US Markets Net highs/lows main chart overlayThis script allows users to change the background color of the main chart to green or red depending on patterns of net highs or lows for the Nasdaq, NYSE, or AMEX. Healthy markets typically show persistent trends of net highs, and the green background highlight helps to identify that condition. Similarly, poor market conditions are associated with trends in net lows which can be identified with a red highlight. The script identifies trends in net highs or lows by looking for three or more consecutive days of either condition.
This script is helpful when analyzing the general market, and it is also helpful when studying individual stocks to see how general market breadth conditions affect individual stock price movements.
You can select which individual US market composite or combination of composites are used in the calculations.
This indicator is intended for use on daily charts.
Acknowledgment
Thank you to @JohnMuchow for coding my formulas.
Carusoinsights
(CD|RS Signal) Caruso Divergence Relative Strength SignalCD|RS Signal allows for plotting horizontal bars to isolate periods where a security is forming a positive divergence from its benchmark, therefore, producing positive Relative strength when accounting for the security's volatility.
Investors can set how many 'pivots' or lows back to use when making an analysis. CD|RS Signal has an algorithm to identify pats market lows and automatically line them up with a stock's low around the same period of time. This allows for divergence analysis across many past lows and helps to isolate positive price divergences that are not so clear in choppy sideways trading action. CD|RS Signal helps an investor to identify when a security does not make a lower low vs a benchmark that has made a lower low over a similar period.
To help visualize the meaning behind the indicator, CD|RS Signal can be plotted in a separate pane, ideally over the benchmark itself. Traditionally the S&P500 is used for US stock analysis. By overlaying CD|RS Signal over the S&P 500, investors can more easily view which S&P 500 lows the stock is currently showing a positive divergence with.
This indicator allows you to select both your benchmark for comparing against as investors may prefer a commodity crypto currency or another stock. As well, users cans elect as far back to make the analysis by selecting the pivot lookback (how many prior ‘pivots’ or ‘market lows’ back to compare against).
In addition, to perform the historical study, investors can turn on historical HLs in the settings enabling all past CD|RS signals to show. This helps an investor to visualize how this has functioned on a security in the past.
(CA|RS Signal) Caruso Adaptive Relative Strength Signal CA|RS Signal is a new approach to relative strength analysis that incorporates a security’s volatility and correlation to a benchmark when performing RS analysis. Traditional RS methods compare the performance between two securities to identify which is outperforming on a percentage basis. although this is effective in many situations, some stocks are inherently less volatile and will not outperform a benchmark on a percentage basis. Accounting for a security's volatility and correlation to its benchmark through BETA allows for a more effective method to conduct RS analysis.
In order to build a tool that provides a robust signal, CA|RS Signal is a composite of RS from different time frames. The strongest trends have a security displaying RS across all timeframes measured. CA|RS Signal displays whether RS is identified along with how many internal components are currently identifying RS. This is helpful as a trend may progress from 3 components identifying RS down to only one as it wekas - providing early warning to an investor that RS is present but deteriorating.
CA|RS Signal is also adaptable to any time frame.
CA|RS Signal allows an investor to select which security will act as a benchmark. Traditionally, the S&P 500 is the benchmark for US stocks. International investors can select their local index of choice. Not equity investors can select a commodity, crypto token, or FX basket to get a different RS analysis.
(CF|DB) Caruso Financial DashboardThe Caruso Financial Dashboard brings a rich amount of company financial data straight to your TradingView chart along with additional vital stock-related information. At a glance, you can see EPS (Diluted), Sales, growth rates, and EPS/Sales surprises either quarter by quarter on the daily chart or for Fiscal Years on the weekly chart.
On the daily chart, the financial table also has helpful highlights to visually display if a quarter’s EPS or Sales are higher than the same quarter a year ago. Also, EPS and Sales data has a helpful green shading when a new record high number has been achieved for the metric. Additional stock-based metrics include the stock’s Up/Down volume ratio, Beta, Average Daily Volume in terms of shares traded or dollar value traded, the percentage distance to a moving average of choice, as well as the stock’s 52-week high and low.
The weekly chart shows financial data for fiscal years. It also has additional stock-based metrics from those available on the daily chart. These include; Market Cap, Shares in Float and the Float as a percentage of all shares outstanding, the distance from the stock’s 52-week high, the distance to a moving average of choice (10 sma by default), the P/E and P/S ratios.
To further help an investor understand a company’s growth rates, the CF|DB allows a user to hide all or part of the table and plot EPS, EPS TTM (Trailing Twelve Months), and Sales TTM lines on the chart. This can be applied to either the daily or weekly chart.
The CF|DB provides financial and market data for international markets (US, EU, Canada, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, and more), making its applicability global.
Features On Daily Chart
· Quarterly EPS
· Quarterly EPS growth rate YoY
· Quarterly EPS Surprise vs consensus estimate
· Quarterly Sales
· Quarterly Sales growth rate YoY
· Quarterly Sales Surprise vs consensus estimate
· Green/Red dot highlighting YoY growth or decline
· EPS/Sales green highlight for 8 quarter high or record high numbers
· Up/Down Volume Ratio
· Beta
· Average Daily Volume (shares trade). Period for the average can be configured
· Average Daily Volume (dollar value traded). Period for the average can be configured
· Distance to a moving average. The average can be configured. 21 ema by default
· 52-week high and low
· New 52-week highs and lows are highlighted by a red or green box shading
· Ability to plot EPS, EPS TTM, Sales lines
· Ability to hide part or all of the financial data table
Features On Weekly Chart
· FY EPS
· FY EPS growth rate YoY
· FY EPS Surprise vs consensus estimate
· FY Sales
· FY Sales growth rate YoY
· FY Sales Surprise vs consensus estimate
· EPS/Sales green highlight for 8-year high or record high numbers
· Market Cap
· Shares in float
· Share in float as a percentage of all shares outstanding
· Distance to new 52-week highs
· Distance to a moving average. The average can be configured. 10 sma by default
· Ability to plot EPS, EPS TTM, Sales lines
· Ability to hide part or all of the financial data table
(CM|DB) Caruso Market DashboardThe Caruso Market Dashboard (CM|DB) provides a snapshot of key US market data, market internals (breadth), and economic statistics. It displays real-time prices of seven major markets along with daily updates of the put/call ratio and multiple breadth measurements. Lastly, it displays the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet and 4-week change of assets held to help investors keep abreast of important FED changes in policy.
Presented for both the Nasdaq and NYSE composites and updated at the end of each trading day, the market breadth section shows:
· the number of net 52-week highs and lows
· the actual number of new 52-week highs and 52-week lows.
· The percentage of volume traded on up stocks vs. total volume
· The percentage of stocks advancing vs. all stocks
· Percentage of stocks above their 5-day average
· Percentage of stocks above their 50-day average
· Percentage of stocks above their 200-day average
In addition to presenting all of this valuable information in a table, users can hide the table and plot each market and economic data point. This is very helpful when viewing trends as well as overbought and oversold levels for these data points.
(CD|RS) Caruso Divergence Relative StrengthCaruso Divergence Relative Strength (CD|RS) helps an investor to identify when a security does not make a lower low vs a benchmark. The standard application is to compare a stock to the S&P 500 (SPX). If the SPX makes a lower low and the stock does not, it displays significant Relative Strength.
This indicator allows you to select both your benchmark for comparing against as well as how far back to make the analysis by selecting the pivot lookback (how many prior ‘pivots’ or ‘market lows’ back to compare against).
Divergences can appear when markets are weak, and they make lower lows, but they can also appear in uptrends as stocks and indexes make higher highs. CD|RS also identifies when RS takes place “On Strength.” If the security and its benchmark both decline but the security can make new highs above its prior peak before the benchmark, it is once again displaying relative strength. Therefore CD|RS is helpful in finding Divergence Relative Strength in both up and down trends.
CD|RS works on any timeframe.
CD|RS has an accompanying indicator called CD|RS Signal which helps display the divergence in a different format and can be placed in a separate pane if the user wishes to keep the price chart clean.
(CA|RS) Caruso Adaptive Relative StrengthCaruso Adaptive Relative Strength helps an investor identify when a stock is performing better than an index on a relative basis. Going beyond traditional Relative Strength(RS) methods, CARS uses a stock's Beta to determine when Relative Strength is present when adjusting for the individual stock's volatility and correlation to its benchmark. Therefore, it allows investors to not only visualize if a stock is outperforming an index but rather if it is outperforming when considering the stock's Beta. This allows Relative Strength to be more easily viewed in lower volatility equities as well as ETFs, Commodities, and alternative assets. To be as effective as possible, I have built CARS to be an RS composite, and it factors in RS from different time periods in making its calculation.
To make the application as simple as possible, I designed CARS to change the background of the chart to blue when Relative Strength is identified. You also have the option to display a box around the data or plot symbols along the bottom of the chart to best suit your visual need. CARS access comes with CARS Signal access which is a separate indicator that plots below the price chart. It provides greater insight into the robustness of the CARS signal by displaying how many core internal components of CARS are displaying RS.
Importantly, you can also change which index or symbol you would like to use for comparison purposes. I have the default set to the S&P 500, but you can use any index, ETF, or security for comparison.
CARS is also adaptable to any time frame.
The greatest benefit in identifying Relative Strength is to discover which stocks are outperforming an index, therefore are undergoing accumulation. It is important to then time your entry into the stock when the price confirms. If an investor is seeking absolute price gains, then this last point of timing an entry is critical because a stock can outperform an index yet still fall - albeit less than the index.
[TTI] Combined Absolute Relative Strength - ARS toolHISTORY AND CREDITS–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
I got inspired to build this based on some public lectures I have seen of Matt Caruso. Matt says he has taken 10 years to build similar tool. The idea of a 'better' Relative Strength hit home and I cracked open the textbooks to see which technique would serve best. I think I have made a very close (my estimate about 90%) script to the original. Examples of side by side in comments.
WHAT IT DOES––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
💡A significant advancement in relative strength analysis is Combined Adaptive Relative Strength (ARS tool).
The ARS tool makes it quick and easy to determine whether an asset exhibits Relative Strength and is therefore subject to institutional accumulation.
ARS is not restricted to equities and may be used to find RS on any traded security like crypto, forex, bonds or ETFs. By design, ARS adjusts to a security's volatility to discover RS in a slower-moving, dividend-paying investment just as easily as in a one with strong velocity. Due to this feature, investors are able to use RS analysis on any security type that fits their objectives and risk tolerance.
When the indicator calculates a favourable, strong relative strength in the ticker it paints the background of the chart to the chosen color.
🎁 Unlike the original indicator, I have left a few customisable settings for those who wish to toggle the sensitivity:
✅. You can choose which index you compare Relative Strength against (perfect for anyone trading international)
✅. You can choose how manyDays Lookback the ticker uses to make calculations
✅. You can chooses what Timeperiod in number of bars the ticker uses to calculate Relative Strength
✅. I have made all calculations adaptable for larger and smaller timeframes (so wether you are daytrader or investor this will adapt to the way you have customised your chart).
HOW TO USE IT–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
The tool highlights the periods of time when the ticker has the highest probability of attracting institutional investors and hence result in price appreciation. The blue color appears in stages of the indicator where significant upward moves are probable.
You can use the indicator as part of the longer term trend analysis of your research.
ATRP (Average True Range Percent)ATRP compares the average true range in percentage terms between two periods. A healthy correction occurs with short-term volatility contracting vs longer-term volatility. It also helps spot low-risk entries as volatility falls.
I also included the historical average true range in percentage terms so an investor can quickly visualize what a likely daily range will be.
In my experience, it is vital to apply this analysis to stocks trending above their 50 and 200-day moving averages as stocks in downtrends can keep falling for extended periods of time with dwindling volatility.