Liquidity mark-out indicator(by Lumiere)This indicator marks out every High that has a bullish candle followed by a bearish one, vice versa for lows.
Once the price reaches the marked-out liquidity, the line is removed automatically.
This indicator only shows the current liquidity of the time frame you are at.
(To get it look like the picture just chance the length to 30-50)
Key Features of the Liquidity Mark-Out Indicator:
🔹 Identifies Liquidity Zones – Marks highs and lows based on candlestick patterns.
🔹 Customizable Settings – Toggle highs/lows visibility 🎚️, adjust line colors 🎨, and set line length (bars) 📏.
🔹 Smart Clean-Up – Automatically removes swept levels (when price breaks through) for a clean chart 🧹.
🔹 Pattern-Based Detection –
Highs: Detects two-candle reversal patterns (🟢 bullish close → 🔴 bearish close).
Lows: Detects two-candle reversal patterns (🔴 bearish close → 🟢 bullish close).
🔹 Dynamic Lines – Projects liquidity levels forward (adjustable length) to track key zones 📈.
Perfect For Traders Looking To:
✅ Spot potential liquidity grabs 🎯
✅ Identify key support/resistance levels 🛑
✅ Clean up their chart from outdated levels 🖥️
Liquidity
Liquidity Zones - Multi TimeframeThis indicator automatically identifies and displays high and low liquidity zones across multiple timeframes (15min, 30min, 1h, 4h, 1d, 1w).
It uses wick-level detection to highlight key levels where price has previously reacted with precision.
Each timeframe can be toggled independently, and users can fully customize the color, line width, and style (solid, dotted, dashed) for better visual clarity.
The indicator is designed to only show zones relevant to the current chart resolution – ensuring a clean and efficient layout.
Ideal for traders who use liquidity grabs, stop hunts, or market structure shifts in their strategy.
Market Maker Zones [VWAP + Liquidity + Stop Hunts]This is a Pine Script indicator for TradingView that identifies market maker zones through VWAP, liquidity zones, and stop hunt levels. Here's what each component does:
VWAP Component:
Calculates Volume Weighted Average Price from a specified anchor time
Uses cumulative volume and price-volume to track institutional interest
Plotted as an orange line that market makers often use as a reference
Liquidity Zones:
Identifies bars with volume exceeding 1.5x the average (configurable)
Highlights these high-volume areas with blue background
These represent zones where large orders were executed
Stop Hunt Zones:
Tracks recent highs and lows over a 20-bar window
Plots horizontal lines at these levels with labels
These are areas where stop losses typically cluster
Key Market Maker Concepts:
The indicator assumes market makers hunt stops at obvious levels (recent highs/lows), accumulate positions in high-volume zones, and use VWAP as a fair value reference. When price approaches these zones, it often indicates potential reversal or continuation points.
Usage Tips:
Watch for price reactions near VWAP line
High-volume zones often act as support/resistance
Stop hunt levels frequently get tested before significant moves
Combine all three elements to identify high-probability trade setups
The script is well-structured with clear input parameters and visual elements that make it easy to spot these institutional footprints on your charts.
My-Indicator - Global Liquidity & Money Supply M2 + Time OffsetThis script is designed to visualize a global liquidity and money supply index by combining data from various regions and, optionally, central bank activity. Visualizing this data on a chart allows you to see how central banks are intervening in the financial system and how the total amount of money in the economy is changing. Let’s take a look at how it works:
Central Bank Liquidity
Shows the actions of central banks (e.g. FED, ECB) providing short-term cash to commercial banks. If you see spikes or a steady increase in these indicators, it may suggest that liquidity is being increased through intervention, which often stimulates the market.
Money Supply
M2 money supply is a monetary aggregate that includes M1 (cash and current deposits) plus savings deposits, small term deposits, and other financial instruments that, while not as liquid as M1, can be quickly converted into cash. As a result, M2 provides a broader picture of the available money in the economy, which is useful for analyzing market conditions and potential economic trends.
How does it help investors?
It allows you to quickly see when central banks are injecting additional liquidity, which could signal higher prices.
It allows you to see trends in the money supply, which informs potential changes in inflation and the economic cycle.
Combining both sets of data provides a more complete picture – both in the short and long term – which makes it easier to predict upcoming price movements.
This allows investors to better respond to changes in central bank policy and broader monetary trends, increasing their chances of making better investment decisions.
Data Collection
The script retrieves money supply data for key markets such as the USA (USM2), Europe (EUM2), China (CNM2), and Japan (JPM2). It also offers additional money supply series for other markets—like Canada (CAM2), Great Britain (GBM2), Russia (RUM2), Brazil (BRM2), Mexico (MXM2), and New Zealand (NZM2)—with extra options (e.g., Australia, India, Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, Sweden) disabled by default. Moreover, you can enable data for central bank liquidity (such as FED, RRP, TGA, ECB, PBC, BOJ, and other central banks), which are also disabled by default.
Index Calculation
The indicator calculates the index by adding together all the enabled money supply series (and the central bank data if activated) and then scales the sum by dividing it by 1,000,000,000,000 (one trillion). This scaling makes the resulting values more manageable and easier to read on the chart.
Time Offset Feature
A key feature of the script is the time offset. With the input parameter "Time Offset (days)", the user can shift the plotted index line by a specific number of days. The script converts the given offset in days into a number of bars based on the current chart's timeframe. This allows you to adjust for the delay between liquidity changes and their effect on asset prices.
Overall, the indicator plots a line on your chart representing the global liquidity and money supply index, allowing you to visually monitor trends and better understand how liquidity and central bank actions may influence market movements.
What makes this script different from others?
Every supported market—both major regions (USA, Eurozone, China, Japan, etc.) and additional ones—is available. You can toggle each series on or off, so you can view only Money Supply data, only Central Bank Liquidity, or any custom combination.
Separated Data Groups. Inputs are organized into clear groups (“Money Supply”, “Other Money Supply”, “Central Bank Liquidity”), making it easy to focus on just the data you need without clutter.
True Day‑Based Offset. This script converts your chosen “Time Offset (days)” into actual days regardless of timeframe. Whether you’re on a 5‑minute or daily chart, the index is always shifted by exactly the number of days you specify.
Advance Smc Ict V4 The Advance SMC ICT Indicator is designed to assist traders in mapping market structure and identifying key price zones based on Smart Money Concepts (SMC) such as dz idm , dz ext , hist idm , hist dz ext & tracks major and minor order flow, and marks potential areas of interest, such as the Golden Zone. The indicator aims to simplify complex chart analysis, providing a structured approach to observing market movements across different timeframes.
✦Understanding the Concept of Order Blocks
DZ IDM
Dz idm is the zone just below inducement . it is also know as decisional order block .
This decisional order block plays a crucial role in identifying potential trade entries and is especially effective at highlighting key reversal zones.
This order block contains inducement liquidity above it, which enhances its significance compared to other order blocks.
Chart Illustration
This diagram illustrates the IDM Order Block (OB-IDM), which is the first order block that appears just below the current IDM level.
SETTING
1. Customizable IDM OB BG Color – Demand
Define the fill color for demand-side IDM OBs to highlight buy zones clearly.
2. Customizable IDM OB BG Color – Supply
Define the fill color for supply-side IDM OBs to mark sell zones distinctly.
3. Customizable IDM OB Text Color – Demand
Choose the label color for “Demand” text so it remains legible over the demand zone.
4. *Customizable IDM OB Text Color – Supply
Choose the label color for “Supply” text so it stands out over the supply zone.
DZ EXT
Extreme Order Block (OB-EXT):
The OB-EXT refers to the extreme order block identified between a Major Low and a Major High. Positioned at the edge of a swing range, this zone often reflects the initial point of strong price movement and can serve as a key area where institutional activity may have occurred.
Usage:
The OB-EXT is used to highlight potential high-probability reversal zones. Its location at structural extremes makes it useful for identifying trade entries during deep pullbacks or at the beginning of trend shifts. Traders often monitor this level for reaction when price revisits it, as it can signal renewed interest and possible directional continuation.
Chart Illustration
Setting
1. Customizable EXT OB BG Color – Demand
Define the fill color for demand-side EXT Order Blocks to highlight key buy zones.
2. Customizable EXT OB BG Color – Supply
Define the fill color for supply-side EXT Order Blocks to mark critical sell zones.
3. Customizable EXT OB Text Color – Demand
Choose the “Demand” label color so it remains legible over the demand-zone background.
4. Customizable EXT OB Text Color – Supply
Choose the “Supply” label color so it stands out clearly against the supply-zone fill.
✦HIST IDM OB AND HIST EXT OB
This indicator automatically identifies and highlights key swing zones to enhance market structure analysis.This features help traders to focus on current swing ,
It dynamically marks the current active swing zones as:
DZ IDM: The most recent Inverse Demand Momentum zone, based on current price structure.
DZ EXT: The latest extreme zone between a major swing low and high.
It also tracks unmitigated historical zones as:
Hist DZ IDM: Previous IDM zones that have not yet been mitigated.
Hist DZ EXT: Past extreme zones that remain untested.
Chart Illustration
✦Minor Order flow
This tool is designed to help traders visualize both Smart Money Concepts (SMC) and Minor Order Flow in a structured and effective way. In a bullish market, a Minor Order Flow zone is defined as the last unmitigated selling move before price continues upward after a short pullback. In a bearish market, it marks the last unmitigated buying move before price resumes its downward trend.
The indicator tracks these zones in real-time,
TradingView
OANDA:XAUUSD Chart Image by AlgoHub100
dynamically labeling unmitigated zones in pink for visibility. Once price revisits and mitigates a zone, its color changes to a bluish tone, clearly showing which areas are active versus completed. This visual shift allows traders to focus on relevant swing levels, filtering out old or already-reacted zones.
Chart Illustration
Minor Order Flow Settings
-Control how Minor Order Flow levels appear on your chart:
-Toggle ON/OFF to enable or disable Minor Order Flow for a cleaner chart when needed.
-Max Count limits the number of Minor Order Flow levels shown (default: 10).
-Separate Bullish and Bearish Colors for easy identification of market direction.
-Custom Colors let you choose distinct visual styles for bullish and bearish flows.
✦Major Order flow
Major Order Flow
The Major Order Flow highlights the last unmitigated selling move in a bullish market and the last unmitigated buying move in a bearish market. These levels represent key institutional order blocks where price is likely to react.
Unmitigated Zones are displayed in blue on the chart, indicating potential areas of interest where price may return.
Once the zone is mitigated (touched by price), the color changes to greyish blue, signaling the zone has been tested.
Chart Illustration
MAJOR ORDER FLOW VS MINOR ORDER FLOW
Major Order Flow identifies the last unmitigated selling move in a bullish market (or buying move in a bearish market). These zones are shown in blue and change to greyish blue once mitigated. Minor Order Flow tracks the last unmitigated move within a larger structure, helping refine entries.
TradingView
OANDA:XAUUSD Chart Image by AlgoHub100
Breaker Block Indicator Overview
This indicator automatically identifies and confirms two special order block levels (breaker blocks) to highlight key supply and demand zones. It pre-marks these zones and then confirms them when price breaks through with a single candle. By focusing solely on these validated zones, the indicator helps traders concentrate on only the most significant supply and demand zones.
OB IDM Breaker Block
An OB IDM Breaker Block is an order block located just below an Inducement (IDM) level, which is a liquidity trap designed to lure traders. The indicator flags this block in advance. When price breaks the block with a single candle, it becomes a confirmed breaker block. This break indicates the inducement has failed and highlights a strong supply or demand zone.
OB EXT Breaker Block
An OB EXT Breaker Block is the extreme order block that lies between a Break of Structure (BOS) and a Change of Character (CHoCH). A BOS occurs when price clears a prior swing high or low, and a CHoCH is an early sign of reversal. The OB EXT is the first (outermost) order block in that swing, and it is marked by the indicator ahead of time. When price breaks this block with a single candle, it becomes a confirmed breaker block, signaling a major shift and highlighting a key supply or demand zone.
Breaker Block identifies a former order block that was invalidated by a break of structure and later retested. These levels often act as support or resistance zones, reflecting a potential shift in market sentiment. Traders may use Breaker Blocks to spot areas where price could react, helping with trade entries or exits.
Chart Illustration
TradingView
OANDA:XAUUSD Chart Image by AlgoHub100
✦Golden zone
The Golden Zone is the critical retracement band between the 61.8% and 78.6% Fibonacci levels of a significant market swing. This indicator automatically recognizes when price breaks a prior swing (Break of Structure, or BOS) and then shifts momentum (Change of Character, or CHoCH). As soon as these two events occur, it anchors a Fibonacci retracement between the BOS high/low and the CHoCH point, shading the area between the 0.618 and 0.786 levels (default: yellow fill).
Although TradingView’s built-in Fibonacci tool is free, it requires you to click two swing points every time—leaving you to guess whether those swings truly represent a valid BOS or CHoCH. In contrast, this indicator’s built-in logic ensures that the 61.8%–78.6% band is always drawn on the most relevant portion of price action without any extra effort. Whenever price completes a new BOS → CHoCH sequence, the Golden Zone instantly redraws, so you never have delayed or outdated retracements.
All aspects of the Golden Zone are fully customizable. You can replace the default 0.618/0.786 boundaries with any retracement values—such as 0.65/0.85 or 0.50/0.75—by entering your preferred ratios in the settings. Once set, those custom levels apply to every future swing, eliminating manual redraws. Likewise, the fill color, opacity, and boundary-line colors can be changed to match your chart’s theme. Select your color choices once, and each new Golden Zone appears consistently across multiple charts and timeframes.
By combining automatic structure alignment with one-click strategy adaptation (custom Fibonacci levels) and flexible styling (color, opacity, line thickness), this indicator saves you countless clicks and removes human error from swing selection. It provides a reliable, always-on highlight of where institutional orders commonly accumulate or distribute, making it easier to spot high-probability pullback entries or reversal areas.
Chart Illustration
This image shows our indicator automatically detecting major SMC swings and shading the Fibonacci 0.618–0.786 “Golden Zone” between each Break of Structure (BOS) and its subsequent Change of Character (CHoCH). By instantly plotting this band, you trade at a discounted price within the swing without manually identifying or drawing Fib lines. All retracement levels (e.g., 0.65/0.85, 0.50/0.75) and zone colors (fill, opacity, and boundary lines) are fully customizable—set your preferred ratios and styling once, and the indicator applies them on every new swing. This automation removes guesswork, saves clicks, and ensures you always see the most relevant pullback area in real time.
Minor Pullback
A minor pullback appears as a shallow retracement within an ongoing trend, without breaking the larger market structure. It represents a brief pause before price resumes its primary direction.
Traders can view minor pullbacks as opportunities to enter at slightly improved prices while the trend remains intact.
Observing how price recovers from a minor pullback helps confirm whether momentum continues in the same direction.
These pullbacks allow users to assess existing positions, consider small adjustments, and check nearby support or resistance levels.
Settings: Enabling “Show Internal Structure” highlights all minor pullbacks on the chart.
Example:
Major Pullback
A major pullback occurs when price retraces more deeply, often testing significant swing points or support/resistance zones. It can temporarily approach or break a key structure level before resuming the trend.
Traders might view a major pullback as a deeper buying opportunity in an uptrend or a validation of support.
Major pullbacks sometimes act as liquidity pools where stop-hunters target orders before a reversal.
The indicator flags major pullbacks distinctly, helping users recognize when caution is advised and when to adjust risk management.
Settings: Enabling “Mark High/Low” automatically labels major swing highs and lows.
Example:
SMC Market Structure
Smart Money Concepts focus on how institutions move price. This indicator highlights core structure components:
Break of Structure (BOS)
Indicates trend continuation when price breaks a previous swing high in an uptrend or swing low in a downtrend.
The indicator marks BOS events so users can verify that the prevailing direction remains intact.
Change of Character (CHOCH)
Signals a possible trend shift when price fails to make a new high in an uptrend and instead breaks the previous low, or vice versa.
CHOCH events are labeled to warn that momentum may be shifting.
Inducement (Trap Zones)
Marks areas where price briefly fakes a breakout to capture liquidity (stop-hunts) before reversing.
Identifying inducement moves helps avoid entries during false breakouts and encourages waiting for clearer confirmation.
The indicator labels induced swings, assisting in recognizing when a breakout may be a trap rather than a sustained move.
Example:
Order Blocks & Point of Interest (POI)
Order blocks represent price areas where institutional buying or selling created a significant move. This indicator distinguishes several types:
Point of Interest (POI)
A collective name for zones where price reactions often occur: Order Block, Breaker Block, and Mitigation Block.
Demand Zone (Bullish Order Block)
A price region where buy orders have overwhelmed sell orders, often forming a base before an upward move.
Traders may consider these zones when seeking long entries.
Supply Zone (Bearish Order Block)
Where sell orders exceed buy orders, frequently causing a downward reversal.
Traders might watch these zones for short entries or to set profit targets.
Breaker Block & Mitigation Block
Breaker Block appears after price breaks through a prior order block and then returns to test it from the opposite side, acting as flipped support or resistance.
Mitigation Block represents areas where institutions address unfilled orders created by previous moves, helping identify unbalanced liquidity.
Single Candle Order Block (SCOB)
A specific order block defined by one candlestick that initiates a notable price imbalance.
SCOBs often signal precise institutional interest and are flagged to show potential reversal or continuation levels.
Settings:
Enabling “Show POI” displays all Order Blocks, Breaker Blocks, and Mitigation Blocks.
Enabling “Institutional Order Block” toggles Demand/Supply Zones.
CONCLUSION
The Advance SMC ICT Indicator stands out by translating Smart Money Concepts into clear, actionable visuals—mapping inducement zones alongside four specialized order block types, including IDM and Extreme Order Blocks, to highlight where institutional activity is most likely concentrated. By combining precise structure analysis (BOS, CHOCH, inducements) with liquidity and fair value gap identification, it gives traders a nuanced view of where supply and demand pressures intersect. In practice, this means users can more easily spot where stop-runs may occur, recognize high-probability entry areas, and avoid common traps created by large-scale order flows.
While the Advance SMC ICT Indicator provides valuable insights into how professional participants interact with price, it is not a standalone trading system. Traders should always confirm its signals with their own analysis, apply sound risk management techniques, and consider broader market context before executing any trade.
DECODE Global Liquidity IndexDECODE Global Liquidity Index 🌊
The DECODE Global Liquidity Index is a powerful tool designed to track and aggregate global liquidity by combining data from the world's 13 largest economies. It offers a comprehensive view of financial liquidity, providing crucial insights into the underlying currents that can influence asset prices and market trends.
The economies covered are: United States, China, European Union, Japan, India, United Kingdom, Brazil, Canada, Russia, South Korea, Australia, Mexico, and Indonesia. The European Union accounts for major individual economies within the EU like Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Poland, etc.
Key Features:
1. Customizable Liquidity Sources
Include Global M2: You can opt to include the M2 money supply from the 13 listed economies. M2 is a broad measure of money supply that includes cash, checking deposits, savings deposits, money market securities, mutual funds, and other time deposits. (Note: Australia uses M3 as its primary measure, which is included when M2 is selected for Australia).
Include Central Bank Balance Sheets (CBBS): Alternatively, or in addition, you can include the total assets held by the central banks of these economies. Central bank balance sheets expand or contract based on monetary policy operations like quantitative easing (QE) or tightening (QT).
Combined View: If you select both M2 and CBBS, and data is available for both, the indicator will display an average of the two aggregated values. If only one source type is selected, or if data for one type is unavailable despite both being selected, the indicator will display the single available and selected component. This provides flexibility in how you define and analyze global liquidity.
2. Lead/Lag Analysis (Forward Projection):
Lead Offset (Days): This feature allows you to project the liquidity index forward by a specified number of days.
Why it's useful: Global liquidity changes can often be a leading indicator for various asset classes, particularly those sensitive to risk appetite, like Bitcoin or growth stocks. These assets might lag shifts in liquidity. By applying a lead (e.g., 90 days), you can shift the liquidity data forward on your chart to more easily visualize potential correlations and identify if current asset price movements might be responding to past changes in liquidity.
3. Rate of Change (RoC) Oscillator:
Year-over-Year % View: Instead of viewing aggregate liquidity, you can switch to a Year-over-Year (YoY%) Rate of Change (ROC) oscillator.
Why it's useful:
Momentum Identification: The ROC highlights the speed and direction of liquidity changes. Positive values indicate liquidity is increasing compared to a year ago, while negative values show it's decreasing.
Turning Points: Oscillators make it easier to spot potential accelerations, decelerations, or reversals in liquidity trends. A cross above the zero line can signal strengthening liquidity momentum, while a cross below can signal weakening momentum.
Cycle Analysis: It helps in assessing the cyclical nature of liquidity provision and its potential impact on market cycles.
This indicator aims to provide a clear, customizable, and insightful measure of global liquidity to aid traders and investors in their market analysis.
CAFX Liquidity Pro V1CAFX Liquidity Pro Indicator
Precision Engineered for Smart Profit-Taking
The CAFX Liquidity Pro Indicator is a powerful trading tool designed to help traders pinpoint high-probability liquidity zones, making it ideal for setting accurate and strategic take profit levels. By identifying where institutional interest is likely to reside, this indicator highlights the areas where price is most likely to react, reverse, or pause—giving you the edge in locking in profits before the market shifts.
Whether you're scalping, day trading, or swing trading, the CAFX Liquidity Pro provides clear visual cues that simplify your decision-making process and enhance your trade management. With a focus on precision and reliability, it helps you avoid emotional exits and instead base your take profits on real market behavior and liquidity dynamics.
Use CAFX Liquidity Pro to stay one step ahead—because knowing where to exit is just as important as knowing when to enter.
Swing High/Low LQ TrackerAn interactive tool to track liquidity events. Select start and end points on your chart—this indicator will automatically detect and plot the highest high and lowest low from that window, then extend those levels forward. If price sweeps either level, it marks the event with a clean "LQ" tag.
Perfect for traders who want to identify session-based liquidity, like killzone highs/lows, without manually drawing and deleting lines every day.
How It Works
-Select start and end time directly from settings
-Indicator calculates the swing high and low during that range
-Lines extend beyond the session until broken
-“LQ” markers appear when price sweeps the swing levels
It’s a must-have for ICT traders, smart money traders, or anyone who wants to track key liquidity levels without clutter.
Simple and effective tool for marking important ranges and tracking when liquidity is taken. No complex settings - just select your range and monitor the levels.
Multi Session LQ Tracker by DeadcatDisplays session ranges and identifies when price sweeps session highs/lows (liquidity) . Shows up to 5 sessions with customizable times.
Setup
Timezone - Must match your chart timezone
Sessions - 2 active by default (Asia and London), add up to 5 total
LQ Trigger Session - Time window for liquidity detection (default: 0800-1600), If LQ sweeps happen before this time, they will not be marked.
Key Features
Session Boxes: Visual range of each session high/low
Extended Lines: Continue until price breaks level
LQ Markers: Red "LQ" circles when session levels swept during trigger hours
Liquidity Toggle: Turn off to use as standard session indicator.
Customize it according to your needs. If LQ detection is off, it will function as a normal session indicator.
Very useful for ICT traders who often track session highs/lows to make trading decisions, or for someone who just wants to use a session indicator.
ryantrad3s session highs and lowsThis indicator allows you find London Session and Asia Session highs and lows without marking them yourself. This indicator can also help you find good draws on liquidity for the day and potential highs and lows you can target during that trading day. I recommend trading NQ and ES with this indicator because that's what I seen it work best with. The blue lines are London Session high and low and the red lines are Asia Session high and low. Hope this can save you time marking out your chart before market open.
Liquidity stop huntThis tool identifies key liquidity zones where stop hunts are likely to occur.
**How it works:**
- Detects swing highs/lows on your selected timeframe.
- Marks levels where "liquidity sweeps" (fakeouts) often happen.
- Plots these zones as dotted lines for visual reference.
**How to use:**
1. Look for price rejections near marked levels.
2. Avoid placing stops too close to obvious liquidity zones.
3. Combine with price action for confirmation.
**Settings:**
- Timeframe: Choose the historical period for analysis (e.g., 1D, 1W).
- Sweep Type: "Wick Only" for precise tails, "Regular" for all breaks.
- Colors/Style: Customize appearance.
Note: Works best in trending markets. Not a standalone strategy — always confirm with additional analysis.
Silver Bullet 5 minutes Box - By KaVeHThis indicator plots high-low range boxes based on selected intraday time windows on the 5-minute chart. It's inspired by the "Silver Bullet" trading concept, highlighting key liquidity grabs and volatility pockets at predefined times. It helps traders visually identify potential smart money trading windows during the New York session and other time anchors.
⚠️ This script only works on the 5-minute chart.
📦 Main Features:
⏰ Customizable Time Boxes:
Define up to 4 separate time windows per day:
3:00 AM – 3:05 AM (New York time) (Box 1)
10:00 AM – 10:05 AM (New York time) (Box 2)
2:00 PM – 2:05 PM (New York time) (Box 3)
8:00 PM – 8:05 PM (New York time) (Box 4)
🎨 Color and Visibility Control:
Each box can be independently toggled and colored for visual distinction.
🕔 New York Time Based:
All timestamps are automatically adjusted to New York Time, aligning with institutional market behavior.
📉 Post-Box Projection:
After each time window closes, a box extends forward 6 hours (72 bars on a 5-minute chart) to highlight the range.
💡 Use Case:
These boxes are best used to:
Detect liquidity sweeps.
Mark potential entry or exit zones.
Track price behavior after specific time-based events.
For example, the 10 AM box is often used to identify setups just after the NYSE open and into the first hour of volatility.
⚠️ TradingView Compliance Notes:
This script is original and does not replicate or resell premium/paid indicators.
All logic is coded from scratch by kaveh_mirmousavi, using public concepts from ICT/Smart Money Trading.
Fully complies with the Mozilla Public License 2.0.
Does not include financial advice or signals — for educational use only.
✅ How to Use:
Apply to a 5-minute chart.
Adjust the desired time boxes in the input panel.
Watch for price action within and after the boxes.
Enjoy and feel free to share feedback or ideas for improvement!
Liqudation HeatMap [BigBeluga]🔵 OVERVIEW
An advanced liquidity visualization tool that plots horizontal heat zones to highlight where potential liquidations and volume clusters are most likely hiding beneath price action.
Liqudation HeatMap scans historical price movements for local highs and lows with elevated volume or candle range. It then draws dynamic heatmap boxes—shaded from lime (low interest) to yellow (high interest)—revealing potential zones of trapped positions or stop clusters. A vertical scale on the right shows you the relative strength of volume behind each level, from 0 to the highest detected.
🔵 CONCEPTS
Maps areas of potential liquidity using volume or candle range (if volume is unavailable).
Identifies swing highs/lows (pivots) and extends heatmap boxes outward from these levels. Colors each zone based on the relative strength of volume concentration.
Fades or removes zones once price crosses their midpoints, simulating the idea of liquidity being “consumed.”
Displays a live vertical scale that shows the volume range for quick reference.
🔵 FEATURES
Dynamic Heatmap Zones:
Draws few boxes above and after pivot highs and below pivot lows, each shaded based on volume concentration.
Smart Coloring System:
Uses a gradient from lime (low) to yellow (high) to visually distinguish between weak and strong liquidity zones.
Adaptive ATR Widths:
Automatically adjusts zone thickness based on volatility (ATR), scaling intelligently across timeframes.
Liquidity Consumption Logic:
Zones are stope extending once price interacts with them—mimicking the behavior of real liquidation sweeps.
Volume Scale Legend:
A real-time scale is plotted on the right side, showing the min-max range of volume used for heat calculations.
🔵 HOW TO USE
Look for thick yellow zones to identify areas of concentrated stop losses or liquidation triggers.
Use these levels to anticipate mean reversion points or high-volatility zones.
Combine with your trend or structure tools to trade into or fade these liquidity pools.
On lower timeframes, use this tool to confirm entries around sweeps or deviations.
Use the right-side scale to compare relative zone strength instantly.
🔵 CONCLUSION
Liqudation HeatMap is a powerful visualization tool that uncovers where liquidity likely resides on the chart. By highlighting hidden traps and reactive levels in real-time, it gives traders a significant edge when it comes to spotting stop hunts, mean reversions, and areas of institutional interest. Whether you’re scalping or swing trading, this heatmap provides unmatched context on the market’s hidden intent.
Enigma Sniper 369The "Enigma Sniper 369" is a custom-built Pine Script indicator designed for TradingView, tailored specifically for forex traders seeking high-probability entries during high-volatility market sessions.
Unlike generic trend-following or scalping tools, this indicator uniquely combines session-based "kill zones" (London and US sessions), momentum-based candle analysis, and an optional EMA trend filter to pinpoint liquidity grabs and reversal opportunities.
Its originality lies in its focus on liquidity hunting—identifying levels where stop losses are likely clustered (around swing highs/lows and wick midpoints)—and providing visual entry zones that are dynamically removed once price breaches them, reducing clutter and focusing on actionable signals.
The name "369" reflects the structured approach of three key components (session timing, candle logic, and trend filter) working in harmony to snipe precise entries.
What It Does
"Enigma Sniper 369" identifies potential buy and sell opportunities by drawing two types of horizontal lines on the chart during user-defined London and US
session kill zones:
Solid Lines: Mark the swing low (for buys) or swing high (for sells) of a trigger candle, indicating a potential entry point where stop losses might be clustered.
Dotted Lines: Mark the 50% level of the candle’s wick (lower wick for buys, upper wick for sells), serving as a secondary confirmation zone for entries or tighter stop-loss placement.
These lines are plotted only when specific candle conditions are met within the kill zones, and they are automatically deleted once the price crosses them, signaling that the liquidity at that level has likely been grabbed. The indicator also includes an optional EMA filter to ensure trades align with the broader trend, reducing false signals in choppy markets.
How It Works
The indicator’s logic is built on a multi-layered approach:
Kill Zone Timing: Trades are only considered during user-defined London and US session hours (e.g., London from 02:00 to 12:00 UTC, as seen in the screenshots). These sessions are known for high volatility and liquidity, making them ideal for capturing institutional moves.
Candle-Based Momentum Logic:
Buy Signal: A candle must close above its midpoint (indicating bullish momentum) and have a lower low than the previous candle (suggesting a potential liquidity grab below the previous swing low). This is expressed as close > (high + low) / 2 and low < low .
Sell Signal: A candle must close below its midpoint (bearish momentum) and have a higher high than the previous candle (indicating a potential liquidity grab above the previous swing high), expressed as close < (high + low) / 2 and high > high .
These conditions ensure the indicator targets candles that break recent structure to hunt stop losses while showing directional momentum.
Optional EMA Filter: A 50-period EMA (customizable) can be enabled to filter signals based on trend direction.
Buy signals are only generated if the EMA is trending upward (ema_value > ema_value ), and sell signals require a downward EMA trend (ema_value < ema_value ). This reduces noise by aligning entries with the broader market trend.
Liquidity Levels and Deletion Logic:
For a buy signal, a solid green line is drawn at the candle’s low, and a dotted green line at the 50% level of the lower wick (from the candle body’s bottom to the low).
For a sell signal, a solid red line is drawn at the candle’s high, and a dotted red line at the 50% level of the upper wick (from the body’s top to the high).
These lines extend to the right until the price crosses them, at which point they are deleted, indicating the liquidity at that level has been taken (e.g., stop losses triggered).
Alerts: The indicator includes alert conditions for buy and sell signals, notifying traders when a new setup is identified.
Underlying Concepts
The indicator is grounded in the concept of liquidity hunting, a strategy often employed by institutional traders. Markets frequently move to levels where stop losses are clustered—typically just beyond swing highs or lows—before reversing in the opposite direction. The "Enigma Sniper 369" targets these moves by identifying candles that break structure (e.g., a lower low or higher high) during high-volatility sessions, suggesting a potential sweep of stop losses. The 50% wick level acts as a secondary confirmation, as this midpoint often represents a zone where tighter stop losses are placed by retail traders. The optional EMA filter adds a trend-following element, ensuring entries are taken in the direction of the broader market momentum, which is particularly useful on lower timeframes like the 15-minute chart shown in the screenshots.
How to Use It
Here’s a step-by-step guide based on the provided usage example on the GBP/USD 15-minute chart:
Setup the Indicator: Add "Enigma Sniper 369" to your TradingView chart. Adjust the London and US session hours to match your timezone (e.g., London from 02:00 to 12:00 UTC, US from 13:00 to 22:00 UTC). Customize the EMA period (default 50) and line styles/colors if desired.
Identify Kill Zones: The indicator highlights the London session in light green and the US session in light purple, as seen in the screenshots. Focus on these periods for signals, as they are the most volatile and likely to produce liquidity grabs.
Wait for a Signal: Look for solid and dotted lines to appear during the kill zones:
Buy Setup: A solid green line at the swing low and a dotted green line at the 50% lower wick level indicate a potential buy. This suggests the market may have grabbed liquidity below the swing low and is now poised to move higher.
Sell Setup: A solid red line at the swing high and a dotted red line at the 50% upper wick level indicate a potential sell, suggesting liquidity was taken above the swing high.
Place Your Trade:
For a buy, set a buy limit order at the dotted green line (50% wick level), as this is a more conservative entry point. Place your stop loss just below the solid green line (swing low) to cover the full swing. For example, in the screenshots, the market retraces to the dotted line at 1.32980 after a liquidity grab below the swing low, triggering a buy limit order.
For a sell, set a sell limit order at the dotted red line, with a stop loss just above the solid red line.
Monitor Price Action: Once the price crosses a line, it is deleted, indicating the liquidity at that level has been taken. In the screenshots, after the buy limit is triggered, the market moves higher, confirming the setup. The caption notes, “The market returns and tags us in long with a buy limit,” highlighting this retracement strategy.
Additional Context: Use the indicator to identify liquidity levels that may be targeted later. For example, the screenshot notes, “If a new session is about to open I will wait for the grab liquidity to go long,” showing how the indicator can be used to anticipate future moves at session opens (e.g., London open at 1.32980).
Risk Management: Always set a stop loss below the swing low (for buys) or above the swing high (for sells) to protect against adverse moves. The 50% wick level helps tighten entries, improving the risk-reward ratio.
Practical Example
On the GBP/USD 15-minute chart, during the London session (02:00 UTC), the indicator identifies a buy setup with a solid green line at 1.32901 (swing low) and a dotted green line at 1.32980 (50% wick level). The market initially dips below the swing low, grabbing liquidity, then retraces to the dotted line, triggering a buy limit order. The price subsequently rises to 1.33404, yielding a profitable trade. The user notes, “The logic is in the last candle it provides new level to go long,” emphasizing the indicator’s ability to identify fresh levels after a liquidity sweep.
Customization Tips
Adjust the EMA period to suit your timeframe (e.g., a shorter period like 20 for faster signals on lower timeframes).
Modify the session hours to align with your broker’s timezone or specific market conditions.
Use the alert feature to get notified of new setups without constantly monitoring the chart.
Why It’s Useful for Traders
The "Enigma Sniper 369" stands out by combining session timing, momentum-based candle analysis, and liquidity hunting into a single tool. It provides clear, actionable levels for entries and stop losses, removes invalid signals dynamically, and aligns trades with high-probability market conditions. Whether you’re a scalper looking for quick moves during London open or a swing trader targeting session-based reversals, this indicator offers a structured, data-driven approach to trading.
ZenAlgo - MultiverseThe ZenAlgo – Multiverse indicator provides a multi-timeframe view of Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP) levels and their dynamic interaction with price across seven defined timeframes: Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly, Semi-Annual, and Yearly. The indicator is intended to help traders contextualize price within time-based value areas and examine how price interacts with statistically relevant bands derived from those VWAPs.
VWAP Calculation and Period Structure
At the core, this script computes VWAP levels anchored to six distinct timeframes using volume data and a configurable source (default is HLC3). Each VWAP resets at the start of its corresponding period (e.g., Daily VWAP resets at the beginning of a new day) using timeframe.change() as a detection mechanism. This allows each VWAP level to reflect a clean aggregation of price and volume over its specified period.
VWAP levels are only computed if volume data is present and cumulative volume increases, ensuring logical consistency. If volume is missing or inconsistent, the script terminates execution with an error to prevent invalid outputs.
Band Calculation
Each VWAP is accompanied by one or two optional bands on both sides, calculated using percentage-based offset. Daily VWAP is configurable per user preference to use either standard deviation or a percentage-based offset. These bands provide a dynamic value area that expands or contracts with volatility or proportional price distance, respectively.
The bands help classify price as:
Inside the main band (e.g., between ±1 band): near average value
Inside extended band (e.g., ±2 bands): stretched but not extreme
Beyond extended band: potentially overheated or oversold conditions
This layering creates a multi-zoned map of value perception across timeframes.
Labeling and Historical Tracking
As each new VWAP is computed, it is stored in a bounded array alongside metadata such as label position, line objects, test count, and test state (whether price has interacted with it). Each level is drawn as a dotted horizontal line and labeled with its value and corresponding period (e.g., "D", "W", "M").
Price interaction with a VWAP level (i.e., candle high/low crossing the line) changes the styling of the label and line, marking it as "tested." A cap on how many tested levels are retained (default 10) avoids excessive clutter and resource usage.
These persistent horizontal levels give the trader a visual reference of where value was defined in previous periods and how price has respected or ignored those levels over time.
Summary Tables and Grid
Two visual table overlays are provided:
1. VWAP Summary Table , this table shows:
VWAP values per timeframe
Trend interpretation (rising, falling, stable) relative to price
Ranked order of VWAP values (from highest to lowest)
The order is recalculated each bar to reflect the vertical positioning of each VWAP on the price chart.
2. VWAP Relationship Grid
A grid matrix compares each VWAP and current price against all others. Each cell reflects whether a given source is above, below, or within a tolerance threshold relative to another. Colors (green, red, gray) visually encode the result, with the diagonal marked in black and unused cells disabled.
This matrix helps identify alignment or dissonance among timeframes, allowing users to detect whether shorter-term value is leading or lagging longer-term value.
Price Band Classification
For the Daily VWAP specifically, the script includes an extra classification system. It assigns the current price to a zone (e.g., "At VWAP", "Bear Band", "Above Bull Band 2") based on where the price lies in relation to the VWAP bands. This classification is also used for dynamic coloring and added to the daily label.
Display Controls
The script offers fine-grained controls:
Toggle visibility of each VWAP and band group independently
Adjust the offset of labels from the current bar
Customize band multipliers and color transparency
Limit the number of historical VWAP labels plotted
Position both the summary and grid tables flexibly on screen
These options allow traders to declutter their charts and focus on the most relevant context for their strategy.
How to Interpret and Use
This indicator provides a structured view of market value perception across various timeframes. For example:
When price converges with multiple VWAPs, it may suggest consensus on value.
When price moves away from all VWAPs, it may indicate trending or stretched conditions.
Crosses and retests of VWAPs (especially higher-timeframe ones) can act as areas of interest.
The band-based classification helps identify transitional zones and whether price is situated in an area where value is being accepted or rejected.
The summary tables offer a high-level dashboard of price positioning and value structure, which can assist with top-down analysis, filtering setups, or contextual decision-making.
Added Value Compared to Free Alternatives
Most free VWAP scripts:
Cover only a single timeframe (often daily or session-based)
Lack historical level tracking with tested/retested visualization
Do not support grid-level relationships or multi-timeframe band analysis
Offer limited configuration over how bands are calculated or displayed
This script consolidates multiple value areas in one consistent framework and goes further by tracking historical relevance, providing interaction logs, and organizing data into actionable overlays.
For traders seeking comprehensive value context across intraday and swing horizons, this tool offers persistent and structured data views that are otherwise unavailable through individual, isolated VWAP tools.
Limitations and Disclaimers
The indicator depends on volume data. On instruments with unreliable or synthetic volume (e.g., certain spot forex or CFDs), results may not be meaningful.
Band-based interpretation should not be used as a signal mechanism on its own.
On low timeframes, longer-period VWAPs may appear flat or visually compressed.
As with any analytical tool, interpretation requires trader discretion and should be combined with broader context.
smc bullrider 1.0The smc bullrider 1.0 indicator is specifically crafted for mapping market structures. It excels in clearly recognizing type of Points Of Interest (SCOB) offering traders a straightforward and effective method to analyze market movements. It helps identify strategic entry points with precision.
🟠 Exploring Structure Mapping.
🔹This indicator presents a distinctive method for examining the market structure, emphasizing liquidity through the concept of 'Inducement'. Inducement plays a pivotal role in pinpointing essential structural indicators in the market, including Higher Highs (HH), Higher Lows (HL), Lower Lows (LL), and Lower Highs (LH).
🔹Consider Inducement as a strategically placed trap near supply or demand zones. It lures in eager buyers or sellers before the actual zone is reached, effectively creating liquidity. To validate an inducement, it must signify a legitimate pullback.
🔹A valid scenario arises when the price either sweeps or closes beyond the high or low of the preceding candle. In this context, the candle's color, whether bullish or bearish, holds no significance, and both situations are deemed valid. Inside bars are disregarded unless they meet this specific criterion. The indicator facilitates this process by automatically highlighting valid pullbacks with a distinctive gray round label.
🔹This feature serves not only as a visual guide but also as a vital tool for effortlessly comprehending market movements, offering a clear and visual representation of ongoing market trends
🟣 Understanding POI Functionality
🔹Single Candle Order Block (SCOB): Leveraging single-candle mitigation proves to be a powerful method for incorporating multiple entries into your successful trades.
🔵 How to Utilize the smc bullrider 1.0 Indicator:
🔹The smc bullrider 1.0 Indicator is crafted to elevate your trading strategy by pinpointing crucial order blocks and market signals. Below is a guide on how to make the most of the different components of the smc bullrider 1.0 Indicator:
🔹SCOB (Single Candle Order Block):
Application: SCOB is well-suited for scaling into a position. It is best utilized to increase positions when the market responds to OB or OB-EXT, signaling a potential reversal.
🟢Here's how to use it.
🔹Market Structure Drawing
This diagram depicts significant market indicators, such as instances of ascending prices (Higher Highs - HH) or descending prices (Lower Lows - LL). It serves as a valuable visual tool for comprehending the dynamics of market behavior
PICTURE (DIAGRAM)
Live Chart Example: Our indicator efficiently dissects market structure, showcasing the 'Inducement' concept with precision in real-time trends—highlighting HH, HL, LL, and LH
PICTURE (REAL CHART)
Valid Pullback ( IDM ):
Valid Pullback Example: This image illustrates a common situation where the price extends beyond the high or low of the preceding candle, signifying a valid pullback. Pay attention to the identifiable gray dotted line label marking the inducement point.
PICTURE (DRAW/REAL)
Single Candle Order Block (SCOB)
The provided chart showcases the SCOB in a real trading setting, highlighting its effectiveness in optimizing trades.
🟡 Summary
🔹smc bullrider 1.0 Indicator distinguishes itself in the realm of market analysis, with a distinct focus on structure mapping and high-probability Point of Interest (POI).
Furthermore, it provides a visual representation of three key areas for each market move: discount, premium, and the equilibrium area at 50%. Its innovative approach involves scrutinizing market structure using the 'Inducement' concept, a pivotal strategy for identifying vital structural markers and steering
Time-based LiquidityThis indicator automatically marks important time-based liquidity levels on your chart, helping you stay aware of where major price reactions may occur and the market is forced to show its hand.
Key Features:
Previous Month’s, Week’s, and Day’s Highs and Lows: Displays PMH/PML, PWH/PWL, and PDH/PDL — key reference points where liquidity often accumulates.
Intraday Session Highs and Lows: Divides the trading day into quarters (00:00–06:00, 06:00–12:00, etc. following Day’s Quarterly Theory) and tracks session highs and lows dynamically across these periods.
Current Session 90-Minute Quarters: Splits the active session into 90-minute intervals to highlight short-term liquidity structures and potential reaction zones.
Level Alerts: Tracks when each liquidity level is reached and enables customizable alerts so you don’t miss important price movements.
Use Case:
This tool provides an organized, time-based framework for identifying where liquidity is likely to concentrate across different timeframes and intraday cycles. Use these levels for forming bias, planning entries, exits, or anticipating price reactions at key points in the market structure.
Customization Options:
Enable/disable liquidity levels to display (Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Sessions, Session Quarters)
Customize the appearance of each level (color, style, line width)
Enable or disable tracking and alerts for level interactions
RunRox - Entry Model🎯 RunRox Entry Model is an all-in-one reversal-pattern indicator engineered to help traders accurately identify key price-reversal points on their charts. It will be part of our premium indicator package and improve the effectiveness of your trading strategies.
The primary concept of this indicator is liquidity analysis, making it ideal for Smart Money traders and for trading within market structure. At the same time, the indicator is universal and can be integrated into any strategy. Below, I will outline the full concept of the indicator and its settings so you can better understand how it works.
🧬 CONCEPT
In the screenshot below, I’ll schematically illustrate the core idea of this indicator. It’s one of the patterns that the indicator automatically detects on the chart using a two-timeframe approach. We use the higher timeframe to identify liquidity zones, and the lower timeframe to capture liquidity removal and structure breaks. The schematic is shown in the screenshot below.
Our indicator includes three entry models in total , and I will discuss its functionality and features in more detail later in this post.
💡 FEATURES
Three entry models
PO3 HTF Bar
Entry Area
Optimization for each Entry Area
Filters
HTF FVG
Alert customization
Next, we will examine each entry model in detail.
🟠 ENTRY MODEL 1
The first model is the core one we’ll work with; all other models rely on its structure and construction. In the screenshot below, I’ll schematically show the complete model.
As shown in the screenshot above, we display higher-timeframe candles on the current chart to better visualize the entry model and keep the trader informed of what’s happening on the larger timeframe. The screenshot also highlights both the Long and Short models, as well as the Entry Area, which I will explain in more detail below.
The schematic model on the lower timeframe is shown in the screenshot above. It illustrates that after the Entry Model forms, we draw the Entry Area on the next candle and wait for a price pullback into this zone for the optimal trade entry. Statistically, before moving higher, the price typically revisits the Entry Area, covering the imbalances created by MSS; thus, the Entry Area represents the ideal entry point.
🟩 Entry Area
Once the Entry Model has formed, we focus on identifying the optimal pullback zone for taking a position. To determine which retracement area performs best, we conducted extensive historical backtesting on potential zones and selected those that consistently delivered the strongest results. This process yields Entry Areas with the highest probability of a successful reversal.
On the screenshot above, you can see an example of the Entry Area and which zones carry a higher versus lower probability of reversal. Zones rendered with greater transparency have historically delivered weaker results than the more opaque zones. The deeper-colored areas represent the optimal entry zones and can improve your risk-reward ratio by allowing you to enter at more favorable prices.
It’s important to remember that the entire Entry Area functions as a potential zone for scaling into a position. However, if your risk-to-reward ratio isn’t favorable, you can wait for the price to retrace to lower levels within the Entry Area and enter with a more attractive risk-to-reward.
🟢 Pattern Rating
Each entry model receives a rating in the form of green circles next to its name 🟢. The rating ranges from one to four circles, based on the historical performance of similar patterns. To calculate this rating, we backtest past data by analyzing candle behavior during the model’s formation and assign circles according to how similar patterns performed historically.
Example Ratings:
🟢 – One circle
🟢🟢 – Two circles
🟢🟢🟢 – Three circles
🟢🟢🟢🟢 – Four circles
The more green circles a model has, the more reliable it is—but it’s crucial to rely on your own analysis when identifying strong reversal points on the chart. This rating reflects the model’s historical performance and does not guarantee future results, so keep that in mind!
Below is a screenshot showing four model variations with different ratings on the chart.
⚠️ Unconfirmed Pattern
Entry Model 1 is designed so that, until the higher-timeframe candle closes, the pattern remains unconfirmed and is hidden on the chart. For traders who prefer to see setups as they form, there’s a dedicated feature that displays the unconfirmed pattern at the moment of its appearance - triggered by the Market Structure Shift - before the HTF candle closes. The screenshot below shows what the pattern looks like prior to confirmation.
‼️IMPORTANT: Until the pattern is confirmed and the higher-timeframe candle has closed, the model may disappear from the chart if price reverses and the HTF candle closes below the previous bar. Therefore, this mode is suitable only for experienced traders who want to see market moves in advance. Remember that the pattern can be removed from the chart, so we recommend waiting for the HTF candle to close before deciding to enter a trade.‼️
✂️ Filters
For the primary model, there are four filters designed to enhance entry points or exclude less-confirmed patterns. The filters available in the indicator are:
Bounce Filter
Market Shift Mode
Same Wave Filter
Only with Divergence
I will explain how each of these filters works below.
- Bounce Filter
The Bounce Filter identifies significant deviations of price from its mean and only displays the Entry Model once the asset’s price moves beyond the average level. The screenshot below illustrates how this appears on the chart.
The actual average-price calculation is more sophisticated than what’s shown in the screenshot, that image is just an illustrative example. When the price deviates significantly from the N-bar average, we start looking for the Entry Model. This approach works particularly well in range-bound markets without a clear trend, as it lets you trade strong deviations from the mean.
- Market Shift Mode
This filter works by detecting the initial impulse that triggered the liquidity sweep on the previous higher-timeframe candle, and then holding the Market Structure Shift level at that point after the sweep. If the filter is turned off, price may move higher following the liquidity removal, creating a new MSS level and potentially producing a false structure shift and entry signal on the formed model.
This filter helps you more accurately identify genuine shifts - but keep in mind that the model can still perform well without it, so choose the setting that best suits your trading style.
- Same Wave Filter
The Same Wave Filter removes entry models that form without a clear lower-timeframe structure when liquidity is swept from the previous higher-timeframe candle. In other words, if the prior HTF candle and the current one belong to the same impulse wave - without any retracements on the LTF - the model is filtered out.
Keep in mind that this filter may also exclude patterns that could have produced positive results, so whether to enable it depends on your trading system.
- Only with Divergence
The Only with Divergence filter detects divergence between the lows of successive candles and indicators like RSI. When the low that swept liquidity diverges from the previous candle’s low, the indicator displays a “DIV” label. Although RSI is cited as an example, our divergence calculation is more advanced. This filter highlights patterns where low divergence signals genuine liquidity manipulation and a likely aggressive price reversal.
🌀 Model Settings
Trade Direction: Choose whether to display models for Long or Short trades.
Fractal: Select between automatic fractal detection—which adapts the lower-timeframe (LTF) and higher-timeframe (HTF) candles—or Custom.
Custom Fractal: When Custom is selected, manually specify the LTF and HTF timeframes used to detect the patterns.
History Pattern Limit: Set the maximum number of patterns to display on the chart to keep it clean and uncluttered.
🎨 Model Style
You can flexibly customize the model’s appearance by choosing your preferred line thickness, color, and the other settings we discussed above.
🔵 ENTRY MODEL 2
This model appears under specific conditions when Model 1 cannot form. It’s a price-reversal model constructed according to different rules than the first model. The screenshot below shows how it looks on the chart.
This model forms less frequently than Model 1 but delivers equally strong performance and is displayed as a position-entry zone.
Like the Entry Area in Entry Model 1, this zone is calculated automatically and highlights the best entry levels: areas that showed the strongest historical results are rendered in a brighter shade.
🎨 Model Style
You can flexibly customize the style of Entry Model 2 - its color, opacity, visibility, and the average price of the previous candle.
🟢 ENTRY MODEL 3
Entry Model 3 is a continuation pattern that only forms after Entry Model 1 has completed and delivered the necessary price move to trigger Model 3.
Below is a schematic illustration of how Model 3 is intended to work.
🎨 Model Style
As with the previous models, you can flexibly customize the style of this zone.
⬆️ HTF CANDLES
One of the standout features of this indicator is the ability to plot higher-timeframe (HTF) candles directly on your lower-timeframe (LTF) chart, giving you clear visualization of the entry models and insight into what’s unfolding on the larger timeframe.
You can fully customize the HTF candles - select their style, the number of bars displayed, and tweak various settings to match your personal trading style.
HTF FVG
Fair Value Gaps (FVGs) can also be drawn on the HTF candles themselves, enabling you to spot key liquidity or interest zones at a glance, without switching between timeframes.
Additionally, you can view all significant historical HTF highs and lows, with demarcation lines showing where each HTF candle begins and ends.
All these options let you tailor the HTF candle display on your chart and monitor multiple timeframes’ trends in a single view.
📶 INFO PANEL
Instrument: the market symbol on which the model is detected
Fractal Timeframes: the LTF and HTF fractal periods used to locate the pattern
HTF Candle Countdown: the time remaining until the higher-timeframe candle closes
Trade Direction: the direction (Long or Short) in which the model is searched for entry
🔔 ALERT CUSTOMIZATION
And, of course, you can configure any alerts you need. There are seven alert types available:
Confirmed Entry Model 1
Unconfirmed Entry Model 1
Confirmed Entry Model 2
Confirmed Entry Model 3
Entry Area 1 Trigger
Entry Area 2 Trigger
Entry Area 3 Trigger
You also get a custom macro field where you can enter any placeholders to fully personalize your alerts. Below are example macros you can use in that field.
{{event}} - Event name ('New M1')
{{direction}} - Trade direction ('Long', 'Short')
{{area_beg}} - Entry Area Price
{{area_end}} - Entry Area Price
{{exchange}} - Exchange ('Binance')
{{ticker}} - Ticker ('BTCUSD')
{{interval}} - Timeframe ('1s', '1', 'D')
{{htf}} - High timeframe ('15', '60', 'D')
{{open}}-{{close}}-{{high}}-{{low}} - Candle price values
{{htf_open}}-{{htf_close}}-{{htf_high}}-{{htf_low}} - Last confirmed HTF candle's price
{{volume}} - Candle volume
{{time}} - Candle open time in UTC timezone
{{timenow}} - Signal time in UTC timezone
{{syminfo.currency}} - 'USD' for BTCUSD pair
{{syminfo.basecurrency}} - 'BTC' for BTCUSD pair
✅ USAGE EXAMPLES
Now I’ll demonstrate several ways to apply this indicator across different trading strategies.
Primarily, it’s most effective within the Smart Money framework - where liquidity and manipulation are the core focus - so it integrates seamlessly into your SMC-based approach.
However, it can also be employed in other strategies, such as classic technical analysis or Elliott Wave, to capitalize on reversal points on the chart.
Example 1
The first example illustrates forming a downtrend using a Smart Money strategy. After the market structure shifts and the first BOS is broken, we begin looking for a short entry.
Once Entry Model 1 is established, a Fair Value Gap appears, which we use as our position-entry zone. The nearest target becomes the newly formed BOS level.
In this trade, it was crucial to wait for a strong downtrend to develop before hunting for entries. Therefore, we waited for the first BOS to break and entered the trade to ride the continuation of the downtrend down to the next BOS level.
Example 2
The next example illustrates a downtrend developing with a Fair Value Gap on the 1-hour timeframe. The FVG is also displayed directly on the HTF candles in the chart.
The pattern forms within the HTF Fair Value Gap, indicating that we can balance this inefficiency and ride the continuation of the downtrend.
The target can simply be a 1:2 or 1:3 risk–reward ratio, as in our case.
📌 CONCLUSION
These two examples illustrate how this indicator can be used to identify reversals or trend continuations. In truth, there are countless ways to incorporate this tool, and each trader can adapt the model to fit their own strategy.
Always remember to rely on your own analysis and only enter trades when you feel confident in them.
Quarterly Theory ICT 05 [TradingFinder] Doubling Theory Signals🔵 Introduction
Doubling Theory is an advanced approach to price action and market structure analysis that uniquely combines time-based analysis with key Smart Money concepts such as SMT (Smart Money Technique), SSMT (Sequential SMT), Liquidity Sweep, and the Quarterly Theory ICT.
By leveraging fractal time structures and precisely identifying liquidity zones, this method aims to reveal institutional activity specifically smart money entry and exit points hidden within price movements.
At its core, the market is divided into two structural phases: Doubling 1 and Doubling 2. Each phase contains four quarters (Q1 through Q4), which follow the logic of the Quarterly Theory: Accumulation, Manipulation (Judas Swing), Distribution, and Continuation/Reversal.
These segments are anchored by the True Open, allowing for precise alignment with cyclical market behavior and providing a deeper structural interpretation of price action.
During Doubling 1, a Sequential SMT (SSMT) Divergence typically forms between two correlated assets. This time-structured divergence occurs between two swing points positioned in separate quarters (e.g., Q1 and Q2), where one asset breaks a significant low or high, while the second asset fails to confirm it. This lack of confirmation—especially when aligned with the Manipulation and Accumulation phases—often signals early smart money involvement.
Following this, the highest and lowest price points from Doubling 1 are designated as liquidity zones. As the market transitions into Doubling 2, it commonly returns to these zones in a calculated move known as a Liquidity Sweep—a sharp, engineered spike intended to trigger stop orders and pending positions. This sweep, often orchestrated by institutional players, facilitates entry into large positions with minimal slippage.
Bullish :
Bearish :
🔵 How to Use
Applying Doubling Theory requires a simultaneous understanding of temporal structure and inter-asset behavioral divergence. The method unfolds over two main phases—Doubling 1 and Doubling 2—each divided into four quarters (Q1 to Q4).
The first phase focuses on identifying a Sequential SMT (SSMT) divergence, which forms when two correlated assets (e.g., EURUSD and GBPUSD, or NQ and ES) react differently to key price levels across distinct quarters. For example, one asset may break a previous low while the other maintains structure. This misalignment—especially in Q2, the Manipulation phase—often indicates early smart money accumulation or distribution.
Once this divergence is observed, the extreme highs and lows of Doubling 1 are marked as liquidity zones. In Doubling 2, the market gravitates back toward these zones, executing a Liquidity Sweep.
This move is deliberate—designed to activate clustered stop-loss and pending orders and to exploit pockets of resting liquidity. These sweeps are typically driven by institutional forces looking to absorb liquidity and position themselves ahead of the next major price move.
The key to execution lies in the fact that, during the sweep in Doubling 2, a classic SMT divergence should also appear between the two assets. This indicates a weakening of the previous trend and adds an extra layer of confirmation.
🟣 Bullish Doubling Theory
In the bullish scenario, Doubling 1 begins with a bullish SSMT divergence, where one asset forms a lower low while the other maintains its structure. This divergence signals weakening bearish momentum and possible smart money accumulation. In Doubling 2, the market returns to the previous low and sweeps the liquidity zone—breaking below it on one asset, while the second fails to confirm, forming a bullish SMT divergence.
f this move is followed by a bullish PSP and a clear market structure break (MSB), a long entry is triggered. The stop-loss is placed just below the swept liquidity zone, while the target is set in the premium zone, anticipating a move driven by institutional buyers.
🟣 Bearish Doubling Theory
The bearish scenario follows the same structure in reverse. In Doubling 1, a bearish SSMT divergence occurs when one asset prints a higher high while the other fails to do so. This suggests distribution and weakening buying pressure. Then, in Doubling 2, the market returns to the previous high and executes a liquidity sweep, targeting trapped buyers.
A bearish SMT divergence appears, confirming the move, followed by a bearish PSP on the lower timeframe. A short position is initiated after a confirmed MSB, with the stop-loss placed
🔵 Settings
⚙️ Logical Settings
Quarterly Cycles Type : Select the time segmentation method for SMT analysis.
Available modes include : Yearly, Monthly, Weekly, Daily, 90 Minute, and Micro.
These define how the indicator divides market time into Q1–Q4 cycles.
Symbol : Choose the secondary asset to compare with the main chart asset (e.g., XAUUSD, US100, GBPUSD).
Pivot Period : Sets the sensitivity of the pivot detection algorithm. A smaller value increases responsiveness to price swings.
Pivot Sync Threshold : The maximum allowed difference (in bars) between pivots of the two assets for them to be compared.
Validity Pivot Length : Defines the time window (in bars) during which a divergence remains valid before it's considered outdated.
🎨 Display Settings
Show Cycle :Toggles the visual display of the current Quarter (Q1 to Q4) based on the selected time segmentation
Show Cycle Label : Shows the name (e.g., "Q2") of each detected Quarter on the chart.
Show Labels : Displays dynamic labels (e.g., “Q2”, “Bullish SMT”, “Sweep”) at relevant points.
Show Lines : Draws connection lines between key pivot or divergence points.
Color Settings : Allows customization of colors for bullish and bearish elements (lines, labels, and shapes)
🔔 Alert Settings
Alert Name : Custom name for the alert messages (used in TradingView’s alert system).
Message Frequenc y:
All : Every signal triggers an alert.
Once Per Bar : Alerts once per bar regardless of how many signals occur.
Per Bar Close : Only triggers when the bar closes and the signal still exists.
Time Zone Display : Choose the time zone in which alert timestamps are displayed (e.g., UTC).
Bullish SMT Divergence Alert : Enable/disable alerts specifically for bullish signals.
Bearish SMT Divergence Alert : Enable/disable alerts specifically for bearish signals
🔵 Conclusion
Doubling Theory is a powerful and structured framework within the realm of Smart Money Concepts and ICT methodology, enabling traders to detect high-probability reversal points with precision. By integrating SSMT, SMT, Liquidity Sweeps, and the Quarterly Theory into a unified system, this approach shifts the focus from reactive trading to anticipatory analysis—anchored in time, structure, and liquidity.
What makes Doubling Theory stand out is its logical synergy of time cycles, behavioral divergence, liquidity targeting, and institutional confirmation. In both bullish and bearish scenarios, it provides clearly defined entry and exit strategies, allowing traders to engage the market with confidence, controlled risk, and deeper insight into the mechanics of price manipulation and smart money footprints.
Dynamic Liquidity Depth [BigBeluga]
Dynamic Liquidity Depth
A liquidity mapping engine that reveals hidden zones of market vulnerability. This tool simulates where potential large concentrations of stop-losses may exist — above recent highs (sell-side) and below recent lows (buy-side) — by analyzing real price behavior and directional volume. The result is a dynamic two-sided volume profile that highlights where price is most likely to gravitate during liquidation events, reversals, or engineered stop hunts.
🔵 KEY FEATURES
Two-Sided Liquidity Profiles:
Plots two separate profiles on the chart — one above price for potential sell-side liquidity , and one below price for potential buy-side liquidity . Each profile reflects the volume distribution across binned zones derived from historical highs and lows.
Real Stop Zone Simulation:
Each profile is offset from the current high or low using an ATR-based buffer. This simulates where traders might cluster their stop-losses above swing highs (short stops) or below swing lows (long stops).
Directional Volume Analysis:
Buy-side volume is accumulated only from bullish candles (close > open), while sell-side volume is accumulated only from bearish candles (close < open). This directional filtering enhances accuracy by capturing genuine pressure zones.
Dynamic Volume Heatmap:
Each liquidity bin is rendered as a horizontal box with a color gradient based on volume intensity:
- Low activity bins are shaded lightly.
- High-volume zones appear more vividly in red (sell) or lime (buy).
- The maximum volume bin in each profile is emphasized with a brighter fill and a volume label.
Extended POC Zones:
The Point of Control (PoC) — the bin with the most volume — is extended backwards across the entire lookback period to mark critical resistance (sell-side) or support (buy-side) levels.
Total Volume Summary Labels:
At the center of each profile, a summary label displays Total Buy Liquidity and Total Sell Liquidity volume.
This metric helps assess directional imbalance — when buy liquidity is dominant, the market may favor upward continuation, and vice versa.
Customizable Profile Granularity:
You can fine-tune both Resolution (Bins) and Offset Distance to adjust how far profiles are displaced from price and how many levels are calculated within the ATR range.
🔵 HOW IT WORKS
The indicator calculates an ATR-based buffer above highs and below lows to define the top and bottom of the liquidity zones.
Using a user-defined lookback period, it scans historical candles and divides the buffered zones into bins.
Each bin checks if bullish (or bearish) candles pass through it based on price wicks and body.
Volume from valid candles is summed into the corresponding bin.
When volume exists in a bin, a horizontal box is drawn with a width scaled by relative volume strength.
The bin with the highest volume is highlighted and optionally extended backward as a zone of importance.
Total buy/sell liquidity is displayed with a summary label at the side of the profile.
🔵 USAGE/b]
Identify Stop Hunt Zones: High-volume clusters near swing highs/lows are likely liquidation zones targeted during fakeouts.
Fade or Follow Reactions: Price hitting a high-volume bin may reverse (fade opportunity) or break with strength (confirmation breakout).
Layer with Other Tools: Combine with market structure, order blocks, or trend filters to validate entries near liquidity.
Adjust Offset for Sensitivity: Use higher offset to simulate wider stop placement; use lower for tighter scalping zones.
🔵 CONCLUSION
Dynamic Liquidity Depth transforms raw price and volume into a spatial map of liquidity. By revealing areas where stop orders are likely hidden, it gives traders insight into price manipulation zones, potential reversal levels, and breakout traps. Whether you're hunting for traps or trading with the flow, this tool equips you to navigate liquidity with precision.
Liquidity Sweep Detector – PDH/PDL LevelsPrevious Day High/Low Liquidity Sweep Detector (Intraday Accurate)
This indicator tracks the previous day's high and low using intraday data, rather than the daily candle, ensuring precise sweep detection across lower timeframes (15m to 4H).
It monitors for liquidity sweeps—moments when price briefly moves above the previous high or below the previous low—and visually marks these events on the chart.
Key Features
Intraday-accurate PDH/PDL tracking
Real-time sweep detection
On-chart labels marking sweep events
Toggleable table showing sweep status
Alert conditions for PDH/PDL sweep triggers
Best For
Traders who use Smart Money Concepts (SMC), liquidity-based strategies, or look for stop hunts and reversal zones tied to key prior-day levels.
Works well across FX, crypto, and indices on 15m, 1H, and 4H charts.
Leonid's Bitcoin Macro & Liquidity Regime Tracker🧠 Macro Overlay Score (Bitcoin Liquidity Regime Tracker)
This indicator combines the most important macroeconomic and on-chain inputs into a single unified score to help investors identify Bitcoin’s long-term cycle phases. Each input is normalized into a 0–100 score and blended using configurable weights to generate a dynamic, forward-looking macro regime tracker.
✅ Best used on the **Bitcoin All Time History Index with Weekly resolution** (`INDEX:BTCUSD`) for maximum historical context and signal clarity.
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📈 Why Macro?
Macro liquidity conditions — interest rates, monetary expansion, dollar strength, credit risk — drive Bitcoin cycles . Risk assets like BTC thrive during periods of:
Monetary easing
Liquidity injections
Expansionary central bank policy
This overlay surfaces those periods *before* price follows. It captures cycle shifts in the business cycle, monetary policy, and investor sentiment — making it ideal for long-term allocators, macro-aligned investors, and cycle-focused BTC holders.
🔔 This is **not** designed for short-term or swing trading. It is optimized for **macro trend confirmation and regime awareness** — not fast entry/exit signals.
---
🔍 What It Tracks
Macro Inputs:
- 🏭 ISM 3M Trend (Business Cycle)
- 💹 CPI YoY (Inverted Inflation)
- 💵 M2 YoY + M2 Acceleration
- 🇨🇳 China M2 (Global Liquidity)
- 💱 DXY 3M Trend (USD Strength)
- 🏦 TGA & RRP YoY (Treasury / MMF Flows)
- 🏛 Fed Balance Sheet (WALCL)
- 💳 High Yield Spread (Credit Conditions)
- 💧 Net Liquidity Composite = WALCL – TGA – RRP
On-Chain Inputs:
- ⚠️ MVRV Ratio (Valuation Cycles)
- 🚀 Mayer Multiple Acceleration (200DMA Momentum)
---
🧩 How It Works
Each input is:
Normalized to a 0–100 score
Weighted by importance (fully configurable)
Combined into a **composite Macro Score**, then normalized across history
The chart will display:
🔷 A 0–100 **Macro Score Line**
🧭 **Cycle Phase classification**: Accumulation, Expansion, Distribution, Capitulation
📊 Optional **debug table** with all sub-scores
---
🧠 Interpreting the Signal
| Signal Type | Meaning |
|-------------------|---------------------------------------------|
| Macro Score ↑ | Liquidity improving → Bullish regime forming |
| Macro Score ↓ | Liquidity deteriorating → Caution warranted |
| Score < 40 & Rising | 🔵 Accumulation cycle likely beginning |
| Score > 70 & Falling | 🟡 Distribution / Macro exhaustion |
| Net Liquidity ↑ | Strong driver of BTC upside historically |
---
❓ FAQ
Q: Why did the Macro Score peak in March 2021, but Bitcoin topped in November?
> The indicator reflects **macro liquidity**, not price momentum. M2 growth slowed, DXY bottomed, and the Fed stopped expanding WALCL by Q1 2021 — all signs of macro exhaustion. BTC continued on **residual momentum**, but the smart money began exiting months earlier.
Q: What does the score range mean?
- 0–25 : Tight liquidity, unfavorable conditions
- 50 : Neutral environment
- 75–100 : Strong easing, liquidity surge
Q: Is this good for short-term signals?
> No. This is a **macro-level overlay**, best used for 3–12 month context shifts, not day trades.
Q: Can I adjust the weights?
> Yes. You can tune the influence of each input to match your thesis (e.g., overweight on-chain, or global liquidity).
Q: Do I need special data access?
> No. All symbols are public TradingView datasets (FRED, CryptoCap, etc.). Just use this on a BTC chart like `BTCUSD`.
---
✅ How to Use
- Load on **`INDEX:BTCUSD`**, set to **Weekly timeframe**
- Confirm long-term bottoms when score is low and rising (Accumulation → Expansion)
- Watch for tops when score is high and falling (Distribution → Capitulation)
- Combine with price structure, realized profit/loss, and market sentiment
---
🚀 If you're serious about understanding Bitcoin's macro regime, this is your alpha map. Share it, clone it, and build on it.
Yome Kill Zones ProPerfect for US30 Entry ## Yome Kill Zones Pro
**Yome Kill Zones Pro** is a precision trading tool designed for day traders and scalpers who focus on session-based setups, liquidity sweeps, and directional bias during the London–New York overlap.
---
### **Key Features**
- **Customizable Kill Zone Box**
- Marks session high/low from any user-defined time window (default: 6:00–11:30 UTC).
- **Swing Point Sweep Detection**
- Identifies significant highs/lows swept by price with momentum—ideal for supply/demand or S/R zones.
- **Independent Bias Kill Zone**
- Separate bias calculation window with adjustable start/end time to isolate market sentiment.
- **Bias Table (Always-On Display)**
- **Killzone Bias** – Shows direction based on price change during bias time.
- **Long-Term Bias** – Compares price vs. Open and EMA(50) from any selected timeframe (default: 15m).
- **Full Visual Customization**
- Editable sweep labels, line colors, line style, label visibility, and kill zone extensions.
---
### **How to Use**
1. **Set Your Session Times**
- Use the “Killzone Settings” to define high/low tracking time.
- Use “Bias Killzone Settings” to define when to calculate bias direction.
2. **Check the Bias Table**
- Use **Killzone Bias** for short-term session direction.
- Use **Long-Term Bias** to align with higher timeframe market structure.
3. **Watch for Liquidity Sweeps**
- Look for momentum-based breaks of swing highs/lows within your kill zone window.
- Use these levels to anticipate reversals, retests, or continuations.
4. **Customize It Your Way**
- Everything from line styles, sweep label visibility, thickness, and colors can be customized.
---
### **Best For**
- London & New York session scalpers
- Liquidity & structure-based traders
- Traders using ICT, Smart Money Concepts, or Wyckoff-style analysis
---
> **Tip:** Pair with volume or order block tools for enhanced sniper entries.
Smarter Money Concepts - MTF IFVGs [PhenLabs]📊 Smarter Money Concepts - MTF IFVG
Version: PineScript™ v6
📌 Description
This multi-timeframe indicator identifies Inverse Fair Value Gaps (IFVGs) and their inversions across simultaneous chart intervals, helping traders spot liquidity voids and potential reversal zones. By analyzing price action through the lens of institutional order flow patterns, it solves the problem of manual gap tracking across timeframes while incorporating volatility-adjusted parameters and psychological level analysis for higher-probability setups.
🚀 Points of Innovation
• Multi-Timeframe Engine - Simultaneous analysis of 3 higher timeframes
• Adaptive Parameters - Auto-adjusts to market volatility conditions
• Quality Scoring System - Ranks gaps using RVI strength and size metrics
• Inversion Tracking - Monitors failed gaps for counter-trend signals
• Render Optimization - Prevents chart clutter with smart gap management
🔧 Core Components
FVG Detection Logic: Identifies gaps using customizable price source (Close/Wick)
Inversion Tracker: Manages failed gaps and generates counter signals
Multi-Timeframe Engine: Processes 3 independent higher timeframe analyses
Dashboard System: Real-time display of active gaps across all timeframes
🔥 Key Features
• Volatility-adjusted gap size filters (ATR-based)
• Customizable timeframe confluence analysis
• Color-coded quality scoring
• Non-repainting inversion signals
• Mobile-optimized visual rendering
🎨 Visualization
• Colored Boxes: Translucent zones show active gaps (green/bullish, red/bearish)
• Midline Plot: Dashed gray line marks gap midpoint for price targets
• Inversion Markers: Intense colors show failed gaps (dark red/bullish failure, bright green/bearish failure)
• HTF Differentiation: Higher timeframe gaps shown in blue/teal hues
📖 Usage Guidelines
Multi-Timeframe Settings
• Higher Timeframe 1
Default: 30 | Range: Any > Chart TF | Controls primary confluence timeframe
• Show All Timeframes
Default: True | Toggles multi-TF gap displays
Gap Settings
• Source
Default: Close | Options: | Determines gap measurement method
• RVI Period
Default: 14 | Range: 1-50 | Sets momentum confirmation sensitivity
• RVI Value
Default 0.1 | 0 to see all IFVGs | Increase min RVI to see the most powerful IFVGs
✅ Best Use Cases
• Identifying confluence across timeframes
• Spotting institutional order blocks
• High-probability reversal trading
• Trend continuation confirmation
• Volatility breakout setups
⚠️ Limitations
• Repaints historical gap zones
• Requires understanding of FVG concepts
• Higher timeframe data latency
• Quality scores rely on RVI/ATR settings
💡 What Makes This Unique
First FVG indicator with true multi-timeframe processing
Adaptive parameters that auto-adjust to volatility
Quantifiable quality scoring system
Professional-grade dashboard with HTF tracking
🔬 How It Works
Gap Detection: Identifies FVGs using price relationships and RVI confirmation
Inversion Tracking: Monitors price breaches to flag failed gaps
Quality Assessment: Scores gaps based on size, momentum, and location
Adaptive Filtering: Adjusts parameters using ATR-based volatility analysis
Multi-TF Synthesis: Correlates gaps across user-selected timeframes
Visual Rendering: Displays only relevant, active gaps to prevent clutter
💡 Note:
Start with default settings and gradually adjust parameters after observing market interactions. Focus on gaps with quality scores above 7 that align with higher timeframe trends. Combine with price action at psychological levels for highest-probability setups. Remember that higher timeframe gaps generally carry more significance than current chart gaps.