OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT
Weighted Sector ADD (sign-weighted)

What it is
A true, cap-weighted advances/declines (ADD) proxy for the S&P 500 using sector ETFs. Each sector contributes +1 if it’s up on the bar, −1 if it’s down, 0 if flat. Those signals are then weighted by your sector weights (auto-normalized to 100%) and summed into a single breadth line. The result is a fast, low-noise read of how much of the S&P (by sector weight) is advancing vs. declining right now.
- Tracks participation, not price magnitude—perfect for spotting “broad vs. narrow” moves
- Heavily weighted sectors (e.g., Tech) matter proportionally more, reflecting real index impact
- Simple scale: ~−1 to +1 (all weight down → all weight up)
Chart Elements
- Green/Red Columns – “Weighted ADD”: Current bar’s weighted breadth (sign-based by default)
- Blue Line – “Weighted MA”: SMA of the weighted ADD (regime filter)
- Zero/Guide Lines (optional): 0.0, ±0.2 (mild), ±0.6 (strong)
- Labels (optional): Text markers at those guide levels
- Advancing Weight % (optional): Label showing ((ADD+1)/2)*100 → share of total sector weight advancing
How to Read (Quick Guide)
- +0.60 to +1.00 → Broad, one-sided risk-on (most sector weight advancing)
- +0.20 to +0.60 → Moderate, supportive breadth
- −0.20 to +0.20 → Mixed/choppy; rotation
- −0.60 to −1.00 → Broad, one-sided risk-off
- MA above/below zero → Simple regime indicator; zero-crosses could be potential alert triggers
- Divergence: Strong price move with a weak/flat ADD could potentially warn of narrow participation
Inputs & settings
Calculation
- Use returns instead of up/down sign?
OFF (default): true weighted participation (+1/−1/0)
ON: weighted sector returns (winsor-capped). Use if you want magnitude, not just direction
- Winsor cap (returns mode): Caps per-sector contribution in returns mode (e.g., 0.02 = ±2%)
- Smoothing MA length: SMA period for the blue “Weighted MA” line
- Source timeframe: Compute signals on another TF (e.g., “60”) but plot on your chart TF
Visibility
- Show Weighted ADD (bars): Toggle the green/red columns
- Show Weighted ADD MA: Toggle the blue SMA line
- Show Zero Line (0): Toggle the 0.0 reference line
- Show ±0.2 / ±0.6 guide lines: Toggle the helper levels
- Show guide labels: Draw small text labels at 0, ±0.2, ±0.6
- Guide label offset (bars left): Move labels left if they overlap the right edge values
- Show Advancing Weight % label: Toggle the % of sector weight currently advancing
Sector Symbols (ETF proxies)
- XLK, XLY, XLF, XLV, XLC, XLI, XLP, XLE, XLB, XLU, XLRE: Defaults to the SPDR sector ETFs. You can swap for alternative proxies if desired.
Sector Weights (auto-normalize)
- Weight inputs for each sector (e.g., Tech 0.30, Financials 0.13…). These auto-normalize to 1.0 so you can paste rough numbers; the script scales them.
- Keep weights fresh. GICS sector weights drift; update periodically (e.g., quarterly).
Alerts included
- “Weighted ADD crossed above 0”
- “Weighted ADD crossed below 0”
Version
v1.0 – Initial release (weighted sign-based ADD + SMA, zero/guide lines & labels, Adv % label, alerts).
A true, cap-weighted advances/declines (ADD) proxy for the S&P 500 using sector ETFs. Each sector contributes +1 if it’s up on the bar, −1 if it’s down, 0 if flat. Those signals are then weighted by your sector weights (auto-normalized to 100%) and summed into a single breadth line. The result is a fast, low-noise read of how much of the S&P (by sector weight) is advancing vs. declining right now.
- Tracks participation, not price magnitude—perfect for spotting “broad vs. narrow” moves
- Heavily weighted sectors (e.g., Tech) matter proportionally more, reflecting real index impact
- Simple scale: ~−1 to +1 (all weight down → all weight up)
Chart Elements
- Green/Red Columns – “Weighted ADD”: Current bar’s weighted breadth (sign-based by default)
- Blue Line – “Weighted MA”: SMA of the weighted ADD (regime filter)
- Zero/Guide Lines (optional): 0.0, ±0.2 (mild), ±0.6 (strong)
- Labels (optional): Text markers at those guide levels
- Advancing Weight % (optional): Label showing ((ADD+1)/2)*100 → share of total sector weight advancing
How to Read (Quick Guide)
- +0.60 to +1.00 → Broad, one-sided risk-on (most sector weight advancing)
- +0.20 to +0.60 → Moderate, supportive breadth
- −0.20 to +0.20 → Mixed/choppy; rotation
- −0.60 to −1.00 → Broad, one-sided risk-off
- MA above/below zero → Simple regime indicator; zero-crosses could be potential alert triggers
- Divergence: Strong price move with a weak/flat ADD could potentially warn of narrow participation
Inputs & settings
Calculation
- Use returns instead of up/down sign?
OFF (default): true weighted participation (+1/−1/0)
ON: weighted sector returns (winsor-capped). Use if you want magnitude, not just direction
- Winsor cap (returns mode): Caps per-sector contribution in returns mode (e.g., 0.02 = ±2%)
- Smoothing MA length: SMA period for the blue “Weighted MA” line
- Source timeframe: Compute signals on another TF (e.g., “60”) but plot on your chart TF
Visibility
- Show Weighted ADD (bars): Toggle the green/red columns
- Show Weighted ADD MA: Toggle the blue SMA line
- Show Zero Line (0): Toggle the 0.0 reference line
- Show ±0.2 / ±0.6 guide lines: Toggle the helper levels
- Show guide labels: Draw small text labels at 0, ±0.2, ±0.6
- Guide label offset (bars left): Move labels left if they overlap the right edge values
- Show Advancing Weight % label: Toggle the % of sector weight currently advancing
Sector Symbols (ETF proxies)
- XLK, XLY, XLF, XLV, XLC, XLI, XLP, XLE, XLB, XLU, XLRE: Defaults to the SPDR sector ETFs. You can swap for alternative proxies if desired.
Sector Weights (auto-normalize)
- Weight inputs for each sector (e.g., Tech 0.30, Financials 0.13…). These auto-normalize to 1.0 so you can paste rough numbers; the script scales them.
- Keep weights fresh. GICS sector weights drift; update periodically (e.g., quarterly).
Alerts included
- “Weighted ADD crossed above 0”
- “Weighted ADD crossed below 0”
Version
v1.0 – Initial release (weighted sign-based ADD + SMA, zero/guide lines & labels, Adv % label, alerts).
Open-source Skript
Ganz im Sinne von TradingView hat dieser Autor sein/ihr Script als Open-Source veröffentlicht. Auf diese Weise können nun auch andere Trader das Script rezensieren und die Funktionalität überprüfen. Vielen Dank an den Autor! Sie können das Script kostenlos verwenden, aber eine Wiederveröffentlichung des Codes unterliegt unseren Hausregeln.
Haftungsausschluss
Die Informationen und Veröffentlichungen sind nicht als Finanz-, Anlage-, Handels- oder andere Arten von Ratschlägen oder Empfehlungen gedacht, die von TradingView bereitgestellt oder gebilligt werden, und stellen diese nicht dar. Lesen Sie mehr in den Nutzungsbedingungen.
Open-source Skript
Ganz im Sinne von TradingView hat dieser Autor sein/ihr Script als Open-Source veröffentlicht. Auf diese Weise können nun auch andere Trader das Script rezensieren und die Funktionalität überprüfen. Vielen Dank an den Autor! Sie können das Script kostenlos verwenden, aber eine Wiederveröffentlichung des Codes unterliegt unseren Hausregeln.
Haftungsausschluss
Die Informationen und Veröffentlichungen sind nicht als Finanz-, Anlage-, Handels- oder andere Arten von Ratschlägen oder Empfehlungen gedacht, die von TradingView bereitgestellt oder gebilligt werden, und stellen diese nicht dar. Lesen Sie mehr in den Nutzungsbedingungen.