GCM Heikin Ashi RSI Trend CloudTitle: GCM Heikin Ashi RSI Trend Cloud
Description:
Overview
The GCM Heikin Ashi RSI Trend Cloud is a comprehensive momentum oscillator designed to filter out market noise and visualize trend strength. Unlike a standard RSI which can be jagged and difficult to interpret during consolidation, this indicator transforms RSI data into Heikin Ashi candles, providing a smoother, clearer view of market momentum.
This tool combines the lag-reducing benefits of RSI with the trend-visualizing power of Heikin Ashi, layered with Multi-Timeframe (HTF) clouds to identify macro trends.
Calculations & How it Works
This indicator does not use standard price action for its candles. Instead, it performs the following calculations:
• HARSI Candles: We calculate the RSI of the Open, High, Low, and Close of the chart. These four RSI values are then processed through the standard Heikin Ashi formula. This means the candles represent momentum movement, not price movement.
• Smoothing: A smoothing algorithm is applied to the "Open" of the HARSI candles (Default: 5). This reduces fake-outs by biasing the candle open toward the previous average, highlighting the true trend direction.
• Trend Bias Mode: A unique visual feature that adjusts the thickness of the RSI line based on your trading style.
o Buyers Mode: The line thickens when RSI is rising, thinning out when falling.
o Sellers Mode: The line thickens when RSI is falling, thinning out when rising.
• Ribbon Clouds: The script pulls RSI data from Higher Timeframes (HTF) and creates a cloud between the current chart's RSI and the HTF RSI. If the current RSI is above the HTF RSI, the cloud is bullish (Green), otherwise bearish (Red).
Key Features
• Derived Heikin Ashi RSI: Smooths out the noise of standard RSI to show clear red/green trends.
• Dynamic Trend Bias: Customize the main RSI line to emphasize Bullish or Bearish momentum using line weight.
• Auto-HTF Clouds: Automatically detects higher timeframes (e.g., 1m chart -> 3m cloud) to show support/resistance momentum from the macro trend.
• OB/OS Zones: Clearly defined Overbought and Oversold channels with "Extreme" outlier zones.
How to Use
1. Trend Continuation: Look for the HARSI candles to change color. A switch from Red to Green, while the Ribbon Cloud is also Green, indicates a strong bullish continuation.
2. Divergence: Because the candles are based on RSI, you can look for divergences between the HARSI candle peaks and the actual price action on the main chart.
3. The Cloud: Use the cloud as dynamic support. In a strong uptrend, the RSI line often bounces off the HTF Cloud without breaking through it.
Settings
• HARSI Length (Default 10): The lookback period for the RSI calculation.
• Smoothing (Default 5): Higher values create smoother candles but add lag. Lower values are more reactive.
Trend Bias Mode: Choose "Neutral" for a standard line, or "Buyers/Sellers" to visually emphasize your preferred market direction.
M-oscillator
[CT] D&W PPO + RBF + DivergenceThis indicator combines two separate ideas into one tool so you can read trend context from your price chart while timing momentum shifts from a clean oscillator panel. The first component is the Daily and Weekly Percentage Price Oscillator (D&W PPO), which measures the relationship between two EMA spreads that are intentionally built to reflect two “speeds” of market structure. The “weekly” leg is calculated as the percentage distance between a slower and faster EMA pair (L1 and L2), and the “daily” leg is calculated as the percentage distance between a shorter EMA pair (L3 and L4), but both are normalized by the same long EMA (e2) so the values behave like a percent-based oscillator rather than raw points. The script then combines those two legs by creating R = W + D, and it plots the histogram as R − W, which simplifies to D. That is not a mistake, it is the point of the design. By setting the baseline at “R equals W,” the zero line becomes a very intuitive threshold that tells you whether the shorter-term push is adding to the longer-term bias or subtracting from it. When the histogram is above zero, the daily component is supportive of the larger trend pressure, and when it is below zero, the daily component is opposing it. The histogram color is intentionally binary and stable, green when the histogram is at or above zero and red when it is below, so the panel reads like a momentum confirmation tool rather than a noisy oscillator that constantly shifts shades.
The second component is the RBF Price Trail, which is drawn on the upper price chart even though the indicator itself lives in a lower panel. This line is not a moving average in the traditional sense. It is a Radial Basis Function kernel smoother that weights recent prices based on their similarity rather than only their recency. In plain terms, the kernel attempts to build a smoother “baseline” that adapts to the shape of price action, and then the script optionally wraps that baseline inside an ATR band and applies a Supertrend-like trailing clamp. When the ATR band is enabled, the line will not simply track the kernel value, it will trail price and hold its position until price forces it to ratchet. This behavior is what makes it useful as a structure-aligned trend line rather than just another smoothing curve. When the adaptive band boost is enabled, the band width is multiplied by a factor that grows when recent price change is large relative to a lookback normalization window. That means the trailing mechanism can adapt to fast markets by changing the effective band behavior, which helps reduce whipsaws in choppy conditions while still allowing the line to respond when volatility expands. The line color is determined by where price closes relative to the trail, bullish when price is above the trail and bearish when price is below it, and you can optionally color your actual chart candles from either the PPO state or the RBF state depending on what you want your eyes to follow.
The settings are organized so you can control each module without changing how the core PPO trend logic behaves. The PPO settings L1, L2, L3, and L4 define the EMA lengths used to compute the weekly leg W and the daily leg D. Increasing these values makes the oscillator slower and smoother, while decreasing them makes it react faster to recent movement. “Show W line” is simply a visual aid, it plots the W line in the oscillator panel so you can see the longer-term component, but it does not change the histogram logic. “Histogram thickness” is purely visual and controls how thick the column bars are. The PPO colors are the two base colors used for the histogram state, green when the daily component is supportive and red when it is opposing.
The RBF settings control what you see on the upper chart. “Show RBF on Price Chart” turns the trail line on or off. “Source” chooses which price series feeds the kernel, and close is usually the cleanest choice. “Kernel Length” determines how many bars the kernel uses; a larger value makes the baseline smoother and slower, and a smaller value makes it more reactive. “Gamma Adj” controls how quickly the kernel’s weights decay as price becomes dissimilar, so higher gamma tends to make the kernel react more sharply to changes while lower gamma produces a broader smoothing effect. “Use ATR Trail Band” is the switch that turns the kernel baseline into a trailing band line, and it is the reason the line can “hold” and then ratchet instead of moving continuously like a normal moving average. “ATR Length” and “ATR Factor” control the width of that band, and widening the band will generally reduce flips and noise at the cost of later signals. “Use Adaptive Band Boost” turns on the volatility normalization idea, “Boost Normalization Lookback” defines how far back the script looks to determine what counts as a large price change, and “Boost Multiplier” controls how strongly the band behavior is adjusted during those periods. The line width and bull/bear colors are visual controls only.
Price bar coloring is intentionally handled with a single selector so you do not end up with two modules fighting to color candles differently. If you choose “Off,” nothing on the main chart is recolored. If you choose “PPO,” your price candles reflect whether the PPO histogram is above or below zero. If you choose “RBF,” your price candles reflect whether price is above or below the RBF trail. Most traders will pick one and stick with it so the chart communicates a single bias at a glance.
The divergence module is optional and is designed to be a confirmation layer rather than a primary trigger. When enabled, it can mark regular divergence and hidden divergence, and it lets you decide what the pivots should be based on. The divergence source can be the PPO histogram or the R line, depending on whether you want divergence measured on the cleaner momentum component or on the combined series. “Key off pivots” determines whether pivot detection is driven by oscillator pivots or by price pivots. If you choose oscillator pivots, divergence anchors are found where the oscillator makes pivot highs or lows and those are compared against price at the same points. If you choose price pivots, the pivots are taken from price first and the oscillator value at those pivot bars is used for the comparison, which can feel more intuitive when you want divergence to respect obvious swing structure on the chart. Pivot Left and Pivot Right control how strict the swing definition is, larger values create fewer but more meaningful pivots and smaller values create more frequent signals. “Mark on Price Chart” adds tiny markers on the candles at the pivot location so you can see where the divergence event was confirmed, while the oscillator panel uses lines and labels to make the divergence relationship obvious.
For trading, the cleanest way to use this tool is to separate “bias” from “timing.” The RBF Price Trail is your bias filter because it is structure-like and tends to hold and ratchet rather than constantly drifting. When price is closing above the trail and the trail is colored bullish, you treat the market as long-biased and you focus on long setups, pullbacks, and continuation entries. When price is closing below the trail and the trail is bearish, you treat the market as short-biased and you focus on short setups, rallies, and continuation shorts. The PPO histogram is then your timing and pressure confirmation. In an up-bias, the highest quality continuation conditions are when the histogram is above zero and stays above zero through pullbacks, because that means the shorter-term pressure is still supporting the longer-term drift. When the histogram dips below zero during an up-bias, it is a warning that the daily component is now opposing, which often corresponds to a deeper pullback, a rotation, or a period of consolidation, so you either wait for the histogram to recover above zero or you tighten expectations and manage risk more aggressively. In a down-bias, the mirror logic applies: the best continuation conditions are when the histogram is below zero, and pushes above zero tend to represent countertrend rotations or pauses inside the bearish condition.
Divergence is best used as an early warning and a location filter, not as a standalone entry button. Regular bullish divergence, where price makes a lower low but the oscillator makes a higher low, can signal bearish pressure is weakening and is most useful when it appears while price is below the RBF trail but failing to continue downward, because it often precedes a reclaim of the trail or at least a meaningful rotation. Regular bearish divergence, where price makes a higher high but the oscillator makes a lower high, can signal bullish pressure is weakening and is most useful when it appears while price is above the trail but extension is failing, because it often precedes a drop back to the trail or a full flip. Hidden divergence is a continuation concept. Hidden bullish divergence, where price makes a higher low while the oscillator makes a lower low, often shows up during pullbacks in an uptrend and can help you confirm continuation as long as the RBF bias remains bullish. Hidden bearish divergence, where price makes a lower high while the oscillator makes a higher high, often shows up during rallies in a downtrend and can help you confirm continuation as long as the RBF bias remains bearish. In practice, you’ll get the best results when you only act on divergence that aligns with the RBF bias for hidden divergence continuation, and you treat regular divergence as a caution or reversal setup only when it occurs near a meaningful swing and is followed by a bias change or a strong momentum shift on the PPO.
The most practical workflow is to keep the RBF trail visible on the price chart as your regime guide, keep the PPO histogram as your momentum confirmation, and decide in advance whether you want candle coloring to represent the PPO state or the RBF state so your eyes are not reading two different meanings at once. if you want the cleanest “trend-following” behavior, color candles by the RBF trail and use the PPO histogram as the timing trigger. If you want the cleanest “momentum-first” behavior, color candles by PPO and treat the RBF trail as the higher-level filter for whether you should press a move or fade it.
BTC vs GOLD Macro RotationBTC vs GOLD Macro Rotation Indicator
BTC vs GOLD Macro Rotation Model
This indicator is a macroeconomic rotation model that compares the relative attractiveness of Bitcoin (BTC) versus Gold (GOLD) based on multiple fundamental macro factors.
How does it work?
The model analyzes weekly data from various macroeconomic indicators and generates a score for each asset. The taller bar indicates the preferred asset to rotate capital into.
- Green bars (above zero): BTC strength
- Yellow bars (below zero):GOLD strength
- Info table:Shows exact percentages and rotation recommendation
Macroeconomic Factors Analyzed:
1. DXY (US Dollar Index)
- Strong dollar → Favors GOLD
- Weak dollar → Favors BTC
2. Oil (WTI Crude)
- Oil rising → Favors GOLD
- Oil falling → Favors BTC
3. Copper
- Copper rising → Favors BTC (risk-on)
- Copper falling → Favors GOLD (risk-off)
4. Real Rates (Fed Funds - YoY Inflation)
- Real rates falling → Favors GOLD
- Real rates rising → Favors BTC
5. Fertilizer/Natural Gas Regime (Urea, Ammonia, Natural Gas)**
- Specific combinations of movements in these commodities generate inflationary/deflationary regime signals
Fertilizer Rules:**
| Urea | Ammonia | Gas | Signal |
|------|---------|-----|--------|
| ↑ | ↑ | ↓ | GOLD +2 |
| ↑ | ↑ | ↑ | GOLD +3, BTC -1 |
| ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | BTC +3, GOLD -1 |
| ↑ | ↓ | ↓ | BTC +3 |
| ↓ | ↑ | ↑ | GOLD +3, BTC -1 |
Technical Features:
- Operates on weekly timeframe regardless of chart
- Normalized changes for signal stability
- Configurable EMA smoothing
- Safe handling of invalid symbols (won't break if a ticker doesn't exist)
- All tickers are user-editable
Configurable Inputs:
- Symbols for all assets (BTC, GOLD, DXY, Oil, Copper, CPI, Fed Funds, Gas, Urea, Ammonia)
- Individual weights for each macro component
- Normalization length
- EMA smoothing
Interpretation:**
- **BTC dominant (taller green):** Macro conditions favor risk/digital assets
- **GOLD dominant (taller yellow):** Macro conditions favor safe-haven/tangible assets
This indicator is for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice. Always do your own research before making investment decisions.
Recommended Timeframe: Weekly (W) or Daily (D)
Intuitive Predictive MACD TargetsThis indicator uses Reverse Engineering math to calculate the exact price the market needs to reach for specific MACD events to happen on the current bar.
Standard MACD is a lagging indicator—you usually wait for the candle to close to confirm a signal. This script changes that by drawing "Finish Lines" on your chart, showing you exactly where price must go right now to trigger a Crossover or a Momentum Hook.
The "Reverse Engineering" Concept
Instead of calculating MACD from Price, we calculate the Required Price from the Target MACD.
Q: "At what price will the MACD line cross the Signal line?"
A: The script solves this and draws the Green/Red "Crossover" Line.
Key Features
1. Three Distinct Targets
Crossover Target (PCO/NCO): The exact price needed to trigger a Buy/Sell signal on the current candle.
Dynamic Coloring: Turns Green if price needs to go UP to cross, Red if price needs to go DOWN.
Settlement Target (The Hook): The exact price where the MACD momentum flattens out (Angle = 0). If price touches this Orange Dashed Line, the trend is likely pausing or preparing to reverse.
Zero Cross Target: The price needed for MACD to reclaim the Zero Line.
2. Smart "Staggered" Labels (No Overlap)
Unlike other scripts where text piles up and becomes unreadable, this indicator automatically spreads labels horizontally.
Crossover info stays near the price.
Settlement info is shifted to the right.
Zero info is shifted further right.
Result: You can read all three targets clearly, even if the prices are almost identical.
3. Full Customization
Line Length: Choose "Infinite" to see targets as Support/Resistance levels across the screen, or "Short" to keep your chart background clean.
Text Visibility: Option to force text to White or Black for high contrast on Dark/Light themes.
Styles: Fully adjustable colors, line widths, and styles (Solid, Dashed, Dotted) for each target type.
How to Use
The "Finish Line" Strategy: If you are Long, and the Red NCO Line appears just below the current price, be cautious. It means a very small drop will confirm a Bearish Cross.
Momentum Checks: Watch the Orange "Settlement" Line.
If price is moving away from the Orange line, the trend is accelerating (Safe to hold).
If price touches the Orange line, momentum has died (Consider taking profit).
Settings
Visual Settings: Change Line Length (Infinite/Short) and Text Color.
MACD Settings: Standard inputs (Default 12, 26, 9).
Toggles: Option to show/hide the Zero Line target.
Trend Force Index (HTF Momentum)📌 Description
Trend Force Index • HTF Momentum (TFI-HTF) is a market context and trend-strength indicator designed to help traders understand directional force, momentum quality, and higher-timeframe bias.
This tool measures directional impulse and trend pressure using a dual-average force model, normalized by volatility. Instead of producing buy or sell signals, it focuses on how strong a move is, which side controls the market, and whether price is in a trending or compressing state.
🔍 What This Indicator Shows
Directional Force: Identifies bullish, bearish, and neutral force zones
Momentum Quality: Differentiates strong trends from weak or fading moves
Compression Zones: Highlights low-force environments where trades are often lower quality
Higher-Timeframe Context (HTF): Displays directional bias from a higher timeframe for alignment
Volatility Normalization: Adapts to changing market conditions using ATR
🧭 How to Use
Use force direction to confirm price action or structure-based setups
Trade in alignment with HTF bias for higher-probability context
Avoid entries during compression / low-force zones
Best used alongside price action, market structure, VWAP, or support & resistance
🎛 UI Presets
PRO Mode: Clean, subdued visuals for experienced traders
BEGINNER Mode: Higher contrast visuals for easier interpretation
⚠️ Important Notes
This indicator does NOT generate buy or sell signals.It is intended for analysis, confirmation, and market context only. Always combine with your own trading plan and risk management
⚠️ Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for educational and analytical purposes only.It does not constitute financial advice or trade recommendations.All trading decisions and associated risks remain the sole responsibility of the user.Past market behavior does not guarantee future results.
Smart Money Flow Oscillator [MarkitTick]💡This script introduces a sophisticated method for analyzing market liquidity and institutional order flow. Unlike traditional volume indicators that treat all market activity equally, the Smart Money Flow Oscillator (SMFO) employs a Logic Flow Architecture (LFA) to filter out market noise and "churn," focusing exclusively on high-impact, high-efficiency price movements. By synthesizing price action, volume, and relative efficiency, this tool aims to visualize the accumulation and distribution activities that are often attributed to "smart money" participants.
✨ Originality and Utility
Standard indicators like On-Balance Volume (OBV) or Money Flow Index (MFI) often suffer from noise because they aggregate volume based simply on the close price relative to the previous close, regardless of the quality of the move. This script differentiates itself by introducing an "Efficiency Multiplier" and a "Momentum Threshold." It only registers volume flow when a price move is considered statistically significant and structurally efficient. This creates a cleaner signal that highlights genuine supply and demand imbalances while ignoring indecisive trading ranges. It combines the trend-following nature of cumulative delta with the mean-reverting insights of an In/Out ratio, offering a dual-mode perspective on market dynamics.
🔬 Methodology
The underlying calculation of the SMFO relies on several distinct quantitative layers:
• Efficiency Analysis
The script calculates a "Relative Efficiency" ratio for every candle. This compares the current price displacement (body size) per unit of volume against the historical average.
If price moves significantly with relatively low volume, or proportional volume, it is deemed "efficient."
If significant volume occurs with little price movement (churn/absorption), the efficiency score drops.
This score is clamped between a user-defined minimum and maximum (Efficiency Cap) to prevent outliers from distorting the data.
• Momentum Thresholding
Before adding any data to the flow, the script checks if the current price change exceeds a volatility threshold derived from the previous candle's open-close range. This acts as a gatekeeper, ensuring that only "strong" moves contribute to the oscillator.
• Variable Flow Calculation
If a move passes the threshold, the script calculates the flow value by multiplying the Typical Price and Volume (Money Flow) by the calculated Efficiency Multiplier.
Bullish Flow: Strong upward movement adds to the positive delta.
Bearish Flow: Strong downward movement adds to the negative delta.
Neutral: Bars that fail the momentum threshold contribute zero flow, effectively flattening the line during consolidation.
• Calculation Modes
Cumulative Delta Flow (CDF): Sums the flow values over a rolling period. This creates a trend-following oscillator similar to OBV but smoother and more responsive to real momentum.
In/Out Ratio: Calculates the percentage of bullish inflow relative to the total absolute flow over the period. This oscillates between 0 and 100, useful for identifying overextended conditions.
📖 How to Use
Traders can utilize this oscillator to identify trend strength and potential reversals through the following signals:
• Signal Line Crossovers
The indicator plots the main Flow line (colored gradient) and a Signal line (grey).
Bullish (Green Cloud): When the Flow line crosses above the Signal line, it suggests rising buying pressure and efficient upward movement.
Bearish (Red Cloud): When the Flow line crosses below the Signal line, it suggests dominating selling pressure.
• Divergences
The script automatically detects and plots divergences between price and the oscillator:
Regular Divergence (Solid Lines): Suggests a potential trend reversal (e.g., Price makes a Lower Low while Oscillator makes a Higher Low).
Hidden Divergence (Dashed Lines): Suggests a potential trend continuation (e.g., Price makes a Higher Low while Oscillator makes a Lower Low).
"R" labels denote Regular, and "H" labels denote Hidden divergences.
• Dashboard
A dashboard table is displayed on the chart, providing real-time metrics including the current Efficiency Multiplier, Net Flow value, and the active mode status.
• In/Out Ratio Levels
When using the Ratio mode:
Values above 50 indicate net buying pressure.
Values below 50 indicate net selling pressure.
Approaching 70 or 30 can indicate overbought or oversold conditions involving volume exhaustion.
⚙️ Inputs and Settings
Calculation Mode: Choose between "Cumulative Delta Flow" (Trend focus) or "In/Out Ratio" (Oscillator focus).
Auto-Adjust Period: If enabled, automatically sets the lookback period based on the chart timeframe (e.g., 21 for Daily, 52 for Weekly).
Manual Period: The rolling lookback length for calculations if Auto-Adjust is disabled.
Efficiency Length: The period used to calculate the average body and volume for the efficiency baseline.
Eff. Min/Max Cap: Limits the impact of the efficiency multiplier to prevent extreme skewing during anomaly candles.
Momentum Threshold: A factor determining how much price must move relative to the previous candle to be considered a "strong" move.
Show Dashboard/Divergences: Toggles for visual elements.
🔍 Deconstruction of the Underlying Scientific and Academic Framework
This indicator represents a hybrid synthesis of academic Market Microstructure theory and classical technical analysis. It utilizes an advanced algorithm to quantify "Price Impact," leveraging the following theoretical frameworks:
• 1. The Amihud Illiquidity Ratio (2002)
The core logic (calculating body / volume) functions as a dynamic implementation of Yakov Amihud’s Illiquidity Ratio. It measures price displacement per unit of volume. A high efficiency score indicates that "Smart Money" has moved the price significantly with minimal resistance, effectively highlighting liquidity gaps or institutional control.
• 2. Kyle’s Lambda (1985) & Market Depth
Drawing from Albert Kyle’s research on market microstructure, the indicator approximates Kyle's Lambda to measure the elasticity of price in response to order flow. By analyzing the "efficiency" of a move, it identifies asymmetries—specifically where price reacts disproportionately to low volume—signaling potential manipulation or specific Market Maker activity.
• 3. Wyckoff’s Law of Effort vs. Result
From a classical perspective, the algorithm codifies Richard Wyckoff’s "Effort vs. Result" logic. It acts as an oscillator that detects anomalies where "Effort" (Volume) diverges from the "Result" (Price Range), predicting potential reversals.
• 4. Quantitative Advantage: Efficiency-Weighted Volume
Unlike linear indicators such as OBV or Chaikin Money Flow—which treat all volume equally—this indicator (LFA) utilizes Efficiency-Weighted Volume. By applying the efficiency_mult factor, the algorithm filters out market noise and assigns higher weight to volume that drives structural price changes, adopting a modern quantitative approach to flow analysis.
● Disclaimer
All provided scripts and indicators are strictly for educational exploration and must not be interpreted as financial advice or a recommendation to execute trades. I expressly disclaim all liability for any financial losses or damages that may result, directly or indirectly, from the reliance on or application of these tools. Market participation carries inherent risk where past performance never guarantees future returns, leaving all investment decisions and due diligence solely at your own discretion.
MDZ Strategy v4.2 - Multi-factor trend strategyWhat This Strategy Does
MDZ (Momentum Divergence Zones) v4.2 is a trend-following strategy that enters long positions when multiple momentum and trend indicators align. It's designed for swing trading on higher timeframes (2H-4H) and uses ATR-based position management.
The strategy waits for strong trend confirmation before entry, requiring agreement across five different filters. This reduces trade frequency but aims to improve signal quality.
Entry Logic
A long entry triggers when ALL of the following conditions are true:
1. EMA Stack (Trend Structure)
Price > EMA 20 > EMA 50 > EMA 200
This "stacked" alignment indicates a strong established uptrend
2. RSI Filter (Momentum Window)
RSI between 45-75 (default)
Confirms momentum without entering overbought territory
3. ADX Filter (Trend Strength)
ADX > 20 (default)
Ensures the trend has sufficient strength, not a ranging market
4. MACD Confirmation
MACD line above signal line
Histogram increasing (momentum accelerating)
5. Directional Movement
+DI > -DI
Confirms bullish directional pressure
Exit Logic
Positions are managed with ATR-based levels:
ParameterDefaultDescriptionStop Loss2.5 × ATRBelow entry priceTake Profit6.0 × ATRAbove entry priceTrailing Stop2.0 × ATROptional, activates after entry
The default configuration produces a 1:2.4 risk-reward ratio.
Presets
The strategy includes optimized presets based on historical testing:
PresetTimeframeNotes1H Standard1 HourMore frequent signals2H Low DD2 HourConservative settings3H Optimized3 HourBalanced approach4H Swing4 HourWider stops for swing tradesCustomAnyFull manual control
Select "Custom" to adjust all parameters manually.
Inputs Explained
EMAs
Fast EMA (20): Short-term trend
Slow EMA (50): Medium-term trend
Trend EMA (200): Long-term trend filter
RSI
Length: Lookback period (default 14)
Min/Max: Entry window to avoid extremes
ADX
Min ADX: Minimum trend strength threshold
Risk
Stop Loss ATR: Multiplier for stop distance
Take Profit ATR: Multiplier for target distance
Trail ATR: Trailing stop distance (if enabled)
Session (Optional)
Filter entries by time of day
Recommended OFF for 3H+ timeframes
What's Displayed
Info Panel (Top Right)
Current preset
Trend status (Strong/Wait)
ADX, RSI, MACD readings
Position status
Risk-reward ratio
Stats Panel (Top Left)
Net P&L %
Total trades
Win rate
Profit factor
Maximum drawdown
Chart
EMA lines (20 blue, 50 orange, 200 purple)
Green background during strong uptrend
Triangle markers on entry signals
Important Notes
⚠️ This is a long-only strategy. It does not take short positions.
⚠️ Historical results do not guarantee future performance. Backtests show what would have happened in the past under specific conditions. Markets change, and any strategy can experience drawdowns or extended losing periods.
⚠️ Risk management is your responsibility. The default settings risk 100% of equity per trade for backtesting purposes. In live trading, appropriate position sizing based on your risk tolerance is essential.
⚠️ Slippage and commissions matter. The backtest includes 0.02% commission and 1 tick slippage, but actual execution costs vary by broker and market conditions.
Best Practices
Test on your specific market — Results vary significantly across different instruments
Use appropriate position sizing — Never risk more than you can afford to lose
Combine with your own analysis — No indicator replaces understanding market context
Paper trade first — Validate the strategy matches your trading style before risking capital
Alerts
Two alerts are available:
MDZ Long Entry: Fires when all entry conditions are met
Uptrend Started: Fires when EMA stack first aligns bullish
Methodology
This strategy is based on the principle that trend continuation has better odds than reversal when multiple timeframe momentum indicators agree. By requiring five independent confirmations, it filters out weak setups at the cost of fewer total signals.
The ATR-based exits adapt to current volatility rather than using fixed pip/point targets, which helps the strategy adjust to different market conditions.
Questions? Leave a comment below.
MACD Matrix: Angle & SettlementThis indicator is a comprehensive Multi-Timeframe (MTF) Dashboard designed for technical traders who rely on MACD not just for crossovers, but for Momentum Angle and Settlement (Hooks).
Instead of cluttering your screen with 5 different MACD charts, this Matrix calculates the math in the background and presents a clean "Heads-Up Display" of the MACD state across your specific timeframes (Default: 3m, 15m, 1h, 4h, 16h).
The Concept: "Angle Settlement"
Standard MACD indicators only show you when a cross happens. By then, the move is often halfway over. This script focuses on the Angle (Slope) of the MACD line to predict turns before they happen:
Steep Angle: Momentum is accelerating. (Strong Trend)
Settling Angle: The slope is flattening out. The MACD line is "hooking." (Reversal/Cross Imminent)
Dashboard Columns Explained
TF (Timeframe): Auto-formats your settings into readable text (e.g., "240" becomes "4h").
Zone:
> 0 (Green): MACD is above the Zero Line (Bullish Trend context).
< 0 (Red): MACD is below the Zero Line (Bearish Trend context).
Cross:
PCO (Green): Positive Crossover (MACD > Signal).
NCO (Red): Negative Crossover (MACD < Signal).
Deg (°):
The calculated mathematical angle of the MACD line.
Positive (+): Momentum is rising.
Negative (-): Momentum is falling.
State (The Strategy):
STEEP (Bright Color): The angle is increasing. Do not trade against this momentum.
SETTLE (Dim Color): The angle is decreasing compared to the previous bar. The momentum is "cooling off," often signaling a "Hook" or an upcoming crossover.
Settings & Customization
Custom Timeframes: You can freely change TF-1, TF-2, etc., in the settings. The table labels will auto-update (e.g., if you change 4h to 1D, the table will display "1D").
MACD Lengths: Fully customizable (Default 12, 26, 9).
Angle Sensitivity: A multiplier to calibrate the "Degrees" to your specific asset class (Crypto, Forex, or Indices). If angles look too small, increase this value.
Premium Money Flow Oscillator [NeuraAlgo]Premium Money Flow Oscillator (PMFO) — NeuraAlgo
The Premium Money Flow Oscillator (PMFO) is an advanced volume-weighted momentum engine designed to reveal true capital flow, not just price movement.
It combines multi-layer smoothing, zero-lag correction, and dynamic normalization to deliver a clean, responsive, and noise-resistant money flow signal suitable for both scalping and swing trading.
Unlike traditional oscillators, PMFO focuses on pressure behind price — showing when smart money accumulation or distribution is actively occurring.
🔹 Core Features
Volume-Weighted Money Flow
Measures real buying and selling pressure using price displacement × volume.
Filters out weak price moves with low participation.
Multi-Layer Smoothing Engine
EMA + SMA hybrid base smoothing
Gaussian noise reduction
Zero-Lag correction
Deep & Super smoothing layers
→ Result: ultra-smooth yet fast reaction to momentum shifts.
Dynamic Normalization
Automatically adapts to volatility.
Keeps signals consistent across all markets and timeframes.
🔹 Smart Zones & Visual Intelligence
Dynamic Overbought / Oversold Zones
Zones strengthen visually as momentum increases.
Strong zones highlight extreme institutional pressure.
Adaptive Gradient Coloring
Color intensity reflects money flow strength.
Instantly see dominance without reading numbers.
Background Pulse
Subtle market bias feedback (bullish / bearish pressure).
🔹 Multi-Timeframe Confirmation
Optional Higher Timeframe Money Flow Confirmation
Align lower-timeframe entries with higher-timeframe capital direction.
Ideal for trend validation and false-signal reduction.
🔹 Professional Dashboard
Live Money Flow Value
Market Flow State
Strength Percentage
MTF Trend Bias
Institutional-style status readout designed for quick decision making.
🔹 Best Use Cases
✔ Trend confirmation
✔ Momentum continuation entries
✔ Reversal exhaustion detection
✔ Divergence analysis
✔ Smart money flow tracking
⚠️ Notes
PMFO works best when combined with price structure, support/resistance, or trend context.
Extreme readings indicate pressure, not immediate reversal — always wait for confirmation.
Designed for traders who want clarity, not clutter.
Built for precision, not lag.
Zenith MACD Evolution [JOAT]
Zenith MACD Evolution - Volatility-Normalized Momentum Oscillator
Introduction and Purpose
Zenith MACD Evolution is an open-source oscillator indicator that takes the classic MACD and normalizes it by ATR (Average True Range) to create consistent overbought/oversold levels across different market conditions. The core problem this indicator solves is that traditional MACD values are incomparable across different volatility regimes. A MACD reading of 50 might be extreme in a quiet market but normal in a volatile one.
This indicator addresses that by dividing MACD by ATR and scaling to a consistent range, allowing traders to use fixed overbought/oversold levels that work across all market conditions.
Why ATR Normalization Works
Traditional MACD problems:
- Values vary wildly based on price and volatility
- No consistent overbought/oversold levels
- Hard to compare across different instruments
- Extreme readings in one period may be normal in another
ATR-normalized MACD (Zenith) solves these:
- Values scaled to consistent range
- Fixed overbought/oversold levels work across all conditions
- Comparable across different instruments
- Extreme readings are truly extreme regardless of volatility
How the Normalization Works
// Classic MACD
= ta.macd(close, fastLength, slowLength, signalLength)
// ATR for normalization
float atrValue = ta.atr(atrNormLength)
// Volatility-Normalized MACD
float zenithMACD = atrValue != 0 ? (histLine / atrValue) * 100 : 0
float zenithSignal = ta.ema(zenithMACD, signalLength)
The result is a MACD that typically ranges from -200 to +200, with consistent levels:
- Above +150 = Overbought
- Below -150 = Oversold
- Above +200 = Extreme overbought
- Below -200 = Extreme oversold
Signal Types
Zero Cross Up/Down - Zenith crosses zero line (trend change)
Overbought/Oversold Entry - Zenith enters extreme zones
Overbought/Oversold Exit - Zenith leaves extreme zones (potential reversal)
Momentum Shift - Histogram direction changes (early warning)
Divergence - Price makes new high/low but Zenith does not
Histogram Coloring
The histogram uses four colors to show momentum state:
- Strong Bull (Teal) - Positive and rising
- Weak Bull (Light Teal) - Positive but falling
- Strong Bear (Red) - Negative and falling
- Weak Bear (Light Red) - Negative but rising
This helps identify momentum shifts before crossovers occur.
Dashboard Information
Zenith - Current normalized MACD value with signal line
Zone - Current zone (EXTREME OB/OVERBOUGHT/NORMAL/OVERSOLD/EXTREME OS)
Momentum - Direction (RISING/FALLING/FLAT)
Histogram - Current histogram value
ATR Norm - Current ATR value used for normalization
Classic - Traditional MACD value for reference
How to Use This Indicator
For Mean-Reversion:
1. Wait for Zenith to reach extreme zones (+200/-200)
2. Look for momentum shift (histogram color change)
3. Enter counter-trend when exiting extreme zone
For Trend Following:
1. Enter long on zero cross up
2. Enter short on zero cross down
3. Use histogram color to gauge momentum strength
For Divergence Trading:
1. Watch for DIV labels (price vs Zenith divergence)
2. Bullish divergence at support = potential long
3. Bearish divergence at resistance = potential short
Input Parameters
Fast/Slow/Signal Length (12/26/9) - Standard MACD parameters
ATR Normalization Period (26) - Period for ATR calculation
Overbought/Oversold Zone (150/-150) - Zone thresholds
Extreme Level (200) - Extreme threshold
Show Classic MACD Lines (false) - Toggle traditional lines
Show Divergence Detection (true) - Toggle divergence signals
Divergence Lookback (14) - Bars to scan for divergence
Timeframe Recommendations
All timeframes work due to normalization
Higher timeframes provide smoother signals
Normalization makes cross-timeframe comparison meaningful
Limitations
ATR normalization adds slight lag
Divergence detection is simplified
Extreme zones can persist in strong trends
Works best when combined with price action analysis
Open-Source and Disclaimer
This script is published as open-source under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 for educational purposes.
This indicator does not constitute financial advice. Momentum analysis does not guarantee profitable trades. Always use proper risk management.
- Made with passion by officialjackofalltrades
Strength Relative to XXX [Hysteresis Smoothed]Strength Relative to XXX
█ OVERVIEW
This versatile indicator measures the relative strength of the current charted asset against any user-selected benchmark symbol (e.g., BTC, ETH, SP:SPX, TVC:GOLD, or any other asset). Green fill = Current asset outperforming the benchmark (bullish relative strength).
Red fill = Current asset underperforming the benchmark (bearish relative weakness). Perfect for rotation strategies across crypto, stocks, forex, and commodities — quickly identify assets gaining momentum edge over a chosen benchmark.
█ HOW IT WORKS
• Relative Ratio : Calculates current close / benchmark close for normalized comparison.
• Smoothing : Applies a Simple Moving Average (SMA) to the ratio (adjustable length).
• Oscillator : Plots deviation from the SMA, centered around zero.
• Hysteresis Enhancement : Adds a small relative threshold (~0.03% default) to prevent rapid color flips from minor noise. Color persists until a convincing cross — stable blocks without lag.
█ FEATURES & INPUTS
• Compare to : Symbol input for any benchmark (match exchange for accuracy).
• MA Length : Smoothing period (default 10).
• Relative Hysteresis Threshold : Noise filter strength (default 0.0003; tweak for responsiveness vs. stability).
█ USAGE TIPS
• Apply to ALT/BTC pairs for crypto rotations, stocks vs. SP:SPX for sector strength, or any custom comparison.
• Works on all timeframes — ideal for short-term scans on 4H/daily.
• Green zones = potential outperformance; red = caution.
• Combine with volume or momentum for confluence.
This refined relative strength oscillator delivers clean, reliable visuals in volatile markets.
Volume-Weighted RSI [VWRSI 2D Pro]A modular, volume-weighted RSI indicator built for clarity and control.
✅ Profile-based auto modes (Scalping → Macro)
✅ Toggleable Buy/Sell signals with strict mode
✅ RSI MA overlays for smoother entries
Buy Signal
RSI crosses above RSI MA
RSI > 50 (or > 55 in strict mode)
Sell Signal
RSI crosses below RSI MA
RSI < 50 (or < 45 in strict mode)
Strict mode filters out weak signals for higher conviction entries.
Volatility-Adaptive RSI Thresholds:
Traditional RSI uses static levels (70/30).
VWRSI Pro replaces these with dynamic bands:
🔹dynHigh = mean + mult × deviation
🔹 dynLow = mean − mult × deviation
Technical write-up can be found here: github.com
Vortex Trend Matrix [JOAT]Vortex Trend Matrix - Multi-Factor Trend Confluence System
Introduction and Purpose
Vortex Trend Matrix is an open-source overlay indicator that combines Ichimoku-style equilibrium analysis with the Vortex Indicator to create a comprehensive trend confluence system. The core problem this indicator solves is that single trend indicators often give conflicting signals. Price might be above a moving average but momentum might be weakening.
This indicator addresses that by combining five different trend factors into a single composite score, making it easy to identify when multiple factors align for high-probability trend trades.
Why These Components Work Together
Each component measures trend from a different perspective:
1. Cloud Position - Price above/below the equilibrium cloud indicates overall trend bias. The cloud acts as dynamic support/resistance.
2. TK Relationship - Conversion line vs Base line (like Tenkan/Kijun in Ichimoku). Conversion above Base = bullish momentum.
3. Lagging Span - Current price compared to price N bars ago. Confirms whether current move has follow-through.
4. Vortex Indicator - VI+ vs VI- measures directional movement strength. Provides momentum confirmation.
5. Base Direction - Whether the base line is rising or falling. Indicates medium-term trend direction.
How the Trend Score Works
float trendScore = 0.0
// Cloud position (+2/-2)
trendScore += aboveCloud ? 2.0 : belowCloud ? -2.0 : 0.0
// TK relationship (+1/-1)
trendScore += conversionLine > baseLine ? 1.0 : conversionLine < baseLine ? -1.0 : 0.0
// Lagging span (+1/-1)
trendScore += laggingBull ? 1.0 : laggingBear ? -1.0 : 0.0
// Vortex (+1.5/-1.5)
trendScore += vortexBull ? 1.5 : vortexBear ? -1.5 : 0.0
// Base direction (+0.5/-0.5)
trendScore += baseDirection * 0.5
Score ranges from approximately -6 to +6:
- +4 or higher = STRONG BULL
- +2 to +4 = BULL
- -2 to +2 = NEUTRAL
- -4 to -2 = BEAR
- -4 or lower = STRONG BEAR
Signal Types
TK Cross Up/Down - Conversion line crosses Base line (momentum shift)
Base Direction Change - Base line changes direction (medium-term shift)
Strong Bull/Bear Trend - Score reaches +4/-4 (high confluence)
Dashboard Information
Trend - Overall status with composite score
Cloud - Price position (ABOVE/BELOW/INSIDE)
TK Cross - Conversion vs Base relationship
Lagging - Lagging span bias
Vortex - VI+/VI- relationship
VI+/VI- - Individual vortex values
How to Use This Indicator
For Trend Following:
1. Enter long when trend score reaches +4 or higher (STRONG BULL)
2. Enter short when trend score reaches -4 or lower (STRONG BEAR)
3. Use cloud as dynamic support/resistance for entries
For Momentum Timing:
1. Watch for TK Cross signals for entry timing
2. Base direction changes indicate medium-term shifts
3. Vortex confirmation adds conviction
For Risk Management:
1. Exit when trend score drops to neutral
2. Use cloud edges as stop-loss references
3. Reduce position when score weakens
Input Parameters
Conversion Period (9) - Fast equilibrium line
Base Period (26) - Slow equilibrium line
Lead Span Period (52) - Cloud projection period
Displacement (26) - Cloud and lagging span offset
Vortex Period (14) - Period for vortex calculation
VI+ Strength (1.10) - Threshold for strong bullish vortex
VI- Strength (0.90) - Threshold for strong bearish vortex
Timeframe Recommendations
4H-Daily: Best for equilibrium-based analysis
1H: Good for intraday trend following
Lower timeframes may require adjusted periods
Limitations
Equilibrium calculations have inherent lag
Cloud displacement means signals are delayed
Works best in trending markets
May whipsaw in ranging conditions
Open-Source and Disclaimer
This script is published as open-source under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 for educational purposes.
This indicator does not constitute financial advice. Trend analysis does not guarantee profitable trades. Always use proper risk management.
- Made with passion by officialjackofalltrades
Kernel Filter Histogram (RBF)The Kernel Filter Histogram (RBF) is a regime-detection and edge-confirmation tool built on Gaussian (RBF) kernel regression.
It is designed to identify when market conditions are favorable for participation and when traders should stay defensive.
Instead of reacting to price noise, this indicator measures the normalized slope of a smoothed kernel regression curve, converts it into a z-score, and displays it as a histogram representing directional edge pressure.
What It Measures
Underlying market regime (bullish, bearish, or neutral)
Strength and quality of directional momentum
Statistical edge expansion vs compression
When trend continuation is more likely vs chop
How It Works
Applies Nadaraya–Watson kernel regression using a Gaussian (RBF) kernel
Calculates the slope of the regression curve
Normalizes slope using ATR for cross-instrument consistency
Converts the result into a z-score to measure statistical deviation
Smooths the output into a readable histogram + signal line
Uses an optional threshold gate to filter low-quality conditions
Reading the Histogram
Green bars → Bullish regime / positive edge
Red bars → Bearish regime / negative edge
Gray bars → Neutral / low-edge environment
Above zero → Bullish pressure dominates
Below zero → Bearish pressure dominates
Threshold gating allows you to require minimum edge strength before treating signals as actionable.
Best Use Cases
Trade filter (only take longs when bullish, shorts when bearish)
Regime confirmation for existing strategies
Momentum quality assessment
Avoiding chop and low-probability setups
Multi-timeframe alignment tool
What This Is (and Is Not)
✔ IS: A high-quality regime and edge filter
✔ IS: Designed for professional trading systems
✔ IS: Instrument-agnostic and timeframe-agnostic
✖ NOT: A buy/sell signal generator
✖ NOT: A lagging moving average
✖ NOT: A beginner indicator
Recommended Usage
Use this indicator as a gatekeeper:
Only execute setups when the histogram confirms favorable regime conditions
Combine with your entry trigger, not instead of it
Works exceptionally well with trend-following, momentum, and mean-expansion systems
Digital MACD Divergences MTF [LUPEN]Digital MACD Divergences MTF V1.0
Overview:
Digital MACD Divergences MTF is an advanced momentum oscillator based on digital signal processing techniques.
Instead of relying on traditional moving-average smoothing, it applies Finite Impulse Response (FIR) digital filters to extract momentum more cleanly, reducing lag and short-term market noise.
The indicator is designed to provide a clear visualization of momentum structure, divergence behavior, and multi-timeframe context, rather than discrete trading signals.
Conceptual Architecture
At its core, the indicator reinterprets the classic MACD framework through digital convolution logic:
FIR filters are used to compute momentum in a more responsive and stable manner than standard EMA-based MACD.
The resulting histogram represents momentum intensity and direction as a continuous state rather than binary conditions.
A digitally smoothed signal line provides structural reference without introducing excessive delay.
This approach emphasizes momentum quality and structure, not signal frequency.
Divergence Detection Logic:
The script includes automatic divergence detection based on pivot analysis:
Regular bullish and bearish divergences are identified using confirmed pivot points.
Divergences are visualized with explicit line structures and optional filled areas, highlighting the zone of disagreement between price behavior and momentum.
The visualization is designed to remain readable without obscuring price action.
Divergences are presented as contextual information, not as mandatory actions.
Multi-Timeframe (MTF) Context
Digital MACD Divergences MTF supports native multi-timeframe analysis through a dual-pane workflow:
A lower-timeframe instance visualizes local momentum dynamics.
A higher-timeframe instance visualizes the broader momentum regime within which lower-timeframe fluctuations occur.
The higher-timeframe view is not intended as confirmation or filtering logic, but as a contextual background layer that helps interpret short-term momentum behavior inside a larger structural environment.
This separation avoids decision compression and keeps each timeframe’s role conceptually distinct.
Visual Design
Gradient-based histogram fills represent momentum intensity in a continuous manner.
Positive and negative momentum regions are clearly differentiated while remaining adaptable to both dark and light chart themes.
All visual elements are designed to emphasize state and regime, not discrete events.
Reliability
No repainting: all divergences and momentum states are confirmed on candle close and remain fixed.
Designed for consistency across instruments and timeframes.
Customization Options
Timeframe selection for MTF mode (leave empty to use the chart’s timeframe).
Adjustable signal smoothing parameters.
Divergence visibility controls, pivot sensitivity, and optional divergence fill.
Fully customizable color palette.
Usage Notes
This indicator is a visual market analysis tool intended to support momentum interpretation and structural context.
It does not provide investment advice, trading signals, or automated decision logic, and should be used as part of a broader analytical framework.
Final quotes:
"Trading is not about prediction, but about understanding momentum structure.
Digital MACD removes noise to make that structure visible."
Market Probability Dashboard📊 Market Probability Dashboard
Market Probability Dashboard is a context-driven analytical tool designed to help traders assess directional bias and market conditions using a probabilistic framework.
It does not generate buy/sell signals. Instead, it provides a structured view of bullish vs bearish probability, market regime, and execution readiness — allowing traders to make informed discretionary decisions.
🔍 What This Indicator Does
This indicator estimates the probability of directional movement in the market by combining:
Futures-based momentum and volatility (execution focus)
Spot-based structure and regime (context focus)
A bounded probability engine with adaptive caps
A visual state model for decision clarity
The output is a dashboard + histogram that summarizes market conditions in real time.
🧠 Probability Model (High-Level)
The probability engine follows these principles:
Baseline neutrality: Starts from 50%
Momentum adjustment: Futures EMA alignment nudges probability
Volatility awareness: Expanding volatility increases confidence
Regime control: Spot-derived regime limits probability extremes
Clamping: Probabilities are intentionally bounded to avoid overconfidence
All probabilities are relative, not predictive.
⏱ Timeframe Logic (Auto Mode)
When Auto Timeframe Engine is enabled:
Execution timeframe = chart timeframe
Context timeframe = automatically derived higher timeframe
Regime timeframe = higher-order structure timeframe
This design helps reduce confusion between execution vs context, especially for intraday traders.You may disable Auto Mode and use fixed timeframes if preferred.
📊 Visual Layout Explained
1️⃣ Probability Histogram (Bottom Pane)
Green bars → Bullish probability dominance
Red bars → Bearish probability dominance
Yellow zone (45–55) → No-trade / balance area
Bar opacity increases with conviction strength
This view helps you see how probability evolved historically, not just the latest value.
2️⃣ Dashboard Panel (Top-Right)
Field Meaning
ACTION Current market participation state
UP BIAS % Bullish probability (bounded)
MARKET MODE Regime derived from spot structure
TRADE TF Execution timeframe
CONTEXT TF Higher timeframe context
The table is intentionally minimal to remain readable on all chart sizes.
🧭 Decision State Logic (Interpretation Guide)
The indicator classifies conditions into states, not signals:
State Interpretation
NO-TRADE Balanced or range-bound conditions
SCALP-ALLOW Short-term participation possible with reduced expectations
TRADE-LIGHT Directional bias present, moderate conviction
TRADE-PRESS Strong alignment and momentum
EXIT Momentum deterioration or probability reversal
These are context labels, not trade instructions.
🧑💻 How to Use This Indicator
Best used as:
A bias filter before taking trades
A context layer alongside price action
A confidence gauge, not a trigger
Recommended pairing:
Price structure
Volume / VWAP
Personal risk rules
⚠️ Important Disclaimer
This indicator is for analytical and educational purposes only.It does not provide buy/sell signals.It does not predict future price. All probability values are estimates, not guarantees.Trading involves risk. Always validate decisions using your own analysis and risk management.
USDT: Market cap changeUSDT: Market Cap Change
This indicator tracks the market capitalization changes of major stablecoins (USDT, USDC, and DAI) to help identify capital flows in the cryptocurrency market.
Features:
Monitor daily and custom period market cap changes for selected stablecoins
Configurable stablecoin selection (USDT, USDC, DAI)
Adjustable lookback period for measuring market cap changes
Multiple moving average types (SMA, EMA, HMA, WMA, RMA) for trend analysis
Visual representation with columns for daily changes and area fill for custom period changes
How to Use:
The indicator displays two main metrics: daily market cap change (shown as columns) and custom period change (shown as a line with area fill). Positive values indicate capital inflow into stablecoins, which may suggest accumulation or risk-off sentiment. Negative values indicate capital outflow, potentially signaling deployment into other crypto assets.
The moving average overlay helps identify trends in stablecoin market cap changes over time.
Settings:
Select which stablecoins to track
Adjust the lookback period (default: 60 days)
Toggle and configure the moving average overlay
Customize MA type and length
Data Source:
Uses Glassnode market capitalization data for USDT, USDC, and DAI on a daily timeframe.
Aura Vortex Oscillator [Pineify]Aura Vortex Oscillator – Adaptive Momentum with Visual Depth
The Aura Vortex Oscillator is a sophisticated momentum indicator that transforms raw price action into a visually immersive analytical tool. By combining Sigmoid-based normalization through ArcTan mathematics with adaptive momentum calculations, this oscillator delivers clear, bounded signals while filtering market noise. The distinctive "Vortex Mesh" visualization creates a layered depth effect that reveals trend consensus across multiple smoothing periods.
Key Features
Sigmoid normalization using ArcTan function for bounded output (-100 to +100)
Adaptive momentum calculation with standard deviation normalization
Multi-layered "Vortex Mesh" creating visual depth and trend confluence signals
Dynamic color-coded visualization for instant trend recognition
Zero-line crossover signals with plotted reversal markers
Extreme zone highlighting for overbought/oversold conditions
How It Works
The core calculation begins with computing the Z-score of price relative to its simple moving average, normalized by standard deviation. This adaptive component automatically adjusts sensitivity based on recent volatility. The normalized value then passes through an ArcTan function, which acts as a sigmoid transformation, "squarifying" the output to emphasize extreme conditions while keeping values bounded.
os = atan(z × intensity) × 63.66
The multiplier 63.66 scales the output to approximately -100 to +100, providing intuitive overbought/oversold levels at ±50.
Trading Ideas and Insights
Use zero-line crossovers as primary trend change signals – bullish when crossing above, bearish when crossing below
Monitor the Vortex Mesh thickness – a thick, solid aura indicates strong trend consensus across timeframes
Watch for background highlighting at ±50 levels to identify statistical extremes for potential reversals
Combine with price action analysis when the oscillator reaches boundary zones
How Multiple Indicators Work Together
The Aura Vortex Oscillator integrates three technical concepts into one cohesive system. The adaptive momentum calculation provides the raw signal, responding dynamically to market volatility. The ArcTan normalization bounds this signal and emphasizes extremes without clipping. Finally, the Vortex Mesh applies multiple EMA smoothing layers to the base signal, creating visual depth that shows whether different momentum speeds agree on trend direction.
Unique Aspects
Unlike traditional oscillators that show a single line, this indicator visualizes momentum as a "thermal field" through its layered mesh system. The mesh expands and contracts based on trend agreement – a thick, cohesive glow suggests high-confluence momentum, while a thin, scattered appearance warns of choppy, range-bound conditions.
How to Use
Add the indicator to your chart as a separate pane
Look for color transitions (green to red or vice versa) at zero-line crosses for trend reversals
Use the ±50 boundary zones and background highlighting to identify overextended conditions
Enable the Vortex Mesh to visualize trend strength and momentum consensus
Customization
Vortex Sensitivity (20) : Base period for momentum calculation – lower values increase responsiveness
Vortex Intensity (2.0) : Amplifies signal squarification – higher values push readings toward extremes faster
Aura Smoothing (8) : EMA period for the main signal line – higher values reduce noise
Enable Vortex Mesh : Toggle the layered visualization effect
Color Settings : Customize bullish, bearish, and neutral colors
Conclusion
The Aura Vortex Oscillator offers traders a unique perspective on momentum analysis by combining mathematical rigor with innovative visualization. Its adaptive normalization ensures reliable signals across different market conditions, while the Vortex Mesh provides instant visual feedback on trend quality. Whether you are identifying trend reversals, measuring momentum strength, or seeking confluence confirmation, this oscillator delivers actionable insights in an intuitive format.
BE-QuantFlow: Adaptive Momentum Trading█ Overview: QuantFlow: Adaptive Momentum Trading
QuantFlow is a sophisticated algorithmic momentum trading method designed specifically for indices and high-beta stocks. However, its logic is universal; with appropriate parameter tuning, it adapts to various asset classes and timeframes.
While the standard momentum indicators (like RSI or MACD) simply measure how fast price is moving (Velocity), QuantFlow analyzes the quality and conviction of the trend . Features like Dynamic Volatility Filtering and Trend Shielding, combined with volatility weighting and a "Dual-Line" approach to distinguish between a sustainable institutional trend and a temporary retail spike, make the indicator unique and more powerful.
█ Why QuantFlow ?
Quant (The Engine): This replaces subjective guessing with objective math.
Instead of just seeing that the price is "up," we measure "how it got there". For example, a stock that rises 1 currency value every day for 10 days (smooth trend) gets a much higher score than a stock that jumps 10 currency value in one minute and does nothing else (erratic noise). This mathematical rigor provides the structure.
█ Core Logic & Philosophy
To understand how QuantFlow calculates momentum, imagine a "Tug-of-War" between Buyers (Bulls) and Sellers (Bears). Most indicators (like RSI) use a single line. If RSI is at 50, it means "Neutral." But "Neutral" can mean two very different things:
Peace: Nothing is happening. No one is buying or selling.
War: Buyers are pushing hard, but Sellers are pushing back equally hard. Volatility is massive.
A single line hides this reality. QuantFlow splits the market into two separate scores:
Bull Score (Green Line): How hard are the buyers pushing?
Bear Score (Red Line): How hard are the sellers pushing?
The Layman's Advantage:
If both lines are low = Sleepy Market (Avoid).
If Green is high and Red is low = Clean Uptrend (Buy).
If Red is high and Green is low = Clean Downtrend (Sell).
If both lines are high = Chaos/War Zone (Wait).
█ How it Weight "Sustenance" (The Critical Quality Check)
This is the most unique aspect of QuantFlow: Trend direction alone is not enough; Sustenance is weighed equally . Standard indicators treat every 10 currency value movements the same way with no distinction. However, QuantFlow asks, "Did you hold the ground you gained?"
Scenario A (High Sustenance) : A stock opens at 100, marches to 110, and closes at 110.
Verdict : Buyers pushed up and sustained the price.
QuantFlow Weight : 100%. This is a high-quality move.
Scenario B (Low Sustenance) : A stock opens at 100, spikes to 110, but gets sold off to close at 102.
Verdict : Buyers pushed up (Trend is Up), but failed to sustain it (Long Wick).
QuantFlow Weight : 20%. This is treated as "Noise" or a trap.
By mathematically weighing the Close Location Value (where the candle closes relative to its high/low), QuantFlow filters out "Gap-and-Fade" traps and exhaustion spikes that fool traditional indicators.
Comparisons: QuantFlow vs. The Rest
Calculation Logic : Standard RSI/MACD measures simple price change over time. QuantFlow measures Price Change 'times (x)' Conviction (Sustenance Weighting).
Visual Output : Standard tools show a single line (0-100), often hiding market conflict. QuantFlow displays Dual Lines (Bull vs Bear Intensity) to reveal the true state of the battle.
Trap Handling : Standard indicators are often fooled by sharp spikes. QuantFlow ignores "Gap-and-Fade" moves with poor closing conviction.
Adaptability : Standard tools use static levels (e.g., Overbought > 70). QuantFlow uses Dynamic Bands that adjust automatically to recent volatility.
█ Dynamic Volatility Filtering
Unlike standard indicators that use fixed levels (e.g., "Buy if RSI > 50"), QuantFlow acknowledges that "50" means something different in a quiet market versus a crashing market. This section explains the statistical engine driving the signals.
The Problem with Static Levels : In a low-volatility environment, a momentum score of 55 might indicate a massive breakout. In a high-volatility environment, a score of 55 might just be random noise. A fixed threshold cannot handle both scenarios.
The Solution: Adaptive Statistics : The script maintains a memory of the Momentum Events. It doesn't just look at price; it looks at where the momentum occurred in the past and draws a "Noise Zone" (Grey Band). This logic acts as a "Smart Gatekeeper" for trade entries:
Scenario A: Inside the Noise (The Filter)
If a new momentum signal happens inside the Noise Zone, the script assumes it is likely chop or noise.
Action : It forces a wait period. The signal is delayed until the trend sustains itself for Confirm Bars; else the signal is cancelled. This filters out ~70% of false signals in sideways markets.
Scenario B: Outside the Noise (The Breakout)
If a new momentum signal happens outside the Noise Zone (or the momentum score smashes through the Upper Band), it is statistically significant (an outlier event).
Action: It triggers an Immediate Entry. No waiting is required because the move is powerful enough to escape the historical noise zone.
█ The ⚠️ "Warning" System (Heads-up for Smart Reversals)
While you are directional if there is potential reversal signal, it provides the heads-up warning for a better decision-making
█ Special Utility: Ghost Mode
For intraday traders, the biggest disruption to "Flow" is the mandatory broker square-off at 3:15 PM (considering Indian Market). Often, a trend continues overnight, and the trader misses the gap-up opening the next morning because their algo was flat.
Ghost Mode is a unique feature that runs silently in the background:
At Square-off: The strategy closes your official position to satisfy the broker.
In the Background: It keeps the trade "alive" virtually (Ghost).
Next Morning: If the market opens in the trend's favor, the strategy re-enters the trade automatically. This approach ensures you capture the full swing of the trend, even if you are forced to exit at the previous session.
█ Advice on this indicator:
Parameter Calibration: The default settings are optimized for BankNifty on 5-minute charts. If you trade stocks, crypto, commodities, or any higher timeframes (e.g., 15-min or hourly), you must adjust these.
Low Volatility Assets: Reduce Stop Multiplier to 2.0.
High Volatility Assets: Increase Momentum Lookback to 50 to filter noise.
Confluence (Additional Confirmation): While QuantFlow is a complete system, using it alongside Key Support/Resistance Levels or Volume Profile provides the highest probability setups.
Estado Coral + SAR + RSIWhen the price is above the SAR level, the Coral level is positive, and the RSI is above 57, a green buy candle is generated. If the SAR and Coral are negative and the RSI is below 38, a red sell bar is generated.
Estado Coral + SAR + RSIWhen the price is above the SAR level, the Coral level is positive, and the RSI is above 57, a green buy candle is generated. If the SAR and Coral are negative and the RSI is below 38, a red sell bar is generated.
VMDivergencesTH Volume Momentum Divergences - How It Works
🎯 Overview
This indicator detects divergences between price action and a custom momentum oscillator. Divergences occur when price moves one direction while momentum moves the opposite direction — often signaling potential reversals or trend continuations.
⚙️ The Hidden Oscillator Engine
The oscillator runs in the background (not plotted on chart) and combines two components:
Component 1: Momentum (MACD-style)
Momentum = Fast EMA(12) - Slow EMA(26)
Measures the difference between a fast and slow exponential moving average. Positive = bullish momentum, Negative = bearish momentum.
Component 2: Bollinger Band Distance
Distance = (Price - BB Middle) / Standard Deviation
Measures how far price has strayed from its "normal" range. Values > 2 = overbought territory, Values < -2 = oversold territory.
Hybrid Blend
Final Oscillator = (Normalized Momentum × Blend) + (Band Distance × (1 - Blend))
The Momentum Blend setting (default 1.0) controls the mix:
1.0 = Pure momentum (like MACD)
0.0 = Pure band distance (like Bollinger %B)
0.5 = Equal blend of both
🔍 Pivot Detection
The indicator identifies swing highs and swing lows on both:
Price (using high and low)
Oscillator (using the hybrid oscillator value)
How Pivots Are Found
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Swing High = A bar where the high is higher than X bars on BOTH sides
Swing Low = A bar where the low is lower than X bars on BOTH sides
The Swing Strength setting (default 5) controls how many bars on each side are required:
Lower values (2-3) = More pivots, more signals, more noise
Higher values (7-10) = Fewer pivots, fewer signals, higher quality
🔀 Divergence Types Explained
1. 🟢 Regular Bullish Divergence (Reversal Signal)
Price: Lower Low ↘ (making new lows)
Oscillator: Higher Low ↗ (momentum improving)
Meaning: Price is falling but momentum is building. The selling pressure is weakening — potential bottom forming.
Visual: Green triangle below bar + solid line connecting lows
2. 🔴 Regular Bearish Divergence (Reversal Signal)
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Price: Higher High ↗ (making new highs)
Oscillator: Lower High ↘ (momentum fading)
Meaning: Price is rising but momentum is declining. The buying pressure is weakening — potential top forming.
Visual: Red triangle above bar + solid line connecting highs
3. 🟡 Hidden Bullish Divergence (Continuation Signal)
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Price: Higher Low ↗ (holding above previous low)
Oscillator: Lower Low ↘ (momentum dipped)
Meaning: In an uptrend, price made a higher low but oscillator made a lower low. The oscillator "reset" while price held strong — trend likely to continue UP.
Visual: Green diamond below bar + dashed line
4. 🟠 Hidden Bearish Divergence (Continuation Signal)
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Price: Lower High ↘ (staying below previous high)
Oscillator: Higher High ↗ (momentum bounced)
Meaning: In a downtrend, price made a lower high but oscillator made a higher high. The oscillator bounced but price couldn't — trend likely to continue DOWN.
Visual: Red diamond above bar + dashed line
5. 🔵 Double Bottom with Divergence (Strong Support)
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Price: Two lows at SIMILAR levels (within ATR tolerance)
Oscillator: Second low HIGHER than first
Meaning: Price tested the same support twice, but momentum was stronger on the second test — buyers defending that level aggressively.
Visual: Cyan circle below bar + dotted line
6. 🟣 Double Top with Divergence (Strong Resistance)
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Price: Two highs at SIMILAR levels (within ATR tolerance)
Oscillator: Second high LOWER than first
Meaning: Price tested the same resistance twice, but momentum was weaker on the second test — sellers defending that level.
Visual: Purple circle above bar + dotted line
✅ Validation Filters
Not every pivot pair creates a signal. The indicator applies filters:
Filter Purpose
Min Pivot Distance (default 5) Pivots must be at least 5 bars apart — prevents micro-divergences
Max Pivot Distance (default 50) Pivots must be within 50 bars — prevents stale/irrelevant divergences
DTB Tolerance (default 0.3 × ATR) For double top/bottom, price levels must be within 30% of ATR
📊 Visual Elements
Element Description
Markers Shapes above/below candles when divergence triggers
Lines Connect the two pivot points involved in the divergence
Labels Text tags showing divergence type (REG, HID, DBL)
Glow Effect Thicker semi-transparent line behind main line
Background Flash Brief color flash on signal bar
Status Panel Real-time table showing oscillator value and active signals
🧠 Trading Logic Summary
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ DIVERGENCE CHEAT SHEET │
├──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ REGULAR BULLISH │ Price ↘ Osc ↗ │ Look for LONGS │
│ REGULAR BEARISH │ Price ↗ Osc ↘ │ Look for SHORTS │
│ HIDDEN BULLISH │ Price ↗ Osc ↘ │ Add to LONGS │
│ HIDDEN BEARISH │ Price ↘ Osc ↗ │ Add to SHORTS │
│ DOUBLE BOTTOM │ Same low, Osc ↗ │ Strong SUPPORT │
│ DOUBLE TOP │ Same high, Osc ↘ │ Strong RESISTANCE │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
[CT] Trend Pulse Oscillator Trend Pulse Oscillator is a clean, responsive trend and momentum oscillator that measures directional pressure by comparing a fast EMA to a slow EMA, then normalizing that spread by ATR so the reading stays consistent across different symbols and volatility regimes. Instead of relying on percentile bands or fixed overbought, oversold logic from legacy oscillators, this indicator converts the EMA spread into a smooth 0–100 signal that behaves like a “trend intensity meter,” where 50 acts as the neutral midpoint, values above 50 reflect bullish dominance, and values below 50 reflect bearish dominance. Because the core input is the distance between two EMAs, it naturally tracks trend alignment, and because it is volatility-normalized, it avoids becoming overly sensitive during high volatility or too sluggish during quiet conditions.
The engine begins by calculating a fast EMA and a slow EMA on your selected source, then computing the spread between them. That spread alone can be misleading across markets because the same raw distance means different things in low volatility versus high volatility environments, so the script divides the spread by ATR to create a normalized value that represents how meaningful the trend separation is relative to typical movement. Once the spread is normalized, the indicator applies a bounded mapping using an arctangent transform, which is a stable way to compress extreme values while preserving sensitivity near the midpoint. This produces a smooth oscillator that stays in a predictable 0–100 range without hard clamping, and it keeps the transitions realistic even when price accelerates strongly. The Speed setting is the main sensitivity control, where higher values make the oscillator respond faster and flip states more quickly, and lower values slow the response, reduce noise, and produce fewer regime changes.
A signal line is then applied to the oscillator using an EMA, creating a two-line framework that is easy to trade. The oscillator line represents the current trend pressure state, while the signal line represents the smoothed baseline of that pressure. The primary decision point is the relationship between the oscillator and the signal, where oscillator above signal indicates improving bullish pressure and oscillator below signal indicates improving bearish pressure. This relationship is also used to drive the visual state of the indicator so the chart feedback matches the current bias. The indicator additionally computes a Pulse histogram as the difference between the oscillator and the signal line, which helps you quickly see when momentum is expanding or contracting. When the histogram grows in the bullish direction, pressure is strengthening above the baseline, and when it contracts toward zero, pressure is fading and conditions are becoming more balanced.
The visual layer is built to make bias and transitions obvious without clutter. You can enable a fill between the oscillator and the signal line that changes color based on whether the oscillator is above or below the signal, so the “state” is visible even at a glance. The Pulse histogram can be shown to highlight the size of the separation between the oscillator and the signal, which is useful for spotting early momentum shifts, confirming continuation, or identifying when a move is losing energy. The indicator includes standard level guides with a midpoint at 50 and optional overbought and oversold thresholds, which can help you contextualize stronger pushes away from neutral. These levels are best treated as context rather than automatic reversal triggers, because this tool is designed to track trend pressure first, and it can remain elevated or depressed for extended periods during strong directional moves.
For traders who like a unified view, there is an optional setting to color price bars based on the oscillator state relative to the signal line. When enabled, candles will reflect bullish bias when the oscillator is above the signal and bearish bias when below, aligning your chart’s candle colors with the same logic driving the oscillator’s state. This makes it easy to stay consistent with your bias filter without constantly checking the panel. The indicator also includes alert conditions focused on the core events traders care about, including oscillator crosses of the signal line, crosses of the 50 midpoint, and crosses of the overbought and oversold levels, so you can automate notifications for regime shifts, momentum changes, and stronger pressure conditions.
In practical use, Trend Pulse Oscillator is most effective as a bias and timing tool. When the oscillator holds above 50 and repeatedly stays above its signal line, it reflects persistent bullish pressure where pullbacks are more likely to be continuation opportunities. When the oscillator holds below 50 and stays below its signal line, it reflects persistent bearish pressure where rallies are more likely to be corrective. The most valuable information often comes from how cleanly the oscillator can stay on the correct side of its signal and whether the Pulse histogram expands during breaks and contractions, because that combination helps separate real trend continuation from choppy rotation.






















