fast markets — ATR deadband, modest Enter Mult (0.8–1.2), response 0.2–0.35, Supertrend factor 1.7–2.2, small Flip Offset (0.2–0.5 ATR).
Choppy ranges — widen deadband or raise Enter Mult, lower response, and add more Flip Offset so flips require stronger evidence.
Slow trends — longer ATR periods and higher Supertrend factor to keep you on side longer; use a conservative adverse K.
Included alerts
DBHF ST Long — side flips to long.
DBHF ST Short — side flips to short.
Adverse Exit Long / Short — K·ATR stop triggers against the current side.
Strengths
Deadbanded baseline reduces micro whipsaws before Supertrend logic even begins.
Flip hysteresis adds a second layer of confirmation at the boundary.
Optional adverse ATR stop provides a uniform risk cut across assets and regimes.
Clear visuals and minimal parameters to adjust for symbol behavior.
Putting it together
Think of this tool as two decisions layered into one view. The deadband baseline answers “does this move even count,” then the Supertrend wrapped around that baseline answers “if it counts, which side should I be on and where do I flip.” When both parts agree you tend to stay on the correct side of a trend for longer, and when they disagree you get an early warning that conditions are changing.
When the baseline bends and price cannot reclaim the opposite band , momentum is usually continuing. Pullbacks into the baseline that stall before the far band often resolve in trend.
When the baseline flattens and the bands compress , expect indecision. Use the Flip Offset ATR to avoid reacting to the first feint. Wait for a clean band breach with follow through.
When an adverse K·ATR exit prints while the side has not flipped , treat it as a risk event rather than a full regime change. Many users cut size, re-enter only if the side reasserts, and let the next flip confirm a new trend.
Final thoughts
Deadband Hysteresis Supertrend is best read as a regime lens. The baseline defines your tolerance for noise, the bands define your trailing structure, and the flip offset plus adverse ATR stop define how forgiving or strict you want to be at the boundary. On strong trends it helps you hold through shallow shakeouts. In choppy conditions it encourages patience until price does something meaningful. Start with settings that reflect the cadence of your market, observe how often flips occur, then nudge the deadband and flip offset until the tool spends most of its time describing the move you care about rather than the noise in between.
[davidev] EMA/MA with projection# EMA/MA with projection
## What it is
A lightweight overlay that plots up to three EMAs and one MA (default: 5/21/55 EMAs and 200 MA) and draws a forward projection from the current bar. The projection extrapolates the latest per-bar change (slope) to visualize where each average *could* be in the next N bars—useful for planning entries, dynamic support/resistance, and anticipating crossovers.
Note: The projection is a simple linear extrapolation of the most recent change. It is not a prediction or signal.
## How it works
Computes EMA1, EMA2, EMA3 and MA (SMA) on your chosen sources.
On the last bar only, it draws a short line segment ahead by `Bars Ahead`, using the most recent change (`ta.change()`) × number of bars to project the line.
Lines are **reused** and updated each tick (no clutter), and deleted on historical bars to avoid artifacts.
## Good for
Visualizing **dynamic levels** slightly ahead of price.
Quickly gauging **momentum** and **slope** of your moving averages.
Sketching possible **crossover timing** (e.g., 5 vs 21 EMA) without changing timeframe.
Cleaner charting: projection only renders on the last bar, so historical candles stay uncluttered.
## Tips
Combine with your market structure/volume tools; the projection helps **plan**, not predict.
Shorter EMAs react faster and will show more pronounced projected moves; longer MAs remain steadier.
Increase `Bars Ahead` on higher timeframes; keep it small on scalping charts to avoid overreach.
Global Liquidity Proxy (Fed + ECB + BoJ + PBoC)Global Liquidity Proxy (Fed + ECB + BoJ + PBoC) Vs BTC
Hurst Momentum Oscillator | AlphaNattHurst Momentum Oscillator | AlphaNatt
An adaptive oscillator that combines the Hurst Exponent - which identifies whether markets are trending or mean-reverting - with momentum analysis to create signals that automatically adjust to market regime.
"The Hurst Exponent reveals a hidden truth: markets aren't always trending. This oscillator knows when to ride momentum and when to fade it."
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
📐 THE MATHEMATICS
Hurst Exponent (H):
Measures the long-term memory of time series:
H > 0.5: Trending (persistent) behavior
H = 0.5: Random walk
H < 0.5: Mean-reverting behavior
Originally developed for analyzing Nile river flooding patterns, now used in:
Fractal market analysis
Network traffic prediction
Climate modeling
Financial markets
The Innovation:
This oscillator multiplies momentum by the Hurst coefficient:
When trending (H > 0.5): Momentum is amplified
When mean-reverting (H < 0.5): Momentum is reduced
Result: Adaptive signals based on market regime
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
💎 KEY ADVANTAGES
Regime Adaptive: Automatically adjusts to trending vs ranging markets
False Signal Reduction: Reduces momentum signals in mean-reverting markets
Trend Amplification: Stronger signals when trends are persistent
Mathematical Edge: Based on fractal dimension analysis
No Repainting: All calculations on historical data
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
📊 TRADING SIGNALS
Visual Interpretation:
Cyan zones: Bullish momentum in trending market
Magenta zones: Bearish momentum or mean reversion
Background tint: Blue = trending, Pink = mean-reverting
Gradient intensity: Signal strength
Trading Strategies:
1. Trend Following:
Trade momentum signals when background is blue (trending)
2. Mean Reversion:
Fade extreme readings when background is pink
3. Regime Transition:
Watch for background color changes as early warning
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
🎯 OPTIMAL USAGE
Best Conditions:
Strong trending markets (crypto bull runs)
Clear ranging markets (forex sessions)
Regime transitions
Multi-timeframe analysis
Market Applications:
Crypto: Excellent for identifying trend persistence
Forex: Detects when pairs are ranging
Stocks: Identifies momentum stocks
Commodities: Catches persistent trends
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
Developed by AlphaNatt | Fractal Market Analysis
Version: 1.0
Classification: Adaptive Regime Oscillator
Not financial advice. Always DYOR.
ICT Sweep + FVG Entry (v6) • Pro Pack 📌 ICT Sweep + FVG Entry Pro Pack
This indicator combines key ICT price action concepts with practical execution tools to help traders spot high-probability setups faster and more objectively. It’s designed for scalpers and intraday traders who want to keep their chart clean but never miss critical market structure events.
🔑 Features
Liquidity Pools (HTF)
• Auto-detects recent swing highs/lows from higher timeframes (5m/15m).
• Draws both lines and optional rectangles/zones for clear liquidity areas.
Liquidity Sweeps (BSL/SSL)
• Identifies when price sweeps above/below liquidity pools and rejects back.
• Optional Grade-A sweep filter (wick size + strong re-entry).
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs)
• Highlights bullish/bearish imbalances.
• Optional midline (50%) entry for precision.
• Auto-invalidation when price fully closes inside the gap.
Killzones (New York)
• Highlights AM (9:30–11:30) and PM (14:00–15:30) killzones.
• Option to block signals outside killzones for higher strike rate.
Bias Badge (DR50)
• Displays if price is trading in a Bull, Bear, or Range context based on displacement range midpoint.
SMT Assist (NQ vs ES)
• Detects simple divergences between indices:
Bearish SMT → NQ makes HH while ES doesn’t.
Bullish SMT → NQ makes LL while ES doesn’t.
SL/TP Helper & R:R Label
• Automatically draws stop loss (at sweep extreme) and target (opposite pool or recent swing).
• Displays expected Risk:Reward ratio and blocks entries if below your chosen minimum.
Filters
• ATR filter ensures signals only appear in sufficient volatility.
• Sweep quality filter avoids weak wicks and fake-outs.
🎯 How to Use
Start on HTF (5m/15m) → Identify liquidity zones and bias.
Drop to LTF (1m) → Wait for a liquidity sweep confirmation.
Check for FVG in the sweep’s direction → Look for retest entry.
Use the SL/TP helper to validate your risk/reward before taking the trade.
Focus entries during NY Killzones for maximum effectiveness.
✅ Why this helps
This tool reduces screen time and hesitation by automating repetitive ICT concepts:
Liquidity pools, sweeps, and FVGs are marked automatically.
Killzone timing and SMT divergence are simplified.
Clear visual signals for entries with built-in RR filter help keep your trading mechanical.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This script is for educational purposes only. It does not provide financial advice or guarantee results. Always use proper risk management.
SAP121212 — Close vs VWAP + Optional RSI (Signals)This indicator combines Supertrend, VWAP with bands, and an optional RSI filter to generate Buy/Sell signals.
How it works
Supertrend Flip (ATR-based): Detects when trend direction changes (from bearish to bullish, or bullish to bearish).
VWAP Band Filter: Signals only trigger if the candle close is beyond the VWAP bands:
Buy = Supertrend flips up AND close > VWAP Upper Band
Sell = Supertrend flips down AND close < VWAP Lower Band
Optional RSI Filter:
Buy requires RSI < 20
Sell requires RSI > 80
Can be enabled/disabled in settings.
Features
Choice of VWAP band calculation mode: Standard Deviation or ATR.
Adjustable ATR/StDev length and multiplier for VWAP bands.
Toggle Supertrend, VWAP lines, and Buy/Sell labels.
Alerts included: add alerts on BUY or SELL conditions (use Once Per Bar Close to avoid intrabar signals).
Use
Works best on intraday or higher timeframes where VWAP is relevant.
Use the RSI filter for more selective signals.
Can be combined with your own stop-loss and risk management rules.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This script is for educational and research purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always test thoroughly and trade at your own risk.
Monthly VWAPDescription
This indicator identifies potential mean reversion opportunities by tracking price deviations from monthly VWAP with dynamic volatility-adjusted thresholds.
Core Logic:
The indicator monitors when price moves significantly away from monthly VWAP and looks for potential reversal opportunities. It uses ATR-based dynamic thresholds that adapt to current market volatility, combined with volume confirmation to filter out weak signals.
Key Features:
Adaptive Thresholds: ATR-based bands that adjust to market volatility
Volume Confirmation: Requires average volume spike to validate signals
Monthly Reset: VWAP anchors reset each month for fresh reference levels
Visual Clarity: Color-coded deviation line with background highlights for active signals
Info Panel: Shows days from anchor and current price context vs fair value
Signal Generation:
Buy Signal: Price below monthly VWAP by threshold amount with elevated volume
Sell Signal: Price above monthly VWAP by threshold amount with elevated volume
Neutral: Price within threshold range or insufficient volume
Best Used For:
Mean reversion strategies in ranging markets
Identifying potential oversold/overbought conditions
Understanding price position relative to monthly fair value
Swing Guardrail — 30-sec Midterm Check (EBITDA Margin & EV/EBITDWhat it does
Before a short-term swing entry, this indicator right-sizes positions by a quick midterm (3–12m) durability screen using two fundamentals:
EBITDA Margin (TTM) → earning power / operational resilience
EV/EBITDA (TTM) → price tag vs earning capacity (payback feel)
A high-contrast table (top-right) shows both metrics and a verdict:
PASS — both meet thresholds → normal size
HALF — only one meets → reduce size
FAIL — neither meets → avoid
Why check “midterm” for a short-term trade?
Short swings still face earnings/news gaps, failed breakouts, and regime shifts. Names with weak margins or stretched valuation tend to break faster and deeper. A 30-sec durability check helps you:
Filter fragile setups (avoid expensive + weakening names)
Stabilize drawdowns (size down when quality/price don’t align)
Keep timing unchanged while improving risk-adjusted returns
Inputs (defaults)
Min EBITDA Margin % (TTM): 8%
Max EV/EBITDA (TTM): 12
Dark chart? High-contrast colors
How to use with a swing system
Get your entry from price/volume (e.g., Ichimoku cloud break, Kijun reclaim, Tenkan>Kijun; or your A/B/C rules).
Run this check only to set size (not timing).
Optional alerts: Once per bar close for PASS / HALF / FAIL.
Size mapping & event guard
PASS → 100% of your planned size
HALF → ~50% size / tighter stops
FAIL → watchlist only
If earnings < ~10 JP business days, drop one tier; ≤3 days → avoid.
Sector guides (tweak as needed)
Software/Internet: Margin ≥ 15%, EV/EBITDA ≤ 18
Industrials/Consumer: Margin ≥ 8%, EV/EBITDA ≤ 12
Retail: Margin ≥ 5–7%, EV/EBITDA ≤ 10–12
Edge cases / substitutions
Banks/Insurers/REITs or net-cash/negative EBITDA: EV/EBITDA may mislead → consider Net Debt/EBITDA or sector metrics (CET1/LTV/DSCR).
Sparse data / fresh listings: numbers may be NA until updates.
Notes & limitations
Data via request.financial() (TTM/most-recent). Some tickers/regions can show NA until fundamentals refresh.
This is a risk-screen / sizing tool, not a buy/sell signal.
Disclaimer
Educational use only. Not investment advice.
日本語
タイトル
スイング用ガードレール―中期“壊れにくさ”30秒チェック(EBITDAマージン & EV/EBITDA, TTM)
概要
短期スイングのエントリー前に、中期(3〜12か月)の耐久性を2指標で素早く確認し、ポジションサイズを決めるためのツールです。
EBITDAマージン(TTM):事業の稼ぐ力・体力
EV/EBITDA(TTM):その体力に対する“値札”(回収年数の感覚)
右上の高コントラスト表に数値と判定を表示:
PASS:両方クリア → 通常サイズ
HALF:片方のみ → サイズ半分
FAIL:両方NG → 見送り
なぜ短期でも“中期”を確認?
短期でも決算・ニュースのギャップ、ブレイク失敗、地合い転換は起きます。マージンが弱い/割高すぎる銘柄は崩れやすく、戻りも鈍い傾向。30秒の耐久性チェックで
脆いセットアップを回避
ドローダウンを平準化(サイズで吸収)
タイミングは変えずに、リスク調整後リターンの改善を狙えます。
入力(既定)
最低EBITDAマージン:8%
最大EV/EBITDA:12
黒背景向け:高コントラスト表示
使い方(スイング手法と併用)
まずは価格シグナル(一目の雲上抜け/基準線回復/転換線>基準線、またはA/B/Cルール)。
本インジの判定でサイズのみ決定(エントリーのタイミングは出しません)。
任意でバー確定アラート(PASS/HALF/FAIL)を設定。
サイズ目安 & イベント抑制
PASS:計画サイズ100%
HALF:約50%(ストップもタイトに)
FAIL:見送り
決算まで≦10営業日なら1段階サイズダウン、≦3営業日は原則見送り。
セクター目安(調整推奨)
ソフト/ネット:マージン 15%以上、EV/EBITDA 18以下
工業/一般消費:マージン 8%以上、EV/EBITDA 12以下
小売:マージン 5〜7%以上、EV/EBITDA 10〜12以下
例外・代替
銀行・保険・REIT/ネットキャッシュ・EBITDAマイナス:EV/EBITDAは適さない場合 → Net Debt/EBITDAやCET1/LTV/DSCR等で補助。
新規上場・データ薄:更新までNAのことあり。
注意
データは request.financial() を使用。更新前はNAの可能性。
本ツールはリスク確認/サイズ調整用で、売買シグナルではありません。
免責
情報提供のみ。投資判断は自己責任で。
3 MA's with Crossing SignalsPlots three fully configurable moving averages on one chart and prints/alerts BUY/SELL signals when price crosses your chosen MA(s). Built to match TradingView’s built-ins exactly.
Features
Per-line MA type: SMA, EMA, SMMA (RMA), WMA, VWMA
Per-line settings: length, color, offset
Source control: Close, Open, High, Low, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4
Optional Heikin Ashi calculation for both the MAs and the cross price
Toggle signals vs MA1 / MA2 / MA3 independently
Alert conditions for every cross (ready for “Once per bar close”)
How signals work
UP when the selected price stream crosses above the chosen MA
DOWN when it crosses below
Signals/alerts follow your selected source (and HA toggle) to keep everything consistent.
FxAST Lite Wave — Universal (Profiles: Intraday / Swing)FxAST-LW Universal (Profiles)
The FxAST Lite Wave – Universal strategy is designed for adaptability across markets and timeframes, with two ready-to-use profiles:
Intraday (5m–1H) → tuned for futures & FX scalps/day trades. Includes session filters, ATR volatility regimes, and impulse confirmation to reduce chop.
Swing (1D–3D) → tuned for swing positions. Uses relaxed impulse filters, slope + bias confirmation, and DI-spread to capture bigger moves.
Key features:
✅ Multi-EMA Lite Wave core (5/13/62/200)
✅ Regime filter via DI-spread (trend vs chop)
✅ EMA200 slope filter
✅ Optional HTF bias confirmation
✅ ATR-based stops, breakeven & trailing logic
✅ Time-stop exits to avoid capital stagnation
✅ Risk % position sizing
Usage:
Switch between Intraday and Swing modes via the Profile input. Adjust DI-spread, slope, and impulse thresholds per symbol. Sessions recommended ON for indices (NQ/ES/RTY) and OFF for FX.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This script is for research & educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Test extensively before applying live. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
© FxAST
Candle Spread + ATR SMA Analysis
This indicator combines elements from two popular open-source scripts — Candle Range Compare
by @oldinvestor
and Objective Analysis of Spread (VSA)
by @Rin-Nin
— into a single tool for analyzing candle spreads (ranges and bodies) in relation to volatility benchmarks.
🔎 What It Does
Candle Decomposition:
Plots total candle ranges (high–low) in gray, for both up and down closes.
Plots up-close bodies (open–close) in white.
Plots down-close bodies in black.
This makes it easy to spot whether volatility comes from real price movement (body) or extended wicks.
ATR & SMA Volatility Bands:
Calculates ATR (Average True Range) and overlays it as a black line.
Plots four volatility envelopes derived from the SMA of the true range:
0.8× (blue, shaded)
1.3× (green)
1.8× (red)
3.0× (purple)
Colored fill zones highlight when candle spreads are below, within, or above key thresholds.
Visual Context:
Track expansion/contraction in spreads.
Compare bullish (white) vs bearish (black) bodies to gauge buying/selling pressure.
Identify when candles stretch beyond typical volatility ranges.
📈 How To Use It
VSA context: Wide down bars (black) beyond ATR bands may suggest supply; wide up bars (white) may indicate demand.
Trend confirmation: Expanding ranges above average thresholds (green/red/purple bands) often confirm momentum.
Reversal potential: Small bodies but large ranges (gray + wicks) frequently appear at turning points.
Volatility filter: Use ATR bands to filter trades — e.g., only act when candle ranges exceed 1.3× or 1.8× SMA thresholds.
🙏 Credits
This script is inspired by and combines ideas from:
Candle Range Compare
by @oldinvestor
Objective Analysis of Spread (VSA)
by @Rin-Nin
Big thanks to both authors for their valuable contributions to the TradingView community.
One thing I couldnt quite get to work is being able to display up and down wicks like in the candle range compare, so I just add that indicator to the chart as well, uncheck everything but the wick plots and there it is.
AVWAP+RSI Confluence — 1R TesterRSI + 1R ATR - Monthly P\&L (v4)
WHAT THIS STRATEGY DOES (OVERVIEW)
* Pine strategy (v4) that combines a simple momentum trigger with a symmetric 1R ATR risk model and an on-chart Monthly/Yearly P\&L table.
* Momentum filter: trades only when RSI crosses its own SMA in the direction of the trend (price vs Trend EMA).
* Risk engine: exits use fixed 1R ATR brackets captured at entry (no drifting targets/stops).
* Accounting: the table aggregates percentage returns by month and year using strategy equity.
ENTRY LOGIC (LONGS & OPTIONAL SHORTS)
Indicators used:
* RSI(rsiLen) and its SMA: SMA(RSI, rsiMaLen)
* Trend filter: EMA(emaTrendLen) on price
Longs:
1. RSI crosses above its RSI SMA
2. RSI > rsiBuyThr (filters weak momentum)
3. Close > EMA(emaTrendLen)
Shorts (optional via enableShort):
1. RSI crosses below its RSI SMA
2. RSI < rsiSellThr
3. Close < EMA(emaTrendLen)
EXIT LOGIC AND RISK MODEL (1R ATR)
* On entry, snapshot ATR(atrLen) into atrAtEntry and the average fill price into entryPx.
* Longs: stop = entryPx - ATR \* atrMult; target = entryPx + ATR \* atrMult
* Shorts: mirrored.
* Stops and targets are posted immediately and remain fixed for the life of the trade.
POSITION SIZING AND COSTS
* Default position size: 25% of equity per trade (adjustable in Properties/inputs).
* Commission percent and a small slippage are set in strategy() so backtests include friction by default.
MONTHLY / YEARLY P\&L TABLE (HOW IT WORKS)
* Uses strategy equity to compute bar returns: equity / equity\ - 1.
* Compounds bar returns into current month and current year; commits each finished period at month/year change (or last bar).
* Renders rows as years; columns Jan..Dec plus a Year total column.
* Cells colored by sign; precision and maximum rows are controlled by inputs.
* Values represent percentage returns, not currency P\&L.
VISUAL AIDS
* Two pivot trails (pivot high/low) are plotted for context only; they do not affect entries or exits.
CUSTOMIZATION TIPS
* Raise rsiBuyThr (long) or lower rsiSellThr (short) to filter weak momentum.
* Increase emaTrendLen to tighten trend alignment.
* Adjust atrLen and atrMult to fit your timeframe/instrument volatility.
* Leave enableShort = false if you prefer long-only behavior or shorting is constrained.
NON-REPAINTING AND BACKTEST NOTES
* Signals use bar-close crosses of built-in indicators (RSI, EMA, ATR); no future bars are referenced.
* calc\_on\_every\_tick = true for responsive visuals; Strategy Tester evaluates on bar close in history.
* Backtest stop/limit fills are simulated and may differ from live execution/liquidity.
DISCLAIMERS
* Educational use only. This is not financial advice. Markets involve risk. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
INPUTS (QUICK REFERENCE)
* rsiLen, rsiMaLen, rsiBuyThr, rsiSellThr
* emaTrendLen
* atrLen, atrMult, enableShort
* leftBars, rightBars, prec, showTable, maxYearsRows
SHORT TAGLINE
RSI momentum with 1R ATR brackets and a built-in Monthly/Yearly P\&L table.
TAGS
strategy, RSI, ATR, trend, risk-management, backtest, Pine-v4
Perp Imbalance Zones • Pro (clean)USD Premium (perp vs spot) → (Perp − Spot) / Spot.
Imbalance (z-score of that premium) → how extreme the current premium is relative to its own history over lenPrem bars.
Hysteresis state machine → flips to a SHORT bias when perp-long pressure is extreme; flips to LONG bias when perp-short pressure is extreme. It exits only after the imbalance cools (prevents whipsaw).
Price stretch filter (±σ) → optional Bollinger check so signals only fire when price is already stretched.
HTF confirmation (optional) → require higher-timeframe imbalance to agree with the current-TF bias.
Gradient visuals → line + background tint deepen as |z| grows (more extreme pressure).
What you see on the pane
A single line (z):
Above 0 = perp richer than spot (perp longs pressing).
Below 0 = perp cheaper than spot (perp shorts pressing).
Guides: dotted levels at ±enterZ (entry) and ±exitZ (cool-off/exit).
Background tint:
Red when state = SHORT bias (perp longs heavy).
Blue when state = LONG bias (perp shorts heavy).
Tint intensity scales with |z| (via hotZ).
Labels (optional): prints when bias flips.
Alerts (optional): “Enter SHORT/LONG bias” and “Exit bias”.
How to use it (playbook)
Attach & set symbols
Put the script on your chart.
Set Spot symbol and Perp symbol to the venue you trade (e.g., BINANCE:BTCUSDT + BINANCE:BTCUSDTPERP).
Read the bias
SHORT bias (red background): perp longs over-extended. Look for short entries if price is at resistance, σ-stretched, or your PA system agrees.
LONG bias (blue background): perp shorts over-extended. Look for long entries at support/σ-stretched down.
Entries
Use the bias flip as a context/confirm. Combine with your structure trigger (OB/level sweep, rejection wick, micro-break in market structure, etc.).
If useSigma=true, only trade when price is already ≥ upper band (shorts) or ≤ lower band (longs).
Exits
Bias auto-exits when |z| falls below exitZ.
You can also take profits at your levels or when the line fades back toward 0 while price mean-reverts to the middle band.
Tuning (what each knob does)
enterZ / exitZ (signal strictness + hysteresis)
Higher enterZ → fewer, cleaner signals (e.g., 1.8–2.2).
exitZ should be lower than enterZ (e.g., 0.6–1.0) to prevent flicker.
lenPrem (context window for z)
Larger (50–100) = steadier baseline, fewer signals.
Smaller (20–30) = more reactive, more signals.
smoothLen (EMA on z)
2–3 = snappier; 5–7 = smoother/laggier but cleaner.
useSigma, bbLen, bbK (price-stretch filter)
On filters chop. Try bbLen=100, bbK=1.0–1.5.
Off if you want more frequent signals or you already gate with your own σ/Keltner.
useHTF, htfTF, htfZmin (trend/confirmation)
Turn on to require higher-TF imbalance agreement (e.g., trading 1H → confirm with 4H htfTF=240, htfZmin≈0.6–1.0).
hotZ (visual intensity)
Lower (2.0–2.5) heats up faster; higher (4.0) is more subtle.
Ready-made presets
Conservative swing (fewer, higher-conviction):
enterZ=2.0, exitZ=1.0, lenPrem=60–80, smoothLen=5, useSigma=true, bbK=1.5, useHTF=true (240/0.8).
Balanced intraday (default feel):
enterZ=1.6–1.8, exitZ=0.8–1.0, lenPrem=50, smoothLen=3–4, useSigma=true, bbK=1.0–1.25, useHTF=false/true depending on trendiness.
Aggressive scalping (more signals):
enterZ=1.2–1.4, exitZ=0.6–0.8, lenPrem=20–30, smoothLen=2–3, useSigma=false, useHTF=false.
Practical tips
Don’t trade the line in isolation. Use it to time trades into your levels: VWAP bands, Monday high/low, prior POC/VAH/VAL, order blocks, etc.
Perp-led reversals often snap—be ready to scale out quickly back to mid-bands.
Venue matters. Keep spot & perp from the same exchange family to avoid cross-venue quirks.
Alerts: enable after you’ve tuned thresholds for your timeframe so you only get high-quality pings.
Volume Profile AnalysisThe Volume Profile Dashboard is a professional-grade analysis tool built for TradingView. It focuses on displaying a comprehensive volume profile breakdown within a dashboard format directly on the chart. The purpose of this tool is to help traders quickly assess buy versus sell volume dynamics, momentum, and sentiment in order to support informed trading decisions.
Instead of plotting simple bars, this indicator uses a detailed table and visual progress bar to summarize live and historical market activity. By condensing key metrics into a structured format, traders can analyse market behaviour without manually calculating or switching between multiple indicators.
________________________________________
How the Script Works
1. Data Gathering
The script uses lower-timeframe price and volume data to calculate buy volume, sell volume, and total traded volume for the current and previous candles.
2. Volume Allocation
Buy and sell volumes are estimated by looking at the candle’s range (high to low) and how the closing price aligns within that range. The closer the close is to the high, the stronger the buying pressure. The closer the close is to the low, the stronger the selling pressure.
3. Delta and Momentum
o Delta measures the difference between buy and sell volume.
o Volume momentum compares the current candle’s activity to the previous one, showing if interest is rising or fading.
4. Point of Control (POC)
An average of high, low, and close is calculated to give an approximate “point of control” level—an area of balance where buyers and sellers previously agreed on price.
5. Dashboard Visualization
All these calculations are displayed inside a clean dashboard table with separate rows for the current candle, previous candle, and a summary row. Icons, colors, and progress bars make it visually intuitive.
6. On-Chart Progress Indicator
A dynamic horizontal progress bar is plotted on the chart above price, showing the balance between buy and sell volume for the latest activity.
7. Alerts
Built-in alerts trigger when strong buying or selling pressure is detected or when there is a significant spike in total traded volume.
________________________________________
How This Tool Can Be Used
• Intraday Trading: Quickly gauge whether buyers or sellers are in control of the market at any moment.
• Swing Trading: Compare momentum shifts between candles to identify early trend reversals.
• Risk Management: Use delta and sentiment signals to confirm whether to hold or reduce exposure.
• Confirmation: Align the volume profile dashboard with other indicators (such as RSI, MACD, or trendlines) for stronger trading conviction.
________________________________________
Using Mixed Indicators for Decisions
This dashboard alone provides volume insights, but better decisions come when it is combined with other tools:
• Pairing it with an RSI can show whether heavy buying is happening in overbought conditions.
• Combining with a SuperTrend or moving averages can confirm if volume momentum aligns with the price trend.
• Overlaying support/resistance levels can identify whether strong buy/sell signals occur at critical levels.
Mixed indicators prevent relying on one signal alone, reducing false trades.
________________________________________
Importance of This Tool
• Clarity: Condenses complex volume data into a simple, visual format.
• Speed: Traders can react faster with pre-calculated buy/sell percentages.
• Precision: Highlights hidden imbalances that are not obvious from candles alone.
• Professional-grade dashboard: Offers an institutional-style view of market behavior directly within TradingView.
________________________________________
Parameters in the Dashboard Table
• Period: Shows whether the row is for the current or previous candle, along with trend arrows.
• Price Range: The high–low range of the candle.
• Total Volume: The sum of buy and sell activity.
• Buy Volume / Sell Volume: Separated distribution of transactions leaning bullish or bearish.
• Delta: The net difference between buy and sell volumes, highlighting pressure imbalance.
• Buy % / Sell %: The percentage contribution of each side to total volume.
• POC: An average reference level where market consensus was strongest.
• Progress: A graphical bar showing buy vs sell dominance.
• Signal: Simplified output like Strong Buy, Buy, Strong Sell, Sell, Neutral.
• Summary Row: Compares changes between the current and previous candles and gives overall market sentiment.
________________________________________
Stock Market Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, or trading recommendations. The stock market and cryptocurrency markets involve high risk. Traders and investors should do their own research and consult licensed financial advisors before making investment decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
________________________________________
Misuse Disclaimer
This script has been developed as per TradingView’s rules and is intended for responsible trading analysis only. Any misuse, redistribution, or modification outside of TradingView’s policies is discouraged. The author and platform are not responsible for financial losses, misinterpretation of signals, or misuse of the code.
________________________________________
Disclaimer
Training & Educational Only — This material and the indicator are provided for educational purposes only. Nothing here is investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell financial instruments. Past simulated or historical performance does not predict future results. Always perform full back testing and risk management, and consider seeking advice from a qualified financial professional before trading with real capital.
________________________________________
Dual Relative Strength (vs NIFTY) Nikrun1. Fast RS (Early Leadership)
• Indicator: Relative Strength (by modhelius)
• Comparative Symbol: NIFTY
• Period: 26 weeks (~6 months)
• Purpose: Detects early shifts in relative strength before price fully confirms.
⸻
2. Slow RS (Confirmation)
• Add the same indicator again.
• Comparative Symbol: NIFTY
• Period: 52 weeks (1 year)
• Purpose: Confirms sustained leadership. Helps filter noise & false positives.
⸻
3. Visuals
• Style tip:
• Make RS(26) = blue line (fast, responsive).
• Make RS(52) = thicker black/green line (slow, authority).
• Keep zero line visible so you instantly see outperformance/underperformance.
⸻
buy sell ultra systemWhat it is
EMA-POC Momentum System Ultra combines a proven trend stack (EMA 20/50/238), a price-of-control layer (POC via Bar-POC or VWAP alternative), and a momentum trigger (RSI) to surface higher-quality entries only when multiple, independent conditions align. This is not a cosmetic mashup; each component gates the others.
How components work together
Trend (EMA 20/50/238): Defines short/medium/long bias and filters counter-trend signals.
POC (Bar-POC or Alt-POC/VWAP): Locates the most-traded/weighted price area; a neutral band around POC helps avoid chop.
Control background: Above POC → buyers likely in control; below → sellers.
Momentum (RSI): Entry arrows print only when RSI confirms with trend and price location vs POC; optional “cross 50” requirement reduces noise.
Optional HTF trend: Confluence with a higher-timeframe EMA stack for stricter filtering.
Why it’s original/useful
Signals require confluence of (1) EMA trend stack, (2) POC location and neutral-zone filtering, (3) momentum confirmation, (4) optional slope and distance-to-POC checks, and (5) optional HTF trend. This reduces false positives compared with using any layer in isolation.
How to use
Markets/TFs: Built for XAUUSD (Gold) and US30. Works 1m–1h for intraday; 2h–4h for swing.
Entries:
Long: EMA stack bullish, price above POC, not in neutral band, RSI condition true → “Buy” arrow.
Short: Opposite conditions → “Sell” arrow.
Stops/Targets (suggested):
Initial stop beyond POC/neutral band or recent swing.
First target around 1R; trail with EMA20/50 or structure breaks.
Settings to tune:
POC Mode: Bar-POC (highest-volume bar’s close over lookback) or Alt-POC (VWAP).
Neutral Band %: 0.10–0.35 typical intraday.
Min distance from POC: 0.10–0.50% helps avoid low-RR entries right at POC.
RSI: Choose “cross 50” for stricter triggers or simple >/< 50 for more signals.
HTF trend: Turn on for extra confluence.
Alerts:
Buy Signal and Sell Signal (separate), or one Combined Buy/Sell alert.
Set to “Once per bar close” if you want only confirmed arrows.
Repainting / limitations
Shapes can move until bar close (standard Pine behavior) when using intrabar conditions; final confirmation at close. No system guarantees profitability—forward test and adapt to your market/instrument.
Clean chart
The published chart contains only this script so outputs are easy to identify.
Versions / updates
Use Publish → Update for minor changes; do not create new publications for small tweaks. If you fork to preserve older behavior, explain why and how your fork differs.
Changelog
v1.1 – Tuning for Gold/US30, neutral-band & distance filters, optional HTF trend, combined alert.
v1.0 – Initial public release (EMA stack + POC modes + RSI + alerts).
License & credits
Open-source for learning and improvement. Please credit on forks and explain modifications in your description.
Buy vs Sell Volume EMA + Signals (fix: bgcolor scope)How to read it
Green EMA above Red EMA = sustained buying volume dominance.
Red EMA above Green EMA = sustained selling volume dominance.
Arrows mark shifts (crossovers).
Optional faint columns show the raw split of buy/sell volume if you enable “Show Raw Buy/Sell Volume Bars.”
Cardwell RSI by TQ📌 Cardwell RSI – Enhanced Relative Strength Index
This indicator is based on Andrew Cardwell’s RSI methodology , extending the classic RSI with tools to better identify bullish/bearish ranges and trend dynamics.
In uptrends, RSI tends to hold between 40–80 (Cardwell bullish range).
In downtrends, RSI tends to stay between 20–60 (Cardwell bearish range).
Key Features :
Standard RSI with configurable length & source
Fast (9) & Slow (45) RSI Moving Averages (toggleable)
Cardwell Core Levels (80 / 60 / 40 / 20) – enabled by default
Base Bands (70 / 50 / 30) in dotted style
Optional custom levels (up to 3)
Alerts for MA crosses and level crosses
Data Window metrics: RSI vs Fast/Slow MA differences
How to Use :
Monitor RSI behavior inside Cardwell’s bullish (40–80) and bearish (20–60) ranges
Watch RSI crossovers with Fast (9) and Slow (45) MAs to confirm momentum or trend shifts
Use levels and alerts as confluence with your trading strategy
Default Settings :
RSI Length: 14
MA Type: WMA
Fast MA: 9 (hidden by default)
Slow MA: 45 (hidden by default)
Cardwell Levels (80/60/40/20): ON
Base Bands (70/50/30): ON
Deadband Hysteresis Filter [BackQuant]Deadband Hysteresis Filter
What this is
This tool builds a “debounced” price baseline that ignores small fluctuations and only reacts when price meaningfully departs from its recent path. It uses a deadband to define how much deviation matters and a hysteresis scheme to avoid rapid flip-flops around the decision boundary. The baseline’s slope provides a simple trend cue, used to color candles and to trigger up and down alerts.
Why deadband and hysteresis help
They filter micro noise so the baseline does not react to every tiny tick.
They stabilize state changes. Hysteresis means the rule to start moving is stricter than the rule to keep holding, which reduces whipsaw.
They produce a stepped, readable path that advances during sustained moves and stays flat during chop.
How it works (conceptual)
At each bar the script maintains a running baseline dbhf and compares it to the input price p .
Compute a base threshold baseTau using the selected mode (ATR, Percent, Ticks, or Points).
Build an enter band tauEnter = baseTau × Enter Mult and an exit band tauExit = baseTau × Exit Mult where typically Exit Mult < Enter Mult .
Let diff = p − dbhf .
If diff > +tauEnter , raise the baseline by response × (diff − tauEnter) .
If diff < −tauEnter , lower the baseline by response × (diff + tauEnter) .
Otherwise, hold the prior value.
Trend state is derived from slope: dbhf > dbhf → up trend, dbhf < dbhf → down trend.
Inputs and what they control
Threshold mode
ATR — baseTau = ATR(atrLen) × atrMult . Adapts to volatility. Useful when regimes change.
Percent — baseTau = |price| × pctThresh% . Scale-free across symbols of different prices.
Ticks — baseTau = syminfo.mintick × tickThresh . Good for futures where tick size matters.
Points — baseTau = ptsThresh . Fixed distance in price units.
Band multipliers and response
Enter Mult — outer band. Price must travel at least this far from the baseline before an update occurs. Larger values reject more noise but increase lag.
Exit Mult — inner band for hysteresis. Keep this smaller than Enter Mult to create a hold zone that resists small re-entries.
Response — step size when outside the enter band. Higher response tracks faster; lower response is smoother.
UI settings
Show Filtered Price — plots the baseline on price.
Paint candles — colors bars by the filtered slope using your long/short colors.
How it can be used
Trend qualifier — take entries only in the direction of the baseline slope and skip trades against it.
Debounced crossovers — use the baseline as a stabilized surrogate for price in moving-average or channel crossover rules.
Trailing logic — trail stops a small distance beyond the baseline so small pullbacks do not eject the trade.
Session aware filtering — widen Enter Mult or switch to ATR mode for volatile sessions; tighten in quiet sessions.
Parameter interactions and tuning
Enter Mult vs Response — both govern sensitivity. If you see too many flips, increase Enter Mult or reduce Response. If turns feel late, do the opposite.
Exit Mult — widening the gap between Enter and Exit expands the hold zone and reduces oscillation around the threshold.
Mode choice — ATR adapts automatically; Percent keeps behavior consistent across instruments; Ticks or Points are useful when you think in fixed increments.
Timeframe coupling — on higher timeframes you can often lower Enter Mult or raise Response because raw noise is already reduced.
Concrete starter recipes
General purpose — ATR mode, atrLen=14 , atrMult=1.0–1.5 , Enter=1.0 , Exit=0.5 , Response=0.20 . Balanced noise rejection and lag.
Choppy range filter — ATR mode, increase atrMult to 2.0, keep Response≈0.15 . Stronger suppression of micro-moves.
Fast intraday — Percent mode, pctThresh=0.1–0.3 , Enter=1.0 , Exit=0.4–0.6 , Response=0.30–0.40 . Quicker turns for scalping.
Futures ticks — Ticks mode, set tickThresh to a few spreads beyond typical noise; start with Enter=1.0 , Exit=0.5 , Response=0.25 .
Strengths
Clear, explainable logic with an explicit noise budget.
Multiple threshold modes so the same tool fits equities, futures, and crypto.
Built-in hysteresis that reduces flip-flop near the boundary.
Slope-based coloring and alerts that make state changes obvious in real time.
Limitations and notes
All filters add lag. Larger thresholds and smaller response trade faster reaction for fewer false turns.
Fixed Points or Ticks can under- or over-filter when volatility regime shifts. ATR adapts, but will also expand bands during spikes.
On extremely choppy symbols, even a well tuned band will step frequently. Widen Enter Mult or reduce Response if needed.
This is a chart study. It does not include commissions, slippage, funding, or gap risks.
Alerts
DBHF Up Slope — baseline turns from down to up on the latest bar.
DBHF Down Slope — baseline turns from up to down on the latest bar.
Implementation details worth knowing
Initialization sets the baseline to the first observed price to avoid a cold-start jump.
Slope is evaluated bar-to-bar. The up and down alerts check for a change of slope rather than raw price crossings.
Candle colors and the baseline plot share the same long/short palette with transparency applied to the line.
Practical workflow
Pick a mode that matches how you think about distance. ATR for volatility aware, Percent for scale-free, Ticks or Points for fixed increments.
Tune Enter Mult until the number of flips feels appropriate for your timeframe.
Set Exit Mult clearly below Enter Mult to create a real hold zone.
Adjust Response last to control “how fast” the baseline chases price once it decides to move.
Final thoughts
Deadband plus hysteresis gives you a principled way to “only care when it matters.” With a sensible threshold and response, the filter yields a stable, low-chop trend cue you can use directly for bias or plug into your own entries, exits, and risk rules.
Prev Day Volume ProfileWhat the script does
Calculates yesterday’s Volume Profile from the bars on your chart (not tick data) and derives:
POC (Point of Control)
VAL (Value Area Low)
VAH (Value Area High)
Draws three horizontal lines for today:
POC in orange
VAL and VAH in purple
Adds labels on the right edge that show the level name and the exact price (e.g., POC 1.2345).
Why it’s bar-based (not tick-based)
Pine Script can’t fetch external tick/aggTrades data. The script approximates a volume profile by distributing each bar’s volume across the price bins that the bar’s high–low range covers. For “yesterday”, this produces a stable, TV-native approximation that’s usually sufficient for intraday trading.
Key inputs
Value Area %: Defaults to 0.70 (70%)—the typical value area range.
TZ Offset vs Exchange (hours): Shifts the day boundary to match your desired session (e.g., Europe/Berlin: +1 winter / +2 summer). This ensures “yesterday” means 00:00–24:00 in your target timezone.
Row Size: Manual? / Manual Row Size: If enabled, you can set the price bin size yourself. Otherwise, the script chooses a TV-like step from syminfo.mintick.
Colors & Line width: POC orange; VAL/VAH purple; configurable width.
Smart Structure Breaks & Order BlocksOverview (What it does)
The indicator “Smart Structure Breaks & Order Blocks” detects market structure using swing highs and lows, identifies Break of Structure (BOS) events, and automatically draws order blocks (OBs) from the origin candle. These zones extend to the right and change color/outline when mitigated or invalidated. By formalizing and automating part of discretionary analysis, it provides consistent zone recognition.
Main Components
Swing Detection: ta.pivothigh/ta.pivotlow identify confirmed swing points.
BOS Detection: Determines if the recent swing high/low is broken by close (strict mode) or crossover.
OB Creation: After a BOS, the opposite candle (bearish for bullish BOS, bullish for bearish BOS) is used to generate an order block zone.
Zone Management: Limits the number of zones, extends them to the right, and tracks tagged (mitigated) or invalidated states.
Input Parameters
Left/Right Pivot (default 6/6): Number of bars required on each side to confirm a swing. Higher values = smoother swings.
Max Zones (default 4): Maximum zones stored per direction (bull/bear). Oldest zones are overwritten.
Zone Confirmation Lookback (default 3): Ensures OB origin candle validity by checking recent highs/lows.
Show Swing Points (default ON): Displays triangles on swing highs/lows.
Require close for BOS? (default ON): Strict BOS (close required) vs loose BOS (line crossover).
Use candle body for zones (default OFF): Zones drawn from candle body (ON) or wick (OFF).
Signal Definition & Logic
Swing Updates: Latest confirmed pivots update lastHighLevel / lastLowLevel.
BOS (Break of Structure):
Bullish – close breaks last swing high.
Bearish – close breaks last swing low.
Only one valid BOS per swing (avoids duplicates).
OB Detection:
Bullish BOS → previous bearish candle with lowest low forms the OB.
Bearish BOS → previous bullish candle with highest high forms the OB.
Zones: Bull = green, Bear = red, semi-transparent, extended to the right.
Zone States:
Mitigated: Price touches the zone → border highlighted.
Invalidated:
Bull zone → close below → turns red.
Bear zone → close above → turns green.
Chart Appearance
Swing High: red triangle above bar
Swing Low: green triangle below bar
Bull OB: green zone (border highlighted on touch)
Bear OB: red zone (border highlighted on touch)
Invalid Zones: Bull zones turn reddish, Bear zones turn greenish
Practical Use (Trading Assistance)
Trend Following Entries: Buy pullbacks into green OBs in uptrends, sell rallies into red OBs in downtrends.
Focus on First Touch: First mitigation after BOS often has higher reaction probability.
Confluence: Combine with higher timeframe trend, volume, session levels, key price levels (previous highs/lows, VWAP, etc.).
Stops/Targets:
Bull – stop below zone, partial take profit at swing high or resistance.
Bear – stop above zone, partial take profit at swing low or support.
Parameter Tuning (per market/timeframe)
Pivot (6/6 → 4/4/8/8): Lower for scalping (3–5), medium for day trading (5–8), higher for swing trading (8–14). Increase to reduce noise.
Strict Break: ON to reduce false breaks in ranging markets; OFF for earlier signals.
Body Zones: ON for assets with long wicks, OFF for cleaner OBs in liquid instruments.
Zone Confirmation (default 3): Increase for stricter OB origin, fewer zones.
Max Zones (default 4 → 6–10): Increase for higher volatility, decrease to avoid clutter.
Strengths
Standardizes BOS and OB detection that is usually subjective.
Tracks mitigation and invalidation automatically.
Adaptable: allows body/wick zone switching for different instruments.
Limitations
Pivot-based: Signals appear only after pivots confirm (slight lag).
Zones reflect past balance: Can fail after new events (news, earnings, macro data).
Range-heavy markets: More false BOS; consider stricter settings.
Backtesting: This script is for drawing/visual aid; trading rules must be defined separately.
Workflow Example
Identify higher timeframe trend (4H/Daily).
On lower TF (15–60m), wait for BOS and new OB.
Enter on first mitigation with confirmation candle.
Stop beyond zone; targets based on R multiples and swing points.
FAQ
Q: Why are zones invalidated quickly?
A: Flow reversal after BOS. Adjust pivots higher, enable Strict mode, or switch to Body zones to reduce noise.
Q: What does “tagged” mean?
A: Price touched the zone once = mitigated. Implies some orders in that zone may have been filled.
Q: Body or Wick zones?
A: Wick zones are fine in clean markets. For volatile pairs with long wicks, body zones provide more realistic areas.
Customization Tips (Code perspective)
Zone storage: Currently ring buffer ((idx+1) % zoneLimit). Could prioritize keeping unmitigated zones.
Automated testing: Add strategy.entry/exit for rule-based backtests.
Multi-timeframe: Use request.security() for higher timeframe swings/BOS.
Visualization: Add labels for BOS bars, tag zones with IDs, count touches.
Summary
This indicator formalizes the cycle Swing → BOS → OB creation → Mitigation/Invalidation, providing consistent structure analysis and zone tracking. By tuning sensitivity and strictness, and combining with higher timeframe context, it enhances pullback/continuation trading setups. Always combine with proper risk management.