The Zone Seeker Supply and Demand - by Karoshi TradingThe Zone Seeker Supply and Demand - by Karoshi Trading
The Zone Seeker is based on the Supply & Demand Methodology.
Activating this indicator will mark all the zones of your chart.
Depending on your setting preferences, some zones will be showed or not.
The indicator code works as follow:
We will use the number of consecutive candles, body size compared to the wick and body length to calculate the zones.
Here is an example of the indicator.
1# Consecutive Candles
The indicator will search for minimum 2 consecutive candles of the same color. That means, that both candles has to close above the opening price of each candle (Bullish) or close below there opening prices (Bearish).
2# Body Size
After the first condition is met, the Code will now look into each candles of step #1.
Each of the candles should be equal or above 50% body, to meet the second requirement.
It will calculate the body size, compared to the full candle size to determine the percentage of the body itself.
3# Body Length
If the first two steps are positive, the code will jump into the 3rd phase of the indicator, the „Body Length“. With 2 options (ATR & MA) the code will calculate within a 14 candles period the average range of the candles. With that information, the code will now compare the average range to our candles from step #1.
The candles from step #1 has to be equal or bigger than 1.5 times the range/size of the average candle to met our last requirement.
4# Demand & Supply Zones
After all 3 requirements are met, the code will search for the last candle of the opposite color, to mark a zone. As example, if we have a demand zone with all conditions met, the indicator will search for the latest candle where the price closed below the opening price.
After finding such a candle, the indicator will mark the whole range of this candle (body + wick) and create a colored rectangle with a description in it. As example „Demand CTF“
CTF = Current Time Frame
5# Testing the Zones
As a test, we only count if the price went inside or touched the zone and left it and closed outside the zone. (You can choose by yourself if touched is on or off in the settings).
The code will not count each candle as a test, but each phase where the price went into the zone and closed outside the zone. As an example, if price went into a demand zone and closes 2 candles within the zone and the 3rd candle closes above the demand zone, that will count as one test.
Each test, will change the color of the zone, to keep in track of the freshness of the zones. After the 3rd test of a zone, the zone will be automatically deleted.
6# Flipping Zones
As a flipping zone is meant, that if the demand zone get broken to the downside by 2 or less candles it will automatically turn into a fresh supply zone. Important to know is, it will only occur if the candles closes below the demand zone. Same occurs for supply zones.
7# Multiple TimeFrames
It is possible, to choose one more time frame on top of the current time frame your are actually trading.
The code will separate both time frames, so you can choose how many zones you want to see in each time frame.
The supplementary time frame zones will be in 3 different grey colors, to destinguish the zones.
Also, overlapping zones will have a little info box, to avoid overlapping text.
On top of that, you can also show "all" time frames at once.
Current Time Frame = Colorized Zones
Supplementary Time Frames = Grey Zones
Oferta e Demanda
MATHR3E LINES█ OVERVIEW
MATHR3E LINES automatically draws Demand lines and Supply lines with their associated targets
█ CONCEPTS
Disclaimer:
MATHR3E LINES indicator is intended for advanced traders and may fit your profile, whether you are a day trader or a long-term investor.
It was originally developed by a renowned market analyst and documented in numerous books. Among them is the author Jason Perl.
It is recommended to have read the trading techniques mentioned in the books covering this indicator beforehand.
How to use:
The indicator draws Demand lines and Supply lines with their associated targets.
These lines connect pivot points which are:
- Lows surrounded on either side by higher lows
- Highs surrounded on either side by lower highs.
The key to drawing trend lines objectively is to select the right pivot points. Their significance is determined by the number of surrounding highs and lows.
By default, these are set to 1 since they are more sensitive to price action than higher level pivot points, and therefore provide an earlier breakout signal.
Another approach suggests that the most significant points to connect are those whose levels coincide with trend reversals.
Once you have chosen a demand line, there are 3 conditions that must be met for the trend line to be used.
As far as one or more of the conditions is met, a break of the intrabar trendline is expected, and a closing violation above the breakout level is likely.
Qualifiers
• Qualifier #1: Reverse Break
• Qualifier #2: Gap Break
• Qualifier #3: Pressure Break
In turn, a confirmed breakout entry may be invalidated the following bar, if any of the disqualifying conditions occur:
Disqualifiers
• Open Failure
• Close Failure
• H/L Failure
█ FEATURES & BENEFITS
Versatile:
This indicator can be applied to any market or time frame.
The methodology is equally relevant whether you are day trading or position trading.
Breakout confirmation:
• If a breakout is confirmed, its associated lines will turn solid.
• Otherwise, for invalidated breakouts or broken trendlines , they will remain dashed
Alerts
Get notified on:
•Demand/Supply Line Confirmed Breaks
•Demand/Supply Invalidated Breaks
•Demand/Supply Target Reached
Support and Resistancewhat is "Support and Resistance"?
it is a support and resistance indicator.
what it does?
it draw support and resistance zones on the chart.
how it does it?
It determines the zones where the price leaves with a big candle after going horizontal for a while as support or resistance zones according to the price movement direction. while doing this, it compares the size of the candles and the elapsed time.
how to use it?
Red zones represent resistance and green zones represent support. You can buy in the support zone or sell in the resistance zone. my advice is to make your own interpretation by taking into account the price movement with different indicators. they are considered useful if there is a closure beyond the zones. otherwise, they continue to be shifted to the right.
notice: As new zones are created, old ones may disappear. so it might be wise to draw boxes using drawing tools where the old zones are.
Support and resistance are very important concepts for technical analysis. so I am thinking of updating and improving this indicator many times in the long run. but I couldn't wait long to post it.
examples:
Professional Zones - Institutional Demand and Supply Imbalances
Intro to Supply and Demand Zone Technical Analysis
Supply and demand is an increasingly common strategy among day and swing traders in equity, forex, and the futures markets. The goal of analyzing supply and demand zones is to pre-determine where price action may pivot before that pivot happens, thus giving us an edge over the market. There are many unique charting/trading strategies that fit under the supply and demand umbrella, however we are going to focus primarily on Institutional Zones of Demand and Supply Imbalances, as this is what our TradingView indicator actively displays.
What are Institutional Zones of Demand and Supply Imbalances?
First, let’s break down the phrase above. The first word is ‘institutional’, which is a key aspect in our trading. As a retail trader, you must understand that retail traders (individual traders like you and I) have very little control and very little effect on price action in the major markets. The price action that we see everyday is caused by large institutions and hedge funds buying and selling equities in massive quantities.
This chart displays the price action for ES, which is the S&P500 E-mini futures .
At the time this guide was created, that chart for ES displays the low of this year (2022). You can see major highs and major lows, as well as steep drops and momentous runs.
Price action like this appears random to the naked eye, however it is all controlled by major institutions. These institutions place large buy and sell orders for markets such as the S&P 500 Index which causes these moves.
Our Institutional Demand and Supply Analysis attempts to discover the price zones where institutions have placed their buy/sell orders. Their buy orders create “demand zones”. And their sell orders create “supply zones”. Knowing where these zones exist allows us to anticipate price trend reversals so we can profitably participate in them alongside the major institutions when these key moves take place.
We are looking for areas in the chart where institutions have created major imbalances (more buy orders than sell orders or vice versa) which creates demand and supply zones that impact price action and trend reversals in predictable ways.
What Causes These Supply and Demand Zones?
Understanding that institutions control the price of the markets is crucial for understanding how these zones of supply and demand imbalances are formed, and it can be derived from historical price action.
There are two types of price action, balanced and imbalanced. Balanced price action is flat, consolidatory price action where the overall direction is sideways. Imbalanced price action is an exaggerated move in price either up or down. Now here is the key: institutional supply and demand imbalances are formed when price action goes from balanced to imbalanced. Below is an example of balanced price action .
There are clearly areas of institutional buy and sell orders that are causing price action to oscillate between the areas of demand and supply. The longer price action consolidates and moves sideways, the larger the volume profile will be in this range. In other words, more institutional orders will build up as price remains relatively the same for a longer period of time.
Here is how a demand zone is formed :
Due to bullish CPI news, price action went from balanced to imbalanced by exploding to the upside. This bullish price action filled all of the sell orders and broke past the previous area of supply. Because price moved up so fast, the buy orders did not get a chance to fill, essentially leaving an area with a high concentration of buy orders remaining. Hence, a new demand zone is formed which is shown here .
Our state-of-the-art indicator automatically scans for these historical shifts in price action (balanced to imbalanced) via our supply and demand zone detection formula, and displays them on your chart instantly. Remember the first image sent of blank price action? Here it is below:
The image below shows the exact same chart of ES, however, our advanced Professional Zones - Institutional Demand and Supply Imbalances indicator has been applied to the chart.
Just like that, price action has been transformed from unexplainable chaos to an orderly sequence of demand bounces and supply rejections.
Yes, all of these zones may be charted manually if one were to acquire the knowledge required to chart them by hand, and spend numerous hours going back in time to find all these zones. Additionally, these charts would then have to be constantly monitored and updated, which would require hours of work each day. This powerful indicator automates all of that work to give you more precious time to analyze and trade these zone-driven pivots in the markets.
How To Measure the Strength of Supply and Demand Zones?
The longer the consolidation takes place, the larger the demand/ supply zone will be. This strength is measured by the time frame of the origin of the zone.
Each zone may be formed on a different time frame, the biggest being the 1 Month time frame, and the smallest being the 30 Minute. Each supply and demand zone is automatically labeled based on the time frame from which the zone originated.
The weakest zones are derived from the 30 minute time frame. This means the zone only took two 30 minute candles to form, which is not a lot of time for institutions to place large orders. This means that the bounces and rejections off of these zones will usually be smaller, and usually won’t last more than a few days.
Larger zones such as 1 Day, 1 Week, and 1 Month often cause large swings in the market lasting weeks, months and even years. So pay attention not just to where the demand and supply zones currently appear, but also to the strength of that zone. You can see below that the demand zone that the market bottomed in and reversed out of in 2022 was in fact, a very strong weekly zone.
What is the Significance of Supply and Demand Zone Breaks?
These zones are order-based. This means that a supply zone level doesn’t turn into demand when price action breaks above it, and demand doesn’t turn into supply when price action breaks below it. It is unlike standard trend-based support and resistance levels. If price action breaks below demand by even $0. 01 , all of the buy orders have been filled and the demand must be deleted from the chart (and vice versa for a supply zone ).
While it is possible to play these zone breaks as continuation plays off of current momentous price action, it is unpredictable how far price will go up or down after breaking supply or demand during that leg.
However, in my years of supply and demand experience, I have noticed that if demand breaks, the market will eventually come down to the next viable demand zone . This is because without a pivot caused by an institutional-created demand or supply imbalance, there is often not enough participation to cause a sustainable trend reversal for a long period of time. Below is an example of this:
Above is the 4 Hour chart of TSLA bouncing up off of a demand zone . We call this a bounce in “no man's land”, as there is no major demand bounce to support this reversal to the upside. So in theory, price action should return lower to the next major historical zone of demand before it has a chance of pulling off a solid reversal. Here is what happened:
As you can see above, TSLA did indeed end up heading back down into the next major demand zone before getting a sustainable reversal to the upside. So you may play these supply and demand zone breaks as continuation trades, either long or short, with a price target at the next major zone. Just make sure to use proper risk management and position sizing, as timing the trigger of a price target can be difficult.
How Might I Place a Trade Using the Indicator?
Now that the basics of institutional supply and demand zones have been discussed, there will come a time that this strategy must be actively applied to personal trading with a goal of becoming profitable. Here is a step-by-step process to place a trade using supply and demand paired with an example of a day trade from the 1 minute time frame.
Step 1: Find a highly institutionally traded stock that is currently in supply or demand as shown by our indicator. For example, AAPL:
Step 2: Look for an above-average (exaggerated) volume spike. Because we are in one of the green zones at the bottom of the chart, we know that we are in demand where large institutional buy orders reside. We need to wait for some of these orders to actually fill before we take our trade. This is known as volume confirmation. The color of the volume usually does not matter in this situation.
Step 3: Now that we have a volume spike which is confirmation of large orders being filled, we need more confirmation that the institutional orders are not only a buy, but large enough to actually reverse the current trend.
This is ultimately a judgment call. A few green candles may be good enough to dictate a reversal, or a trend break. It comes down to personal preference and how aggressive you would like to be. Keep in mind, the longer you wait, the more confirmation your trade has, but also, the longer you wait, the greater the risk of missing the new trend. In this example, we will use a trend line to confirm our trend reversal.
Step 4: Enter the trade. Now that you have proper demand confirmation, you may place your trade. Be sure to determine your stop loss, price target, position size, and all other risk management factors along the way.
In this example, AAPL ran all the way up to supply before rejecting; making for a perfect demand to supply call trade. Also, more short trade entries could have been taken based off of the multiple supply rejections AAPL had.
The Bottom Line
There are many ways one may go about trading the stock market. However in my years of trading and teaching, there has never been a strategy that has not only changed my career, but improved the trading careers of my students, more dramatically than Institutional Zones of Demand and Supply Imbalances.
Though charting new zones and deleting broken ones everyday was time consuming and repetitive, the results of trading these zones made it well-worth the hours of charting. However, after months of development and fine-tuning, the painful charting process has been automated by this powerful indicator, completely replacing the tedious charting work for myself and my students.
While numerous other indicators include the name “Supply and Demand Zones”, we believe that no supply and demand indicator remotely this advanced and accurate available on TradingView. I am very blessed to finally bring this revolutionary tool to the market.
Introduction to the Aurora Demand and Supply Indicator for TradingView and its Functionality
This page is dedicated to providing a thorough walk-through of our Professional Zones - Institutional Demand and Supply Imbalances indicator. The settings functionality, customizability, and purpose will be discussed to give you an in-depth understanding of the indicator. Understanding the purpose of the different functions and settings is crucial to utilizing this powerful tool at its full potential.
First Look Upon Indicator Addition
After purchasing the indicator, your chart may initially appear cluttered, zoomed out, and hard to read. But do not worry, it just means the indicator settings must be fine-tuned to optimize your experience. Tt may appear overwhelming. However this page will discuss each major customizable setting and the functionality behind it to streamline your TradingView set up.
Filter Options Settings Category
This is the first customizable feature that appears when accessing the settings of the indicator. What Filter Zone Ranges does is allow you to filter the range at which zones appear both above and below the current asset price. With this setting unchecked, every single demand and supply zone within the 5k candle limit (or 20k limit if you have a premium TradingView account) will appear on your chart. This causes chart clutter which limits the visibility of price action.
If you have this setting activated, you can choose exactly the range of zones visible to you. This range is percent based and is measured both above and below the current market price. For example, if you activate Filter Zone Ranges and set the Filter Percentage at 7%, only zones within the range of 7% above, and 7% below the current asset price will be shown.
Demand/ Supply Zone Options Settings Category
The next two categories contain the majority of the customizability for supply and demand zones. The first option in both the Demand/ Supply Zone Options is Create Demand/Supply Zones. This toggle is very straight forward, you may choose whether or not to display all demand zones, or all supply zones.
The next two options are Demand/ Supply Zone Border and Demand/ Supply Zone Fill. Again, these are straight forward. The border setting allows you to edit both the color and opacity of the zones’ border lines. The fill setting allows you to edit the color and opacity of the interior of the supply/demand boxes.
Following the first pair of visual settings, you will see Demand/ Supply Zone Box Offset. This allows you to toggle how much the indicator offsets each zone from its origin point. In other words, move it to the left or right from the point in time at which the zone was created. The 0 offset is the base setting which is actually a slight offset to the right of the origin point to ensure that the candlesticks remain unobstructed visually.
After the offset options, you will find Demand/ Supply Zone ERC Multiple. This is a key setting which inputs the value our formula utilizes to scan the areas of institutional supply and demand imbalances. Unless you are extremely experienced with supply and demand analysis or you are running backtesting, it is highly recommended this value is left at ‘2’ for both the demand and supply options.
The next two options you will see in your indicator settings are Extend Demand/ Supply Zone and Demand/ Supply Zone Size. This feature allows you to customize exactly how far your zones will extend from the point of origin into the future.
The three options on the drop down menu are Extend, Fixed, and Dynamic. Each of these options extend your zones in a different fashion. It is important to note that the value inputted in the size option is the amount of units the zones will extend to the right for both Fixed and Dynamic options. The larger this input is, the further out the zones will extend into the future, and vice versa.
The final setting in the Demand/ Supply Zone Options category is Broken Zones to Keep and Broken Demand/ Supply Zone Fill. The Broken Zones to Keep input allows you to see recent supply or demand zones that have been broken and deleted from your chart. This may be useful for a trader in a few different ways. The Broken Demand/ Supply Zone Fill setting allows you to customize the number of broken zones displayed as well as their color and opacity. The most prominent example of this option’s utility is for traders that do not observe price action during the entirety of the market open.
If an individual left their charts for a few hours and missed a demand break, it may give the illusion that there was never a demand there and price action has been in “no-man's land” all day. However if that individual inputted ‘1’ in the Broken Zones to Keep setting, they would be able to see that a demand has broken. This may be useful as the trader may have an altered sentiment after knowing that a zone did in fact break.
Note: the value inputted is the amount of previously broken zones that will appear on your chart. For example, if the value ‘3’ is inputted, the three most recently broken zones will appear on your chart.
Time Frame Options Settings Category
Time Frame Options Settings allows you to toggle which supply and demand zones appear on your chart by time frame. For example, if you are analyzing a chart on a larger time frame such as the daily or weekly, the small 30 minute and 45 minute zones will often clutter your chart. By deselecting the weaker and smaller time frame zones, it will clean your chart up, allowing you to only see the zones that assist your analysis.
However the first two options in the category are unique.The first is Show Forming Zones. This option is extremely useful if you are watching price action play out live, when seeing the possibility of a supply or demand zone forming may be of benefit during your day trading. By toggling this setting ON, you will see all possible supply and demand zones forming in real time. However, this could cause clutter if multiple zones are forming at once in which case, toggling it off may be more beneficial.
The second option in the Timeframe Options category is the Show Zones Inside toggle, which controls the table at the top right of your screen (you may get rid of this table by deselecting tables in display settings).
This setting simply is a “yes” or “no” as to whether or not the table located at the top right of your screen will display the number of zones price action is currently sitting in. This setting is useful as zones may sometimes pile up on top of one another, making it hard to know exactly how many zones price action is currently sitting in.
Gap Options Settings Category
Just below the Timeframe Options category, is the Gap Options category. Gaps appear when two daily candles highs and lows do not overlap. These are often created when a catalyst is released into the market overnight causing a large move, resulting in a “gap” up or down the next morning.
A Gap often forms due to a strong move to the upside, and the indicator highlights this gap with a gray box. Gaps are important to many traders as there is often a large lack of liquidity inside the gap area, which often acts as a magnet that attracts future price action to fill it. If toggled on, the indicator displays the gap among the supply and demand zones seamlessly. The rest of the settings for this category are options to customize the color, opacity, size, and offset. These have the same effect as the options in the Demand/ Supply Zone Options category.
Text Options Settings Category
The final category in the indicator input settings is Text Options. This category allows you to toggle zone labeling on or off, and to specify how you would like the zone labels to appear. It’s strongly recommended that zone labeling is left ON because knowing the time frame a supply or demand zone originated from is a massive indicator of its strength. Top right alignment causes labeling such as “3H” to appear at the top right of each zone.
Indicator Data Limitations
There are a few limitations of TradingView which impact the Professional Zones - Institutional Supply and Demand Imbalances indicator. The first is the data TradingView provides to its users. With a basic TradingView account, a user only has access to 5,000 candles of data. So if a user is on the 1 minute time frame, that user can only see 5,000 candles before that current point. This is important because our advanced indicator scans historical price action that has formed supply and demand zones and displays it on your chart. This means that if a user is on a 1 minute time frame chart, they will only be able to see zones formed within the last 5,000 candles. Older supply and demand zones can not be displayed. However if a user has the Premium TradingView subscription, they can access up to 20,000 candles, which greatly increases the potential zones the user may see on the smaller time frames.
To counter this, we strongly recommend checking the larger time frames before starting your trading day, as there could be an old zone lurking behind the scenes. Once you spot it on the 30 minute time frame, for example, you may easily take note of the demand zone and its location.
The Bottom Line
This indicator has been intricately and powerfully designed to not only display institutional supply and demand imbalances more accurately and efficiently than any other TradingView indicator, but it has also been designed to give the user full control. Full control means the user has the ability to customize the appearance and inputs, as well as toggle specific objects visible to the trader.
We have meticulously designed the Professional Zones - Institutional Supply and Demand Imbalances indicator to be extremely valuable as a stand-alone strategy, as well as versatile enough to incorporate multiple other trading strategies on top of supply and demand .
However, in order for this indicator to be utilized by you at its full potential, it is important that you understand all of its features, capabilities and configuration options before you dive into trading.
Equity Bond Currency DashboardDepicts demand-flow between Equities, Bonds and Currencies of 6 countries. Useful in tracking the flow of smart money and checking the dynamics of inter-connected markets.
Principle:
DXY lies at the heart of the diagram with usd-currency pairs of 5 countries connected to it. When demand for a currency increases it strengthens against Dollar. This is depicted by a line from DXY to the currency indicating demand flow from Dollar to the currency (DXY is only an indicative symbol for Dollar, the currency may not be part of the dollar index). Similarly when Dollar strengthens against the currency, demand flow is depicted by a line from the currency to DXY. Currency blocks are connected to Equity and Bond Yields of the respective countries. Equities and Bonds, when bought, takes the demand from the respective currencies and vice versa.
Overall, the demand flows in the direction of arrows. The flow is incomplete without commodities, import/export, interest/inflation rates of countries, however, the diagram most of the times explains why an asset class is performing the way it is.
Left side bar of each block is very similar to OHLC candles except for the following -
Instead of wicks, top and bottom of the bar represents high and low for the selected time-frame
Open and close are normalised for high and low
Bar border is red if close < prev.close, green if close >= prev.close
Other notes:
The diagram requires at least 200 bars in the chart to render. Please select the symbol and time-frame that contain at least 200 bars.
The diagram requires a live market to render the flow. To check flows on historical bars, set the option from settings.
Desired indices could be selected for countries of choice. Default settings point to futures wherever possible to have the markets live simultaneously across the countries.
Gap ZonesSharing a simple gap zone identifier, simply detects gap up/down areas and plots them for visual reference. Calculation uses new candle open compared to previous candle close and draws the zone, a mid point is plotted also as far too often it's significance is proven effective.
Works on any timeframe and market though I recommend utilizing timeframes such as weekly or daily for viewing at lower timeframes such as 5, 15 or 30 minutes.
Often price is observed reaching towards zone high/mid/low before rejection/bouncing. These gap zones can give quantitative basis for trade management.
Future features may include alerts based on price crossing up/down gap low, mid and highs. Feel free to message with any other suggestions.
Support Resistance Channels/Zones Multi Time FrameHello All,
For long time I have been getting a lot of requests for Support/Resistance Multi Time Frame script. Here ' Support Resistance Channels/Zones Multi Time Frame ' is in your service.
This script works if the Higher Time Frame you set is higher than the chart time frame. so the time frame in the options should be higher than the chart time frame.
The script checks total bars and highest/lowest in visible part of the chart and shows all S/R zones that fits according the highest/lowest in visible part. you can see screenshots below if it didn't make sense or if you didn't understand
Let see the options:
Higher Time Frame : the time frame that will be used to get Support/Resistance zones, should be higher than chart time frame
Pivot Period : is the number to find the Pivot Points on Higher time frame, these pivot points are used while calculating the S/R zones
Loopback Period : is the number of total bars on higher time frame which is used while finding pivot points
Maximum Channel Width % : is the percent for maximum width for each channel
Minimum Strength : each zone should contain at least a 1 or more pivot points, you set it here. (Open/High/Low/Close also are considered while calculating the strength)
Maximum Number of S/R : the number of maximum Support/Resistance zones. there can be less S/Rs than this number if it can not find enough S/Rs
Show S/R that fits the Chart : because of we use higher time frame, you should enable this option then the script shows only S/Rs that fits the current chart. if you disable this option, all S/R zones are shown and it may shrink the chart. also you may not see any S/R zone if you don't choose the higher time frame wisely ;)
Show S/R channels in a table : if you enable this option (by default it's enabled) then lower/upper bands of all S/R zones shown in a table ( even if it doesn't fit the chart ). you can change its location. zones are sorted according to their strengths. first one is the strongest.
and the other options is about colors and transparency.
Screenshots before and after zoom-out:
after zoom-out number of visible bars and highest/lowest change and it shows more S/R zones that fits the current chart!
if you see Support Resistance zone like below then you should decrease ' Maximum Channel Width ' or you should set higher time frame better:
You can change colors and transparency:
You can change Table location:
Alerts added :)
P.S. I haven't tested it so much, if you see any issue please drop a comment or send me message
Enjoy!
Mark LevelsMark Levels is marking liquidity pools by drawing lines on their pivots and labelling them so that you can instantly detect them on your realtime chart
It supports:
- marking previous and current day lows and highs
- marking previous and current week lows and highs
- marking previous and current month lows and highs
- marking equal lows and highs
technically it re-builds them on the last bar or as soon as new realtime bar is updated. it looks with 1k bars back to find higher timeframe ranges and find lows and highs there
Adjustments:
- changing the line style of the group
- changing the lines color and the labels on the groups
- currently pools are split on 2 groups Period Liquidity and Equal Pivots Liquidity.
TAS Float PCL + TAS Static PCL [TASMarketProfile]TAS PRICE COMPRESSION LEVELS (PCLs) includes 2 distinct indicators that use volume at price analysis, volume aggregation and multi-timeframe confluence to calculate and display significant levels of commercial interest above and below the market. These levels reveal reliable trading levels which can be leveraged for enhanced trade entries, trailing stops and targets.
THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF TAS PCLs:
TAS Float PCLs - These levels take into account new data flow throughout the trading session and expands or contracts the levels dynamically in accordance with changing market conditions. These are often referred to by traders as “Floaters” or “Dynamic PCLs.”
TAS Static PCLs - These levels are set upon the start of the trading session and remain intact throughout the duration of the session. Many traders These are often referred to by traders as “Statics.”
Both TAS Floaters and TAS Statics have up to 10 horizontal lines available to display. The four center lines are referred to as Points of Control (POC). Three of these lines are colored cyan and one is yellow. The yellow line is more prominent and referred to as the Master Point of Control (MPOC) of the Price Compression Levels on display. The first area of commercial suppor t and resistance are plotted with red lines on both sides of the POC lines and commonly referred to as S1 and R1 levels. The next level of support and resistance areas are designated by blue lines (S2 and R2 levels) and then lastly the farthest from the POC lines are the green lines (S3 and R3 levels). By default, typically the green lines are not displayed but can be activated on an “as needed” basis within the indicator Style settings.
EXAMPLE OF TAS FLOAT PCLs:
ABOUT TAS FLOAT PCLs:
The TAS Dynamic PCLs (Floaters) reveal the price areas that attract commercial interest based on the current market conditions.
How the PCLs are plotted can be adjusted with two inputs controlled by the user.
----------1) MinSignal_123: This setting controls the sensitivity of the calculations. The default is set to 1 and this represents the most sensitive input that makes it easiest for market conditions to trigger new PCL levels. A setting of 2 is considered “medium” sensitivity and lastly a setting of 3 would require the most substantial change in conditions to trigger an adjustment of PCLs on the chart.
----------2) Length: This input setting determines the number of bars of data included in the calculation for new TAS Float PCLs to be adjusted on the chart. The default is set to 8.
MORE ON INPUT SETTINGS:
Using higher values in both inputs will display more significant areas of commercial interest for higher probability support and resistance levels around PCLs. These are referred to as “slow” Floaters.
Using lower value inputs will create Floaters that are more responsive to market conditions. These are referred to as “fast” Floaters.
When fast Floaters are contracted (cover a narrow range of prices) the market is tightly balanced and can easily enter into breakout conditions, if price closes outside of the TAS Float PCLs.
Expanded Floaters that are wider apart provide for greater rotational range trading conditions.
BELOW ARE THE RECOMMENDED INPUT SETTINGS COMBINATIONS THAT WILL DICTATE HOW RESPONSIVE THE PCLs WILL REACT TO CONDITIONS:
FAST (default): 1 - 8
MEDIUM: 2 - 14
SLOW: 3 - 34
The user will typically choose to have either Statics or Float PCLs active on the chart at a time, but not both as you'll have up to 20 levels on your chart (too many). You can, however, put them on different panes. Visit the INPUT settings of the indicator to select which one you want active.
The user can change the coloring, line type and thickness in the STYLE settings.
ABOUT TAS STATIC PCLs:
Many traders opt for TAS Static PCLs because they prefer to know the significant commercial interest price areas before they trade.
Unlike Floaters, TAS Static levels will not change throughout the trading session and are only affected if the user changes the opening and closing time parameters for the trading session displayed. By default, Static levels will recalculate and display new levels upon the reopen of the next session.
Tightly compacted POC lines designate an area of particularly strong commercial interest that provides higher probability, lower risk entries for extended directional moves. These areas are often referred to as “walls.”
If the POC lines are spread out over a wider range, a trader should be on the lookout for a more rotational trading session.
Periodically, one of the POC lines may be plotted outside of a red line (S1 or R1). In this case, the market may be biased in the same direction that the POC line is in relation to the red line.
TAS PRICE COMPRESSION LEVELS can be used as a stand-alone trading guidance system or in conjunction with other popular TASMarketProfile indicators.
Trade Well My Friends!
ZigZag with Retracement LevelsThis is a modification to "ZigZag with Fibonacci Levels" by LonesomeTheBlue.
By default, the script finds the ZigZag, draws Fibonacci lines and labels accordinly. ZigZag period can be set.
The modification to the original script provides the following features:
1) Option for user to customize retracement levels, if they don't want to use Fibonacci levels. This allows for different strategy adoptions.
2) Option to show Fibonacci or custom retracement levels based on the latest pivot (including the current bar)
For example:
Enjoy and happy trading~!!
PT OrderBlockVersion 1.0 of the PT OrderBlock indicator was developed to visually identify supply & demand zones within price. This indicator can be used on all timeframes. My preferred method is swing trading the higher timeframe.
Orderblocks are formed when there is a break in structure once a big buy/sell candle has formed. These "blocks" will eventually get revisited on a retest acting as major support/resistance. An orderblock for a demand zone is populated on the chart when there is a bearish candle before a swift move to the top side (opposite direction). The same goes for the orderblock that is formed for a supply zone, it is the last bullish candle before a swift move to the downside. Once you see such behavior, the indicator will populate the orderblock for you. When an orderblock gets mitigated (tapped into) the indicator will change colors of the block to allow you to distinguish between a fresh and already taped supply/demand zone. It has been proven effective to enter entries based on retests of the orderblocks which take place AFTER a break in market structure.
*PT OB Features:
-OBs that have been partially filled will remove a portion of the background zone to indicate how much of the orderblock is left to fill in the full zone (Toggle Highlight remaining OB).
-OB trigger can be switched between candle open & wick. I prefer wick because it increases the probability of catching a low/high.
Video with strategy will be uploaded shortly! It is included as part of the library. Just message us for access!
Refracted EMARefracted EMA is a price based indicator with bands that is built on moving average.
The price range between the bands directly depends on relationship of Average True Range to Moving Average. This gives us very valuable variable constant that changes with the market moves.
So the bands expand and contract due to changes in volatility of the market, which makes this tool very flexible exposing psychological levels.
Customizable Pivot Support/Resistance Zones [MyTradingCoder]This script uses the standard pivot-high/pivot-low built-in methods to identify pivot points on the chart as a base calculation for the zones. Rather than displaying basic lines, it displays a zone from the original pivot point to the closest part of the available body on the same candle. The script comes in handy by utilizing Pinescripts available input.source() function to allow for an external indicators output value to be used within the indicator. Make sure to read all of the TOOLTIPS in the indicator settings menu to get a full understanding of what each setting does, and how it can affect the results that end up on the chart.
By enabling the custom filter in the indicator settings, you will notice you have the ability to filter out zones using an external indicator such as an RSI. Maybe you only want zones to be calculated/drawn when the RSI is overbought or oversold, or maybe you only want the zones to calculate/draw if the Supertrend is green or red. The list of possible filters that you can implement is too many to count. Feel free to play around with the indicator however you like, and configure something that you find to be the most useful for your trading.
On top of everything listed above, the indicator has pre-programmed built-in alertconditions so that you can potentially automate trading, or get a notification to your cell phone when a zone is being touched/broken.
Supply and Demand MultiTimeFrameWhat Is the Law of Supply and Demand?
The law of supply and demand is a theory that explains the interaction between the sellers of a resource and the buyers for that resource . The theory defines the relationship between the price of a given good or product and the willingness of people to either buy or sell it. Generally, as price increases, people are willing to supply more and demand less and vice versa when the price falls. ( -Investopedia )
This Indicator Help's you to find possible Supply and Demand zones formed on chart on MultiTimeFrame.
All the Supply Zones are colored RED and are above the current price. It will vanish once price crosses over it.
All the Demand Zones are colored GREEN and are below the current price. It will vanish once price crosses under it.
Only Untested Zone are plotted on chart.
These zones can be plotted on Chart TimeFrame as well as MultiTimeFrame(Higher). That can be selected from Input Section.
Concept Behind the Zones
1. Rally Base Rally
2. Drop Base Drop
3. Drop Base Rally
4. Rally Base Drop
Drop base rally
Rally base drop
rally base rally
drop base drop
For Supply zones we try to find "Drop Base Drop" and "Rally Base Drop" , and plot RED zones on the width of base. Base can include any number of candle ranging from 1 to 6. This can be controlled from Input Section
For Demand zones we try to find "Rally Base Rally" and "Drop Base Rally" , and plot GREEN zones on the width of base. Base can include any number of candle ranging from 1 to 6. This can be controlled from Input Section
How to Trade
We recommend to use 5-8 time Higher TimeFrame as Supply and Demand Zones. For Example if chart is at 5 min Timeframe then Zones should be plotted on 25 min to 40 min TImeframe.
And when Price reaches closer to Supply/ Demand Zone then use some other indicator to confirm the reversal from that level, like trendline , moving average etc.
Targets should be nearest Supply/ Demand Zone .
Carrey's Structure Supply and DemandThis script uses basic Rally Base Rally, Rally Base Drop, Drop Base Drop, and Drop Base Rally concepts to draw supply and demand zones. While the script is designed to account for multiple (up to 5) candles in the "base" phase, the box it will draw will only be the high and low of the last candle before the final Rally/Drop candle.
Demand Supply Screener 1.0The Demand Supply Screener helps in identifying symbols that are trading close to or inside Demand Supply Zones. You can provide a list of up to 40 symbols to the screener.
The more the number of symbols or smaller the time frame, the longer it will take for the screener to shortlist symbols. This can result in a calculation timeout. In such a case, you can reduce the number of symbols in the list by splitting it into multiple charts/indicators until the error is resolved.
Use "Proximity %" to filter symbols, for example, if you set it to 2%, the screener will shortlist symbols where the high/low of the time frame you are on is within 2% proximity of the supply/demand zone respectively.
For shortlisting symbols that are currently touching demand supply zones or trading inside of them use Proximity % as 0 and ensure Show Tested Zones is enabled.
Smart Money ConceptSmart Money Concept is being used to understand the Market Structure, Demand/Supply, and Risk Management.
- Lines represent BoS and CHoCH.
- X-cross and Diamond shapes represent Peak and Trough.
- Numbers represent the Spread Percentages.
Next Gen Auto S/RThis indicator will automatically plot support and resistance levels and will also allow you to overlay multi time frame support and resistance on any time frame that you are currently conducting analysis on. In addition you can also set alerts when a support and resistance level is tested, fine tune how many levels you would like to view on your charts, option to input how many candlesticks minimum you would like between support and resistance levels. You can also select breakout mode which will turn old support into resistance by a colour change and turn old resistance into support. NEW you can now use extended levels and change your zones into lines.
XPace* XPACE INDICATOR *
The XPace indicator represents a histogram view of the Tape Speed of the Floor. The Tape Speed (aka Pace) is represented as red and green bars drawn in a histogram view.
As the red histogram bars grow larger and increase in frequency, this shows that the BIDS are in kontrol at that time. And conversely, when the green histogram bars grow larger and instead in frequency, this shows that the OFFERS are in kontrol.
Weighing in whether the BIDS or OFFERS are in kontrol can be a helpful indicator to decide what direction the market could move in.
What is helpful about XPace is that it will show you the raw value of the BID and OFFER kontrol. This can be combined with XKontrol which will classify the kontrol as either Initial, Strong, and Total. Using these 2 indicators combined has added value.
* WHAT MAKES IT ORIGINAL *
Up to this point, there is not another indicator that represents the BIDS and OFFERS that correlate and represent the Tape Speed of the Floor.
* XKONTROL INDICATOR *
The other indicator on this chart is XKontrol, as shown as dots of varying sizes on the chart. The dots are a visual representation of who is in Kontrol relative to the Tape Speed of the Floor. The XKontrol indicator will show you who is in Kontrol, the BIDS or the OFFERS. This is a very powerful indicator. Great for long term plays and a *SCALPERS* paradise.
The XKontrol indicator reads the BIDS Being hit and the OFFERS being lifted, and then represents the strength of the Bids being hit and Offers being lifted as dots on the chart. The various dot sizes produced by XKontrol show the level of control the Bids or the Offers have at that point of time in the chart.
As the Dots grow larger, the level of Kontrol is increased. There are 3 dot sizes ranging from Small, Medium, and Large. Respectively they represent Intial Kontrol, Strong Kontrol, and Total Kontrol. Total Kontrol is achieved when either the BIDS or the OFFERS are dominating at the time. This is generally the direction you want to place your trades in and show that either the Bids or the Offers are flooding the market.
As the BID dots increase in frequency and in size this shows that the BIDS are in kontrol and dominating. Vice versa, when the OFFER dots increase in frequency and in size this shows that the offers are in kontrol and dominating. When you see the large dot that is generally a strong sign of the direction price may go. However, it also can be climactic and price could reverse. That would symbolize a case of Effort / No Result. For Example, when the BIDS are in Kontrol and dominating, make a lower low, and then price quickly reverses, it could symbolize a climax.
Usually XKontrol is used in conjunction with XPace, as XKontrol deciphers the Tape Speed of the Floor and draws graphical dots to show whether the BIDS or the OFFERS are dominating right on the chart. Reading XPace will show visually in the histogram the strength of the BID and OFFER Kontrol in the histogram.
* XKONTROL ALERTS *
Alerts can be set very easily with the instructions below.
1. Right Click Chart -> Add Alert...
2. Select Condition to be "XKontrol"
3. Select any level of Kontrol. For example you can Select "Offers Total Kontrol"
4. Select "Greater Than" with Value = 0
5. Options set "Once Per Bar Close" to only fire alert after bar closes
6. Customize Any other Alert Options you want
* EXAMPLE AND USE CASES *
Some practical examples of using XKontrol + XPace combined could be the following:
1. XKontrol Large Green Dot + XPace Large Green Bar could be that the OFFERS have gained total kontrol and are dominating against the Bids. Once would want to watch for higher prices to be potentially reached after that.
2. XKontrol Small Red Dot + XPace Large Red Bar could be that there was a lot of effort on behalf of the BIDS, but they failed to achieve any significant kontrol. The small red dot in XKontrol represents only initial kontrol which is weak kontrol. An application would be to watch for a potential break out on the up side and that will confirm that the BIDS overexerted their effort and was oversold.
3. XKontrol Red and Green Dots mixed could show that it has not been decided whether the BIDS or OFFERS are dominating and the outlook is neutral. If the XPace histogram bars don't stand out either, it would add another point for a neutral analysis.
* AUTHOR *
This script is published by MBoxWave LLC
XKontrol* XKONTROL INDICATOR *
Is a visual representation of who is in Kontrol relative to the Tape Speed of the Floor. The XKontrol indicator will show you who is in Kontrol, the BIDS or the OFFERS. This is a very powerful indicator. Great for long term plays and a *SCALPERS* paradise.
* WHAT THE SCRIPT DOES *
The XKontrol indicator reads the BIDS Being hit and the OFFERS being lifted, and then represents the strength of the Bids being hit and Offers being lifted as dots on the chart. The various dot sizes produced by XKontrol show the level of control the Bids or the Offers have at that point of time in the chart.
* HOW IT WORKS *
As the Dots grow larger, the level of Kontrol is increased. There are 3 dot sizes ranging from Small, Medium, and Large. Respectively they represent Intial Kontrol, Strong Kontrol, and Total Kontrol. Total Kontrol is achieved when either the BIDS or the OFFERS are dominating at the time. This is generally the direction you want to place your trades in and show that either the Bids or the Offers are flooding the market.
* HOW TO USE IT *
As the BID dots increase in frequency and in size this shows that the BIDS are in kontrol and dominating. Vice versa, when the OFFER dots increase in frequency and in size this shows that the offers are in kontrol and dominating. When you see the large dot that is generally a strong sign of the direction price may go. However, it also can be climactic and price could reverse. That would symbolize a case of Effort / No Result. For Example, when the BIDS are in Kontrol and dominating, make a lower low, and then price quickly reverses, it could symbolize a climax.
Usually XKontrol is used in conjunction with XPace, as XKontrol deciphers the Tape Speed of the Floor and draws graphical dots to show whether the BIDS or the OFFERS are dominating right on the chart. Reading XPace will show visually in the histogram the strength of the BID and OFFER Kontrol in the histogram.
* WHAT MAKES IT ORIGINAL *
Up to this point, there is not another indicator that shows BID and OFFER Kontrol on the chart, that correlates and represents the Tape Speed of the Floor.
* XKONTROL ALERTS *
Alerts can be set very easily with the instructions below.
1. Right Click Chart -> Add Alert...
2. Select Condition to be "XKontrol"
3. Select any level of Kontrol. For example you can Select "Offers Total Kontrol"
4. Select "Greater Than" with Value = 0
5. Options set "Once Per Bar Close" to only fire alert after bar closes
6. Customize Any other Alert Options you want
* XPACE INDICATOR *
The other indicator on the chart shown in the Histogram is called XPace. It represents a histogram view of the Tape Speed of the Floor. It correlates to XKontrol, but instead of Dots will draw histogram bars showing the extent of the BID or OFFER Control.
As the red histogram bars grow larger and increase in frequency, this shows that the BIDS are in kontrol at that time. And conversely, when the green histogram bars grow larger and instead in frequency, this shows that the OFFERS are in kontrol.
Weighing in whether the BIDS or OFFERS are in kontrol can be a helpful indicator to decide what direction the market could move in.
What is helpful about XPace is that it will show you the raw value of the BID and OFFER kontrol whereas XKontrol will classify the kontrol as either Initial, Strong, and Total. Using these 2 indicators combined has added value.
* EXAMPLE AND USE CASES *
Some practical examples of using XKontrol + XPace combined could be the following:
1. XKontrol Large Green Dot + XPace Large Green Bar could be that the OFFERS have gained total kontrol and are dominating against the Bids. Once would want to watch for higher prices to be potentially reached after that.
2. XKontrol Small Red Dot + XPace Large Red Bar could be that there was a lot of effort on behalf of the BIDS, but they failed to achieve any significant kontrol. The small red dot in XKontrol represents only initial kontrol which is weak kontrol. An application would be to watch for a potential break out on the up side and that will confirm that the BIDS overexerted their effort and was oversold.
3. XKontrol Red and Green Dots mixed could show that it has not been decided whether the BIDS or OFFERS are dominating and the outlook is neutral. If the XPace histogram bars don't stand out either, it would add another point for a neutral analysis.
* AUTHOR *
This script is published by MBoxWave LLC
Order Flow Imbalance Finder By TurkThis indicator is created to find the imbalances when a market exchange receives too many of one kind of order—buy, sell, limit—and not enough of the order's counterpoint and price shoots up or down and it left with unfilled orders. If you know how to trade the imbalances, this indicator can help you by find imbalances automatically.
Imbalance Finder By DrewThis indicator is created to find the imbalances when a market exchange receives too many of one kind of order—buy, sell, limit—and not enough of the order's counterpoint. If you know how to trade the imbalances, this indicator can help you by find imbalances automatically.
OrderBlocks [SignalCave]The OrderBlocks indicator is used to find the supply and demand zones that represent the support and resistance.
What it is Demand Zone?
A demand zone is the price area at which the traders usually buy. This area is present below the current price, where the highest buying interest or potential. This means the demand zone has many buyers available due to many buying orders at that level. When the price hits this level, the unfilled orders get completed and bring up the price.
What it is Supply Zone?
A supply zone is the price area at which the traders usually sell. This area is present above the current price, where the highest selling interest or potential. When the price hits this level, the unfilled orders get completed and bring down the price.
OrderBlocks Indicator
OrderBlocks indicator have four main visual output which are active demand zones (green), active supply zones (red), tested zones (yellow) and inactive zones (black).
Active Zones: Once the market structure breakout or breakdown, indicator draws a new zone (green or red). When the price enters in the active zone at the first time, price tends to bounce over it.
Tested Zones: If price touches the active zone but did not close any bar over or below it, indicator marks the tested zone as a yellow color. If the price touches multiple times, zone get weaker and tend to break when the price enters same zone once again.
Inactive Zones: If bar close over or below any active zone then indicator marks it as a black color and it turns an inactive zone afterwards. Inactive zones have less effective price turning points compare to active and tested zones.