Sustained 200 SMA Cross (Locked to Daily)For individuals looking to track trend changes against the 200 day simple moving average. We are measuring 5 consecutive days changing from the above or below the 200 day SMA as a flag for a potential shift in trend.
Candlestick analysis
HydraBot v1.2average bias of a bunch of indicators that blah blah blah i need to hit at least so many words to publish this
Wavelet Candle Constructor (Inc. Morlet) 2Here is the detailed description of the **Wavelet Candle** construction principles based on the code provided.
This indicator is not a simple smoothing mechanism (like a Moving Average). It utilizes the **Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT)**, specifically the Stationary variant (SWT / à Trous Algorithm), to separate "noise" (high frequencies) from the "trend" (low frequencies).
Here is how it works step-by-step:
###1. The Wavelet Kernel (Coefficients)The heart of the algorithm lies in the coefficients (the `h` array in the `get_coeffs` function). Each wavelet type represents a different set of mathematical weights that define how price data is analyzed:
* **Haar:** The simplest wavelet. It acts like a simple average of neighboring candles. It reacts quickly but produces a "boxy" or "jagged" output.
* **Daubechies 4:** An asymmetric wavelet. It is better at detecting sudden trend changes and the fractal structure of the market, though it introduces a slight phase shift.
* **Symlet / Coiflet:** More symmetric than Daubechies. They attempt to minimize lag (phase shift) while maintaining smoothness.
* **Morlet (Gaussian):** Implemented in this code as a Gaussian approximation (bell curve). It provides the smoothest, most "organic" effect, ideal for filtering noise without jagged edges.
###2. The Convolution EngineInstead of a simple average, the code performs a mathematical operation called **convolution**:
For every candle on the chart, the algorithm takes past prices, multiplies them by the Wavelet Kernel weights, and sums them up. This acts as a **digital low-pass filter**—it allows the main price movements to pass through while cutting out the noise.
###3. The "à Trous" Algorithm (Stationary Wavelet Transform)This is the key difference between this indicator and standard data compression.
In a classic wavelet transform, every second data point is usually discarded (downsampling). Here, the **Stationary** approach is used:
* **Level 1:** Convolution every **1** candle.
* **Level 2:** Convolution every **2** candles (skipping one in between).
* **Level 3:** Convolution every **4** candles.
* **Level 4:** Convolution every **8** candles.
Because of this, **we do not lose time resolution**. The Wavelet Candle is drawn exactly where the original candle is, but it represents the trend structure from a broader perspective. The higher the `Decomposition Level`, the deeper the denoising (looking at a wider context).
###4. Independent OHLC ProcessingThe algorithm processes each component of the candle separately:
1. Filters the **Open** series.
2. Filters the **High** series.
3. Filters the **Low** series.
4. Filters the **Close** series.
This results in four smoothed curves: `w_open`, `w_high`, `w_low`, `w_close`.
###5. Geometric Reconstruction (Logic Repair)Since each price series is filtered independently, the mathematics can sometimes lead to physically impossible situations (e.g., the smoothed `Low` being higher than the smoothed `High`).
The code includes a repair section:
```pinescript
real_high = math.max(w_high, w_low)
real_high := math.max(real_high, math.max(w_open, w_close))
// Same logic for Low (math.min)
```
This guarantees that the final Wavelet Candle always has a valid construction: wicks encapsulate the body, and the `High` is strictly the highest point.
---
###Summary of ApplicationThis construction makes the Wavelet Candle an **excellent trend-following tool**.
* If the candle is **green**, it means that after filtering the noise (according to the selected wavelet), the market energy is bullish.
* If it is **red**, the energy is bearish.
* The wicks show volatility that exists within the bounds of the selected decomposition level.
Here is a descriptive comparison of **Wavelet Candles** against other popular chart types. As requested, this is a narrative explanation focusing on the differences in mechanics, interpretation philosophy, and the specific pros and cons of each approach.
---
###1. Wavelet Candles vs. Standard (Japanese) CandlesThis is a clash between "the raw truth" and "mathematical interpretation." Standard Japanese candles display raw market data—exactly what happened on the exchange. Wavelet Candles are a synthetic image created by a signal processor.
**Differences and Philosophy:**
A standard candle is full of emotion and noise. Every single price tick impacts its shape. The Wavelet Candle treats this noise as interference that must be removed to reveal the true energy of the trend. Wavelets decompose the price, reject high frequencies (noise), and reconstruct the candle using only low frequencies (the trend).
* **Wavelet Advantages:** The main advantage is clarity. Where a standard chart shows a series of confusing candles (e.g., a long green one, followed by a short red one, then a doji), the Wavelet Candle often draws a smooth, uniform wave in a single color. This makes it psychologically easier to hold a position and ignore temporary pullbacks.
* **Wavelet Disadvantages:** The biggest drawback is the loss of price precision. The Open, Close, High, and Low values on a Wavelet candle are calculated, not real. You **cannot** place Stop Loss orders or enter trades based on these levels, as the actual market price might be in a completely different place than the smoothed candle suggests. They also introduce lag, which depends on the chosen wavelet—whereas a standard candle reacts instantly.
###2. Wavelet Candles vs. Heikin AshiThese are close cousins, but they share very different "DNA." Both methods aim to smooth the trend, but they achieve it differently.
**Differences and Philosophy:**
Heikin Ashi (HA) is based on a simple recursive arithmetic average. The current HA candle depends on the previous one, making it react linearly.
The Wavelet Candle uses **convolution**. This means the shape of the current candle depends on a "window" (group) of past candles multiplied by weights (Gaussian curve, Daubechies, etc.). This results in a more "organic" and elastic reaction.
* **Wavelet Advantages:** Wavelets are highly customizable. With Heikin Ashi, you are stuck with one algorithm. With Wavelet Candles, you can change the kernel to "Haar" for a fast (boxy) reaction or "Morlet" for an ultra-smooth, wave-like effect. Wavelets handle the separation of market cycles better than simple HA averaging, which can generate many false color flips during consolidation.
* **Wavelet Disadvantages:** They are computationally much more complex and harder to understand intuitively ("Why is this candle red if the price is going up?"). In strong, vertical breakouts (pumps), Heikin Ashi often "chases" the price faster, whereas deep wavelet decomposition (High Level) may show more inertia and change color more slowly.
###3. Wavelet Candles vs. RenkoThis compares two different dimensions: Time vs. Price.
**Differences and Philosophy:**
Renko completely ignores time. A new brick is formed only when the price moves by a specific amount. If the market stands still for 5 hours, nothing happens on a Renko chart.
The Wavelet Candle is **time-synchronous**. If the market stands still for 5 hours, the Wavelet algorithm will draw a series of flat, small candles (the "wavelet decays").
* **Wavelet Advantages:** They preserve the context of time, which is crucial for traders who consider trading sessions (London/New York) or macroeconomic data releases. On a wavelet chart, you can see when volatility drops (candles become small), whereas Renko hides periods of stagnation, which can be misleading for options traders or intraday strategies.
* **Wavelet Disadvantages:** In sideways trends (chop), Wavelet Candles—despite the smoothing—will still draw a "snake" that flips colors (unless you set a very high decomposition level). Renko can remain perfectly clean and static during the same period, not drawing any new bricks, which for many traders is the ultimate filter against overtrading in a flat market.
###Summary**Wavelet Candles** are a tool for the analyst who wants to visualize the **structure of the wave and market cycle**, accepting some lag in exchange for noise reduction, but without giving up the time axis (like in Renko) or relying on simple averaging (like in Heikin Ashi). It serves best as a "roadmap" for the trend rather than a "sniper scope" for precise entries.
Displacement## Displacement Indicator (Institutional Momentum Filter)
This indicator highlights **true price displacement** — candles where price moves with **abnormal force relative to recent volatility**.
It is designed to help traders distinguish **real momentum** from normal market noise.
Displacement often precedes:
- Breaks of structure
- Fair Value Gaps (FVGs)
- Strong continuation or meaningful pullbacks
This tool focuses on **confirmation**, not prediction.
---
### 🔍 How Displacement Is Defined
A candle is marked as *displacement* only when **all conditions are met**:
• Candle body is larger than a multiple of ATR (volatility-adjusted)
• Candle body makes up a high percentage of the full candle (strong close)
• Directional conviction (bullish or bearish close)
This filters out:
- Small or average candles
- Wick-heavy indecision
- Low-quality breakouts
---
### 🎯 What This Indicator Is Best Used For
✔ Confirming impulsive moves
✔ Validating structure breaks
✔ Anchoring Fair Value Gaps
✔ Filtering low-probability setups
✔ Identifying institutional participation
Works best on **M5, M15, and H1**, especially during **London and NY sessions**.
---
### ⚠️ Important Notes
• This is **not** a buy/sell signal by itself
• Best used with trend, structure, or liquidity context
• Not designed for ranging or low-volatility markets
Think of this indicator as a **momentum truth filter** —
if displacement is missing, conviction is likely missing too.
---
### ⚙️ Inputs Explained
• ATR Length – defines normal volatility
• ATR Multiplier – how aggressive displacement must be
• Minimum Body % – ensures strong candle closes
All inputs are adjustable to fit different markets and styles.
---
### 🧠 Philosophy
Displacement reflects **commitment**, not anticipation.
This tool helps you wait for **proof**, not hope.
---
If you want, I can:
- Tighten this for **ICT-style language**
- Rewrite for **beginner clarity**
- Add a **“How I personally use it”** section
- Optimize it for **TradingView algorithm visibility**
**Tell me which you want changed.**
Renko with Multi-Timeframe RSI (Non-Repaint)This is a Renko-based Multi-Timeframe RSI indicator with Inverted Volatility Oscillator that combines three technical analysis concepts to provide trading signals without repainting issues.
Core Components
1. Renko Chart Foundation
Instead of using time-based candles, this indicator creates Renko bricks based on price movement:
Green brick = Price moved up by one brick size
Red brick = Price moved down by one brick size
Brick size = Either ATR-based (dynamic) or fixed value
Key advantage: Filters out market noise by ignoring time and small price fluctuations
Non-Repaint Feature: Only processes confirmed bars (barstate.isconfirmed), ensuring signals don't disappear or change after they appear.
2. Volume-Weighted RSI (Multiple Timeframes)
Three RSI calculations:
a) Renko RSI (Purple line)
Calculated directly from Renko brick close prices
Shows momentum based on actual brick formations
More stable than traditional RSI since it's based on significant price moves
b) 1-Hour RSI (Blue line)
Standard RSI from 1-hour timeframe
Provides medium-term momentum context
c) 4-Hour RSI (Orange line)
Standard RSI from 4-hour timeframe
Shows longer-term momentum trends
RSI Interpretation:
Above 70: Overbought (potential sell signal)
Below 30: Oversold (potential buy signal)
Above 50: Bullish momentum
Below 50: Bearish momentum
3. Inverted Volatility Oscillator (Yellow line)
Measures the opposite of price volatility in Renko brick closes:
What It Actually Is:
Simply calculates volatility (standard deviation of rate of change)
Normalizes it to 0-100 scale
Inverts it (100 minus volatility)
Result: When prices are volatile, the number is LOW. When prices are calm, the number is HIGH.
This is just repackaged volatility:
Above 80: Low volatility period (calm, stable prices)
50-80: Below-average volatility
20-50: Above-average volatility
Below 20: High volatility period (choppy, erratic prices)
The "Fear/Greed" Marketing: The assumption is that high volatility = panic/fear, and low volatility = complacency/greed. But this is just a narrative wrapper around basic volatility measurement. Markets can be:
Highly volatile during euphoric rallies (not fear)
Very calm during sustained downtrends (not greed)
The relationship between volatility and sentiment is assumed, not measured.
How It Works
Signal Generation
Buy Signals occur when:
Renko RSI < 30 (oversold) OR
1H RSI < 30 OR
4H RSI < 30 OR
Inverted Volatility < 20 (high volatility = "extreme fear")
Sell Signals occur when:
Renko RSI > 70 (overbought) OR
1H RSI > 70 OR
4H RSI > 70 OR
Inverted Volatility > 80 (low volatility = "extreme greed")
Exit Conditions:
Brick color changes (green→red or red→green)
Any RSI enters opposite extreme zone
Multiple confirmations increase signal reliability
What You're Actually Getting
Legitimately Useful:
Renko filtering: Real noise reduction
Multi-timeframe RSI: Valid momentum confirmation across timeframes
Non-repainting: Reliable signal timing
Marketing Fluff: The "Fear/Greed Index" is:
Just normalized, inverted volatility
Given emotional labels to sound sophisticated
Based on an assumption (volatility = fear) that's often wrong
No actual measurement of fear, greed, sentiment, or psychology
Adds no information you couldn't get from a standard volatility indicator
Reality Check
What the indicator claims: "Fear/Greed Index measures market psychology"
What it actually does: Calculates volatility of Renko closes, flips the scale, and slaps emotional labels on different levels
Better description: "Low Volatility Warning" (>80) and "High Volatility Warning" (<20)
The indicator works fine as a multi-timeframe RSI system with Renko smoothing. The volatility component can be useful for identifying regime changes. But calling it "Fear/Greed" is pure marketing - it's just repackaged volatility with psychology buzzwords.
Bottom Line
Use this for:
Renko trend following (genuinely useful)
Multi-timeframe momentum confirmation (valid approach)
Volatility regime detection (what the yellow line actually measures)
Don't use this thinking:
It reads market psychology (it doesn't)
It's measuring actual fear or greed (it isn't)
It's anything more than inverted volatility (it's not)
// ============ DISCLAIMER ============
// EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY - NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE
// This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only.
// It does NOT constitute financial, investment, trading, or any other type of advice.
//
// PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS
// No trading system or indicator can guarantee profits or prevent losses.
//
// RISKS:
// - Trading and investing involve substantial risk of loss
// - You can lose some or all of your invested capital
// - Only trade with money you can afford to lose
// - Indicators can produce false signals and lag price action
//
// "FEAR/GREED INDEX" DISCLAIMER:
// The so-called "Fear/Greed Index" is simply inverted normalized volatility.
// It does NOT actually measure fear, greed, sentiment, or market psychology.
// It is a mathematical calculation based on price volatility with emotional
// labels applied for marketing purposes. The relationship between volatility
// and sentiment is ASSUMED, not measured or proven.
//
// NO REPAINTING GUARANTEE:
// While designed to avoid repainting, no indicator is perfect. Always verify
// signals on confirmed bars and test thoroughly before live trading.
//
//(RESPONSIBILITY):
// By using this indicator, you acknowledge that:
// - All trading decisions are your own responsibility
// - You have tested this indicator on historical data
// - You understand the risks involved in trading
// - The creator(s) of this indicator are not liable for any losses
//
// ALWAYS:
// - Do your own research and due diligence
// - Consult with qualified financial professionals
// - Use proper risk management and position sizing
// - Never risk more than you can afford to lose
// - Practice on paper/demo accounts before live trading
// =======================================
First Candle + FVGs🕯️ First Candle + 🟢🔴 FVG (Gated After Breakout)
Must be traded on the 1-minute timeframe.
• Step 1: At 9:30 AM NY time, the indicator starts tracking the first 15-minute range (9:30–9:45).
• Step 2: At 9:45 AM, it locks that range and draws two horizontal lines: First Candle High and First Candle Low.
• Step 3: The FVG logic is OFF until price breaks outside that locked range (above the high or below the low).
• Step 4: After the breakout happens, the FVG logic turns ON for the rest of the day.
• Step 5: The indicator detects bullish or bearish FVGs, but shows only one direction at a time:
• If a bullish FVG triggers → all bearish drawings are cleared/hidden.
• If a bearish FVG triggers → all bullish drawings are cleared/hidden.
• Step 6: For each active FVG, it plots:
• The FVG box
• The entry line (BUY or SELL)
• The stop-loss line (default light orange, using your selected SL rule)
• A number label for the FVG sequence
• Step 7: It resets everything on the next NY trading day and starts over.
First Candle's FVGsBull & Bear FVG – One at a Time
This indicator is rule #1 designed to be used with the First 15-Minute Candle indicator. It’s intended strictly for the 1-minute timeframe and should only be applied after 9:45 AM.
In other words, once the market breaks outside the high or low of the first 15-minute candle of the day, that’s when this FVG logic kicks in. It will detect either bullish or bearish Fair Value Gaps and display only one direction at a time: hiding bearish levels when bullish is active and hiding bullish levels when bearish is active.
In short, it waits for the market to break that initial 15-minute range and then helps you focus on a single FVG direction at a time for cleaner and simpler trading.
SCOTTGO - RVOL Bull/Bear Painter (Real-Time) SCOTTGO - RVOL Bull/Bear Painter (Real-Time Momentum Detection)
📌Overview
The RVOL Bull/Bear Painter is a Pine Script indicator designed to instantly highlight high-momentum candles driven by significant Relative Volume (RVOL).
It provides a clear visual signal (bar color, shape, and label) when a candle's volume exceeds its average by a user-defined threshold, confirming strong bullish or bearish interest in real-time. This helps traders quickly identify potential institutional accumulation/distribution or breakout/breakdown attempts.
✨ Key Features
Relative Volume (RVOL) Calculation: Automatically calculates the ratio of the current bar's volume to its moving average (SMA or EMA) over a customizable lookback period.
Momentum Confirmation: Paints the candle green (bullish) or red (bearish) only when both price direction and high RVOL criteria are met.
Real-Time Detection: Uses a plotshape method to display the signal triangle as soon as the RVOL and direction conditions are met on the currently forming candle, aiming for faster alerts than bar-close coloring.
Customizable Threshold: Easily adjust the RVOL multiplier (e.g., 1.5x, 2.0x, 3.0x) to filter out noise and only focus on truly significant volume events.
Labels and Alerts: Displays a volume multiplier label (e.g., BULL 2.55x) and includes pre-configured alert conditions for automated notifications.
🛠️ How to Use It
1. Identify High-Conviction Moves
Look for the painted candles and the corresponding labels. A candle painted green with a BULL label (e.g., BULL 2.5x) indicates that buyers stepped in with 2.5 times the typical volume to drive the price higher.
2. Configure Your Sensitivity
The power of the script lies in customizing the inputs:
RVOL Lookback Period: Determines the length of the volume moving average.
Shorter periods (e.g., 9-20) make the indicator more reactive to recent volume changes.
Longer periods (e.g., 50-200) require a much larger volume spike to trigger a signal.
RVOL Threshold: This is the multiplier.
Lower values (e.g., 1.5) will generate more signals.
Higher values (e.g., 3.0) will generate fewer, but generally higher-conviction, signals.
3. Set Up Alerts
Use the pre-configured alert conditions (Bullish RVOL Signal and Bearish RVOL Signal) in TradingView's alert menu. Crucially, set the alert frequency to "Once per bar" or "Once per minute" to receive notifications as soon as the high RVOL event occurs, without waiting for the bar to close.
Raeinex Momentum Liquidity IndexEntry arrow signals with volumetric momentum (buying and selling pressure) and the possibility to use all entry signals as liquidity area for price retest.
Unfinished Candles (UNF) CustomizableMarks out candles with no top/bottom wick with customisable tolerance.
Customisable colours and other features.
fenxingFractal Sequence Trading System (Final Stable Version) identifies trends formed by two consecutive fractals based on three or five candlesticks.
Monday Tuesday Initial Balance and Range ProjectionsThis indicator is based on Stacey Burke’s definition of Initial Balance, where Monday and Tuesday together establish the Initial Balance for the trading week.
The high and low formed across Monday and Tuesday define the Initial Balance. Once Tuesday closes, this range is locked in and used as a structural reference for the remainder of the week.
What the Indicator Displays
Initial Balance High (Monday–Tuesday high)
Initial Balance Low (Monday–Tuesday low)
Optional midpoint
Optional range projections:
0.5 range extension to the upside/downside
1.0 range extension to the upside/downside
These extensions are calculated using the Monday–Tuesday range, projected above the Initial Balance High.
Why This Matters
In a large percentage of weeks:
The weekly high or low is established by Monday or Tuesday
One side of the Initial Balance tends to hold, while the other may break and trend
The range provides context for high-probability setups, not trade signals
Price will typically:
Reject the Initial Balance extremes (reversal / three-day setup)
Break and hold outside the balance (trend week)
Rotate within the balance (consolidation)
How to Use It
This tool is designed for context and structure, supporting:
Three Day Setups
First Green / First Red Days
False breaks
Weekly pump-and-dump / dump-and-pump scenarios
Trade execution should still be aligned with session timing, 15-minute structure, price action confirmation, and news awareness.
Tails and WicksTails and Wicks 📊
A clean price action tool that spots strong wick rejection candles and draws semi-transparent colored boxes around their high-to-low range. 🔍
Boxes extend forward to highlight potential S/R zones – perfect for pinbars, hammers, shooting stars & indecision dojis! 🚀
Features:
• 🟢 Bullish tails (long lower wick – default green)
• 🔴 Bearish tails (long upper wick – default red)
• 🟠 Indecision (both long wicks – default orange)
• Independent toggles & custom colors 🎨
• Adjustable wick % threshold (default 60%)
• Fixed or infinite right extension ➡️
• Limit recent zones per type (default 4) to keep charts tidy 🧹
• Pure visual – no text clutter (disable "Labels on price scale" in indicator Style tab if needed)
Lightweight, customizable, and great for clean price action trading! 💹
Timeframe Overlay 24HrDaily High–Low Box (00:00–23:59)
This indicator highlights each trading day with a shaded box spanning from 00:00 to 23:59 (based on the selected timezone) and covering the day’s highest and lowest price.
• Green box when the day closes above its open
• Red box when the day closes below its open
• Historical days are fully drawn for easy comparison
• Current day box builds dynamically as new candles form
Useful for visualising daily range, market bias, and intraday structure across all timeframes.
Fixed 5 Point Levels 21 Lines Stable by Pie789The 500-point lines (upper and lower) don't need to be drawn manually. Simply define the center point and adjust it afterwards to create a 500-point frame.
wally H4 Rango Dominante + scanner X20ENGLISH
This script marks the range of the last largest candlestick. You can configure the number of candlesticks to search for the range!
Once it mitigates a high or low and re-enters the range, a signal label appears!
You can lower the timeframe to look for entry confirmation!
It comes with a scanner for 20 manually configurable currencies!
[AlscapeLabs] HTF Candle Stack (Multi-Timeframe)
Overview
The HTF Candle Stack (Multi-TF) indicator is a powerful visualization tool designed to overlay high-timeframe (HTF) price action directly onto your current chart, independent of the chart's price scale. This gives traders a clear, aligned, and non-overlapping view of simultaneous price movements across customizable timeframes.
By stacking the candles horizontally next to the chart's price action, the indicator allows for quick identification of multi-timeframe correlation, trend confluence, and key levels without switching chart timeframes.
Key Features
6 Independent Stacks: Configure up to 6 separate timeframes (e.g., 5m, 15m, 1H, 4H, Daily, Weekly) to view the complete market fractals from micro to macro.
Price-Aligned Visualization : All HTF candle stacks are perfectly aligned with the main chart's vertical price axis
Replay Mode Safe : Includes dedicated logic to prevent "duplicate candles" during Bar Replay, ensuring accurate backtesting and historical analysis.
Toggleable Stacks : Each stack can be individually enabled or disabled via input settings
Dynamic Spacing : The distance between active stacks is automatically calculated and adjusted based on the visibility of the preceding stack.
Settings Guide
Stack Configuration (1 - 6)
Each of the six stacks has identical controls:
Show/Hide : Enable or disable this specific stack.
Timeframe : The specific HTF to display (e.g., "60" for 1 Hour, "D" for Daily).
[*} Count : How many candles to show in this stack (Current Active Candle + Past Closed Candles). Tip: Use higher counts (10-12) for lower TFs (Stack 1-2) and lower counts (2-4) for higher TFs (Stack 5-6)
Candle Color
Controls global coloring
Bullish / Bearish : Customize the body colors.
Wick : Separate control for wick color and transparency
Layout
Distance from Chart : How far (in bars) to the right the first stack begins
Space between Stacks : The gap (in bars) between each active stack.
Candle Width : The thickness of the HTF candles.
Labels
Displays a time-frame next to the active (live) candle in each stack
Show TF Labels : Enable or disable labels through all stacks
Text Color : Label text color
Background : Label background color
Style : Label position (Left, Down)
Size : Label text size (Tiny, Small, Normal, Large, Huge)
Developed by AlscapeLabs
EMA 8 / 20 / 200Created to easily use the 8/20/200 strategy.
This indicator is designed to give a clear, multi-timeframe view of trend, momentum, and structure using three exponential moving averages.
1. Trend direction (EMA 200 – pink)
The 200 EMA acts as the long-term trend filter.
Price above the 200 EMA suggests a bullish market bias.
Price below the 200 EMA suggests a bearish market bias.
Many traders avoid taking trades against this higher-timeframe direction.
2. Momentum and trade bias (EMA 20 – blue)
The 20 EMA reflects short-term momentum.
When price respects the 20 EMA in an uptrend, pullbacks often provide continuation entries.
In downtrends, the 20 EMA frequently acts as dynamic resistance.
3. Entry timing (EMA 8 – yellow)
The 8 EMA is a fast reaction line used for precise timing.
Crosses of the 8 EMA over the 20 EMA can signal momentum shifts.
Strong trends often show price holding above (or below) the 8 EMA during impulse moves.
4. Confluence and trade filtering
The indicator works best when the EMAs are aligned:
Bullish alignment: EMA 8 > EMA 20 > EMA 200
Bearish alignment: EMA 8 < EMA 20 < EMA 200
Misaligned EMAs usually indicate consolidation or low-probability conditions.
5. Risk management context
EMAs can act as dynamic support and resistance:
Stops are often placed beyond the 20 EMA or 200 EMA depending on trade horizon.
Loss of EMA structure is a warning sign that the trend may be weakening.
In short, the indicator is a trend-first, momentum-second framework that helps you decide when to trade, in which direction, and when to stay out.
Monthly Hotness RSI (Auto-Calibrated)Indicator of the previous months volatility/vol compared to averages over the last 3-5 years. helps show trend and if the market is 'hot'. indicator is good for showing favourable market conditions.
EMA 5/9 Angle + Candle Strength (SL=Open, TP=RR)EMA 5 / EMA 9 cross
Cross must have ~30° angle (approximated using slope → atan)
Entry candle must be bullish/bearish and also be Normal / 2nd Most / Most based on body-size percentile
Entry = close of signal candle
SL = open of signal candle
TP = 1:2 RR (editable input)
AlgosPoint G&MPoint Breaking 2025 (MB&GB Breaking Point Pro)
What It Does:
A comprehensive TradingView indicator that combines multiple technical analysis tools to identify key market breakout points, support/resistance levels, and trading opportunities. It integrates Volume Profile analysis, AlphaTrend signals, and custom risk assessment metrics.
Key Features:
Volume Profile Analysis: Displays Point of Control (POC), Value Area High/Low (VAH/VAL), and volume distribution
Support & Resistance Detection: Automatically identifies key price levels based on volume or price action
AlphaTrend Signals: Generates BUY/SELL signals with visual labels on chart
Volume Spike Detection: Highlights unusual volume activity indicating potential exhaustion or breakout
High Volatility Alerts: Marks periods of increased market volatility using ATR
Risk Assessment Dashboard: Real-time panel showing:
Long/Short percentages (RSI-based)
Stop levels for both directions
Bot activity percentage
Csocy Signal status (Safe/Undecided/Risky)
How to Use:
Add to Chart: Apply indicator to any timeframe (works best on 15m-4H)
Configure Settings: Adjust parameters in grouped sections:
📊 General Settings (lookback periods)
🎯 Support & Resistance (line styles/colors)
💥 Volume Spike (threshold sensitivity)
⚡ High Volatility (ATR multiplier)
📈 Volume Profile (display options)
🔥 AlphaTrend (signal sensitivity)
Read Signals:
BUY label = Potential long entry when AlphaTrend crosses up
SELL label = Potential short entry when AlphaTrend crosses down
Dashboard colors: Green = bullish, Red = bearish, Yellow = neutral
Set Alerts: Built-in alerts for price crosses, volume spikes, and signal confirmations
Risk Management: Use displayed stop levels and Csocy Signal status to manage position sizing
Best For:
Day traders and swing traders
Crypto, Forex, and Stock markets
Identifying high-probability breakout zones
Volume-based trading strategies






















