ORB Breakouts with alerts"ORB Breakouts with Alerts" is a utility indicator that highlights an Opening Range Breakout (ORB) setup during a user-defined intraday time window. It allows traders to visualize price consolidation ranges and receive alerts when price breaks above or below the session high/low.
🔧 Features:
*Customizable session time (start and end), adjustable to local time using a timezone offset.
*Automatically plots:
*A shaded box around the session's high and low.
*Horizontal lines at session high and low levels.
*Optional "BUY"/"SELL" labels to mark breakout directions.
*Visual breakout signals when price crosses above or below the session range.
*Built-in alerts to notify when breakouts occur.
*Configurable styling options including box color, highlight color, and label placement.
⚙️ How It Works:
*During the defined time range, the script tracks the highest high and lowest low.
*After the session ends:
*A box is drawn to represent the opening range.
*Breakouts above the high or below the low trigger visual markers and optional alerts.
*Alerts are limited to one per direction per day to reduce noise.
⚠️ This indicator is a technical analysis tool only and does not provide financial advice or trade recommendations. Always use with proper risk management and in conjunction with your trading plan.
Candlestick analysis
HorizonSigma Pro [CHE]HorizonSigma Pro
Disclaimer
Not every timeframe will yield good results . Very short charts are dominated by microstructure noise, spreads, and slippage; signals can flip and the tradable edge shrinks after costs. Very high timeframes adapt more slowly, provide fewer samples, and can lag regime shifts. When you change timeframe, you also change the ratios between horizon, lookbacks, and correlation windows—what works on M5 won’t automatically hold on H1 or D1. Liquidity, session effects (overnight gaps, news bursts), and volatility do not scale linearly with time. Always validate per symbol and timeframe, then retune horizon, z-length, correlation window, and either the neutral band or the z-threshold. On fast charts, “components” mode adapts quicker; on slower charts, “super” reduces noise. Keep prior-shift and calibration enabled, monitor Hit Rate with its confidence interval and the Brier score, and execute only on confirmed (closed-bar) values.
For example, what do “UP 61%” and “DOWN 21%” mean?
“UP 61%” is the model’s estimated probability that the close will be higher after your selected horizon—directional probability, not a price target or profit guarantee. “DOWN 21%” still reports the probability of up; here it’s 21%, which implies 79% for down (a short bias). The label switches to “DOWN” because the probability falls below your short threshold. With a neutral-band policy, for example ±7%, signals are: Long above 57%, Short below 43%, Neutral in between. In z-score mode, fixed z-cutoffs drive the call instead of percentages. The arrow length on the chart is an ATR-scaled projection to visualize reach; treat it as guidance, not a promise.
Part 1 — Scientific description
Objective.
The indicator estimates the probability that price will be higher after a user-defined horizon (a chosen number of bars) and emits long, short, or neutral decisions under explicit thresholds. It combines multi‑feature, z‑normalized inputs, adaptive correlation‑based weighting, a prior‑shifted sigmoid mapping, optional rolling probability calibration, and repaint‑safe confirmation. It also visualizes an ATR‑scaled forward projection and prints a compact statistics panel.
Data and labeling.
For each bar, the target label is whether price increased over the past chosen horizon. Learning is deliberately backward‑looking to avoid look‑ahead: features are associated with outcomes that are only known after that horizon has elapsed.
Feature engineering.
The feature set includes momentum, RSI, stochastic %K, MACD histogram slope, a normalized EMA(20/50) trend spread, ATR as a share of price, Bollinger Band width, and volume normalized by its moving average. All features are standardized over rolling windows. A compressed “super‑feature” is available that aggregates core trend and momentum components while penalizing excessive width (volatility). Users can switch between a “components” mode (weighted sum of individual features) and a “super” mode (single compressed driver).
Weighting and learning.
Weights are the rolling correlations between features (evaluated one horizon ago) and realized directional outcomes, smoothed by an EMA and optionally clamped to a bounded range to stabilize outliers. This produces an adaptive, regime‑aware weighting without explicit machine‑learning libraries.
Scoring and probability mapping.
The raw score is either the weighted component sum or the weighted super‑feature. The score is standardized again and passed through a sigmoid whose steepness is user‑controlled. A “prior shift” moves the sigmoid’s midpoint to the current base rate of up moves, estimated over the evaluation window, so that probabilities remain well‑calibrated when markets drift bullish or bearish. Probabilities and standardized scores are EMA‑smoothed for stability.
Decision policy.
Two modes are supported:
- Neutral band: go long if the probability is above one half plus a user‑set band; go short if it is below one half minus that band; otherwise stay neutral.
- Z‑score thresholds: use symmetric positive/negative cutoffs on the standardized score to trigger long/short.
Repaint protection.
All values used for decisions can be locked to confirmed (closed) bars. Intrabar updates are available as a preview, but confirmed values drive evaluation and stats.
Calibration.
An optional rolling linear calibration maps past confirmed probabilities to realized outcomes over the evaluation window. The mapping is clipped to the unit interval and can be injected back into the decision logic if desired. This improves reliability (probabilities that “mean what they say”) without necessarily improving raw separability.
Evaluation metrics.
The table reports: hit rate on signaled bars; a Wilson confidence interval for that hit rate at a chosen confidence level; Brier score as a measure of probability accuracy; counts of long/short trades; average realized return by side; profit factor; net return; and exposure (signal density). All are computed on rolling windows consistent with the learning scheme.
Visualization.
On the chart, an arrowed projection shows the predicted direction from the current bar to the chosen horizon, with magnitude scaled by ATR (optionally scaled by the square‑root of the horizon). Labels display either the decision probability or the standardized score. Neutral states can display a configurable icon for immediate recognition.
Computational properties.
The design relies on rolling means, standard deviations, correlations, and EMAs. Per‑bar cost is constant with respect to history length, and memory is constant per tracked series. Graphical objects are updated in place to obey platform limits.
Assumptions and limitations.
The method is correlation‑based and will adapt after regime changes, not before them. Calibration improves probability reliability but not necessarily ranking power. Intrabar previews are non‑binding and should not be evaluated as historical performance.
Part 2 — Trader‑facing description
What it does.
This tool tells you how likely price is to be higher after your chosen number of bars and converts that into Long / Short / Neutral calls. It learns, in real time, which components—momentum, trend, volatility, breadth, and volume—matter now, adjusts their weights, and shows you a probability line plus a forward arrow scaled by volatility.
How to set it up.
1) Choose your horizon. Intraday scalps: 5–10 bars. Swings: 10–30 bars. The default of 14 bars is a balanced starting point.
2) Pick a feature mode.
- components: granular and fast to adapt when leadership rotates between signals.
- super: cleaner single driver; less noise, slightly slower to react.
3) Decide how signals are triggered.
- Neutral band (probability based): intuitive and easy to tune. Widen the band for fewer, higher‑quality trades; tighten to catch more moves.
- Z‑score thresholds: consistent numeric cutoffs that ignore base‑rate drift.
4) Keep reliability helpers on. Leave prior shift and calibration enabled to stabilize probabilities across bullish/bearish regimes.
5) Smoothing. A short EMA on the probability or score reduces whipsaws while preserving turns.
6) Overlay. The arrow shows the call and a volatility‑scaled reach for the next horizon. Treat it as guidance, not a promise.
Reading the stats table.
- Hit Rate with a confidence interval: your recent accuracy with an uncertainty range; trust the range, not only the point.
- Brier Score: lower is better; it checks whether a stated “70%” really behaves like 70% over time.
- Profit Factor, Net Return, Exposure: quick triage of tradability and signal density.
- Average Return by Side: sanity‑check that the long and short calls each pull their weight.
Typical adjustments.
- Too many trades? Increase the neutral band or raise the z‑threshold.
- Missing the move? Tighten the band, or switch to components mode to react faster.
- Choppy timeframe? Lengthen the z‑score and correlation windows; keep calibration on.
- Volatility regime change? Revisit the ATR multiplier and enable square‑root scaling of horizon.
Execution and risk.
- Size positions by volatility (ATR‑based sizing works well).
- Enter on confirmed values; use intrabar previews only as early signals.
- Combine with your market structure (levels, liquidity zones). This model is statistical, not clairvoyant.
What it is not.
Not a black‑box machine‑learning model. It is transparent, correlation‑weighted technical analysis with strong attention to probability reliability and repaint safety.
Suggested defaults (robust starting point).
- Horizon 14; components mode; weight EMA 10; correlation window 500; z‑length 200.
- Neutral band around seven percentage points, or z‑threshold around one‑third of a standard deviation.
- Prior shift ON, Calibration ON, Use calibrated for decisions OFF to start.
- ATR multiplier 1.0; square‑root horizon scaling ON; EMA smoothing 3.
- Confidence setting equivalent to about 95%.
Disclaimer
No indicator guarantees profits. HorizonSigma Pro is a decision aid; always combine with solid risk management and your own judgment. Backtest, forward test, and size responsibly.
The content provided, including all code and materials, is strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It is not intended as, and should not be interpreted as, financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument, or an offer of any financial product or service. All strategies, tools, and examples discussed are provided for illustrative purposes to demonstrate coding techniques and the functionality of Pine Script within a trading context.
Any results from strategies or tools provided are hypothetical, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading and investing involve high risk, including the potential loss of principal, and may not be suitable for all individuals. Before making any trading decisions, please consult with a qualified financial professional to understand the risks involved.
By using this script, you acknowledge and agree that any trading decisions are made solely at your discretion and risk.
Enhance your trading precision and confidence 🚀
Best regards
Chervolino
Candle ShapeCandle Shape
This indicator visualizes rolling candles that aggregate price action over a chosen lookback period, allowing you to see how OHLC dynamics evolve in real time.
Instead of waiting for a higher timeframe (HTF) bar to close, you can track its development directly from a lower timeframe chart.
For example, view how a 1-hour candle is forming on a 1-minute chart — complete with rolling open, high, low, and close levels, as well as colored body and wick areas.
---
🔹 How it works
- Lookback Period (n) → sets the bucket size, defining how many bars are merged into a “meta-candle.”
- The script continuously updates the meta-open, meta-high, meta-low, and meta-close.
- Body and wick areas are filled with color , making bullish/bearish transitions easy to follow.
---
🔹 Use cases
- Monitor the intra-development of higher timeframe candles.
- Analyze rolling OHLC structures to understand how price dynamics shift across different aggregation windows.
- Explore unique perspectives for strategy confirmation, breakout anticipation, and market structure analysis.
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✨ Candle Shape bridges the gap between timeframes and uncovers new layers of price interaction.
Beta Zones [MMT]Beta Zones
Overview
The Beta Zones indicator is a multi-timeframe analysis tool designed to identify and visualize price ranges (zones) across different timeframes on a TradingView chart. It draws boxes to represent high and low price levels for each enabled timeframe, helping traders spot key support and resistance zones, track price movements, and assess market signals relative to these zones. The indicator is highly customizable, allowing users to toggle timeframes, adjust colors, and control historical visibility.
Features
Multi-Timeframe Support : Tracks up to five user-defined timeframes (default: 15m, 1H, 4H, 1D, 1W) to display price zones.
Dynamic Price Boxes : Draws boxes on the chart to represent the high and low prices for each timeframe, updating dynamically as new bars form.
Signal Indicators : Provides directional signals (▲, ▼, →) based on the previous close relative to the current box's top and bottom.
Customizable Display : Includes options to show or hide historical boxes, adjust box colors, and configure a summary table.
Summary Table : Displays a table with timeframe status, price range, and signal information for quick reference.
Settings
Timeframes
Enable/Disable : Toggle each timeframe (e.g., 15m, 1H, 4H, 1D, 1W) to display or hide its respective zones.
Timeframe Selection : Choose custom timeframes for each of the five slots.
Color Customization : Set unique fill and border colors for each timeframe's boxes (default colors: green, blue, orange, purple, red).
Display
Max Historical Boxes : Limit the number of historical boxes per timeframe (default: 1, max: 50).
Show History : Toggle visibility of historical boxes (default: false, showing only the latest box).
Min Box Height : Ensures boxes have a minimum height in ticks (default: 1.0, currently hardcoded).
Table
Show Table : Enable or disable the summary table (default: true).
Background Color : Customize the table's background color.
Header Color : Set the color for the table's header row.
Text Color : Adjust the text color for table content.
Table Columns
Timeframe : Displays the selected timeframe (e.g., 15m, 1H).
Color : Shows the color associated with the timeframe's boxes.
Status : Indicates if the timeframe is "Active" (valid and lower than the chart's timeframe), "Invalid" (enabled but not lower), or "Disabled".
Range : Shows the price range (high - low) of the current box.
Signal : Displays ▲ (price above box), ▼ (price below box), or → (price within box) based on the previous close.
How to Use
Add to Chart : Apply the indicator to your TradingView chart.
Configure Timeframes : Enable desired timeframes and adjust their settings (e.g., 15m, 1H) to match your trading strategy.
Analyze Zones : Use the boxes to identify key price levels for support, resistance, or breakout opportunities.
Monitor Signals : Check the table's "Signal" column to gauge price direction relative to each timeframe's zone.
Customize Appearance : Adjust colors and historical box visibility to suit your preferences.
Ideal For
Swing Traders : Identify key price zones across multiple timeframes for entry/exit points.
Day Traders : Monitor short-term price movements relative to higher timeframe zones.
Technical Analysts : Combine with other indicators to confirm support/resistance levels.
TBBT (Two Bar Break Through)📘 TBBT (Two Bar Break Through)
Overview
TBBT is a simple breakout indicator that generates signals when the current bar breaks above or below the previous bar’s high/low.
Signals are marked in **green (60% transparent)** on the chart for both buy and sell conditions.
- Buy → Current high > Previous high and candle closes bullish
- Sell → Current low < Previous low and candle closes bearish
---
Key Features
1. Straightforward breakout logic
• Detects upward breakouts of the previous bar’s high.
• Detects downward breakouts of the previous bar’s low.
2. Visuals
• Green labels (60% transparency).
• “Buy” label plotted below breakout bars.
• “Sell” label plotted above breakdown bars.
3. Alerts
• Alerts available for both Buy and Sell conditions.
• Custom alert messages included.
---
How to Use
• Add TBBT to your chart.
• Watch for “Buy” or “Sell” signals to identify momentum shifts.
• Combine with other filters (trend, volume, higher timeframe analysis) for more reliable setups.
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👉 In short:
**TBBT highlights simple two-bar breakout signals** with clean green markers for both directions.
FTBBT📘 FTBBT (Filtered Two Bar Break Through)
Overview
FTBBT is a filtered breakout indicator based on the Two Bar Break Through concept.
It generates Buy and Sell signals when the current bar breaks above or below the previous bar’s high/low, but filters out duplicate signals in the same direction.
This ensures that only the **first breakout** in each sequence is shown, keeping the chart clean and focused.
---
Key Features
1. Filtered Breakouts
• Only the first breakout is displayed.
• Prevents clutter when multiple candles break in the same direction.
2. Visuals
• Light pink labels (60% transparency).
• "Buy" appears below the bar when the high is broken.
• "Sell" appears above the bar when the low is broken.
3. Alerts
• Alerts are triggered only for filtered signals.
• Custom alert messages for both Buy and Sell events.
---
How to Use
• Add FTBBT to your chart.
• Focus on the first breakout signal after a move begins.
• Combine with trend filters, volume, or higher timeframe context for stronger confirmation.
---
👉 In short:
**FTBBT delivers clean, filtered breakout signals.**
It highlights meaningful shifts by removing duplicate noise, showing traders only the key moments.
Market Imbalance Tracker (Inefficient Candle + FVG)# 📊 Overview
This indicator combines two imbalance concepts:
• **Squared Up Points (SUP)** – midpoints of large, "inefficient" candles that often attract price back.
• **Fair Value Gaps (FVG)** – 3-candle gaps created by strong impulse moves that often get "filled."
Use them separately or together. Confluence between a SUP line and an FVG boundary/midpoint is high-value.
---
# ⚡ Quick Start (2 minutes)
1. **Add to chart** → keep defaults (Percentile method, 80th percentile, 100-bar lookback).
2. **Watch** for dashed SUP lines to print after large candles.
3. **Toggle Show FVG** → see green/red boxes where gaps exist.
4. **Turn on alerts** → New SUP created, SUP touched, New FVG.
5. **Trade the reaction** → look for confluence (SUP + FVG + S/R), then manage risk.
---
# 🛠 Features
## 🔹 Squared Up Points (SUP)
• **Purpose:** Midpoint of a large candle → potential support/resistance magnet.
• **Detection:** Choose *Percentile* (adaptive) or *ATR Multiple* (absolute).
• **Validation:** Only plots if the preceding candle does not touch the midpoint (with tolerance).
• **Lifecycle:** Line auto-extends into the future; it's removed when touched or aged out.
• **Visual:** Horizontal dashed line (color/width configurable; style fixed to dashed if not exposed).
## 🔹 Fair Value Gaps (FVG)
• **Purpose:** 3-candle gaps from an impulse; price often revisits to "fill."
• **Detection:** Requires a strong directional candle (Marubozu threshold) creating a gap.
• **Types:**
- **Bullish FVG (Green):** Gap below; expectation is downward fill.
- **Bearish FVG (Red):** Gap above; expectation is upward fill.
• **Close Rules (if implemented):**
- *Full Fill:* Gap closes when the opposite boundary is tagged.
- *Midpoint Fill:* Gap closes when its midpoint is tagged.
• **Visual:** Colored boxes; optional split-coloring to emphasize the midpoint.
> **Note:** If a listed FVG option isn't visible in Inputs, you're on a lighter build; use the available switches.
---
# ⚙️ Settings
## SUP Settings
• **Candle Size Method:** Percentile (top X% of recent ranges) or ATR Multiple.
• **Candle Size Percentile:** e.g., 80 → top 20% largest candles.
• **ATR Multiple & Period:** e.g., 1.5 × ATR(14).
• **Percentile Lookback:** Bars used to compute percentile.
• **Lookback Period:** How long SUP lines remain eligible before auto-cleanup.
• **Touch Tolerance (%):** Buffer based on the inefficient candle's range (0% = exact touch).
## Line Appearance
• **Line Color / Width:** Customizable.
• **Style:** Dashed (fixed unless you expose a style input).
## FVG Settings (if present in your build)
• **Show FVG:** On/Off.
• **Close Method:** Full Fill or Midpoint.
• **Marubozu Wick Tolerance:** Max wick % of the impulse bar.
• **Use Split Coloring:** Two-tone box halves around midpoint.
• **Colors:** Bullish/Bearish, and upper/lower halves (if split).
• **Max FVG Age:** Auto-remove older gaps.
---
# 📈 How to Use
## Trading Applications
• **SUP Lines:** Expect reaction on first touch; use as S/R or profit-taking magnets.
• **FVG Fills:** Price frequently tags the midpoint/boundary before continuing.
• **Confluence:** SUP at an FVG midpoint/boundary + higher-timeframe S/R = higher quality.
• **Bias:** Clusters of unfilled FVGs can hint at path of least resistance.
## Best Practices
• **Timeframe:** HTFs for swing levels, LTFs for execution.
• **Volume:** High volume at level = stronger signal.
• **Context:** Trade with broader trend or at least avoid counter-trend without confirmation.
• **Risk:** Always pre-define invalidation; structures fail in chop.
---
# 🔔 Alerts
• **New SUP Created** – When a qualifying inefficient candle prints a SUP midpoint.
• **SUP Touched/Invalidated** – When price touches within tolerance.
• **New FVG Detected** – When a valid gap forms per your rules.
> **Tip:** Set alerts *Once Per Bar Close* on HTFs; *Once* on LTFs to avoid noise.
---
# 🧑💻 Technical Notes
• **Percentile vs ATR:** Percentile adapts to volatility; ATR gives consistency for backtesting.
• **FVG Direction Logic:** Gap above price = bearish (expect up-fill); below = bullish (expect down-fill).
• **Performance:** Limits on lines/boxes and auto-aging keep things snappy.
---
# ⚠️ Limitations
• Imbalances are **context tools**, not signals by themselves.
• Works best with trend or clear impulses; expect noise in narrow ranges.
• Lower-timeframe gaps can be plentiful and lower quality.
---
# 📌 Version & Requirements
• **Pine Script v6**
• Heavy drawings may require **TradingView Pro** or higher (object limits).
---
*For best results, combine with your existing trading strategy and proper risk management.*
Volume Weighted Average Price HPSIt helps you to get to know about the volume basis on monthly , yearly and so on.
22:50 Breakout StrategyBreakout range near the close of the day
We age getting 5 min range near the close of the day and buy or sell breaking this range
OB/FVG Precision Overlap ZonesThis indicator highlights only the zones where Order Blocks (OBs) and Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) overlap, filtering out weaker signals. By focusing on these confluence areas, it helps identify higher-probability entries and cleaner risk to reward setups.
Breakout Signals This indicator is a Pine Script tool for identifying potential trading opportunities using breakout signals. It provides two distinct types of breakout alerts and calculates a potential price target for one of them.
### Breakout Signal Types
* **Lowest Low Breakout:** This signal is triggered when the current bar closes above the high of the previous bar, and that previous bar had the lowest low within a user-defined lookback period. This indicates a potential bullish reversal after a short-term downtrend.
* **Highest High Breakout:** This signal occurs when the current bar's close price exceeds the highest high recorded within a specified lookback period. This pattern suggests strong bullish momentum and a potential continuation of an uptrend.
### Visuals and Alerts
The indicator helps visualize these signals on the chart by highlighting the background of entry candles. It uses a light green background for the Lowest Low Breakout and a light yellow for the Highest High Breakout. A table is displayed on the chart to show the details of the most recent Lowest Low Breakout and its calculated target. Additionally, it provides an alert feature to notify users in real time when either of the breakout conditions is met.
Smart Money Windows- X7Smart Money Windows 📊💰
Unlock the secret moves of the big players! This indicator highlights key liquidity traps, smart money zones, and market kill zones for the Asian, London, and New York sessions. See where the pros hide their orders and spot potential price flips before they happen! 🚀🔥
Features:
Visual session boxes with high/low/mid levels 🟪🟫
NY session shifted 60 mins for precise timing 🕒
Perfect for spotting traps, inducements & smart money maneuvers 🎯
Works on Forex, crypto, and stocks 💹
Get in the “Smart Money Window” and trade like the pros! 💸🔑
By HH
20/40/60Displays three consecutive, connected range boxes showing high/low price ranges for customizable periods. Boxes are positioned seamlessly with shared boundaries for continuous price action visualization.
Features
Three Connected Boxes: Red (most recent), Orange (middle), Green (earliest) periods
Customizable Positioning: Set range length and starting offset from current bar
Individual Styling: Custom colors, transparency, and border width for each box
Display Controls: Toggle borders, fills, and line visibility
Use Cases
Range Analysis: Compare volatility across time periods, spot breakouts
Support/Resistance: Use box boundaries as potential S/R levels
Market Structure: Visualize recent price development and trend patterns
Key Settings
Range Length: Bars per box (default: 20)
Starting Offset: Bars back from current to position boxes (default: 0)
Style Options: Colors, borders, and visibility controls for each box
Perfect for traders analyzing consecutive price ranges and comparing current conditions to recent historical periods.
FVG Fusion – by EB | Smart Money ConceptsFVG Fusion – by EB is an advanced indicator based on Smart Money Concepts (SMC).
It automatically detects Fair Value Gaps (FVG) on multiple timeframes, along with key PDH/PDL (Daily Previous) and PWH/PWL (Weekly Previous) levels.
🔹 Key Features
Automatic detection of bullish and bearish FVGs
Multi-timeframe (M5 to D1)
PDH/PDL and PWH/PWL levels with lightning bolts
Configurable alerts when tapping on a FVG
Customizable colors, thicknesses, and automatic clearing.
💡 Ideal for traders who use Price Action and SMC to identify imbalances and high-probability zones.
A SRCDrawing support and resistance lines based on the price of candles that are multiple times larger than their recent period average
MuLegend's NQ 1 Min Sniper Entry Set up!enter after the retest, and ride it to the next structure point!
MuLegend's NQ 1m Break & Retest Sniper (clean)This indicator will mos def alert you when on NQ 1 minute time frame, to ENTER, AFTER retest:
1) if its' a bullish retest: enter on the candle HIGHER than the retest candle, with the stop loss, under the retest candle, and target is the next structure point.
2) If it's a bearish retest candle: enter on the candle LOWER than the retest candle, with the stop lost above the retest candle, and your target is the next structure point.
MuLegend
Follow me on IG @ atltime2shine
Same-Direction Candles (Two Symbols)Same-Direction Candles (Two Symbols)
What it does
Highlights bars on your chart when two symbols print the same candle direction on the chosen timeframe:
Both Bullish → one color
Both Bearish → another color
Great for spotting synchronous moves (e.g., NQ & ES, QQQ & SPY), or confirming risk-on/risk-off with an inverse asset (e.g., NQ vs DXY with inversion).
How it works
For each bar, the script checks whether close > open (bullish), close < open (bearish), or equal (doji) for:
The chart’s symbol
A second symbol pulled via request.security() (optionally on a different timeframe)
If both symbols are bullish, it paints Bull color; if both are bearish, it paints Bear color. Dojis can be ignored.
Inputs
Second symbol: Ticker to compare (e.g., CME_MINI:ES1!, NASDAQ:QQQ, TVC:DXY).
Second symbol timeframe: Leave blank to use the chart’s TF, or set a specific one (e.g., 5, 15, D).
Invert second symbol direction?: Flips the second symbol’s candle direction (useful for inversely related assets like DXY vs indices).
Ignore doji candles: Skip highlights when either candle is neutral (open == close).
Coloring options: Toggle bar coloring and/or background shading; pick colors; set background transparency.
Alerts
Three alert conditions:
Both Bullish
Both Bearish
Both Same Direction (bullish or bearish)
Create alerts from the Add Alert dialog after adding the script.
Use cases
Index confluence: NQ & ES moving in lockstep
ETF confirmation: QQQ & SPY agreement
FX/Index risk signals: Invert DXY against NQ/ES to see when equity strength aligns with dollar weakness
Tips
For mixed timeframes (e.g., chart on 1m, ES on 5m), set Second symbol timeframe to the higher TF to reduce noise.
Keep Ignore dojis on for cleaner signals.
Combine with your own entry rules (structure, FVGs, liquidity sweeps).
Notes
Works on any symbol/timeframe supported by TradingView.
Overlay script; no strategy/entries/exits are executed.
Past performance ≠ future results; for education only.
Version: 1.0 – initial release (bar/background highlights, doji filter, inversion, multi-TF support, alerts).
OMN Heikin Ashi Candle Direction Reversal AlertThis is a indicator to let you know once Heikin Ashi candle has changed direction compared to the candle before it. Set an alert on the indicator to get an audible alert.
Setup Cripto EMA + Volume//@version=5 indicator("Sinais Multi-Cripto – EMA+Volume (BTC/ETH/BNB/SOL/XRP)", overlay=false)
// Inputs emaFast = input.int(50, "EMA Curta") emaSlow = input.int(200, "EMA Longa") emaPull = input.int(20, "EMA Pullback") volLen = input.int(20, "Média Volume")
symBTC = input.symbol(defval="BINANCE:BTCUSDT", title="BTC") symETH = input.symbol(defval="BINANCE:ETHUSDT", title="ETH") symBNB = input.symbol(defval="BINANCE:BNBUSDT", title="BNB") symSOL = input.symbol(defval="BINANCE:SOLUSDT", title="SOL") symXRP = input.symbol(defval="BINANCE:XRPUSDT", title="XRP")
f_sig(sym) => c = request.security(sym, timeframe.period, close) v = request.security(sym, timeframe.period, volume) e50 = ta.ema(c, emaFast) e200 = ta.ema(c, emaSlow) e20 = ta.ema(c, emaPull) vma = ta.sma(v, volLen) long = (e50 > e200) and (c > e20) and (v > vma) short = (e50 < e200) and (c < e20) and (v > vma)
= f_sig(symBTC) = f_sig(symETH) = f_sig(symBNB) = f_sig(symSOL) = f_sig(symXRP)
// Exibição plotchar(btcL, title="BTC Long", char="▲", location=location.top) plotchar(btcS, title="BTC Short", char="▼", location=location.bottom) plotchar(ethL, title="ETH Long", char="▲", location=location.top) plotchar(ethS, title="ETH Short", char="▼", location=location.bottom) plotchar(bnbL, title="BNB Long", char="▲", location=location.top) plotchar(bnbS, title="BNB Short", char="▼", location=location.bottom) plotchar(solL, title="SOL Long", char="▲", location=location.top) plotchar(solS, title="SOL Short", char="▼", location=location.bottom) plotchar(xrpL, title="XRP Long", char="▲", location=location.top) plotchar(xrpS, title="XRP Short", char="▼", location=location.bottom)
Volumetric Support and Resistance [BackQuant]Volumetric Support and Resistance
What this is
This Overlay locates price levels where both structure and participation have been meaningful. It combines classical swing points with a volume filter, then manages those levels on the chart as price evolves. Each level carries:
• A reference price (support or resistance)
• An estimate of the volume that traded around that price
• A touch counter that updates when price retests it
• A visual box whose thickness is scaled by volatility
The result is a concise map of candidate support and resistance that is informed by both price location and how much trading occurred there.
How levels are built
Find structural pivots uses ta.pivothigh and ta.pivotlow with a user set sensitivity. Larger sensitivity looks for broader swings. Smaller sensitivity captures tighter turns.
Require meaningful volume computes an average volume over a lookback period and forms a volume ratio for the current bar. A pivot only becomes a level when the ratio is at least the volume significance multiplier.
Avoid clustering checks a minimum level distance (as a percent of price). If a candidate is too close to an existing level, it is skipped to keep the map readable.
Attach a volume strength to the level estimates volume strength by averaging the volume of recent bars whose high to low range spans that price. Levels with unusually high strength are flagged as high volume.
Store and draw levels are kept in an array with fields for price, type, volume, touches, creation bar, and a box handle. On the last bar, each level is drawn as a horizontal box centered at the price with a vertical thickness scaled by ATR. Borders are thicker when the level is marked high volume. Boxes can extend into the future.
How levels evolve over time
• Aging and pruning : levels are removed if they are too old relative to the lookback or if you exceed the maximum active levels.
• Break detection : a level can be removed when price closes through it by more than a break threshold set as a fraction of ATR. Toggle with Remove Broken Levels.
• Touches : when price approaches within the break threshold, the level’s touch counter increments.
Visual encoding
• Boxes : support boxes are green, resistance boxes are red. Box height uses an ATR based thickness so tolerance scales with volatility. Transparency is fixed in this version. Borders are thicker on high volume levels.
• Volume annotation : show the estimated volume inside the box or as a label at the right. If a level has more than one touch, a suffix like “(2x)” is appended.
• Extension : boxes can extend a fixed number of bars into the future and can be set to extend right.
• High volume bar tint : bars with volume above average × multiplier are tinted green if up and red if down.
Inputs at a glance
Core Settings
• Level Detection Sensitivity — pivot window for swing detection
• Volume Significance Multiplier — minimum volume ratio to accept a pivot
• Lookback Period — window for average volume and maintenance rules
Level Management
• Maximum Active Levels — cap on concurrently drawn levels
• Minimum Level Distance (%) — required spacing between level prices
Visual Settings
• Remove Broken Levels — drop a level once price closes decisively through it
• Show Volume Information on Levels — annotate volume and touches
• Extend Levels to Right — carry boxes forward
Enhanced Visual Settings
• Show Volume Text Inside Box — text placement option
• Volume Based Transparency and Volume Based Border Thickness — helper logic provided; current draw block fixes transparency and increases border width on high volume levels
Colors
• Separate colors for support, resistance, and their high volume variants
How it can be used
• Trade planning : use the most recent support and resistance as reference zones for entries, profit taking, or stop placement. ATR scaled thickness provides a practical buffer.
• Context for patterns : combine with breakouts, pullbacks, or candle patterns. A breakout through a high volume resistance carries more informational weight than one through a thin level.
• Prioritization : when multiple levels are nearby, prefer high volume or higher touch counts.
• Regime adaptation : widen sensitivity and increase minimum distance in fast regimes to avoid clutter. Tighten them in calm regimes to capture more granularity.
Why volume support and resistance is used in trading
Support and resistance relate to willingness to transact at certain prices. Volume measures participation. When many contracts change hands near a price:
• More market players hold inventory there, often creating responsive behavior on retests
• Order flow can concentrate again to defend or to exit
• Breaks can be cleaner as trapped inventory rebalances
Conditioning level detection on above average activity focuses attention on prices that mattered to more participants.
Alerts
• New Support Level Created
• New Resistance Level Created
• Level Touch Alert
• Level Break Alert
Strengths
• Dual filter of structure and participation, reducing trivial swing points
• Self cleaning map that retires old or invalid levels
• Volatility aware presentation using ATR based thickness
• Touch counting for persistence assessment
• Tunable inputs for instrument and timeframe
Limitations and caveats
• Volume strength is an approximation based on bars spanning the price, not true per price volume
• Pivots confirm after the sensitivity window completes, so new levels appear with a delay
• Narrow ranges can still cluster levels unless minimum distance is increased
• Large gaps may jump past levels and immediately trigger break conditions
Practical tuning guide
• If the chart is crowded: increase sensitivity, increase minimum level distance, or reduce maximum active levels
• If useful levels are missed: reduce volume multiplier or sensitivity
• If you want stricter break removal: increase the ATR based break threshold in code
• For instruments with session patterns: tailor the lookback period to a representative window
Interpreting touches and breaks
• First touch after creation is a validation test
• Multiple shallow touches suggest absorption; a later break may then travel farther
• Breaks on high current volume merit extra attention
Multi timeframe usage
Levels are computed on the active chart timeframe. A common workflow is to keep a higher timeframe instance for structure and a lower timeframe instance for execution. Align trades with higher timeframe levels where possible.
Final Thoughts
This indicator builds a lightweight, self updating map of support and resistance grounded in swings and participation. It is not a full market profile, but it captures much of the practical benefit with modest complexity. Treat levels as context and decision zones, not guarantees. Combine with your entry logic and risk controls.