Stop Getting Whipsawed. Meet Fimathe Elite V40 (State Machine LoThe trader's biggest enemy isn't the market—it's indecision and market noise. "Should I enter now?", "The price pulled back, should I exit or hold?".
To solve this, I developed Fimathe Elite V40. This is not just a simple indicator; it is a complete Trade Management System based on the renowned Fimathe technique (Reference Channels & Neutral Zones), but armored with institutional-grade algorithms to filter out fake signals.
💡 WHY IS THIS SCRIPT DIFFERENT?
Most indicators repaint or spam "Sell" signals the moment a candle turns red, even during a healthy bullish pullback. Fimathe Elite V40 solves this using a sophisticated State Machine Engine.
1. The "State Machine" Technology (No Noise): The script has "memory". It knows if you are already positioned.
Silence: If you are in a trade, it ignores minor fluctuations. It will NOT spam new signals during a consolidation.
Action: It only alerts you in two specific scenarios: Profit Expansion (Level Breakout) or True Reversal (Close against the Stop Loss).
2. Smart Trend Detection (Linear Regression): Instead of guessing the trend, the script calculates the mathematical slope of the last X bars using Linear Regression.
If the slope is positive = It creates Bullish Channels (Reference Channel on Top).
If the slope is negative = It creates Bearish Channels (Reference Channel on Bottom). This prevents you from trading against the mathematical flow of the market.
3. Visual Trade Management:
Active Stop Loss (Orange Line): A visual floor/ceiling that trails the price. If the price does not close beyond this line, you stay in the trade, ignoring emotional wicks.
Active Target (Green Line): Shows exactly where the next expansion level is.
Full Grid: Automatically projects Level 1, 2, and 3 for roadmap planning.
🚀 HOW TO TRADE:
Wait for the Map: Let the script draw the CR (Reference Channel) and NZ (Neutral Zone) automatically (it skips the volatile opening minutes).
The Signal: Wait for the "BUY (Breakout)" or "SELL (Breakout)" label. This signal appears on the close of the breakout candle.
The Entry: Enter on the violation of that candle's high/low.
The Ride: Follow the Orange Line. As the price conquers new levels, the Stop Loss automatically moves up (Trailing Stop) to lock in profits.
🛡️ Risk Management: This tool is designed to force discipline. It visually shows you that a pullback is not a reversal, keeping you in the trend longer and getting you out immediately when the structure actually breaks.
วัฏจักร
Daily SR - Locked VersionRiverSide Indicator - User Guide📊 What is RiverSide?RiverSide is a dynamic channel indicator that creates Upper and Lower bands around a Moving Average (MA). The bands automatically change color based on their position relative to the EMA 200, helping you identify market trends.🎯 Key Features1. Dynamic Bands
Upper Band = MA × (1 + Deviation %)
Lower Band = MA × (1 - Deviation %)
Bands expand and contract based on the MA value
2. Color-Coded Trend
🔵 Blue Lines = Bullish trend (MA above EMA 200)
🔴 Red Lines = Bearish trend (MA below EMA 200)
3. Customizable Settings
MA Period: Default 50 (adjustable)
MA Type: EMA, SMA, WMA, or RMA
Deviation: Default 0.14% (adjustable from 0.1% to 100%)
Applied Price: Close, Open, High, Low, HL2, HLC3, OHLC4
Seasonality (Prev Month Close Expected)Seasonality Indicator
This indicator shows how an asset has historically behaved during each calendar month. It highlights the typical price direction and strength for the current month based on long-term seasonal patterns.
The projected zone on the chart represents the average historical outcome for the ongoing month, allowing traders to quickly see whether current price action is developing in line with, above, or below its usual seasonal behavior. A heatmap summarizes monthly performance across years, making recurring strong and weak periods easy to identify.
Vladimir Popdimitrov
Seasonax Pro PopdimitrovThis indicator studies how an asset has historically behaved during each calendar month and uses that information to frame expectations for the current month. When a new month begins, it anchors the analysis to the confirmed closing price of the previous month and compares the current month to all past occurrences of the same month.
Based on this long-term seasonal behavior, the indicator projects an expected price zone for the ongoing month, showing where price would typically end if it follows its historical monthly pattern. The projection is visualized directly on the chart, making it easy to see whether current price action is developing above, below, or in line with seasonal norms.
The accompanying heatmap highlights monthly tendencies across years, helping traders identify recurring strengths, weaknesses, and consistency in seasonal performance.
Vladimir Popdimitrov
Hedge Fund Session Ranges [GMT+2] - Multi-Timezone TrackingOverview
This professional-grade tool is designed for institutional-style trading, specifically focusing on the Liquidity Cycles of the global markets. It allows traders to visualize key trading windows (Asia, Europe, and US) with precision, using a fixed GMT+2 offset—ideal for traders aligned with Middle Eastern or Eastern European timezones.
Key Features
Triple Session Tracking: Includes pre-defined windows for Asia, London Morning, and NY Afternoon.
Dynamic Box Scaling: Automatically calculates and visualizes the High/Low range of each session in real-time.
GMT+2 Optimization: Built-in timezone handling to ensure your charts align perfectly with local bank hours.
Clean Visuals: Minimalist design to avoid chart clutter, allowing for clear price action analysis.
Why Trade Sessions?
Institutional volume isn't distributed evenly throughout the day. By identifying the Asian Range (01:00-06:00), the London Open (10:00-12:00), and the NY Reversal/Trend (16:30-18:30), traders can identify "Liquidity Grabs" and "Expansion Phases" more effectively.
QUARTERLY CYCLES - DAY - SESSION - 90M - RICH BVWYThis custom version of the origional script by © HandlesHandle
refines the quarter labeling system. Instead of implying discrete deliveries (A, M, D, X etc.), quarters are labeled Q1–Q4 to reflect fixed time ranges. This ensures clarity: quarters are structural anchors, while AMDX variables define the actual cycle behavior. The indicator highlights cycles, not expected deliveries.
Commodity Market Structure SuiteThe Commodity Market Structure Suite is a unified indicator combining three powerful analytical frameworks into one comprehensive tool for analyzing commodity markets. It integrates term structure analysis, spot-futures spread dynamics, and Commitment of Traders positioning data into a scientifically-weighted composite score.
This indicator consolidates the functionality of three separate tools into one:
1. Futures Basis Suite (term structure, contango/backwardation)
2. Spot-Futures Spread (premium/discount, arbitrage)
3. Commodity Crowded Trade Suite (COT positioning)
The composite score is calculated using weights derived from academic research on commodity futures returns.
SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION
The indicator is built on established financial theory and recent academic research.
THEORY OF STORAGE (Working 1933, Kaldor 1939)
The Theory of Storage explains the relationship between spot and futures prices through the cost-of-carry model. The futures price equals the spot price plus storage costs, insurance, and financing costs, minus the convenience yield. The convenience yield represents the benefit of holding physical inventory, which increases when supplies are tight.
When convenience yield exceeds carrying costs, the market enters backwardation. When carrying costs dominate, the market is in contango. This relationship provides fundamental signals about physical supply and demand conditions.
TERM STRUCTURE TRADING STRATEGIES (Erb and Harvey 2006, Gorton and Rouwenhorst 2006)
Academic research has documented significant risk premiums associated with futures term structure. A 2011 study in the Journal of Banking and Finance found that combining momentum signals with term structure signals generated annualized returns of 21 percent, significantly outperforming single-signal strategies. The strategy involves buying commodities in backwardation and selling commodities in contango.
LIMITS TO ARBITRAGE
Recent academic work reveals that arbitrage does not fully eliminate pricing distortions in commodity futures markets. Institutional investors and index traders introduce persistent distortions, especially in distant expiration contracts. This creates exploitable inefficiencies that the indicator helps identify.
CONVENIENCE YIELD AND INVENTORY
Empirical studies confirm that convenience yield is inversely related to physical inventory levels across 21 different commodities. Low inventory correlates with backwardation and high convenience yield. High inventory correlates with contango and low convenience yield. Price volatility decreases as inventory increases, with this effect being more pronounced in backwardated markets.
COT POSITIONING AND PRICE PREDICTION
Research shows that commercial hedger positions provide valuable information about future price direction. Commercials tend to be net buyers before price increases and net sellers before decreases. Extreme speculator positioning often precedes reversals, as crowded trades unwind.
DATA ARCHITECTURE
The indicator fetches data from multiple sources:
TERM STRUCTURE DATA
Compares front month futures (e.g., GC1!) with second month futures (e.g., GC2!) to determine the shape of the futures curve. Positive spread (front > back) indicates backwardation. Negative spread (front < back) indicates contango.
SPOT-FUTURES DATA
Compares spot or cash market prices (e.g., XAUUSD) with front month futures to determine premium or discount. Positive spread indicates futures premium. Negative spread indicates futures discount.
COT DATA
Uses TradingView LibraryCOT to fetch Commitment of Traders data including commercial positions, speculator positions, and open interest. Supports Legacy, Disaggregated, and Financial report types.
COMPOSITE SCORE CALCULATION
The composite score combines four normalized signals using configurable weights:
Composite = (TermSignal x W1) + (SpotFutSignal x W2) + (COTSignal x W3) + (PhysicalSignal x W4)
Default weights based on research: Term=0.25, SpotFut=0.30, COT=0.30, Physical=0.15
TERM SIGNAL
The z-score of the term structure spread. Flattening contango (higher z-score) is bullish. Deepening contango (lower z-score) is bearish. Backwardation is bullish.
SPOT-FUTURES SIGNAL
The inverted z-score of the spot-futures spread. Futures discount (physical demand) is bullish. Futures premium is bearish.
COT SIGNAL
The z-score of commercial net positioning. Commercial buying (positive z-score) is bullish. Commercial selling is bearish.
PHYSICAL STRESS SIGNAL
Triggered when spread volatility or spread extremes exceed thresholds. Adds to signal in direction of other indicators when physical market stress is detected.
ANALYSIS MODES
1. MARKET STRUCTURE COMPOSITE
The default mode showing the weighted composite score. Positive values indicate bullish market structure. Negative values indicate bearish structure. Values beyond plus or minus 2 sigma indicate extreme conditions.
2. TERM STRUCTURE
Shows the z-score of the futures curve spread. Visualizes whether the market is in contango or backwardation relative to historical norms.
3. SPOT-FUTURES PREMIUM
Shows the z-score of the spot-futures spread. Visualizes whether futures trade at premium or discount to spot.
4. COT POSITIONING
Shows the z-score of commercial net positioning. Visualizes whether commercials are accumulating or distributing.
5. PHYSICAL STRESS INDEX
Shows combined stress indicators from spread volatility and extremes. Alerts when physical delivery conditions become strained.
6. DIVERGENCE SCANNER
Detects price-positioning divergences. Bullish divergence occurs when price makes new lows but positioning improves. Bearish divergence occurs when price makes new highs but positioning deteriorates.
7. RAW DEBUG
Shows underlying calculations for troubleshooting.
SIGNAL INTERPRETATION
The dashboard provides automatic signal interpretation based on the combination of readings:
PHYSICAL SQUEEZE
Occurs when backwardation coincides with futures discount. This is the strongest bullish signal, indicating severe physical supply tightness. Historically associated with significant price rallies.
ACCUMULATION
Occurs when contango is flattening and commercials are buying (positive commercial z-score). Indicates smart money accumulation.
DISTRIBUTION
Occurs when contango is deepening and speculator positioning is extremely long. Indicates potential distribution phase before decline.
REGIME CHANGE
Occurs when multiple z-scores reach extreme levels simultaneously. Indicates high probability of significant market shift.
BULLISH SETUP
Occurs when composite score exceeds plus 1 sigma without extreme conditions. Favorable market structure for long positions.
BEARISH SETUP
Occurs when composite score falls below minus 1 sigma without extreme conditions. Unfavorable market structure for long positions.
INTERPRETING FOR PRECIOUS METALS
Gold and silver are almost always in contango. This is normal and expected. The key signals for precious metals are:
FLATTENING CONTANGO
When the term structure spread becomes less negative, physical supply is tightening. This is bullish. The z-score will rise toward positive territory.
DEEPENING CONTANGO
When the term structure spread becomes more negative, supply is ample. This is neutral to bearish. The z-score will fall toward negative territory.
BACKWARDATION
Extremely rare for precious metals. When it occurs, it signals severe physical market stress and is strongly bullish. Historical examples include the Hunt Brothers silver squeeze in 1980 and the October 2025 silver squeeze.
FUTURES DISCOUNT
When futures trade below spot, physical demand exceeds paper market supply. This is bullish and indicates real buying pressure.
SETTINGS GUIDE
SYMBOL SELECTION
Auto-Detect reads the chart symbol and configures all data sources automatically. Dropdown provides preset configurations for common commodities. Manual allows custom symbol entry.
DATA SOURCES
Individual data sources can be enabled or disabled. Disabling a source removes its contribution from the composite score.
COMPOSITE WEIGHTS
Adjust the relative importance of each signal. Weights should sum to approximately 1.0 for proper scaling, though the indicator normalizes automatically.
STATISTICAL ENGINE
Z-Score Length determines the lookback period for normalization. Default of 52 represents approximately one year on daily charts. Extreme Z-Score sets the threshold for flagging extreme conditions. Physical Stress Z sets the threshold for physical market stress alerts.
ALERTS
COMPOSITE FLIP
Triggers when the composite score crosses zero, indicating a shift from bullish to bearish structure or vice versa.
PHYSICAL STRESS
Triggers when physical market stress is first detected, indicating potential delivery squeeze conditions.
REGIME CHANGE
Triggers when the market shifts between contango and backwardation.
COT EXTREME
Triggers when commercial or speculator positioning reaches historical extremes, indicating elevated reversal risk.
DIVERGENCE ALERTS
Triggers when price-positioning divergences are detected.
SUPPORTED COMMODITIES
Gold: Spot OANDA:XAUUSD, Futures COMEX:GC1!, CFTC 088691
Silver: Spot OANDA:XAGUSD, Futures COMEX:SI1!, CFTC 084691
Crude Oil: Spot TVC:USOIL, Futures NYMEX:CL1!, CFTC 067651
Natural Gas: Futures NYMEX:NG1!, CFTC 023651
Copper: Futures COMEX:HG1!, CFTC 085692
Wheat: Futures CBOT:ZW1!, CFTC 001602
Corn: Futures CBOT:ZC1!, CFTC 002602
Soybeans: Futures CBOT:ZS1!, CFTC 005602
PRACTICAL APPLICATION
For best results, use this indicator on daily or weekly timeframes. Commodity data, especially COT data, is updated weekly and works best on longer timeframes.
When analyzing a commodity:
1. Check the composite score for overall market structure
2. Review the signal interpretation for context
3. Examine individual components (term structure, spot-futures, COT) for confirmation
4. Watch for physical stress alerts indicating delivery conditions
5. Monitor divergences for potential reversal signals
Combine this indicator with price action analysis and fundamental research for complete market analysis.
LIMITATIONS
The indicator relies on multiple data sources that may have different update frequencies. COT data is updated weekly. Some spot price sources may have gaps during certain hours. Term structure and spot-futures spreads work best for commodities with liquid continuous futures contracts. Very short timeframes may produce noisy signals.
REFERENCES
Working, H. (1933). Price Relations between July and September Wheat Futures at Chicago since 1885. Wheat Studies.
Kaldor, N. (1939). Speculation and Economic Stability. Review of Economic Studies.
Erb, C. and Harvey, C. (2006). The Strategic and Tactical Value of Commodity Futures. Financial Analysts Journal.
Gorton, G. and Rouwenhorst, K. (2006). Facts and Fantasies about Commodity Futures. Financial Analysts Journal.
Miffre, J. and Rallis, G. (2007). Momentum Strategies in Commodity Futures Markets. Journal of Banking and Finance.
Various (2024). Limits to Arbitrage in Commodity Futures Markets. SSRN Working Paper.
VERSION HISTORY
Version 1 released as unified indicator combining term structure, spot-futures spread, and COT positioning analysis with scientifically-weighted composite score.
CREDITS
Developed by Robinhodl21. Released under Mozilla Public License 2.0.
Spot-Futures SpreadThe Spot-Futures Spread indicator measures the price difference between spot (cash) markets and futures markets for the same underlying asset. This spread reveals important information about market structure, sentiment, and potential arbitrage opportunities.
When futures trade above spot, this is called a futures premium. When futures trade below spot, this is called a futures discount. The size and direction of this spread provides insight into whether traders expect prices to rise or fall, how much it costs to carry the asset, and whether there are unusual supply or demand imbalances.
HOW IT WORKS
The indicator fetches price data from two different markets: a spot or cash market price and a futures contract price. For example, it might compare the spot gold price from a forex broker (XAUUSD) with the front month gold futures contract on COMEX (GC1!).
The core calculation is simple. Spread equals Futures Price minus Spot Price. A positive result means futures are trading at a premium to spot. A negative result means futures are trading at a discount to spot.
The indicator expresses this spread in multiple ways: as an absolute dollar value, as a percentage of the spot price, and as a statistical z-score showing how the current spread compares to historical norms.
DIFFERENCE FROM THE BASIS SUITE
The Futures Basis Suite compares two futures contracts of different expiration months, such as the front month versus the second month. This shows the term structure or curve shape of the futures market.
The Spot-Futures Spread indicator compares the actual spot or cash market price to a futures contract. This shows the relationship between physical market pricing and derivatives market pricing.
Both indicators provide valuable but different information. The basis suite shows carrying costs and convenience yield within the futures market. The spot-futures spread shows how the derivatives market relates to the underlying physical or cash market.
FUTURES PREMIUM EXPLAINED
A futures premium means the futures price is higher than the spot price. This is the normal condition for most assets. The premium reflects several factors.
First, it includes the cost of carry. Holding a physical asset requires storage, insurance, and financing costs. Futures buyers avoid these costs, so they pay a premium reflecting what it would cost to hold the physical asset until delivery.
Second, it may reflect expectations of rising prices. If traders expect the asset price to increase, futures will trade at a premium to current spot.
Third, for financial assets like stock index futures, the premium reflects interest rates minus expected dividends. This is called the fair value premium.
FUTURES DISCOUNT EXPLAINED
A futures discount means the futures price is lower than the spot price. This is unusual for most assets and signals something important.
For commodities, a discount often indicates immediate physical scarcity. Buyers need the commodity now and are willing to pay more for immediate delivery than for future delivery.
For financial assets, a discount can indicate expected price declines, upcoming dividend payments, or market stress where futures are being sold heavily.
For cryptocurrencies, a discount often signals bearish sentiment as leveraged traders reduce long positions.
ANALYSIS MODES
Spread Absolute mode shows the raw dollar difference between futures and spot. This is useful for seeing the actual cost in currency terms.
Spread Percentage mode expresses the spread as a percentage of the spot price. This makes it easier to compare across different assets and time periods.
Z-Score mode normalizes the current spread against its historical distribution. A z-score of zero means the spread is at its historical average. Extreme z-scores indicate unusual conditions.
Premium/Discount mode labels the current regime and shows the spread percentage. This provides the clearest read on market conditions.
Raw Debug mode displays the underlying prices and calculation details for troubleshooting.
IMPORTANT SETTINGS
Symbol Mode determines how the indicator finds the spot and futures prices. Auto Detect reads your chart symbol and selects appropriate spot and futures sources. Dropdown lets you select from common assets. Manual lets you enter custom ticker symbols.
Spread Direction sets the calculation order. Futures minus Spot means positive values indicate premium. Spot minus Futures reverses this convention.
Premium Threshold and Discount Threshold set the percentage levels for classifying the spread as a premium, discount, or fair value.
Z-Score Length sets the lookback period for calculating how unusual the current spread is.
Arbitrage Threshold sets the percentage level at which the indicator flags potential arbitrage opportunities.
INTERPRETING THE SPREAD FOR DIFFERENT ASSETS
For precious metals like gold and silver, the spread reflects storage costs and financing costs. A larger than normal premium may indicate that physical is readily available. A narrowing premium or discount indicates physical tightness.
For crude oil, the spread reflects storage economics. When storage is cheap and plentiful, futures trade at premium. When storage is scarce or oil is in high demand, the spread narrows or inverts.
For stock index futures like the S&P 500, the spread reflects interest rates minus expected dividends. Deviations from fair value create arbitrage opportunities for institutional traders.
For cryptocurrencies, the spread reflects sentiment and funding conditions. Large premiums indicate bullish leverage. Discounts indicate bearish positioning or liquidation events.
ARBITRAGE OPPORTUNITIES
When the spot-futures spread deviates significantly from fair value, arbitrage opportunities may exist. Professional traders can exploit these by simultaneously buying the cheaper market and selling the more expensive market, locking in the spread as profit when prices converge.
The indicator alerts when spreads reach levels that historically indicate arbitrage opportunities. However, actual arbitrage requires accounting for transaction costs, execution risk, and margin requirements.
TRADING SIGNALS
Flip from Premium to Discount is often bearish. It indicates that near-term demand has collapsed or that leveraged longs are being liquidated.
Flip from Discount to Premium is often bullish. It indicates improving sentiment and increased demand for leveraged long exposure.
Extreme Z-Scores suggest the spread is unsustainable and likely to revert. This can indicate mean reversion trades or flag unusual market conditions requiring attention.
Expanding Spread during price rallies confirms that the move has broad participation from both spot and futures markets. Narrowing spread during rallies suggests futures traders are not confirming the move.
ALERTS
Regime Flip alerts trigger when the market crosses from premium to discount or vice versa.
Extreme Z-Score alerts trigger when the spread reaches statistical extremes.
Arbitrage Level alerts trigger when the spread exceeds the configured threshold, potentially indicating arbitrage opportunities.
SUPPORTED ASSETS
The indicator supports major assets across multiple classes. Precious metals include gold and silver comparing forex spot to COMEX futures. Energy includes crude oil comparing cash prices to NYMEX futures. Cryptocurrencies include Bitcoin and Ethereum comparing index prices to CME futures. Stock indices include S&P 500 and Nasdaq comparing cash indices to CME futures. Currencies include Euro and Yen comparing forex rates to CME futures.
LIMITATIONS
Spot and futures markets may have different trading hours, creating gaps in the spread calculation. Data quality varies between spot price sources. Transaction costs and execution risk affect whether theoretical arbitrage opportunities are practical. The indicator shows a single futures contract and does not capture the full term structure.
VERSION HISTORY
Version 1 released with five analysis modes, automatic symbol detection, comprehensive dashboard, regime classification, and arbitrage alerts.
CREDITS
Developed by Robinhodl21 as part of the Grandmaster Indicator Suite. Released under Mozilla Public License 2.0.
TMS EMA and MA Cross AlertThis indicator plots 1 EMA and 3 customizable MAs on your chart and helps you spot when the EMA crosses any of the MAs. Key features include:
Customizable EMA & MA lengths
Option to show or hide each MA
Triangles appear on EMA x MA crosses (optional)
Optional labels on triangles to indicate the cross (e.g., EMA>MA1)
Triangle size can be Small, Normal, or Large
Alerts for all EMA x MA crosses
Perfect for traders who want a clean, simple, and visual way to track EMA vs. MA crosses without clutter.
DarkFutures Where/How/WhenTesting - for 15min Gold scalps
It identifies 4hr Where, 30m How and 5min When sareas of trade, then gives a signal to buy/sell based on that trend and momentum information using 8/21 EAM and Vwaps.
Global M2 with correlation table, by Colin (No linear - Trader Qno more linear line
Now works perfectly CRYPTOCAP:BTC / $ eth chart
make sure that the time frame is set as daily
Pair Correlation Oscillator (Overlay)Pair Correlation Oscillator (Overlay)
Overview
This open-source TradingView indicator computes the Pearson correlation coefficient between the chart's instrument (Ticker A) and a user-selected instrument (Ticker B). The correlation is displayed as an oscillator within the range −1..+1:
+1 — perfect positive correlation
0 — no linear correlation
−1 — perfect inverse correlation
Key features
Default window: 500 bars (configurable)
Option to compute correlation on log returns (recommended for comparing different instruments)
Option to exclude the current unfinished bar (use previous completed bars only)
Overlaid line + histogram columns for immediate visual interpretation
Alert examples included (commented out) for high correlation thresholds
Inputs
Ticker 2 — the other instrument to compare against (Ticker 1 is always the chart symbol)
Correlation length — window in bars for the rolling correlation (default 500)
Use log returns — converts price series to log returns before correlation (recommended)
Exclude current bar — shift series by 1 to use only completed bars
How to use
Add the script to your chart and set Ticker 2 to the instrument you want to correlate with the chart symbol.
Choose Use log returns = true for price-to-price comparisons (it removes level bias).
Optionally enable Exclude current bar for more stable signals if you do not want the live unfinished bar affecting results.
Use the line/histogram and label shown on the chart to inspect correlation in real time.
Limitations & notes
Correlation measures linear relationship over the chosen window — non-linear relationships won't be captured.
Very different tickers (e.g., price scales, very low liquidity) may show noisy correlation; use returns and longer windows in such cases.
This indicator is for information/analysis only — not trading advice.
Solar Flares 2025 X & M Class This indicator plots vertical lines on your chart at the exact timestamps of the strongest solar flares recorded in 2025.
X-class flares are shown in light yellow
M-class flares are shown in light blue
All timestamps are based on the maximum intensity time of each flare (default timezone: UTC, adjustable in settings).
Features
Toggle X-class and M-class flares independently
Adjustable line width
Uses precise intraday timestamps (not daily approximations)
Designed as a timing overlay for market cycle research and event clustering
This tool is intended for exploratory and correlation analysis, allowing traders and researchers to visually compare periods of heightened solar activity with market behavior.
Data is hard-coded from the 2025 top solar flare catalog and loads once on script initialization for performance.
1of1 Trades Expected Ranges (Friday Close Calculator)Expected Ranges (Friday Close Calculator)
Expected Ranges is a simple, non-plotting calculator designed for weekly market preparation.
It uses the most recent Friday’s daily close as the base price and calculates an expected trading range for the upcoming week.
This indicator is intentionally built as a calculator only — it does not draw lines or zones on the chart. This ensures there is no bleed between symbols and allows traders to convert levels into permanent TradingView drawings (horizontal lines and shaded rectangles) that are stored per symbol in their account.
How It Works
Friday Close is automatically detected from the daily chart.
You input a single value for Expected Weekly Move.
The indicator calculates:
Upper Range = Friday Close + Expected Move
Lower Range = Friday Close − Expected Move
Values are displayed in a clean top-right panel for quick reference.
Session Open/Close Labels - SimpleSimple and Minimal Label that shows Tokyo and EU open and close times on the chart
Global Liquidity Index (Major Economies Only)This iteration represents a revised adaptation of QuantitativeAlpha ’s framework for measuring global liquidity. It enables clear visibility into the current state of global liquidity—a foundational driver of risk asset prices.
Tamil - Reversal ProThis indicator highlights possible reversal zones where price may change direction after an extended move. It is most effective on 5m and 15m charts, especially for SPX and Gold, but can be applied to other instruments too.
How to use:
• Use it as an early warning for a reversal setup.
• Confirm with support/resistance, volume, trend context, or price action.
• Best results usually come when signals appear near key levels.
Credits: Inspired by and partially adapted from open-source community scripts. Thanks to the TradingView open-source community for shared ideas and building blocks.
Dynamic Risk and RewardThe Dynamic Equity Projection (DEP Map) is an institutional-grade visual execution tool designed to automate risk-to-reward mapping directly on your chart. Unlike standard drawing tools, it is context-aware—calculating volatility and trend bias in real-time to provide a "live" projection of your trade's potential.Core Logic & Intelligence1. Trend-Filtered SentimentThe indicator uses a 200-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) as a directional filter.Bullish Map: If the current price is above the EMA, the DEP Map projects a green "Long" zone.Bearish Map: If the price is below the EMA, it instantly flips to a red "Short" zone.This helps traders stay aligned with the primary market momentum, avoiding the trap of "trading against the tide."2. Volatility-Adaptive Risk (ATR)Rather than using arbitrary point distances, the DEP Map utilizes the Average True Range (ATR).It measures the market's "noise" level over the last 14 bars.The Stop Loss is set at a multiplier (default 1.5x) of this volatility, ensuring your stop is wide enough to survive market breathing but tight enough to maintain a high R:R.Technical FeaturesFeatureDescriptionProfessional BenefitProjection BoxA dynamic rectangle that extends into the "future" (right-side offset).Keeps the current price action clear while providing a visual goalpost for the trade.Persistent LogicUses advanced var object handling to prevent "ghosting" or label stacking.Ensures a clean, high-performance chart interface without clutter.R:R Equity LadderSegments the profit zone into specific milestones: 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, and the "Equity Target" (5.0).Allows for precise partial profit-taking and psychological target setting.Dashed SL LineA high-contrast red dashed line indicating the invalidation point.Provides an immediate visual cue of the trade's total risk.How to Use the DEP MapIdentify the Bias: Observe the color of the box. A green box suggests looking for buying opportunities; a red box suggests selling.Verify the Levels: The labels on the right edge of the box provide the exact price points for your Stop Loss and Take Profit orders.Execute & Manage:R:R 1.0: The "Safety Point." Many traders move their stop to breakeven here.R:R 2.0 - 3.0: The "Standard Exit." This is where the bulk of the trade's profit is usually captured.Equity Target: The "Home Run." Reserved for high-conviction trend extensions.
BK AK-Gann Celestial Cycle🌕♉ BK AK-Gann Celestial Cycle
A timing overlay — not a direction oracle.
Most traders don’t lose because their ideas are “wrong.” They lose because their timing is off—entering too early, chasing the first impulse, or sizing up right before volatility reprices the market.
Celestial Cycle adds a clean, precise “time layer” to your chart: astronomical timestamps mapped onto candles so you can see when the market is more likely to change tempo—then let price structure decide direction.
This is not “the moon says buy.”
This is: “you’re entering a timing window—trade with discipline.”
What it does
Accurate event timing (down to the candle)
Uses ephemeris longitude plus bounded bisection to place events inside the bar, so icons and shading align with the candle that actually contains the moment.
Auto Intraday vs Swing behavior (keeps charts readable)
Auto mode adapts the display to timeframe:
Intraday (<4H): 8-phase lunar cycle for tighter rhythm work
Swing (≥4H): New/Full only for major windows
Manual mode stays literal—no hidden overrides.
Regime markers traders actually feel
Sun ingresses = monthly rhythm partition
Solstice/Equinox = broader regime hinge
Mercury stations / retrograde = higher-noise conditions and fakeout risk
Moon windows = short-cycle acceleration / exhaustion timing
Execution-friendly placement + clutter control
Absolute Above/Below mode prevents overlap (icons don’t sit on price).
Spacing limits + auto-delete keep labels under control without performance issues.
A “What’s Next” status table
A compact panel that shows what phase/regime you’re in and what’s coming—so you plan before the window hits, not during.
How to use it (real execution)
Mark your levels first.
This tool doesn’t replace structure. It tells you when structure is more likely to matter.
Treat events as decision windows.
Around event timestamps, expect: liquidity runs, volatility repricing, false breaks—or clean expansion. Your edge comes from waiting for confirmation.
Use the regime logic correctly:
Mercury retrograde: require break + retest + hold; fade extremes more often; reduce size
Direct: continuation behaves cleaner; breakouts regain reliability
Keep confirmation grounded:
VWAP / EMA20 / SMA50 + swing pivots + volume response.
Event timing is the frame; price action is the verdict.
Non-negotiable rule
The sky is a timing filter — not a signal.
If you invert that, you turn a precision tool into superstition.
Respect
“AK” represents discipline, patience, and clean execution—no fantasy trades, no impulsive hero entries.
And above all: glory to God. Any edge here only matters if it produces humility, restraint, and better decisions.
The Old Testament lens (deep, but practical)
A subtle pattern in the Old Testament is that time isn’t treated as a vague backdrop—it’s treated as something with set moments, where responsibility increases.
The key idea is simple and powerful:
Heaven provides the timing. Humans provide the judgment.
In other words, the existence of a “moment” doesn’t automatically justify action. The moment creates a higher accountability window, and the person still has to respond with discernment.
That maps directly onto how this indicator is meant to be used:
The astronomical layer gives you timing windows where conditions often shift.
Your trade only becomes valid when it’s “confirmed on the ground” by structure, acceptance/rejection at key levels, and controlled risk.
So the deeper point isn’t “stars predict price.”
It’s: time has gates, and wisdom is knowing you don’t step through a gate without proof.
May God bless your vision, sharpen your timing, and steady your hands when the window opens.
May He give you patience to wait for confirmation, discipline to obey your rules, and humility in victory.
Trade clean, respect the boundary, and let wisdom—not impulse—decide the moment. 🙏
SMC Range Box + HTF Matrix [AMD] # SMC Range Box + HTF Matrix
## Overview
**SMC Range Matrix** is a comprehensive Smart Money Concepts (SMC) indicator designed for ICT/SMC traders. It combines multi-timeframe range analysis with advanced Fair Value Gap detection, Inverted FVG tracking, Volume Imbalance zones, and AMD (Accumulation-Manipulation-Distribution) phase detection — all in one powerful tool.
---
## 🔥 Key Features
### 📦 Multi-Timeframe Range Boxes
- Display **1H, 4H, and Daily** candle ranges as visual boxes
- Up to **5 boxes per timeframe** for historical context
- **Bullish/Bearish color coding** based on candle direction
- **Time labels** showing when each range started
- **Range size display** in pips/points
- **Sweep markers** when previous highs/lows are taken
### 📊 Fair Value Gaps (FVG)
- **Auto Threshold Filter** — Only shows significant FVGs, filters out noise
- **Multi-Timeframe Support** — Display FVGs from any timeframe on your current chart
- **Smart Mitigation** — FVGs automatically removed when filled (customizable fill %)
- **Near Price Filter** — Only shows FVGs within X ATR of current price
- **Bullish & Bearish FVG** detection with customizable colors
### 🔄 Inverted Fair Value Gaps (IFVG)
- **Automatic IFVG Detection** — When price closes through an FVG, it converts to IFVG
- **Role Reversal Logic**:
- Bullish FVG → Price closes below → Becomes **Bearish IFVG** (Resistance)
- Bearish FVG → Price closes above → Becomes **Bullish IFVG** (Support)
- **Consequent Encroachment (CE) Line** — 50% level marked for optimal entry (ICT concept)
- **IFVG Invalidation** — Automatically removes IFVG when broken
### 📈 Volume Imbalance (VI)
- Detects gaps between consecutive candle bodies
- **Auto-removal** when mitigated
- Separate color settings for bullish/bearish VI
### ⚖️ Equilibrium Lines
- **50% level** of each range box
- Dynamic color based on price position (support/resistance)
- Helps identify premium/discount zones
### 🎯 AMD Phase Detection
- **Accumulation** — Tight range, consolidation phase
- **Manipulation** — Liquidity sweep with rejection
- **Distribution** — Strong directional move
- Labels displayed on each range box
---
## 🎨 Customization
### Theme Presets
- **Ocean** — Cool blue tones
- **Forest** — Natural green shades
- **Monochrome** — Clean grayscale
- **Neon** — Vibrant colors
- **Custom** — Full color control
### Fully Customizable
- Individual colors for each timeframe
- Border width and styles
- Label sizes and visibility toggles
- FVG/VI transparency and borders
---
## ⚙️ Settings Guide
### FVG Settings
| Setting | Description |
|---------|-------------|
| FVG Timeframe | Leave blank for current TF, or select specific timeframe |
| Auto Threshold | Filters insignificant FVGs based on bar movement % |
| Fill % to Remove | FVG removed when filled by this percentage (default 50%) |
| Near Price Filter | Only show FVGs within X ATR from current price |
| Show CE Line | Display 50% Consequent Encroachment line on IFVGs |
### Range Box Settings
| Setting | Description |
|---------|-------------|
| Boxes to Show | Number of historical boxes (1-5) per timeframe |
| Show Sweep Markers | Highlight when previous high/low is swept |
| Show Time Label | Display start time of each range |
---
## 📖 How to Use
### For ICT/SMC Trading:
1. **Identify the range** — Use 4H or Daily boxes to see the current dealing range
2. **Watch for FVGs** — These are potential entry zones
3. **Monitor IFVG formation** — When FVG fails, it becomes support/resistance
4. **Use CE level** — 50% of IFVG is optimal entry per ICT methodology
5. **Check AMD phase** — Understand current market phase before entry
### For Liquidity Trading:
1. Look for **sweep markers** on range boxes
2. Wait for **manipulation phase** detection
3. Enter on **IFVG retest** at CE level
4. Target opposite side of the range
---
## 🔔 Best Practices
- Use **4H boxes** for swing trading context
- Use **1H boxes** for intraday entries
- Enable **Auto Threshold** to reduce FVG clutter
- Set **Fill % to 50-70%** based on your trading style
- Combine with your own bias analysis (HTF trend, news, etc.)
---
## ⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own analysis and manage your risk properly. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
---
## 📝 Release Notes
**v8**
- Added LuxAlgo-style FVG detection with Auto Threshold
- Added Multi-Timeframe FVG support
- Improved IFVG logic — proper inversion detection
- Added Consequent Encroachment (CE) line for IFVGs
- Fixed fill tracking to not interfere with inversion
- Added Volume Imbalance detection
- Added AMD phase detection
- Multiple theme presets
---
## 💬 Feedback
If you find this indicator helpful, please leave a like and comment! Your feedback helps improve future versions.
**Tags:** #SMC #ICT #FVG #IFVG #SmartMoney #OrderFlow #LiquiditySweep #AMD #PriceAction #InstitutionalTrading
CapitalFlowsResearch: YC Regime (Shading)CapitalFlowsResearch: YC Regime (Shading) — Yield Curve Environment Overlay
CapitalFlowsResearch: YC Regime (Shading) turns the yield curve into a live, colour-coded market backdrop, classifying the curve into six intuitive regimes: bull steepener, bear steepener, steepener twist, bull flattener, bear flattener, and flattener twist. Instead of staring at raw spreads or multiple rate charts, you get a simple visual answer to: “What kind of curve move am I trading in right now?”
The script compares a short-dated and long-dated yield and tracks how both the spread and the individual legs have evolved over a chosen lookback window. From that, it tags each bar with the dominant curve regime and paints either the background or the candles accordingly, so regime changes are immediately obvious on any price chart you overlay it on. An optional on-chart legend summarises the regime definitions and colour scheme, making it easy to interpret at a glance and consistent across instruments and timeframes.
In practice, this overlay acts as a rates context layer for everything else you trade—equities, FX, credit, commodities—helping you link price action back to whether the curve is bull-steepening, bear-flattening, or twisting in ways that often line up with shifts in macro narrative, policy expectations, and risk appetite, all without exposing the underlying classification logic.
CapitalFlowsRsearch: YC RegimeCapitalFlowsResearch: YC Regime — Yield Curve Regime Histogram
CapitalFlowsResearch: YC Regime takes the same six-regime yield curve framework (bull/bear steepeners, bull/bear flatteners, and their twist variants) and presents it as a dedicated histogram panel. Instead of colouring the background of a price chart, this indicator plots the 2s–10s (or chosen pair) spread as a column series and tints each bar according to the active curve regime, with an overlaid white line to show the raw spread path through time.
By comparing how the spread itself is evolving against the regime classification, traders can see not just what the curve is doing (steepening vs flattening), but also how those moves are building, stalling, or reversing over the chosen lookback. An optional legend explains each regime and the colour mapping, making it easy to standardise interpretation across instruments and timeframes. In practice, this panel functions as a compact “yield curve dashboard” you can stack under risk assets, helping align trades with the prevailing rates environment without exposing the underlying regime logic.






















