PROTECTED SOURCE SCRIPT
Delta Pressure Spectrum

What this indicator is (brief)
Delta Pressure Spectrum (DPS-3) is a volume-pressure oscillator that estimates buy vs sell imbalance (a delta proxy), then normalizes it into a robust z-score so “significant” pressure means the same thing across different volatility regimes and market conditions. It visualizes that pressure as delta candles + a histogram, and only “lights up” with three breach tiers (plus an ultra-rare white core) when the move is statistically extreme for the current environment.
How to use it:
1) Read it like a pressure gauge, not an entry signal
-Histogram/candle height = intensity of net pressure (buy-dominant vs sell-dominant).
It’s best at telling you: “Is this move real pressure or just price wiggling?”
2) The 3 tiers tell you “how abnormal” the pressure is
-Tier-1 (weak breach): meaningful but common; “something’s happening.”
-Tier-2 (strong breach): rare enough to care; often aligns with real expansions / squeezes / liquidation events.
-Tier-3 (extreme breach): statistically extreme; often shows climactic behavior (either continuation impulse or blow-off/flush conditions).
-White core: only when Tier-3 overshoots hard—treat as “exceptional event.”
Key idea: tiers are adaptive. Tier-2 on BTC 1m and Tier-2 on ES 1h should both represent “strong for that regime.”
3) Best ways to trade with it (high-signal)
-Trend continuation confirmation: In an uptrend, repeated Tier-2/Tier-3 on the up side = real demand; avoid fading unless structure breaks.
-Exhaustion / climax watch: Tier-3 + white core after an extended run = “crowded pressure.” That can precede either: continuation (if structure holds), or reversal / mean reversion (if structure fails).
So you use it as a warning light, then let price structure confirm.
-Compression → expansion detection:
-Quiet baseline for a while, then sudden Tier-2/Tier-3 = expansion regime shift.
-Divergence (use carefully): Price makes new high, DPS-3 fails to reach prior tier intensity → weakening participation. This is most useful on HTFs or at major levels.
4) What the alerts should mean (how you set them)
-Tier-3 breach alerts: your “something serious just hit the tape” alert.
-Pressure flip alerts: best used as contextual reversal confirmation (it requires strong context in your logic).
-White core alert: extremely rare “event mode” notification—use sparingly.
5) One simple rule that keeps you out of trouble
-Don’t fade Tier-2/Tier-3 pressure just because it’s extreme. Fade only when price structure says the move failed (break of trend / reclaim failure / key level loss). DPS-3 tells you strength, structure tells you directional validity.
Delta Pressure Spectrum (DPS-3) is a volume-pressure oscillator that estimates buy vs sell imbalance (a delta proxy), then normalizes it into a robust z-score so “significant” pressure means the same thing across different volatility regimes and market conditions. It visualizes that pressure as delta candles + a histogram, and only “lights up” with three breach tiers (plus an ultra-rare white core) when the move is statistically extreme for the current environment.
How to use it:
1) Read it like a pressure gauge, not an entry signal
-Histogram/candle height = intensity of net pressure (buy-dominant vs sell-dominant).
It’s best at telling you: “Is this move real pressure or just price wiggling?”
2) The 3 tiers tell you “how abnormal” the pressure is
-Tier-1 (weak breach): meaningful but common; “something’s happening.”
-Tier-2 (strong breach): rare enough to care; often aligns with real expansions / squeezes / liquidation events.
-Tier-3 (extreme breach): statistically extreme; often shows climactic behavior (either continuation impulse or blow-off/flush conditions).
-White core: only when Tier-3 overshoots hard—treat as “exceptional event.”
Key idea: tiers are adaptive. Tier-2 on BTC 1m and Tier-2 on ES 1h should both represent “strong for that regime.”
3) Best ways to trade with it (high-signal)
-Trend continuation confirmation: In an uptrend, repeated Tier-2/Tier-3 on the up side = real demand; avoid fading unless structure breaks.
-Exhaustion / climax watch: Tier-3 + white core after an extended run = “crowded pressure.” That can precede either: continuation (if structure holds), or reversal / mean reversion (if structure fails).
So you use it as a warning light, then let price structure confirm.
-Compression → expansion detection:
-Quiet baseline for a while, then sudden Tier-2/Tier-3 = expansion regime shift.
-Divergence (use carefully): Price makes new high, DPS-3 fails to reach prior tier intensity → weakening participation. This is most useful on HTFs or at major levels.
4) What the alerts should mean (how you set them)
-Tier-3 breach alerts: your “something serious just hit the tape” alert.
-Pressure flip alerts: best used as contextual reversal confirmation (it requires strong context in your logic).
-White core alert: extremely rare “event mode” notification—use sparingly.
5) One simple rule that keeps you out of trouble
-Don’t fade Tier-2/Tier-3 pressure just because it’s extreme. Fade only when price structure says the move failed (break of trend / reclaim failure / key level loss). DPS-3 tells you strength, structure tells you directional validity.
Script protégé
Ce script est publié en source fermée. Cependant, vous pouvez l'utiliser librement et sans aucune restriction – pour en savoir plus, cliquez ici.
Clause de non-responsabilité
Les informations et publications ne sont pas destinées à être, et ne constituent pas, des conseils ou recommandations financiers, d'investissement, de trading ou autres fournis ou approuvés par TradingView. Pour en savoir plus, consultez les Conditions d'utilisation.
Script protégé
Ce script est publié en source fermée. Cependant, vous pouvez l'utiliser librement et sans aucune restriction – pour en savoir plus, cliquez ici.
Clause de non-responsabilité
Les informations et publications ne sont pas destinées à être, et ne constituent pas, des conseils ou recommandations financiers, d'investissement, de trading ou autres fournis ou approuvés par TradingView. Pour en savoir plus, consultez les Conditions d'utilisation.