The ultimate Momentum Oscillator! The ticker line act as a common momentum oscillator. When it's orange, the trustability of the overbought/oversold condition is greater. The thiner line is made to be used on range moments, such as squares or envelopes. The background collors indicates good moments to buy (green) or sell (red) - the signal is triggered in the...
The idea of the Squeeze is to figure out when the market is primed for a movement. The script is based on the excellent description of John Carter on the second edition of his book. I made a few changes regarding the sources of data, he uses a plain momentum oscillator, I have added an aggressive and a conservative profile. Aggresive profile is good for entries as...
This is a simulation of Gunbot's Okkies Mode and is meant solely as a companion indicator to Gunbot so that you may visualize and optimize your settings for this mode. It displays Money Flow for BTCUSDT or BTCUSD. The green area represents where Okkies Mode is not active and the yellow area represents where Okkies Mode would activate Buy Disabled in...
[ ---> ZOOM IN THE CHART TO GET BETTER SIGHT ! <--- or look at the picture version if render is messy : (INVITE ONLY indicator. Access to all my indicators for a symbolic 1€/day subscription + FREE WEEK TRIAL) Please don't post comment to ask for unlock... if you want to try it out, simply follow the link at the bottom and trigger your trial...
EXPERIMENTAL calculates, price change * volume over a specific time window. It reflects trend, momentum and volume participation. It can be used to find divergences.
Custom Indicator using tick data to display momentum. (The arrows are the channel breakout arrows that you can find in default scripts.)
This indicator can be useful for analyzing trends and for effective entry and exit points. The buy entry point is above 0 and the blue line. The buy exit point is below the blue line. The sell entry point is below 0 and the blue line. The sell exit point is above the blue line. Don't need any settings. Custom alerts are available.
The Up/Down Range breaks the price range into an upward and a downward moving component, so we can easily turn it into a momentum oscillator. This script does just that. You can find the Up/Down Range (UDR) indicator here:
Measuring the difference between the highs and lows from the average, this measure can serve as a proxy for the volatility, just like the ATR. However, it breaks the range into an upward and a downward moving component, so it also gives information about the current trend direction. In fact, I turned it into a momentum indicator here:
The Kovach Chande indicator measures instantaneous buying pressure. It features advanced signal processing algorithms to minimize lag and filter the effects of volatility. Consider using it with the Kovach OBV indicator and Kovach Momentum indicator. When used with the Kovach OBV, divergences may be used to isolate entry points.
The Kovach Momentum indicator averages instantaneous momentum, while employing advanced signal processing algorithms to minimize lag and filter the effects of volatility. Consider using it with the Kovach Chande indicator and Kovach OBV indicator.
The Kovach OBV measures sustained buying pressure. It features advanced signal processing algorithms to minimize lag and filter the effects of volatility. Consider using it with the Kovach Chande indicator and Kovach Momentum indicator.
This indicator plots Chande Momentum Oscillator and its WMA on the same chart. This indicator plots the absolute value of CMO. The CMO is closely related to, yet unique from, other momentum oriented indicators such as Relative Strength Index, Stochastic, Rate-of-Change, etc. It is most closely related to Welles Wilder?s RSI, yet it differs ...
This indicator plots Chande Momentum Oscillator. This indicator was developed by Tushar Chande. A scientist, an inventor, and a respected trading system developer, Mr. Chande developed the CMO to capture what he calls "pure momentum". For more definitive information on the CMO and other indicators we recommend the book The New Technical...