Market Manipulation Index (MMI)The Composite Manipulation Index (CMI) is a structural integrity tool that quantifies how chaotic or orderly current market conditions are, with the aim of detecting potentially manipulated or unstable environments. It blends two distinct mathematical models that assess price behavior in terms of both structural rhythm and predictability.
1. Sine-Fit Deviation Model:
This component assumes that ideal, low-manipulation price behavior resembles a smooth oscillation, such as a sine wave. It generates a synthetic sine wave using a user-defined period and compares it to actual price movement over an adaptive window. The error between the real price and this synthetic wave—normalized by price variance—forms the Sine-Based Manipulation Index. A high error indicates deviation from natural rhythm, suggesting structural disorder.
2. Predictability-Based Model:
The second component estimates how well current price can be predicted using recent price lags. A two-variable rolling linear regression is computed between the current price and two lagged inputs (close and close ). If the predicted price diverges from the actual price, this error—also normalized by price variance—reflects unpredictability. High prediction error implies a more manipulated or erratic environment.
3. Adaptive Mechanism:
Both components are calculated using an adaptive smoothing window based on the Average True Range (ATR). This allows the indicator to respond proportionally to market volatility. During high volatility, the analysis window expands to avoid over-sensitivity; during calm periods, it contracts for better responsiveness.
4. Composite Output:
The two normalized metrics are averaged to form the final CMI value, which is then optionally smoothed further. The output is scaled between 0 and 1:
0 indicates a highly structured, orderly market.
1 indicates complete structural breakdown or randomness.
Suggested Interpretation:
CMI < 0.3: Market is clean and structured. Trend-following or breakout strategies may perform better.
CMI > 0.7: Market is structurally unstable. Choppy price action, fakeouts, or manipulative behavior may dominate.
CMI 0.3–0.7: Transitional zone. Caution or reduced risk may be warranted.
This indicator is designed to serve as a contextual filter, helping traders assess whether current market conditions are conducive to structured strategies, or if discretion and defense are more appropriate.
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Quantum Motion Oscillator-QMO (TechnoBlooms)Quantum Motion Oscillator (QMO) is a momentum indicator designed for traders who demand precision. Combining multi-timeframe weighted linear regression with EMA crossovers, QMO offers a dynamic view of market momentum, helping traders anticipate trend shifts with greater accuracy.
This oscillator is inspired by quantum mechanics and wave theory, where market movement is seen as a series of probabilistic waves rather than rigid structures.
The histogram is plotted in proportion to the price movement of the candlesticks.
KEY FEATURES
1. Multi-Timeframe Histogram - Integrates 1 to 5 weighted linear regression averages, reducing lag while maintaining accuracy.
2. EMA Crossover Signal - Uses a Short and Long EMA to confirm trend shifts with minimal noise.
3. Adaptive Trend Analysis - Self-adjusting mechanics make QMO effective in both ranging and trending markets.
4. Scalable for Different Trading Styles - Works seamlessly for scalping, intraday, swing and position trading.
ADVANCED PROFESSIONAL INSIGHTS
1. Wave Dynamics and Market Flow - Inspired by wave mechanics, QMO reflects the energy accumulation and dissipation in price movements.
Expanding histogram waves = Strong momentum surge
Contracting waves = Momentum weakening, potential reversal zone.
2. Liquidity and Order Flow Applications - QMO works well alongside liquidity concepts and smart money techniques:
Combine with Fair Value Gaps & Order Blocks -> Enter when QMO signals align with liquidity zones.
Avoid False Moves - If price sweeps liquidity, but QMO momentum diverges, it is a sign of potential smart money manipulation.
15-Minute ORB by @RhinoTradezOverview
Hey traders, ready to jump on the morning breakout train? The 15-Minute ORB by @RhinoTradez
is your go-to pal for rocking the Opening Range Breakout (ORB) scene, zeroing in on the first 15 minutes of the U.S. market day—9:30 to 9:45 AM Eastern Time. Picture this: sleek orange lines mark the high and low of that opening rush, but they only hang out during regular trading hours (9:30 AM-4:00 PM ET) and reset fresh each day—no old baggage here! Built in Pine Script v6 for that cutting-edge feel, it’s loaded with breakout signals and alerts to keep your trading game strong—ideal for SPY, QQQ, or any ticker you love.
Crafted by @RhinoTradez
to fuel your daily grind—let’s hit those breakouts running!
What It Does
The ORB strategy is all about that early market spark: the 9:30-9:45 AM range sets the battlefield, and breakouts signal the charge. Here’s the rundown:
Captures the Range : Snags the high and low from the 9:30-9:45 AM ET candle—U.S. market kickoff, locked in.
Daily Refresh : Wipes yesterday’s lines at 9:30 AM ET each day—today’s all that matters.
Regular Hours Focus : Orange lines shine from 9:45 AM to 4:00 PM ET, vanishing outside those hours.
Breakout Signals : Green triangles for upside breaks, red for downside, all within regular hours.
Alerts You : Chimes in with “Price broke above 15-min ORB High: 597” (or below the low) when the move hits.
It’s your morning breakout blueprint—simple, focused, and trader-ready.
Functionality Breakdown:
15-Minute ORB Snap:
Locks the high and low of the 9:30-9:45 AM ET candle on a 15-minute chart (EST/EDT auto-adjusted).
Resets daily at 9:30 AM ET—yesterday’s range is outta here.
Regular Hours Only:
Lines glow from 9:45 AM to 4:00 PM ET, keeping pre-market and after-hours clean.
Breakout Flags:
Marks price busting above the ORB high (green triangle below bar) or below the low (red triangle above), only during 9:30 AM-4:00 PM.
Alert Action:
Drops a custom alert with the breakout price (e.g., “Price broke below 15-min ORB Low: 594”)—stay in the know, hands-free.
Customization Options
Keep it chill with one slick tweak:
ORB Line Color : Starts at orange—vibrant and trader-cool! Flip it to blue, purple, or any shade you dig in the settings. Make it yours.
How to Use It
Pop It On: Add it to a 15-minute chart—SPY, QQQ, or your hot pick works like a dream.
Time It Right: Set your chart to “America/New_York” time (Chart Settings > Time Zone) to sync with 9:30 AM ET.
Choose Your Color: Dive into the indicator settings and pick your ORB line color—orange kicks it off, but you’re in charge.
Set Alerts: Right-click the indicator, add an alert with “Any alert() function call,” and catch breakouts live.
Ride the Wave: Green triangle? Upward vibe. Red? Downside alert. Mix with volume or candles for extra punch.
Pro Tips
15-Minute Only : Tailored for that 9:30-9:45 AM ET candle—other timeframes won’t sync up.
Daily Reset : Lines refresh at 9:30 AM ET—always today’s play.
Breakout Boost : High volume or RSI can seal the deal on those triangle signals.
No Clutter : Lines stick to 9:30 AM-4:00 PM ET—your chart stays tidy.
Brought to you by @RhinoTradez
in Pine Script v6, this ORB script’s your morning breakout wingman. Slap it on, pick a color, and let’s chase those moves together! Happy trading!
Hanzo_Wave_Price %Hanzo_Wave_Price % is a custom indicator for the TradingView platform that combines RSI (Relative Strength Index) and Stochastic RSI while also displaying the percentage price change over a specified period. This indicator helps traders identify overbought and oversold conditions, analyze price waves, and forecast potential market movements.
How It Works
1. RSI and Stochastic RSI Calculation
RSI is calculated based on the selected price source (default: close) with a user-defined Main Line period.
Stochastic RSI is then applied and smoothed using a moving average.
The Main Line represents the smoothed Stochastic RSI, serving as a wave indicator to help identify potential entry and exit points.
2. Overbought and Oversold Zones
The 70 and 30 levels indicate overbought and oversold zones, displayed as dashed lines on the chart.
Additional 20% and 10% levels provide a visual reference for historical price changes, aiding in future predictions.
3. Percentage Price Change Calculation
The indicator calculates the percentage price change over a Barsback period (default: 30 candles).
Users can choose a multiplier (100 or 1000) for better visualization (1000 scales the values by dividing by 10).
The data is displayed as a colored area:
Red (Short) → Negative price change.
Green (Buy) → Positive price change.
Settings & Parameters
Multiplier 💪 – Selects the scaling factor (100 or 1000) for percentage values.
Main Line ✈️ – Stochastic smoothing period (smoothK).
Don't touch ✋ – Reserved value (do not modify).
RSI 🔴 – RSI calculation period.
Stochastic 🔵 – Stochastic RSI calculation period.
Source ⚠️ – Price source for calculations (default: close).
Price changes % 🔼🔽 – Enables percentage price change display.
Barsback ↩️ – Number of candles used to calculate price change.
Visual Representation
Gray Line (Takeprofit Line 🎯) – Smoothed Stochastic RSI.
Red Dashed Line (70) – Overbought zone.
Blue Dashed Line (30) – Oversold zone.
Percentage Price Change Display:
Green Fill → Price increase.
Red Fill → Price decrease.
Advantages
✅ Combined Analysis – Uses RSI and Stochastic RSI for more accurate market condition identification.
✅ Flexibility – Customizable parameters allow adaptation for different markets and strategies.
✅ Visual Clarity – Clearly defined zones and dynamic percentage change display.
✅ Additional Market Insights – The percentage price change helps assess market volatility.
Disadvantages
⚠ Lagging Signals – Smoothing may cause delayed response.
⚠ False Breakouts – The 70/30 levels may not always work effectively for all assets.
⚠ IMPORTANT!
This indicator is for informational and educational purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future profits! Use it in combination with other technical analysis tools. 🚀
Example 1: Identifying a Long Position
📌 Scenario:
The asset price has dropped significantly (1-hour timeframe), and the Main Line (gray line) crosses below the 30 level. This signals oversold conditions, which may indicate a potential reversal or upward correction.
✅ How to Use:
1️⃣ Identifying the Entry Zone:
If the Main Line is below 30, consider looking for a long entry point.
2️⃣ Confirming the Signal:
Place a vertical line at the moment when the Main Line crosses the 30 level from below.
3️⃣ Confirmation on a Lower Timeframe:
Switch to a 30-minute timeframe and wait for the Main Line to cross above the 70 level.
Enter a long position at this point.
4️⃣ Analyzing Percentage Price Change:
Check the historical indicator behavior:
If a similar past movement resulted in a ~10% price increase (green fill), this may indicate potential upward momentum.
5️⃣ Setting Take-Profit:
Set a take-profit level at 10%, based on previous price movements.
Also, monitor when the Main Line crosses the 70 level, as this may signal a potential profit-taking point.
📊 Conclusion:
This method helps to precisely determine entry points by confirming signals across multiple timeframes and analyzing the historical volatility of the asset. 🚀
Example 2: Analyzing Percentage Price Change
📌 Scenario:
You have set the Barsback parameter to 30, and the indicator shows +3.5%. This means that over the last 30 candles, the price has increased by 3.5%.
However, such small changes might be visually difficult to notice. To improve visibility, you can enable the multiplier (1000), which will scale the displayed percentage change to 35%. This is purely for visual convenience—the actual price movement remains 3.5%.
✅ How to Use:
1️⃣ Identifying Trend Direction:
If the percentage change is positive (green area) → Uptrend.
If the percentage change is negative (red area) → Downtrend.
2️⃣ Analyzing Movement Strength:
Compare the current percentage change with previous waves to evaluate the strength of the movement.
For example:
If previous waves reached 10% or more, a current wave of 3.5% might indicate a weak trend or a local correction.
3️⃣ Additional Filtering with the Main Line (Gray Line):
Use the Main Line to confirm the trend.
If the percentage change shows an increase, but the Main Line is still below 30, further upward movement can be expected.
If the percentage change indicates a decline, but the Main Line is above 70, there is a higher probability of a downward reversal.
"It's unfortunate that TradingView restricts adding images to indicator descriptions unless you have a paid subscription. This makes it harder to share free tools effectively."
[COG]StochRSI Zenith📊 StochRSI Zenith
This indicator combines the traditional Stochastic RSI with enhanced visualization features and multi-timeframe analysis capabilities. It's designed to provide traders with a comprehensive view of market conditions through various technical components.
🔑 Key Features:
• Advanced StochRSI Implementation
- Customizable RSI and Stochastic calculation periods
- Multiple moving average type options (SMA, EMA, SMMA, LWMA)
- Adjustable signal line parameters
• Visual Enhancement System
- Dynamic wave effect visualization
- Energy field display for momentum visualization
- Customizable color schemes for bullish and bearish signals
- Adaptive transparency settings
• Multi-Timeframe Analysis
- Higher timeframe confirmation
- Synchronized market structure analysis
- Cross-timeframe signal validation
• Divergence Detection
- Automated bullish and bearish divergence identification
- Customizable lookback period
- Clear visual signals for confirmed divergences
• Signal Generation Framework
- Price action confirmation
- SMA-based trend filtering
- Multiple confirmation levels for reduced noise
- Clear entry signals with customizable display options
📈 Technical Components:
1. Core Oscillator
- Base calculation: 13-period RSI (adjustable)
- Stochastic calculation: 8-period (adjustable)
- Signal lines: 5,3 smoothing (adjustable)
2. Visual Systems
- Wave effect with three layers of visualization
- Energy field display with dynamic intensity
- Reference bands at 20/30/50/70/80 levels
3. Confirmation Mechanisms
- SMA trend filter
- Higher timeframe alignment
- Price action validation
- Divergence confirmation
⚙️ Customization Options:
• Visual Parameters
- Wave effect intensity and speed
- Energy field sensitivity
- Color schemes for bullish/bearish signals
- Signal display preferences
• Technical Parameters
- All core calculation periods
- Moving average types
- Divergence detection settings
- Signal confirmation criteria
• Display Settings
- Chart and indicator signal placement
- SMA line visualization
- Background highlighting options
- Label positioning and size
🔍 Technical Implementation:
The indicator combines several advanced techniques to generate signals. Here are key components with code examples:
1. Core StochRSI Calculation:
// Base RSI calculation
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsi_length)
// StochRSI transformation
stochRSI = ((ta.highest(rsi, stoch_length) - ta.lowest(rsi, stoch_length)) != 0) ?
(100 * (rsi - ta.lowest(rsi, stoch_length))) /
(ta.highest(rsi, stoch_length) - ta.lowest(rsi, stoch_length)) : 0
2. Signal Generation System:
// Core signal conditions
crossover_buy = crossOver(sk, sd, cross_threshold)
valid_buy_zone = sk < 30 and sd < 30
price_within_sma_bands = close <= sma_high and close >= sma_low
// Enhanced signal generation
if crossover_buy and valid_buy_zone and price_within_sma_bands and htf_allows_long
if is_bullish_candle
long_signal := true
else
awaiting_bull_confirmation := true
3. Multi-Timeframe Analysis:
= request.security(syminfo.tickerid, mtf_period,
)
The HTF filter looks at a higher timeframe (default: 4H) to confirm the trend
It only allows:
Long trades when the higher timeframe is bullish
Short trades when the higher timeframe is bearish
📈 Trading Application Guide:
1. Signal Identification
• Oversold Opportunities (< 30 level)
- Look for bullish crosses of K-line above D-line
- Confirm with higher timeframe alignment
- Wait for price action confirmation (bullish candle)
• Overbought Conditions (> 70 level)
- Watch for bearish crosses of K-line below D-line
- Verify higher timeframe condition
- Confirm with bearish price action
2. Divergence Trading
• Bullish Divergence
- Price makes lower lows while indicator makes higher lows
- Most effective when occurring in oversold territory
- Use with support levels for entry timing
• Bearish Divergence
- Price makes higher highs while indicator shows lower highs
- Most reliable in overbought conditions
- Combine with resistance levels
3. Wave Effect Analysis
• Strong Waves
- Multiple wave lines moving in same direction indicate momentum
- Wider wave spread suggests increased volatility
- Use for trend strength confirmation
• Energy Field
- Higher intensity in trading zones suggests stronger moves
- Use for momentum confirmation
- Watch for energy field convergence with price action
The energy field is like a heat map that shows momentum strength
It gets stronger (more visible) when:
Price is in oversold (<30) or overbought (>70) zones
The indicator lines are moving apart quickly
A strong signal is forming
Think of it as a "strength meter" - the more visible the energy field, the stronger the potential move
4. Risk Management Integration
• Entry Confirmation
- Wait for all signal components to align
- Use higher timeframe for trend direction
- Confirm with price action and SMA positions
• Stop Loss Placement
- Consider placing stops beyond recent swing points
- Use ATR for dynamic stop calculation
- Account for market volatility
5. Position Management
• Partial Profit Taking
- Consider scaling out at overbought/oversold levels
- Use wave effect intensity for exit timing
- Monitor energy field for momentum shifts
• Trade Duration
- Short-term: Use primary signals in trading zones
- Swing trades: Focus on divergence signals
- Position trades: Utilize higher timeframe signals
⚠️ Important Usage Notes:
• Avoid:
- Trading against strong trends
- Relying solely on single signals
- Ignoring higher timeframe context
- Over-leveraging based on signals
Remember: This tool is designed to assist in analysis but should never be used as the sole decision-maker for trades. Always maintain proper risk management and combine with other forms of analysis.
QT RSI [ W.ARITAS ]The QT RSI is an innovative technical analysis indicator designed to enhance precision in market trend identification and decision-making. Developed using advanced concepts in quantum mechanics, machine learning (LSTM), and signal processing, this indicator provides actionable insights for traders across multiple asset classes, including stocks, crypto, and forex.
Key Features:
Dynamic Color Gradient: Visualizes market conditions for intuitive interpretation:
Green: Strong buy signal indicating bullish momentum.
Blue: Neutral or observation zone, suggesting caution or lack of a clear trend.
Red: Strong sell signal indicating bearish momentum.
Quantum-Enhanced RSI: Integrates adaptive energy levels, dynamic smoothing, and quantum oscillators for precise trend detection.
Hybrid Machine Learning Model: Combines LSTM neural networks and wavelet transforms for accurate prediction and signal refinement.
Customizable Settings: Includes advanced parameters for dynamic thresholds, sensitivity adjustment, and noise reduction using Kalman and Jurik filters.
How to Use:
Interpret the Color Gradient:
Green Zone: Indicates bullish conditions and potential buy opportunities. Look for upward momentum in the RSI plot.
Blue Zone: Represents a neutral or consolidation phase. Monitor the market for trend confirmation.
Red Zone: Indicates bearish conditions and potential sell opportunities. Look for downward momentum in the RSI plot.
Follow Overbought/Oversold Boundaries:
Use the upper and lower RSI boundaries to identify overbought and oversold conditions.
Leverage Advanced Filtering:
The smoothed signals and quantum oscillator provide a robust framework for filtering false signals, making it suitable for volatile markets.
Application: Ideal for traders and analysts seeking high-precision tools for:
Identifying entry and exit points.
Detecting market reversals and momentum shifts.
Enhancing algorithmic trading strategies with cutting-edge analytics.
Gartley Harmonic Pattern [TradingFinder] Harmonic Chart patterns🔵 Introduction
Research by H.M. Gartley and Scott Carney emphasizes the importance of harmonic patterns in technical analysis for predicting market movements. Gartley's work, particularly the Gartley 222 pattern, is detailed in his book "Profits in the Stock Market" and relies on the specific placement of points X, A, B, C, and D.
🟣 Defining the Gartley Pattern
The Gartley pattern is a powerful technical analysis tool often seen at the end of a trend, signaling a potential reversal. Ideally, it forms during the first and second waves of Elliott Wave theory, with wave XA representing wave 1 and the entire ABCD correction representing wave 2.
While patterns outside this structure are also valid, the key points of the Gartley pattern align closely with Fibonacci retracement levels. Specifically, point B corrects wave XA to the 61.8% level, point C lies between 38% and 79% of wave AB, and point D extends between 113% and 162% of wave BC.
The bullish Gartley pattern, shown below, forms at the end of a downtrend and signals a potential buying opportunity.
Bullish :
Bearish :
🔵 How to Use
🟣 Bullish Gartley Pattern
To spot a bullish Gartley pattern, follow these rules: the move from point X to point A (the first leg) must be upward. The subsequent move from point A to point B is downward, followed by an upward move from point B to point C.
Finally, the move from point C to point D is downward. On a chart, this pattern resembles the letter M. After the final leg of this pattern, prices are expected to rise from point D.
🟣 Bearish Gartley Pattern
A bearish Gartley pattern forms similarly to the bullish one but in reverse. The initial move from point X to point A should be downward. The next move from point A to point B is upward, followed by a downward move from point B to point C.
The final leg moves upward from point C to point D. This pattern appears as a W on charts, indicating that prices are likely to fall from point D after the final move.
By understanding and identifying Gartley patterns, traders can enhance their technical analysis and improve their decision-making in financial markets. These patterns, when correctly identified, offer significant insights into potential market reversals and continuation patterns.
🔵 Setting
🟣 Logical Setting
ZigZag Pivot Period : You can adjust the period so that the harmonic patterns are adjusted according to the pivot period you want. This factor is the most important parameter in pattern recognition.
Show Valid Format : If this parameter is on "On" mode, only patterns will be displayed that they have exact format and no noise can be seen in them. If "Off" is, the patterns displayed that maybe are noisy and do not exactly correspond to the original pattern
Show Formation Last Pivot Confirm : if Turned on, you can see this ability of patterns when their last pivot is formed. If this feature is off, it will see the patterns as soon as they are formed. The advantage of this option being clear is less formation of fielded patterns, and it is accompanied by the latest pattern seeing and a sharp reduction in reward to risk.
Period of Formation Last Pivot : Using this parameter you can determine that the last pivot is based on Pivot period.
🟣 Genaral Setting
Show : Enter "On" to display the template and "Off" to not display the template.
Color : Enter the desired color to draw the pattern in this parameter.
LineWidth : You can enter the number 1 or numbers higher than one to adjust the thickness of the drawing lines. This number must be an integer and increases with increasing thickness.
LabelSize : You can adjust the size of the labels by using the "size.auto", "size.tiny", "size.smal", "size.normal", "size.large" or "size.huge" entries.
🟣 Alert Setting
Alert : On / Off
Message Frequency : This string parameter defines the announcement frequency. Choices include: "All" (activates the alert every time the function is called), "Once Per Bar" (activates the alert only on the first call within the bar), and "Once Per Bar Close" (the alert is activated only by a call at the last script execution of the real-time bar upon closing). The default setting is "Once per Bar".
Show Alert Time by Time Zone : The date, hour, and minute you receive in alert messages can be based on any time zone you choose. For example, if you want New York time, you should enter "UTC-4". This input is set to the time zone "UTC" by default.
TASC 2024.04 The Ultimate Smoother█ OVERVIEW
This script presents an implementation of the digital smoothing filter introduced by John Ehlers in his article "The Ultimate Smoother" from the April 2024 edition of TASC's Traders' Tips .
█ CONCEPTS
The UltimateSmoother preserves low-frequency swings in the input time series while attenuating high-frequency variations and noise. The defining input parameter of the UltimateSmoother is the critical period , which represents the minimum wavelength (highest frequency) in the filter's pass band. In other words, the filter attenuates or removes the amplitudes of oscillations at shorter periods than the critical period.
According to Ehlers, one primary advantage of the UltimateSmoother is that it maintains zero lag in its pass band and minimal lag in its transition band, distinguishing it from other conventional digital filters (e.g., moving averages ). One can apply this smoother to various input data series, including other indicators.
█ CALCULATIONS
Ehlers derived the UltimateSmoother using inspiration from the design principles he learned from his experience with analog filters , as described in the original publication. On a technical level, the UltimateSmoother's unique response involves subtracting a high-pass response from an all-pass response . At very low frequencies (lengthy periods), where the high-pass filter response has virtually no amplitude, the subtraction yields a frequency and phase response practically equivalent to the input data. At other frequencies, the subtraction achieves filtration through cancellation due to the close similarities in response between the high-pass filter and the input data.
Rocket RSI from John EhlersWhat is Rocket RSI
Welles Wilder's original description of the relative strength index (RSI) in his 1978 New Concepts In Technical Trading Systems specified a calculation period of 14 days. This requirement led him on a 40-year quest to find the right length of data for calculating indicators and trading strategy rules. Many technicians touched on RSI and explained its applications. In this study we will obtain a more flexible and easier to interpret formulation (of the indicator). We will also estimate the algorithm to properly handle a statistical approach to technical analysis. Start with RSI Here is the original definition of the RSI indicator:
RSI = 100 - 100 / (1 + RS)
RS = Average gain from downtime over the specified time period / Average loss from downtime over the specified time period My first observation is that the factor of 100 is insignificant. Second, there is no need for averages because we take the ratio of closes (CU) to closes (CD) and if we accumulate the wins and losses independently, the averages emerge. Therefore We will only accumulate CU and CD. He can then write the RSI equation as:
RSI = 1 – 1 / (1 + CU / CD)
If he use a little algebra to put everything on a common denominator on the right side of the equation, the indicator equation becomes:
RSI = CU / (CU + CD)
In this formulation, if CU accumulation is zero, the RSI value is zero, and if CD accumulation is zero, the RSI value is 1. If you reduce the price action to its primitive level as a sine wave, it is easy to see that this RSI only has CU going from valley to peak and only CD going from peak to valley. This RSI follows the shape of the sine wave between these two limits. However, the sine wave oscillates between -1 and +1, not between 0 and +1. If we multiply the above equation by 2 and then subtract 1, we can make the RSI have the same swing limits as the sine wave. the product is as follows:
RSI = 2*CU / (CU + CD) – 1
Again, using a little algebra to put the right-hand side of the equation on a common denominator, the equation develops like this:
MyRSI = (CU – CD) / (CU + CD)
Again, the vertical scale of the RocketRSI indicator is in standard deviations. For example, -2 means it is two standard deviations below the mean. Since exceeding two standard deviations in the Gaussian probability distribution occurs in only 2.4% of the results
Because we are using the momentum of the dominant cycle period, the spike where the indicator falls below -2 provides a surgically precise timing signal to enter a long position. Similarly, exceeding the +2 standard deviation level is a timing signal to exit a long position or return to a short position. Therefore using the RocketRSI indicator is relatively intuitive. The only concern is whether a dominant cycle is present in the data, setting the indicator to half the dominant cycle period, and whether smoothing causes lag.
DETERMINING CYCLICAL TURNING POINTS
When you insert the chart you see an example of what the RocketRSI indicator looks like. Here you see that RocketRSI precisely displays cyclical turning points as statistical events. Cator can be applied. I used RS Length 10 because according to Ehlers, stocks and stock indexes usually have a more or less monthly cycle (about 20 bars). A cursory examination of Figure 2 shows that negative increases in the indicator correspond to excellent buying opportunities, while positive increases correspond to excellent selling opportunities. Exceeding +/- 2 on the indicator scale indicates that a cyclical reversal is a high probability event.
ALMA Smoothed Gaussian Moving AverageThis indicator is an altered version of the Gaussian Moving Average (GMA) (Credit to author: © LeafAlgo ). The GMA applies weights to the prices, giving more importance to the values closer to the current period and gradually diminishing the significance of older prices. The ALMA Smoothed Gaussian Moving Average (ASGMA) applies an ALMA smoothing to its price data to minimize lag and provide a more accurate representation of the underlying trend by dynamically adapting to changing market conditions. The Arnaud Legoux Moving Average (ALMA) is a specialized smoothing technique that adjusts the weights of the moving average based on market volatility. Its calculation uses Wavelet Transform techniques which enables this type of smoothing to capture both high-frequency and low-frequency components of a signal or data. The rationale for this mashup between ALMA and Gaussian filtering is to smooth the moving average line over the smoothed price data and produce stronger trend signals.
ASGMA serves as a trend-following indicator, identifying both bullish and bearish trends. It provides buy and sell signals indicated by "B" and "S" labels plotted alongside the price data. Additionally, the ASGMA's Exponential Moving Average (EMA) line alternates between green and red, indicating bullish and bearish momentum, respectively.
The ASGMA also incorporates two popular momentum indicators, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and the Chande Momentum Oscillator (CMO). The inclusion of these indicators aims to enhance trend identification and reversal signals. For a strong buy signal, all three indicators (RSI, CMO, and ASGMA) must indicate bullish conditions, resulting in a vertical green line. Conversely, a vertical red line is plotted when all indicators indicate bearish conditions, representing a strong sell signal.
The ASGMA, with its unique combination of smoothing techniques and indicator amalgamation, provides traders and investors with powerful analytical tools. It can be applied in trend-following strategies using the regular buy and sell signals generated by labels and the EMA line. Alternatively, the vertical lines offer stronger buy and sell signals. These features aid in identifying potential entry and exit points, thereby enhancing trading decisions and market analysis. However, it is important to remember that the future performance of any trading strategy is fundamentally unknowable, and past results do not guarantee future performance.
Planetary Tunings Moving AveragesThe Pine Script "Planetary Tunings Moving Averages" is a unique tool that plots moving averages (MAs) on a chart, representing the wavelengths of different planets as derived from the book Quadrivium. These wavelengths, also referred to as 'planetary tunings', are related to the orbital resonance of each planet.
Each planetary tuning value is first transformed into a whole number by multiplying it by 1000 and removing the decimal. This whole number is then used as the length parameter for a Simple Moving Average (SMA) function. This function calculates the average of the closing prices over the defined number of periods, thereby creating a moving average line on the chart.
The moving average lines are color-coded according to the planet they represent, allowing for quick and easy interpretation. For example, Mercury's moving average line is blue, Venus's line is orange, and so forth. These colors can be adjusted directly in the Pine Script code if desired.
Additionally, the script computes the mean of all these moving averages and plots it on the chart. This line provides an overall trend line, summarizing the collective behavior of all the planetary tuning moving averages.
The drawings in the chart are fib channels and fib circles that I use to capture liquidity in time.
Please note that this script is written for Pine Script Version 4. It's crucial to ensure your TradingView platform is compatible with this version. For any issues or further clarification, consider referring to TradingView's Pine Script documentation or its community forums.
RHODL_RatioIndicator Overview
This indicator uses a ratio of Realized Value HODL Waves.
In summary, Realized Value HODL waves are different age bands of UTXO’s (coins) weighted by the Realized Value of coins within each band.
The Realized Value is the price of UTXO’s (coins) when they were last moved from one wallet to another.
RHODL Ratio looks at the ratio between RHODL band of 1 week versus the RHODL band of 1-2yrs.
It also calibrates for increased hodl’ing over time and for lost coins by multiplying the ratio by the age of the market in number of days.
When the 1-week value is significantly higher than the 1-2yr it is a signal that the market is becoming overheated.
How to Use this Indicator
When RHODL ratio starts to approach the red band it can signal that the market is overheating (Red bars on a chart). This has historically been a good time for investors to take profits in each cycle.
When RHODL ratio starts to approach the green band it can signal great time to buy (Green bars on a chart)
If you change an upper band location this automatically affects on the normalization of value what you can send with allert and what you see on the lable.
This version have differences to original one
Original idea of:
Philip Swift (@positivecrypto)
Volatility Percentile (H-LINES)A simple script that adjusts the Volatility Percentile Indicator visibly in order to better accommodate entries/exits and certain trading setups/strategies.
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TL;DR - Remember after a full reset, we are looking for initial crosses UP on the UpperSwingline and crosses DOWN on the LowerSwingline for primary and secondary signal derivation.
Vice versa also works great but the prior method mentioned is a little more consistent in my experience, but you should mess around and optimise this for your own setups and strategies anyway.
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ORIGINAL SCRIPT HERE:
^Click image for a redirect to that script.
ALL CREDIT GOES TO: www.tradingview.com
He wrote everything so give credit where it's due, good bit of kit this here script is.
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HOW I USE MY VISUALLY ALTERED VERSION OF THIS SCRIPT
First of all, the alterations I've made seem only to be consistently viable with renko charts though if you can get the sought after results using candles or any other chart type then perfect, but be wary. All my back-testing done only with LinReg, HMA and SWMA - ATR type settings exclusively on renko charts. The changes I've made to the original script essentially just turns it visibly into an oscillator and uses a couple horizontal lines to generate signals, very simple - absolutely nothing has changed in the actual code of calculating this indicator.
What I believe my adjustments have achieved is quite simple. A full reset/oscillation on the indicator tries to map the strongest parts of a move or at least the part of the move where volume and the rate of transactions is at its peak to even facilitate said move. *take this statement with a pinch of salt though I do believe it's interacting with accumulation/distribution patterns, which is expected of volatility*
For ease of communication let's refer to the area between the the first UpperSwingline cross to the subsequent LowerSwingline cross, as the primary move. Then afterwards when it crosses the UpperSwingline again to make the full reset, the area in between those two points referred to as the secondary move.
Though more interestingly/practically the indicator ends up giving you two signals. In order for this to work we have to first decide that a spike up in volatility which crosses the UpperSwingline implies a significant level of interest at that price level. Usually that means a reversal is brewing, if price has already moved, trended and is approaching a certain area of value; which causes a spike of new positions to be taken, then you know that this is a level where contrarians are looking to enter. Now here's the tricky part, when volatility crosses the LowerSwingline price action becomes a little more open for interpretation, the way I personally like to look at this secondary signal is the potential for an exhaustion period to prolong itself a little longer. I know that's not the perfect analysis for what's going on, a more in-depth look into what's going on would best be described using Elliott Wave Theory, if a cross on the UpperSwingline near a significant area of value gives us a reversal trade lets just assume for the sake of argument that a new Elliott Wave can begin forming here. Making the move from that initial UpperSwngline cross to the cross on the LowerSwingline, the area that encompasses those two points: the impulse wave. After this point my analogy kind of falls apart and sadly my knowledge just isn't what it needs to be in order for me to properly analyse what's going on here but I must digress. Price after crossing the LowerSwingline up until the point where it makes a full reset by crossing the UpperSwingline again, within this area price seems to do either one of two things:
Situation 1 - Most likely occurs after a major trend reversal from major support/resistance or area of value (price has trended to new territory, maybe spent time a little time consolidating but hasn't broken the key level, momentum shifts, price action breaks current structure and you get the signal that primary move is a reversal) = Exhaustion Period, price will continue in direction of primary move during the secondary move. This here is for our trend-followers, you wanna take a continuation trade? Just wait for the pullback/rally to hit a FiB retracement level and enter - or any other means to find a decent support/resistance to enter.
Situation 2 - Most likely occurs when market enters a range or consolidation (price was previously seen as being at either a discount or premium so Situation 1 could have already played out and now you're looking at a full reset after that, imagine this spot to be the centre line of a linear regression channel or bang in the middle of your range, could even occur if price breaks a key moving average and decides it ought to consolidate around it for a while. Basically at any point where a somewhat prolonged consolidation is expected and not a quick reversal) = Corrective Wave, price will move against the direction of primary move during the secondary move. Now you might be expecting me to say this ones for you reversal traders but not really, if this is occurring then there probably isn't a definitive direction the market has chosen so you can use this opportunity to take range trades in the direction or against the direction of whatever the current trend or latest trend was depending on whatever slight bias you may have. <--- Situation 2 is very useful for finding cleaner entries if you do have a trend bias, say price underwent Situation 1, is now at key moving average but your bias is that it will break and continue up, so you wait and allow the secondary move of Situation 2 to take your entry to a much better R:R before entering a position.
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Hurst Diamond Notation PivotsThis is a fairly simple indicator for diamond notation of past hi/lo pivot points, a common method in Hurst analysis. The diamonds mark the troughs/peaks of each cycle. They are offset by their lookback and thus will not 'paint' until after they happen so anticipate accordingly. Practically, traders can use the average length of past pivot periods to forecast future pivot periods in time🔮. For example, if the average/dominant number of bars in an 80-bar pivot point period/cycle is 76, then a trader might forecast that the next pivot could occur 76-ish bars after the last confirmed pivot. The numbers/labels on the y-axis display the cycle length used for pivot detection. This indicator doesn't repaint, but it has a lot of lag; Please use it for forecasting instead of entry signals. This indicator scans for new pivots in the form of a rainbow line and circle; once the hi/lo has happened and the lookback has passed then the pivot will be plotted. The rainbow color per wavelength theme seems to be authentic to Hurst (or modern Hurst software) and has been included as a default.
Overlay - HARSI + Divergences // All credit to © //@author=JayRogers & VuManChu Cipher B for their original Scripts (Open Source)
/ ====== ABOUT THIS INDICATOR
// I've combined some part of the code of the following indicators to get some alerts based on the Idea and Use section below :
// - RSI based Heikin Ashi candle oscillator
// - Divergence based on the VuManChu Cipher B
// -- This is the OVERLAY Version
//
// ====== ARTICLES and FURTHER READING
//
// - www.investopedia.com
//
// "Heikin-Ashi is a candlestick pattern technique that aims to reduce
// some of the market noise, creating a chart that highlights trend
// direction better than typical candlestick charts"
//
// ====== IDEA AND USE
// - The use of the HA RSI indicator when in the OverSold and OverBought
// area combined to a Divergence & a OB/OS buy/sell
// on the Cipher B by VuManChu.
// Can be useful as a confluence at S/R levels.
// *** Tip = 1 minute timeframe seems to work the best on FOREX
//
// *** Alerts :
// - The Divergence alert needs 2 bar to calculate,
// so alerts and dots as well, it will be placed on the right spot on
// the chart as per the offset added.
// - Use "Once Per Bar" for the alert, not per bar close, or you would
// have 1 extra bar delay
//
// ** Contributions : Remodel some part of the original script in order to get :
// --> Total conditions for an alert and a dot to display, resumed :
// - Buy/Sell in OB/OS
// - Divergence Buy/Sell
// - RSI Overlay is in OB/OS on current bar (or was the bar before)
// when both Buy/Sell dots from VMC appears.
//
// ====== DISCLAIMER
// For Tradingview & Pinescript moderators =
// This follow a strategy where RSI Overlay from @JayRogers script shall be
// in OB/OS zone, while combining it with the VuManChu Cipher B Divergences
// Buy&Sell + Buy/sell alerts In OB/OS areas.
// Any trade decisions you make are entirely your own responsibility.
//
// Thanks to dynausmaux for the code
// Thanks to falconCoin for inspired me to start this.
// Thanks to LazyBear for WaveTrend Oscillator
// Thanks to RicardoSantos for
HARSI + Divergences// All credit to © //@author=JayRogers & VuManChu Cipher B for their original Scripts (Open Source)
/ ====== ABOUT THIS INDICATOR
// I've combined some part of the code of the following indicators to get some alerts based on the Idea and Use section below :
// - RSI based Heikin Ashi candle oscillator
// - Divergence based on the VuManChu Cipher B
//
// ====== ARTICLES and FURTHER READING
//
// - www.investopedia.com
//
// "Heikin-Ashi is a candlestick pattern technique that aims to reduce
// some of the market noise, creating a chart that highlights trend
// direction better than typical candlestick charts"
//
// ====== IDEA AND USE
// - The use of the HA RSI indicator when in the OverSold and OverBought
// area combined to a Divergence & a OB/OS buy/sell
// on the Cipher B by VuManChu.
// Can be useful as a confluence at S/R levels.
// *** Tip = 1 minute timeframe seems to work the best on FOREX
//
// *** Alerts :
// - The Divergence alert needs 2 bar to calculate,
// so alerts and dots as well, it will be placed on the right spot on
// the chart as per the offset added.
// - Use "Once Per Bar" for the alert, not per bar close, or you would
// have 1 extra bar delay
//
// ** Contributions : Remodel some part of the original script in order to get :
// --> Total conditions for an alert and a dot to display, resumed :
// - Buy/Sell in OB/OS
// - Divergence Buy/Sell
// - RSI Overlay is in OB/OS on current bar (or was the bar before)
// when both Buy/Sell dots from VMC appears.
//
// ====== DISCLAIMER
// For Tradingview & Pinescript moderators =
// This follow a strategy where RSI Overlay from @JayRogers script shall be
// in OB/OS zone, while combining it with the VuManChu Cipher B Divergences
// Buy&Sell + Buy/sell alerts In OB/OS areas.
// Any trade decisions you make are entirely your own responsibility.
//
// Thanks to dynausmaux for the code
// Thanks to falconCoin for inspired me to start this.
// Thanks to LazyBear for WaveTrend Oscillator
// Thanks to RicardoSantos for
TASC 2022.11 Phasor Analysis█ OVERVIEW
TASC's November 2022 edition Traders' Tips includes an article by John Ehlers titled "Recurring Phase Of Cycle Analysis". This is the code that implements the phasor analysis indicator presented in this publication.
█ CONCEPTS
The article explores the use of phasor analysis to identify market trends.
An ordinary rotating phasor diagram is a two-dimensional vector, anchored to the origin, whose rotation rate corresponds to the cycle period in the price data stream. Similarly, Ehlers' phasor is a representation of angular phase rotation along the course of time. Its angle reflects the current phase of the cycle. Angles -180, -90, +90 and +180 degrees correspond to the beginning, valley, peak and end of the cycle, respectively.
If the observed cycle is very long, the market can be considered trending . In his article, John Ehlers defined trending behavior to occur when the derived instantaneous cycle period value is greater that 60 bars. The author also introduced guidelines for long and short entries in a trending state. Depending on the tuning of the indicator period input, a long entry position may occur when the phasor angle is around the approximate vicinity of −90 degrees, while a short entry position may occur when the phasor angle will be around the approximate vicinity of +90 degrees. Applying these definitive guidelines, the author proposed a state variable that is indicated by +1 for a trending long position, 0 for cycling, and −1 for a trending short position (or out).
The phasor angle, the cycle period, and the state variable are made available with three selectable display modes provided for this TradingView indicator.
█ CALCULATIONS
The calculations are carried out as follows.
First, the price data stream is correlated with cosine and sine of a fixed cycle period. This produces two new data streams that correspond to the projections of the frequency domain phasor diagram to the horizontal (so-called real ) and vertical (so-called imaginary ) axis respectively. The wavelength of the cycle period input should be set for the midrange vicinities of the phasor to coincide with the peaks and valleys of the charted price data.
Secondly, the phase angle of the phasor is easily computed as the arctangent of the ratio of the imaginary component to the real component. The difference between the current phasor values and its last is then employed to calculate a derived instantaneous period and market state. This computation is then repeated successively for each individual bar over the entire duration of the data set.
Directional Index Macro IndicatorWhat is This For?
The default settings for this indicator are for BINANCE:BTCUSDT and intended to be used on the 3D timeframe to identify market trends. This indicator does a great job identifying whether the market is bullish, bearish, or consolidating. This can also work well on lower time frames to help identify when a trend is strong or when it's reversing.
Directional Index Rate of Change
Core to this indicator is the rate at which DI+ and DI- are moving away or towards each other. This is called The Rate of Change (ROC). "The ROC length dictates how many bars back you want to compare to the current bar to see how much it has changed. It is calculated like this:
(source - source /source ) * 100"
The rate of change is smoothed using an EMA. A shorter EMA length will cause the ROC to flip back and forth between positive and negative while a larger EMA length will cause the ROC to change less often. Since the rate of change is used to indicate periods of 'consolidation', you want to find a setting that doesn't flip back and forth too often. Between the DI+ and DI- is a blue centerline. Offset from this centerline is a channel that is used to filter out false crosses of the DI+ and DI-. Sometimes, the DI+ and DI- lines will come together in this channel and cross momentarily before resuming the direction prior to the cross. When this happens, you don't want to flip your bias too soon. The wider the channel, the later the indicator will signal a DI reversal. A narrower channel will call it sooner but risks being more choppy and indicating a false cross.
Indicator Status Line
This indicator has 4 values in the status line (in order):
DI+
DI-
Distance between DI+ and DI-
DI Rate of Change ( how quickly are DI+ and DI- moving away or towards center )
Indicator Plots
This indicator plots DI+ (green), DI- (red), and a center channel between DI- and DI+. Across the top of the indicator, red and green triangles indicate the market trend while the background changes to show whether the price is in an impulse wave or consolidating. This makes up 4 possible scenarios:
Bullish impulse wave ( green triangle up + green background )
Bullish consolidation ( green triangle up + yellow background )
Bearish impulse wave ( red triangle down + red background )
Bearish consolidation ( red triangle down + yellow background )
Summary
Combined with support and resistance levels, volume, and your other favorite indicators, this can be a useful tool for validating that your entries are not going against the trend.
Disclaimer
This is not financial advice. Do not take trades only based on the DI+ and DI- crossing. Always use multiple indicators to validate your entries and never take a trade when you aren’t emotionally grounded. Have a plan. Stick to the plan.
The screenshot for this strategy is of a manual historical review of BTC on the 3 day chart. The indicator was built to try and mimic the chart above. You’ll see that it nails it sometimes, is a little late sometimes, and chops around between consolidation and impulse waves when it should stay in consolidation. Share your settings if you are able to improve the choppiness without sacrificing catching the reversals early.
Zone Strength [wbburgin]The Zone Strength indicator is a multifaceted indicator combining volatility-based, momentum-based, and support-based metrics to indicate where a trend reversal is likely.
I recommend using it with the RSI at normal settings to confirm entrances and exits.
The indicator first uses a candle’s wick in relation to its body, depending on whether it closes green or red, to determine ranges of volatility.
The maxima of these volatility statistics are registered across a specific period (the “amplitude”) to determine regions of current support.
The “wavelength” of this statistic is taken to smooth out the Zone Strength’s final statistic.
Finally, the ratio of the difference between the support and the resistance levels is taken in relation to the candle to determine how close the candle is to the “Buy Zone” (<-0.5) or the “Sell Zone” (>0.5).
wbburgin
FIBIShows Fibonacci waves for a long range and Fibonacci lines for a short range.
For me it helps to identify key levels or confluence on the macro and micro range.
In the example above you can clearly see that the macro waves are in a down-trend while the micro lines are in a up-trend..
Also the price has been rejected at the 78.6 fib mirco line but found support on the 78.6 macro wave.
these situations are hard to find with the default retracement tools
Bitcoin Risk Long Term indicatorOBJECTIVE:
The purpose of this indicator is to synthesize via an average several indicators from a wide choice with in order to simplify the reading of the bitcoin price and that on a long term vision.
Useful for those who want to see things simply, typically to make a smart DCA based on risk.
I originally used this script as a sandbox to understand and test the usefulness of several indicators, and to develop my PineScript skills, but finally the Risk Indicator output seems relevant so I decided to share it.
USAGE:
The selected indicators are the ones that I think give the best market bottoms, but the idea here is that anyone can try and use any set of indicators based on those preferences (post in comments if you find a relevant config)
Most of the indicator inputs are configurable. And some are not taken into account in the calculation of the Risk indicator because I consider them not relevant, this script is also a test more than a final version.
NOTES :
If you have any idea of adding an indicator, modification, criticism, bug found: share them, it is appreciated!
In the future I will create another more versatile Risk indicator that will not be focused on bitcoin in weekly. (this indicator is still usable on other assets and timeframe)
THANKS:
to Benjamin Cowen for inspiring me with his Bitcoin Risk metric
to Lazybear for his Wavetrend Indicator and all the scripts he shares
to Mabonyi for his Bitcoin Logarithmic Growth Curves & Zones script
to VuManChu for his VMC Cypher B Divergence
to the Trading view team for developing TV and PineScript
And to all the community for all the published codes that allowed me to progress and create this script
---- FR ----
OBJECTIF :
L'objectif de cet indicateur est de synthétiser via une moyenne plusieurs indicateurs parmi un large choix avec afin de simplifier la lecture du cours de bitcoin et cela sur une vision longue terme.
Utile pour ceux qui veulent voir les choses simplement, typiquement faire un DCA intelligent en fonction du risque.
À la base j'ai utilisé ce script comme un bac à sable pour comprendre puis tester l'utilité de plusieurs indicateurs, et développer mes compétences PineScript, mais finalement l'output Risk Indicateur me semble pertinent donc autant le partager.
UTILISATION :
Les indicateurs sélectionnés sont ceux qui permettent selon moi d'avoir les meilleurs point bas de marché, mais l'idée ici est que chacun puisse essayer et utiliser n'importe quel ensemble d'indicateur en fonction de ces préférences (poster en commentaire si vous trouvez une configuration pertinente)
La plupart des inputs indicateurs sont paramétrables. Et certains ne sont pas pris en compte dans le calcul du Risk indicateur car je les estime non pertinent, ce script est aussi un essai plus qu'une version finale.
NOTES :
Si vous avez la moindre idée d'ajout d'indicateur, modification, critique, bug trouvé : partagez-les, c'est apprécié !
à l'avenir je créerais un autre Risk indicator plus polyvalent qui ne sera pas focalisé sur bitcoin en weekly. (cet indicateur est tout de même utilisable sur d'autre actif et timeframe)
REMERCIEMENT :
à Benjamin Cowen pour m'avoir inspiré avec son Bitcoin Risk metric
à Lazybear pour son Wavetrend Indicator et globalement tout les scripts qu'il partage
à Mabonyi pour son script Bitcoin Logarithmic Growth Curves & Zones
à VuManChu pour son VMC Cypher B Divergence
à l'équipe Trading view pour avoir développé TV et PineScript
Et à toute la communauté pour tous les codes publiés qui m'ont permis de progresser et de créer ce script
Orion Algo Strategy v2.0Hi everyone.
I decided to make the latest Orion Algo open to people. I don't have enough time to work on it lately, so I figured it would be best that everyone can have it to work on it. I took out some stuff from the original but it should give an idea on how things work. I made two strategies with this so far so you can use that to come up with your own. I recommend the DCA strategy because it gives you the most bang for Orion Algo's buck. It's pretty good at finding long entries.
Overall I hope you guys like this one. Also, Banano is the best crypto currency :)
-INFO-
Orion Algo is a trading algorithm designed to help traders find the highs and lows of the market before, during, and after they happen. We wanted to give an indicator to people that was simple to use. In fact we created the algorithm in such a way that it currently only needs a single input from the user. Since no indicator can predict the market perfectly, Orion should be used as just another tool (although quite a sharp one) for you to trade with. Fundamental knowledge of price action and TA should be used with Orion Algo.
Being an oscillator, Orion currently has a bias towards market volatility . So you will want to be trading markets over 30% volatility . We have plans to develop future versions that take this into account and adjust automatically for dead conditions. Also, while there are some similarities across all oscillators, what sets ours apart is the prediction curve. The prediction curve looks at the current signal values and gives it a relative score to approximate tops and bottoms 1-2 bars ahead of the signal curve. We also designed a velocity curve that attempts to predict the signal curve 2+ bars ahead. You can find the relative change in velocity in the Info panel. The bottom momentum wave is based on the signal curve and helps find overall market direction of higher time-frames while in a lower one.
Settings and How to Use them:
User Agreement – Orion Algo is a tool for you to use while trading. We aren’t responsible for losses OR the gains you make with it. By clicking the checkbox on the left you are agreeing to the terms.
Super Smooth – Smooths the main signal line based on the value inside the box. Lower values shift the pivot points to the left but also make things more noisy. Higher values move things to the right making it lag a bit more while creating a smoother signal. 8 is a good value to start with.
Theme – Changes the color scheme of Orion.
Dashboard – Turns on a dashboard with useful stats, such as Delta v, Volatility , Rsi , etc. Changing the value box will move the dashboard left and right.
Prediction – A secondary prediction model that attempts to predict a reversal before it happens (0-2bars). This can be noisy some times so make your best judgement. Curve will toggle a curve view of the prediction. Pivots will toggle bull/bear dots.
∆v – Delta v (change in velocity). This shows momentum of the signal. Crossing 0 signals a reversal. If you see the delta v changing direction, it may signify a reversal in the several bars depending on the overall momentum of the market.
Momentum Wave – Uses the signal as a macro trend indicator. Changes in direction of the wave can signify macro changes in the market. Average will toggle an averaging algorithm of the momentum waves and makes it easy to understand.
-STRATEGIES-
Simple - Just buy and sell on the dots
DCA - Uses the settings in the script for entries. If a buy dot appears then it will buy, if the price goes below the percentage it will wait for another dot before entering. This drastically improves DCA potential.
[blackcat] L1 Swing Reversal IndicatorLevel: 1
Background
Many asked me about swing reversal indicators. There are many but less of them can guarantee high win rate. Because market is complex, the reversals can be nested together, which means sub level reversals will be contained in higher level waves. This can be well explained by Elloit wave theory.
Function
Here it is a simple moving average based swing reversal indicator as an example for many others to improve it. Although it simple, it could be very powerful to dedicated trading pairs in specific time frame. One can adjust N1~N4 as SMA peiords from short to long to customized this indicator or even by trying different moving average types to enhance its accuracy.
Key Signal
N1~N4 --> SMA look back periods
OB --> Overbought Threshold
OS --> Oversold Threshold
Pros and Cons
Simpe but powerful. More feedbacks are appreciated.
Remarks
Easy to be customized or integrated to your trading system.
Readme
In real life, I am a prolific inventor. I have successfully applied for more than 60 international and regional patents in the past 12 years. But in the past two years or so, I have tried to transfer my creativity to the development of trading strategies. Tradingview is the ideal platform for me. I am selecting and contributing some of the hundreds of scripts to publish in Tradingview community. Welcome everyone to interact with me to discuss these interesting pine scripts.
The scripts posted are categorized into 5 levels according to my efforts or manhours put into these works.
Level 1 : interesting script snippets or distinctive improvement from classic indicators or strategy. Level 1 scripts can usually appear in more complex indicators as a function module or element.
Level 2 : composite indicator/strategy. By selecting or combining several independent or dependent functions or sub indicators in proper way, the composite script exhibits a resonance phenomenon which can filter out noise or fake trading signal to enhance trading confidence level.
Level 3 : comprehensive indicator/strategy. They are simple trading systems based on my strategies. They are commonly containing several or all of entry signal, close signal, stop loss, take profit, re-entry, risk management, and position sizing techniques. Even some interesting fundamental and mass psychological aspects are incorporated.
Level 4 : script snippets or functions that do not disclose source code. Interesting element that can reveal market laws and work as raw material for indicators and strategies. If you find Level 1~2 scripts are helpful, Level 4 is a private version that took me far more efforts to develop.
Level 5 : indicator/strategy that do not disclose source code. private version of Level 3 script with my accumulated script processing skills or a large number of custom functions. I had a private function library built in past two years. Level 5 scripts use many of them to achieve private trading strategy.






















