Geass SRV - Support Resistance VolumeGeass SRV - Support Resistance Volume
by MasterTony
Volume profile engine adapted from Zeiirman's work — used with respect and full credit.
Most indicators tell you where price is. This one tells you where the market lives. The Support Band + Volume Profile is built around a single idea: price gravitates toward zones where real participation has happened, and it respects dynamic boundaries defined by the market's own momentum structure. This indicator surfaces both at once — a trend-adaptive zone on price and the volume history behind it.
How It's Calculated
Trend Direction (ADX + 200 SMA)
Market direction is read continuously using the DMI system — DI+ vs DI− for directional dominance, with the 200 SMA as a tiebreaker when they are equal. There is no neutral state. The indicator always commits to bull or bear, and all colors and zone behavior follow from that.
The Support Band (SMA 20 / EMA 21)
The innermost layer is a filled zone between the 20-period SMA and the 21-period EMA. These two averages are nearly identical in length but calculated differently, so the gap between them stays tight — producing a precise dynamic level rather than a wide smear. This is the mean of the recent trend. In a bull market it is the floor price returns to on pullbacks. In a bear market it is the ceiling price fails at on rallies. Green in a bull trend, red in a bear trend.
The Kijun Band — Main Trend Support and Resistance
The outer layer is the primary structural boundary of the indicator. The Kijun-Sen and Tenkan-Sen form a filled zone that acts as the main dynamic support in uptrends and the main dynamic resistance in downtrends, derived from Ichimoku Cloud. When price holds above this band the trend is intact. When price breaks through it and cannot reclaim it, the trend is in trouble.
Both lines adapt their lengths based on market conditions — compressing when momentum is strong and price is trending cleanly, expanding when conditions are weak or choppy. This means the boundary zone tightens in fast trends and widens when the market is uncertain, automatically adjusting to the environment. The lines are colored cyan in a bull regime and magenta in a bear regime, keeping them distinct from the inner band at all times.
The Kijun line within that band is the single most important level to watch. It is the baseline the trend must hold. Everything else in the indicator gives context to what happens at the Kijun.
Volume Profile — Reading the Zones
Volume profile engine adapted from Zeiirman's original work.
The volume profile is drawn to the right of price covering the last 240 bars. It answers the question the bands cannot: how much real participation has happened at each price level. A band sitting on a high-volume node is structurally different from a band sitting in empty space.
Point of Control (POC): The price level with the highest total volume — the market's center of gravity. When the POC aligns with the Kijun or the support band, that level is not just a moving average. It is a price the market has repeatedly chosen, making it the highest-conviction read the indicator can produce.
Value Area: The central 68% of all volume, shown as the brightest bars on the profile. The edges of the Value Area are high-probability reaction levels. Price approaching from outside tends to stall at the boundary or accelerate into the core. When the band zone overlaps a Value Area edge, dynamic structure and volume history are stacked at the same level.
Buy/Sell Split: Every row is divided between buying volume (green) and selling volume (red). When one side exceeds 60% it renders as a strong single color. This shows not just where volume was high — it shows who was in control. A dominant green node below price is demand. A dominant red node above is supply.
Low Volume Gaps: Rows with very little volume are structural gaps. Price moves through them quickly with little friction and accelerates until it hits the next meaningful cluster. When the band sits at the edge of a gap, a break can be fast and directional.
Freshness Fade: Recent volume glows brighter. Older volume fades. This prevents the profile from treating a level from 200 bars ago the same as one from yesterday.
Price Pivot S/R Lines
The last three swing highs and swing lows drawn as horizontal dashed lines — red for resistance, green for support. These are price memory. The exact levels where the market has previously reversed.
Bollingerbands
Custom Bollinger bands that can be toggled on to see outer lines of directional trend
How to Read It
The zone between the support band and the Kijun boundary is the core read. Green means the corridor is support — healthy pullbacks happen here. Red means it is resistance — rallies fail here. A tight narrow zone signals strong trend momentum. A wide zone signals a slower or more uncertain market.
The Kijun line is the level that matters most. A pullback that holds above it and bounces is trend continuation. A close below it is a warning. A reclaim from below is the first sign of a potential reversal. Every trade setup built with this indicator lives or dies at the Kijun.
The volume profile tells you whether the Kijun level carries real weight. A Kijun sitting on a large green volume node has been defended by buyers repeatedly — it has structural backing. A Kijun sitting in thin faded volume is unproven. When the POC and the Kijun are at the same price, that is the strongest signal this indicator can produce.
Value Area edges add a second volume-based reference layer. Watch for the band or Kijun to overlap with the top or bottom of the Value Area — that is confluence of two independent structural forces at the same level.
Pivot lines show the nearest price structure above and below. A green pivot just below the Kijun in a bull trend means two separate historical references are stacked — structural and volume-based support reinforce each other.
How to Trade With It
Bull Trend Pullback
Band is green. Price pulls back into the support band or toward the Kijun. Check the volume profile — is there a high-volume green node or the POC near that level? If yes, the zone has volume backing. Wait for a reversal signal inside the zone. Enter long with a stop below the Kijun. The nearest green pivot below is your hard invalidation.
Bear Trend Rally
Band is red. Price rallies into the band or toward the Kijun. Check the volume profile — is there a high-volume red node or the POC near the Kijun? If yes, the resistance is volume-confirmed. Wait for rejection inside the zone. Enter short with a stop above the Kijun. The nearest red pivot above is your invalidation.
Volume Gap Move
When price breaks out of the band and enters a low-volume section of the profile, expect the move to accelerate. There is no structural resistance in that gap. Price will run until it hits the next meaningful volume cluster. Use the profile to identify where that cluster is and target it.
Trend Change Warning
When the band flips color, stop trading the previous direction. Wait for price to pull back and hold the newly-colored zone on a retest before entering the new direction. Check the POC — if it is already on the new direction's side of price, the flip has volume support and is more likely to hold.
Confluence Filter
The cleanest setups occur when everything agrees: band color matches the trade direction, price is testing the Kijun, the POC or a high-volume node is at or near that level, and a pivot line adds nearby structure. When all of that stacks at one price, the zone is as high-conviction as this indicator gets.
Credits
Volume profile engine — Gaussian volume distribution, buy/sell split, POC calculation, Value Area logic, and freshness fade — adapted from Zeiirman's original work. Full credit to Zeiirman for the foundation that powers the volume layer of this indicator.
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