TrendFollower - v1.0This script is based on trend following and attempts to capture the larger trends for an asset. Works on BTCUSD, ALTUSD and ALTBTC pairs alike as the crypto market is largely momentum based.
Perfectly suited for long-term trades.
In den Scripts nach "trend" suchen
Trend followerThis indicator is a trend follower that uses exponential moving averages to estimate the trend strength and prints a BUY label every time that price action matches the algorithm conditions. Always wait for the closure of the current candle to confirm the conditions match.
Ideally, the trade should be taken with a BUY STOP order placed above the signal candle and a STOP LOSS below the most recent swing low; make sure you allow enough room for the trade to breathe.
For additional resources, follow my YouTube channel .
You can also join my Facebook group or PM me directly here on Tradingview.
Trend LengthScript tries to capture the length of trends. It calculates an SMA and then determines the slope of the SMA using a simple momentum function. From there it counts bars from when the slope changed directions last. The lime green line is the count from when the slope changed. The yellow line is the average time of a trend. The white line is "trying" to capture the length of a full healthy pip running trend. Pick and SMA you like and then run through many currencies. I find that trends tend to be the same length. Not surprising as the markets are extremely correlated to each other. The trick is to find the most active pair for action. To do that look up my Pairs Range script.
Comments are welcome.
Trend Following $BTC - Multi-Timeframe Structure + ReversTREND FOLLOWING STRATEGY - MULTI-TIMEFRAME STRUCTURE BREAKOUT SYSTEM
Strategy Overview
This is an enhanced Turtle Trading system designed for cryptocurrency spot trading. It combines Donchian Channel breakouts with multi-timeframe structure filtering and ATR-based dynamic risk management. The strategy trades both long and short positions using reverse signal exits to maximize trend capture.
Core Features
Multi-Timeframe Structure Filtering
The strategy uses Swing High/Low analysis to identify market structure trends. You can customize the structure timeframe (default: 3 minutes) to match your trading style. Only enters trades aligned with the identified trend direction, avoiding counter-trend positions that often lead to losses.
Reverse Signal Exit System
Instead of using fixed stop-losses or time-based exits, this strategy exits positions only when a reverse entry signal triggers. This approach maximizes trend profits and reduces premature exits during normal market retracements.
ATR Dynamic Pyramiding
Automatically adds positions when price moves 0.5 ATR in your favor. Supports up to 2 units maximum (adjustable). This pyramid scaling enhances profitability during strong trends while maintaining disciplined risk management.
Complete Risk Management
Fixed position sizing at 5000 USD per unit. Includes realistic commission fees of 0.06% (Binance spot rate). Initial capital set at 10,000 USD. All backtest parameters reflect real-world trading conditions.
Trading Logic
Entry Conditions
Long Entry: Close price breaks above the 20-period high AND structure trend is bullish (price breaks above Swing High)
Short Entry: Close price breaks below the 20-period low AND structure trend is bearish (price breaks below Swing Low)
Position Scaling
Long positions: Add when price rises 0.5 ATR or more
Short positions: Add when price falls 0.5 ATR or more
Maximum 2 units including initial entry
Exit Conditions
Long Exit: Triggers when short entry signal appears (price breaks 20-period low + structure turns bearish)
Short Exit: Triggers when long entry signal appears (price breaks 20-period high + structure turns bullish)
Default Parameters
Channel Settings
Entry Channel Period: 20 (Donchian Channel breakout period)
Exit Channel Period: 10 (reserved parameter)
ATR Settings
ATR Period: 20
Stop Loss ATR Multiplier: 2.0
Add Position ATR Multiplier: 0.5
Structure Filter
Swing Length: 300 (Swing High/Low calculation period)
Structure Timeframe: 3 minutes
Adjust these based on your trading timeframe and asset volatility
Position Management
Maximum Units: 2 (including initial entry)
Capital Per Unit: 5000 USD
Visualization Features
Background Colors
Light Green: Bullish market structure
Light Red: Bearish market structure
Dark Green: Long position entry
Dark Red: Short position entry
Optional Display Elements (Default: OFF)
Entry and exit channel lines
Structure high/low reference lines
ATR stop-loss indicator
Next position add level
Entry/exit labels
Alert Message Format
The strategy sends notifications with the following format:
Entry: "5m Long EP:90450.50"
Add Position: "15m Add Long 2/2 EP:91000.25"
Exit: "5m Close Long Reverse Signal"
Where the first part shows your current chart timeframe and EP indicates Entry Price
Backtest Settings
Capital Allocation
Initial Capital: 10,000 USD
Per Entry: 5,000 USD (split into 2 potential entries)
Leverage: 0x (spot trading only)
Trading Costs
Commission: 0.06% (Binance spot VIP0 rate)
Slippage: 0 (adjust based on your experience)
Best Use Cases
Ideal Scenarios
Trending markets with clear directional movement
Moderate to high volatility assets
Timeframes from 1-minute to 4-hour charts
Best suited for major cryptocurrencies with good liquidity
Not Recommended For
Highly volatile choppy/ranging markets
Low liquidity small-cap coins
Extreme market conditions or black swan events
Usage Recommendations
Timeframe Guidelines
1-5 minute charts: Use for scalping, consider Swing Length 100-160
15-30 minute charts: Good for short-term trading, Swing Length 50-100
1-4 hour charts: Suitable for swing trading, Swing Length 20-50
Optimization Tips
Always backtest on historical data before live trading
Adjust swing length based on asset volatility and your timeframe
Different cryptocurrencies may require different parameter settings
Enable visualization options initially to understand entry/exit points
Monitor win rate and drawdown during backtesting
Technical Details
Built on Pine Script v6
No repainting - uses proper bar referencing with offset
Prevents lookahead bias with lookahead=off parameter
Strategy mode with accurate commission and slippage modeling
Multi-timeframe security function for structure analysis
Proper position state tracking to avoid duplicate signals
Risk Disclaimer
This strategy is provided for educational and research purposes only. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Backtesting results may differ from live trading due to slippage, execution delays, and changing market conditions. The strategy performs best in trending markets and may experience drawdowns during ranging conditions. Always practice proper risk management and never risk more than you can afford to lose. It is recommended to paper trade first and start with small position sizes when going live.
How to Use
Add the strategy to your TradingView chart
Select your desired timeframe (1m to 4h recommended)
Adjust parameters based on your risk tolerance and trading style
Review backtest results in the Strategy Tester tab
Set up alerts for automated notifications
Consider paper trading before risking real capital
Tags
Trend Following, Turtle Trading, Donchian Channel, Structure Breakout, ATR, Cryptocurrency, Spot Trading, Risk Management, Pyramiding, Multi-Timeframe Analysis
---
Strategy Name: Trend Following BTC
Version: v1.0
Pine Script Version: v6
Last Updated: December 2025
Trend Continuation [OmegaTools]Trend Continuation is a trend-following and trend-continuation tool designed to highlight high-probability pullbacks within an existing directional bias. It helps discretionary and systematic traders visually isolate “continuation zones” where a retracement is more likely to resolve in favor of the prevailing trend rather than trigger a full reversal.
1. Concept and Objective
The indicator combines two key components:
1. A trend bias engine (based either on a Rolling VWAP regime or on swing market structure).
2. A pullback pressure model, which quantifies how deep and “aggressive” the recent retracement has been relative to the trend.
The goal is to identify moments where the market pulls back against the trend, builds enough “reversal pressure,” and then shows signs that the trend is likely to **continue** rather than flip. When specific conditions are met, the indicator highlights bars and plots reference levels that can be used as potential continuation zones, filters, or confluence areas in a broader trading plan.
2. Trend Bias Modes
The primary trend direction is defined through the `Trend Mode` input:
* **RVWAP Mode (default)**
The script computes two rolling volume-weighted average prices over different lengths:
* A **shorter-term rolling VWAP**
* A **longer-term rolling VWAP**
When the shorter RVWAP is above the longer one, the bias is set to **bullish (+1)**. When it is below, the bias is **bearish (-1)**.
This creates a smooth, volume-weighted trend definition that tends to adapt to shifting regimes and filters out minor noise.
* **Market Structure Mode**
In this mode, trend bias is derived from **pivot highs and lows**:
* When price breaks above a recent pivot high, the bias flips to **bullish (+1)**.
* When price breaks below a recent pivot low, the bias flips to **bearish (-1)**.
This approach is more structurally oriented and reacts to significant swing breaks rather than just moving-average style relationships.
If no clear condition is met, the internal bias can temporarily be neutral, though the main design assumes working with clearly bullish or bearish environments.
3. Pullback and Reversal Pressure Logic
Once the trend bias is defined, the indicator measures **pullback intensity** against that trend:
* A **lookback window (“Pullback Length”)** scans recent highs and lows:
* In an uptrend, it tracks the **highest high** over the window and measures how far the current low pulls back from that high.
* In a downtrend, it tracks the **lowest low** and measures how far the current high bounces up from that low.
* This distance is converted into a **“reversal pressure” value**:
* In a bullish bias, deeper pullbacks (lower lows relative to the recent high) indicate stronger counter-trend pressure.
* In a bearish bias, stronger rallies (higher highs relative to the recent low) indicate stronger counter-trend pressure.
The raw reversal pressure is then smoothed with a long-term moving average to separate normal retracements from **statistically significant extremes**.
4. Thresholds and Histogram Coloring
To avoid reacting to every minor pullback, the indicator builds a **dynamic threshold** using a combination of:
* Long-term averages of reversal pressure.
* Standard deviation of reversal pressure.
* High-percentile values of reversal behavior over different sample sizes.
From this, a **threshold line** is derived, and the script then compares the current reversal pressure to this adaptive level:
* The **Reversal Histogram** (column plot) represents the excess reversal pressure above its own long-term average.
* When:
* There is a valid bullish or bearish bias, and
* The histogram is above the dynamic threshold,
the bars of the histogram are **colored**:
* Blue (or a similar “positive” color) in bullish bias.
* Red/pink (or a similar “negative” color) in bearish bias.
* When reversal pressure is below threshold or bias is not relevant, the histogram remains **neutral gray**.
These colored histogram segments represent **“high-tension” pullback states**, where counter-trend pressure has reached an extreme that, historically, often resolves with the original trend continuing rather than fully reversing.
5. Continuation Level and Bar Coloring on Price Chart
To connect the oscillator logic back to the chart:
* A **continuation reference level** is computed on the price series:
* In an uptrend, this is derived by subtracting the threshold from recent highs.
* In a downtrend, it is derived by adding the threshold to recent lows.
* This level is plotted as a **line on the price chart** (only when the trend bias is stable), acting as a visual guide for:
* Potential continuation zones,
* Possible stop-placement or invalidation areas,
* Or filters for entries/exits.
The bars are then **colored** when price crosses or interacts with these levels in the direction of the trend:
* In a bullish bias, bars closing below the continuation level can be highlighted as potential **deep pullback/continuation opportunities** or as warning signals, depending on the user’s playbook.
* In a bearish bias, bars closing above the continuation level are similarly highlighted.
This makes it easy to see where the oscillator’s “extreme pullback” conditions align with structural movements on the actual price bars.
6. Embedded Win-Rate Estimation (WR Table)
The script also includes an internal **win-rate style metric (WR%)** displayed in a small table on the chart:
* It tracks occurrences where:
* A valid bullish or bearish bias is present, and
* The Reversal Histogram is **above the threshold** (i.e., histogram is colored).
* It then approximates the **probability that the trend bias does not change** following such high-pressure pullback events.
* The WR value is shown as a percentage and represents, in essence, the **historical trend-continuation rate** under these specific conditions over the most recent sample of events.
This is not a formal statistical test and does not guarantee future performance, but it provides a quick visual indication of how often these continuation setups have led to **trend persistence** in the recent past.
7. How to Use in Practice
Typical applications include:
Trend-following entries on pullbacks
Identify the main trend using either RVWAP or Market Structure mode.
Wait for a colored histogram bar (reversal pressure above threshold).
Use the continuation reference line and bar coloring on the price chart to refine entry zones or invalidation levels.
Filtering signals from other systems
Run the indicator in the background to confirm trend continuation conditions before taking signals from another strategy (e.g., breakouts or momentum entries).
Only act on long signals when the bias is bullish and a high-pressure pullback has recently occurred; similarly for short signals in bearish conditions.
Risk management and trend monitoring
Monitor when reversal pressure is building against your current position.
Use shifts in bias combined with high reversal pressure to re-evaluate or scale out of trend-following trades.
Recommended steps:
1. Choose your Trend Mode:
- RVWAP for smoother, regime-style trend detection.
- Market Structure for swing-based structural changes.
2. Adjust Trend Length and Pullback Length to match your timeframe (shorter for intraday, longer for swing/position trading).
3. Observe where histogram colors appear and how price reacts around the continuation line and highlighted bars.
4. Integrate these signals into a pre-defined trading plan with clear entry, exit, and risk rules.
8. Limitations and Disclaimer
* This tool is a **technical analysis aid**, not a complete trading system.
* Past behavior of trend continuation or reversal pressure does **not** guarantee future results.
* The embedded WR metric is a **descriptive statistic** based on recent historical conditions only; it is not a promise of performance or a robust statistical forecast.
* All parameters (lengths, thresholds, modes) are user-configurable and should be **tested and validated** on your own data, instruments, and timeframes before any live use.
Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Trading and investing in financial markets involve substantial risk, including the possible loss of all capital. You are solely responsible for your own trading decisions and for evaluating all information provided by this tool. OmegaTools and the author of this script expressly disclaim any liability for any direct or indirect loss resulting from the use of this indicator. Always consult with a qualified financial professional before making any investment decisions.
Trend Reversal by George - Reversal ColorsTrend Reversal by George - Reversal Colors
This indicator is designed to visually identify major shifts in market trends and signal trend continuity. By analyzing dynamic price action, it detects when market sentiment flips between bullish and bearish control.
The tool focuses on relying entirely on candlestick coloring to communicate market state:
Reversal Signals: Highlights specific bars with unique colors at the exact moment a trend changes direction, serving as potential entry or exit points.
Trend Continuation: Uses distinct colors to indicate when a trend has been established and is currently active (holding a position).
TrendMaster V2TrendMaster V2 is a comprehensive Pine Script indicator designed for TradingView. It combines multiple technical indicators and an advanced scoring logic to provide actionable trading signals. The script is highly customizable, allowing users to adjust trading modes, color themes, and signal filters according to their preferences and risk tolerance.
Key Features
Composite Scoring System:
The script calculates a composite score based on trend, momentum, pattern recognition, volume, volatility, divergence, Pearson correlation, and the CCI index. This score helps identify the best buy or sell opportunities.
Customizable Parameters:
Users can choose between “Aggressive,” “Balanced,” or “Conservative” trading modes, adjust indicator periods, and customize the color scheme of all visual elements.
Confluence Analysis:
The script evaluates the number of matching bullish or bearish signals, providing a confluence summary for higher-confidence trades.
Visual Signals:
Clear visual cues (triangles, circles, crosses) are displayed on the chart for strong buy/sell signals, confluences, and divergences.
Information Panels:
Two panels display real-time data such as score, RSI, volume, volatility, Pearson, CCI, trend, signal, and mode, along with the confluence status for quick reference.
Alert Conditions:
The script supports alerts for strong buy/sell signals, confluences, and divergences.
How It Works
Main Configuration:
Users select a trading mode (Aggressive, Balanced, or Conservative) and a color theme (Dark or Light).
Custom colors can also be set for bullish, bearish, strong, neutral, and signal elements.
Technical Indicators
Moving Averages (SMA/EMA) for trend analysis.
RSI to assess momentum and overbought/oversold conditions.
MACD for trend confirmation.
Volume and Volatility (ATR) for market activity evaluation.
Advanced Indicators
Pearson Correlation to measure trend strength.
CCI for cyclic momentum analysis.
Pattern Recognition
The script identifies common bullish and bearish reversal patterns (e.g., engulfing, hammer, morning/evening star) and continuation patterns (e.g., three white soldiers/black crows).
Composite Score
Each indicator contributes to a composite score, weighted according to the selected trading mode.
The score determines the strength of buy/sell signals.
Confluence Analysis
The script counts the number of matching bullish or bearish signals, providing a confluence summary for higher-confidence trades.
Visual Signals and Alerts
Strong buy/sell signals: triangles
Confluence signals: circles
Divergences: crosses
Alerts are triggered for strong buy/sell signals, confluences, and divergences.
Usage Instructions
Add the script to your TradingView chart.
Adjust the settings in the configuration panel to match your trading style.
Monitor the information panels and visual signals to spot trading opportunities.
Set up alerts for your preferred signal types.
Trend Duration Forecast [ChartPrime]⯁ OVERVIEW
The Trend Duration Forecast indicator is designed to estimate the probable lifespan of a bullish or bearish trend. Using a Hull Moving Average (HMA) to detect directional shifts, it tracks the duration of each historical trend and calculates an average to forecast how long the current trend is statistically likely to continue. This allows traders to visualize both real-time trend strength and potential exhaustion zones with exceptional clarity.
⯁ KEY FEATURES
Dynamic Trend Detection: Utilizes the Hull Moving Average to identify when price transitions into a new uptrend or downtrend.
Trend Duration Counting: Measures the number of bars in each completed bullish and bearish phase to understand trend persistence.
Forecast Projection: Automatically projects an estimated trend continuation line based on the average length of recent trends.
Real-Time Updates: Continuously updates the “Real Length” label as the trend develops.
Historical Data Table: Displays previous trend durations for both bullish and bearish cycles, along with their averages.
Adaptive Sampling: Uses a customizable sample size to smooth out volatility in the forecast and provide statistically meaningful projections.
Color-Based Clarity: Highlights uptrends in green and downtrends in orange for instant visual interpretation.
⯁ USAGE
Use the Trend Detection Sensitivity setting to control how fast or slow the indicator reacts to trend changes — lower values increase responsiveness, while higher values smooth out noise.
Compare the Real Length of the ongoing trend with the Probable Length forecast to estimate whether the move is nearing exhaustion.
Observe the historical duration table to understand the average lifespan of trends in the current market structure.
Use the color-coded HMA line and projection arrows to identify when momentum strength is fading and prepare for possible reversals.
Ideal for swing or trend-following strategies where trend longevity is crucial to managing entries and exits effectively.
⯁ CONCLUSION
The Trend Duration Forecast gives traders a quantitative edge by combining real-time trend tracking with statistical forecasting. It helps identify not only when a new trend begins, but also how long it’s likely to persist based on past market behavior. This indicator enhances timing precision for both entries and exits, supporting smarter trend-following decisions with clear, data-driven insights.
Trend TraderThe Trend Trader indicator is a trend-following tool based on a triple EMA (Exponential Moving Average) setup designed to help traders identify market direction and potential reversal zones. It plots three customizable EMAs on the chart to highlight bullish and bearish momentum, then generates trade signals when price shows a strong likelihood of continuing in the direction of the prevailing trend.
EMA Alignment: The indicator checks for bullish stacking (fast EMA above medium, medium above slow) and bearish stacking (fast EMA below medium, medium below slow). This alignment defines the prevailing market trend.
Trend Validation: A user-defined lookback period ensures signals are only taken if the market recently displayed a stacked trend, thus filtering false entries during consolidations.
Signal Generation: Buy signals appear when price dips into the zone between the fast and medium EMAs during a bullish trend. Sell signals appear when price rallies into the zone between the fast and medium EMAs during a bearish trend.
Alerts: Built-in alerts notify traders of new trade opportunities without having to constantly watch the chart.
This indicator is suitable for swing trading and intraday strategies across multiple markets, including forex, stocks, indices, and crypto.
Suggested Strategy for Profitability
This tool is best used as part of a structured trend-trading plan. Below is a suggested framework:
Entry Rules
Long (Buy Trade):
Confirm that EMA alignment is bullish (EMA1 > EMA2 > EMA3).
Wait for a Buy Signal (triangle up below price).
Ensure the higher timeframe (e.g., 4H if trading 1H) trend is also bullish to filter trades.
Short (Sell Trade):
Confirm EMA alignment is bearish (EMA1 < EMA2 < EMA3).
Wait for a Sell Signal (triangle down above price).
Higher timeframe should also be bearish to increase probability.
Stop Loss
For long positions, place the stop loss just below EMA3 or the most recent swing low.
For short positions, place the stop loss just above EMA3 or the most recent swing high.
Take Profit
Conservative: Set TP at 1.5x to 2x the stop loss distance.
Aggressive: Trail stop loss below EMA2 (for longs) or above EMA2 (for shorts) to capture larger trends.
Risk Management
Use no more than 1–2% of account risk per trade.
Trade only when the signal aligns with overall market context (higher timeframe, support/resistance, or volume confirmation).
This indicator is very similar to the indicator "Trend Scalper" by the same developer, the difference is this indicator is used to just find the trade and hold the trade or to find the reversal of a trend instead of triggering alerts every time price enters between EMA1 and EMA2.
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) [KedArc Quant]Description:
Trend Fib Zone Bounce (TFZB) trades with the latest confirmed Supply/Demand zone using a single, configurable Fib pullback (0.3/0.5/0.6). Trade only in the direction of the most recent zone and use a single, configurable fib level for pullback entries.
• Detects market structure via confirmed swing highs/lows using a rolling window.
• Draws Supply/Demand zones (bearish/bullish rectangles) from the latest MSS (CHOCH or BOS) event.
• Computes intra zone Fib guide rails and keeps them extended in real time.
• Triggers BUY only inside bullish zones and SELL only inside bearish zones when price touches the selected fib and closes back beyond it (bounce confirmation).
• Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + fib next to the triangle markers.
What it does
Finds structure using confirmed swing highs/lows (you choose the confirmation length).
Builds the latest zone (bullish = demand, bearish = supply) after a CHOCH/BOS event.
Draws intra-zone “guide rails” (Fib lines) and extends them live.
Signals only with the trend of that zone:
BUY inside a bullish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back above it.
SELL inside a bearish zone when price tags the selected Fib and closes back below it.
Optional labels print BULL/BEAR + Fib next to triangles for quick context
Why this is different
Most “zone + fib + signal” tools bolt together several indicators, or fire counter-trend signals because they don’t fully respect structure. TFZB is intentionally minimal:
Single bias source: the latest confirmed zone defines direction; nothing else overrides it.
Single entry rule: one Fib bounce (0.3/0.5/0.6 selectable) inside that zone—no counter-trend trades by design.
Clean visuals: you can show only the most recent zone, clamp overlap, and keep just the rails that matter.
Deterministic & transparent: every plot/label comes from the code you see—no external series or hidden smoothing
How it helps traders
Cuts decision noise: you always know the bias and the only entry that matters right now.
Forces discipline: if price isn’t inside the active zone, you don’t trade.
Adapts to volatility: pick 0.3 in strong trends, 0.5 as the default, 0.6 in chop.
Non-repainting zones: swings are confirmed after Structure Length bars, then used to build zones that extend forward (they don’t “teleport” later)
How it works (details)
*Structure confirmation
A swing high/low is only confirmed after Structure Length bars have elapsed; the dot is plotted back on the original bar using offset. Expect a confirmation delay of about Structure Length × timeframe.
*Zone creation
After a CHOCH/BOS (momentum shift / break of prior swing), TFZB draws the new Supply/Demand zone from the swing anchors and sets it active.
*Fib guide rails
Inside the active zone TFZB projects up to five Fib lines (defaults: 0.3 / 0.5 / 0.7) and extends them as time passes.
*Entry logic (with-trend only)
BUY: bar’s low ≤ fib and close > fib inside a bullish zone.
SELL: bar’s high ≥ fib and close < fib inside a bearish zone.
*Optionally restrict to one signal per zone to avoid over-trading.
(Optional) Aggressive confirm-bar entry
When do the swing dots print?
* The code confirms a swing only after `structureLen` bars have elapsed since that candidate high/low.
* On a 5-min chart with `structureLen = 10`, that’s about 50 minutes later.
* When the swing confirms, the script plots the dot back on the original bar (via `offset = -structureLen`). So you *see* the dot on the old bar, but it only appears on the chart once the confirming bar arrives.
> Practical takeaway: expect swing markers to appear roughly `structureLen × timeframe` later. Zones and signals are built from those confirmed swings.
Best timeframe for this Indicator
Use the timeframe that matches your holding period and the noise level of the instrument:
* Intraday :
* 5m or 15m are the sweet spots.
* Suggested `structureLen`:
* 5m: 10–14 (confirmation delay \~50–70 min)
* 15m: 8–10 (confirmation delay \~2–2.5 hours)
* Keep Entry Fib at 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in strong trends, 0.6 in chop.
* Tip: avoid the first 10–15 minutes after the open; let the initial volatility set the early structure.
* Swing/overnight:
* 1h or 4h.
* `structureLen`:
* 1h: 6–10 (6–10 hours confirmation)
* 4h: 5–8 (20–32 hours confirmation)
* 1m scalping: not recommended here—the confirmation lag relative to the noise makes zones less reliable.
Inputs (all groups)
Structure
• Show Swing Points (structureTog)
o Plots small dots on the bar where a swing point is confirmed (offset back by Structure Length).
• Structure Length (structureLen)
o Lookback used to confirm swing highs/lows and determine local structure. Higher = fewer, stronger swings; lower = more reactive.
Zones
• Show Last (zoneDispNum)
o Maximum number of zones kept on the chart when Display All Zones is off.
• Display All Zones (dispAll)
o If on, ignores Show Last and keeps all zones/levels.
• Zone Display (zoneFilter): Bullish Only / Bearish Only / Both
o Filters which zone types are drawn and eligible for signals.
• Clean Up Level Overlap (noOverlap)
o Prevents fib lines from overlapping when a new zone starts near the previous one (clamps line start/end times for readability).
Fib Levels
Each row controls whether a fib is drawn and how it looks:
• Toggle (f1Tog…f5Tog): Show/hide a given fib line.
• Level (f1Lvl…f5Lvl): Numeric ratio in . Defaults active: 0.3, 0.5, 0.7 (0 and 1 off by default).
• Line Style (f1Style…f5Style): Solid / Dashed / Dotted.
• Bull/Bear Colors (f#BullColor, f#BearColor): Per-fib color in bullish vs bearish zones.
Style
• Structure Color: Dot color for confirmed swing points.
• Bullish Zone Color / Bearish Zone Color: Rectangle fills (transparent by default).
Signals
• Entry Fib for Signals (entryFibSel): Choose 0.3, 0.5 (default), or 0.6 as the trigger line.
• Show Buy/Sell Signals (showSignals): Toggles triangle markers on/off.
• One Signal Per Zone (oneSignalPerZone): If on, suppresses additional entries within the same zone after the first trigger.
• Show Signal Text Labels (Bull/Bear + Fib) (showSignalLabels): Adds a small label next to each triangle showing zone bias and the fib used (e.g., BULL 0.5 or BEAR 0.3).
How TFZB decides signals
With trend only:
• BUY
1. Latest active zone is bullish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone (between top and bottom).
3. The bar’s low ≤ selected fib and it closes > selected fib (bounce).
• SELL
1. Latest active zone is bearish.
2. Current bar’s close is inside the zone.
3. The bar’s high ≥ selected fib and it closes < selected fib.
Markers & labels
• BUY: triangle up below the bar; optional label “BULL 0.x” above it.
• SELL: triangle down above the bar; optional label “BEAR 0.x” below it.
Right-Panel Swing Log (Table)
What it is
A compact, auto-updating log of the most recent Swing High/Low events, printed in the top-right of the chart.
It helps you see when a pivot formed, when it was confirmed, and at what price—so you know the earliest bar a zone-based signal could have appeared.
Columns
Type – Swing High or Swing Low.
Date – Calendar date of the swing bar (follows the chart’s timezone).
Swing @ – Time of the original swing bar (where the dot is drawn).
Confirm @ – Time of the bar that confirmed that swing (≈ Structure Length × timeframe after the swing). This is also the earliest moment a new zone/entry can be considered.
Price – The swing price (high for SH, low for SL).
Why it’s useful
Clarity on repaint/confirmation: shows the natural delay between a swing forming and being usable—no guessing.
Planning & journaling: quick reference of today’s pivots and prices for notes/backtesting.
Scanning intraday: glance to see if you already have a confirmed zone (and therefore valid fib-bounce entries), or if you’re still waiting.
Context for signals: if a fib-bounce triangle appears before the time listed in Confirm @, it’s not a valid trade (you were too early).
Settings (Inputs → Logging)
Log swing times / Show table – turn the table on/off.
Rows to keep – how many recent entries to display.
Show labels on swing bar – optional tags on the chart (“Swing High 11:45”, “Confirm SH 14:15”) that match the table.
Recommended defaults
• Structure Length: 10–20 for intraday; 20–40 for swing.
• Entry Fib for Signals: 0.5 to start; try 0.3 in stronger trends and 0.6 in choppier markets.
• One Signal Per Zone: ON (prevents over trading).
• Zone Display: Both.
• Fib Lines: Keep 0.3/0.5/0.7 on; turn on 0 and 1 only if you need anchors.
Alerts
Two alert conditions are available:
• BUY signal – fires when a with trend bullish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bullish zone.
• SELL signal – fires when a with trend bearish bounce at the selected fib occurs inside a bearish zone.
Create alerts from the chart’s Alerts panel and select the desired condition. Use Once Per Bar Close to avoid intrabar flicker.
Notes & tips
• Swing dots are confirmed only after Structure Length bars, so they plot back in time; zones built from these confirmed swings do not repaint (though they extend as new bars form).
• If you don’t see a BUY where you expect one, check: (1) Is the active zone bullish? (2) Did the candle’s low actually pierce the selected fib and close above it? (3) Is One Signal Per Zone suppressing a second entry?
• You can hide visual clutter by reducing Show Last to 1–3 while keeping Display All Zones off.
Glossary
• CHOCH (Change of Character): A shift where price breaks beyond the last opposite swing while local momentum flips.
• BOS (Break of Structure): A cleaner break beyond the prior swing level in the current momentum direction.
• MSS: Either CHOCH or BOS – any event that spawns a new zone.
Extension ideas (optional)
• Add fib extensions (1.272 / 1.618) for target lines.
• Zone quality score using ATR normalization to filter weak impulses.
• HTF filter to only accept zones aligned with a higher timeframe trend.
⚠️ Disclaimer This script is provided for educational purposes only.
Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Trading involves risk, and users should exercise caution and use proper risk management when applying this strategy.
Trend CandlesTrend Candles
Overview
The Trend Candles indicator is a simple yet effective tool designed to help traders visually identify the prevailing market trend. By combining candle coloring with a trend-based Exponential Moving Average (EMA), it enhances chart readability and makes trend-following strategies easier to apply.
Concepts
Exponential Moving Average (EMA): The EMA is a moving average that places more weight on recent price data. It reacts faster to price changes compared to a Simple Moving Average (SMA), making it well-suited for trend detection.
Trend Determination:
- If the EMA is rising (current EMA > previous EMA), the market is considered bullish.
- If the EMA is falling (current EMA < previous EMA), the market is considered bearish.
- If the EMA is flat (no significant change), no trend color is applied.
Candle Coloring:
- Green candles = Uptrend
- Purple candles = Downtrend
- Default candles = Sideways/Flat EMA
Features
- Trend Visualization: Candles automatically change color based on EMA slope, making it easy to spot bullish and bearish phases.
- Customizable EMA Length: The trader can set the EMA period (default is 50), allowing flexibility for short-term or long-term trend analysis.
- Overlay EMA Line: An orange EMA line is plotted on the chart for additional confirmation of the trend.
- Clean & Minimalist: Focuses on trend clarity without cluttering the chart with unnecessary signals.
How to Use
1. Apply the indicator to your chart.
2. Adjust the EMA Length as per your trading style (shorter = faster signals, longer = smoother trend).
3. Follow the candle color:
- Green = Favor long entries.
- Purple = Favor short entries.
- No color = Stay cautious, as trend is unclear.
4. Use with other confirmation tools (support/resistance, volume, or oscillators).
5. Users are encouraged to experiment with different EMA lengths. The default length is 50, but you can explore other values based on your needs. In particular, try Fibonacci numbers such as 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, and 233 to observe how trends behave differently.
Disclaimer
The information provided by the Trend Candles indicator is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk, and past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. Always do your own research and use risk management practices.
Trend Lines (only lines)[matteovesperi]Indicator Overview
The indicator, developed by matteovesperi, is an overlay tool that plots trend lines on price charts. It is designed to identify and connect pivot highs and lows over short-term, intermediate-term, and long-term periods, providing a visual representation of trends and potential support/resistance levels. The indicator is customizable, with options to adjust periods, toggle visibility, and manage performance for efficient use.
Key Points
The indicator plots trend lines based on pivot points for short-term, intermediate-term, and long-term periods.
It seems likely that it helps visualize trends and support/resistance levels across different time frames.
Research suggests users can customize periods and toggle line/label visibility for analysis.
Overview
This indicator overlays on price charts to show trend lines connecting pivot highs and lows, identified over customizable short, intermediate, and long-term periods. It uses color-coded lines for each period and allows toggling visibility.
Functionality
It detects pivots using lookback periods (e.g., default 3 for short-term, 15 for intermediate, 40 for long-term), draws lines between consecutive pivots, and can display prioritized labels. Lines are managed for performance, removing oldest when exceeding limits.
Usage
The indicator is particularly useful for traders and technical analysts seeking to understand trends across different time frames. By observing the direction and slope of the trend lines, users can gauge the strength and direction of trends. The pivot points and connecting lines can act as dynamic support and resistance levels, aiding in decision-making for entry and exit points.
The multi-timeframe capability allows for a comprehensive analysis, combining short-term price movements with longer-term trends. For example, a trader might use short-term lines for day trading signals while referring to long-term lines for overall market direction. The customizable periods enable adaptation to various trading styles and asset characteristics, enhancing flexibility.
Customization and User Experience
Users can adjust the lookback periods to suit their trading strategy, with ranges ensuring practical sensitivity (e.g., short-term minimum of 1, long-term maximum of 100). The ability to toggle line and label visibility provides control over chart clutter, allowing focus on specific periods. Color settings, while defaulted, can be adjusted for better visualization, though the provided RGB values suggest a grayscale theme for consistency.
Trend Scanner ProTrend Scanner Pro, Robust Trend Direction and Strength Estimator
Trend Scanner Pro is designed to evaluate the current market trend with maximum robustness, providing both direction and strength based on statistically reliable data.
This indicator builds upon the core logic of a previous script I developed, called Best SMA Finder. While the original script focused on identifying the most profitable SMA length based on backtested trade performance, Trend Scanner Pro takes that foundation further to serve a different purpose: analyzing and quantifying the actual trend state in real time.
It begins by testing hundreds of SMA lengths, from 10 to 1000 periods. Each one is scored using a custom robustness formula that combines profit factor, number of trades, and win rate. Only SMAs with a sufficient number of trades are retained, ensuring statistical validity and avoiding curve fitting.
The SMA with the highest robustness score is selected as the dynamic reference point. The script then calculates how far the price deviates from it using rolling standard deviation, assigning a trend strength score from -5 (strong bearish) to +5 (strong bullish), with 0 as neutral.
Two detection modes are available:
Slope mode, based on SMA slope reversals
Bias mode, based on directional shifts relative to deviation zones
Optional features:
Deviation bands for visual structure
Candle coloring to reflect trend strength
Compact table showing real-time trend status
This tool is intended for traders who want an adaptive, objective, and statistically grounded assessment of market trend conditions.
Trend Harvester PRO Trend Harvester PRO – Adaptive Trend-Following Strategy for Crypto
Trend Harvester PRO is a fully systematic trend-following strategy built for cryptocurrency markets on intraday timeframes — particularly optimized for the 1-hour chart. The script combines ZLEMA-based trend tracking, momentum confirmation, and a volatility-aware filter to detect high-probability directional moves with clarity and precision.
This is not a mashup of random indicators — each component serves a specific purpose in validating trends, avoiding choppy zones, and timing entries responsibly.
🔍 Strategy Logic Overview
The core objective is to detect sustainable, real-time trends and exit with multi-stage profit targets. To do this, the script uses several layers of confirmation:
1. 📊 ZLEMA Trend Engine (Zero Lag EMA)
This is the backbone of the strategy.
ZLEMA (Zero-Lag EMA) is a moving average that minimizes lag by adjusting for past data offset.
The strategy uses a fast ZLEMA and a slow ZLEMA, combined with a slope calculation, to assess the current trend.
When:
Fast ZLEMA > Slow ZLEMA
The ZLEMA is rising (positive slope)
→ The market is considered in an uptrend.
Conversely, if:
Fast ZLEMA < Slow ZLEMA
The slope is negative
→ The market is considered in a downtrend.
This setup detects not just direction, but also whether the trend has meaningful acceleration.
2. ⚡ Momentum Confirmation
Trend direction alone isn’t enough — we also need momentum agreement.
The script calculates a smoothed Rate of Change (ROC) to evaluate if momentum supports the direction of the ZLEMA trend.
For long trades: ROC must be positive
For short trades: ROC must be negative
This prevents taking trades where price is crossing moving averages but lacks follow-through power.
3. 🌪️ Volatility Filter
Choppy markets are common in crypto. To reduce false signals:
The script compares short-term volatility (10-bar standard deviation of price changes) to longer-term volatility.
If the ratio is too high (i.e., short-term volatility is spiking), the strategy avoids entry.
This ensures trades are only taken when the market is relatively calm and directional — avoiding false breakouts.
4. 🧠 Confirmation Bars + Trend State
Signals only trigger after a certain number of consecutive bars confirm trend direction (confirmBars).
This prevents reacting to just 1 candle and requires consistent evidence of trend.
A state machine is used to track current trend status:
+1 = confirmed uptrend
-1 = confirmed downtrend
0 = neutral / no trade
This trend state changes only after all conditions are met and confirmation bars pass.
5. 🧊 Cooldown Enforcement
After a trade exits (from TP or a trend reversal), the strategy enforces a cooldown period before new entries are allowed. This:
Prevents back-to-back entries on trend flips
Reduces overtrading
Helps avoid whipsaws or same-bar reversal trades
6. 🎯 Multi-Level Take Profits (TP1 & TP2)
Once a trade is entered:
Two limit exits are set automatically:
TP1: Closes 50% of the position at a configurable profit level
TP2: Closes the remaining 50%
If the trend weakens before TP2 is reached, the position is closed early.
Both long and short trades use the same logic, with user-defined percentages.
This system allows for partial profit-taking while keeping a portion of the trade running.
7. 🧾 Built-in Dashboard
The script includes a real-time dashboard showing:
Trend direction: Bullish, Bearish, or Neutral
Whether TP1 / TP2 was hit
Entry price
If currently in a trade
How many bars the trade has been open
This helps monitor strategy performance at a glance without needing extra labels.
8. 🔔 Webhook-Compatible Alerts
The strategy includes custom alerts that can be used for:
Long and Short entries
TP1 and TP2 hits
Exiting trades
These can be integrated into automated bot systems or used manually.
🔒 Non-Repainting Logic
The strategy uses only confirmed bar data (i.e., values from closed bars).
There are no repainting indicators.
Entries and exits are placed using strategy.entry and strategy.exit on confirmed conditions.
✅ How to Use It
Apply the strategy to 1H altcoin charts (BTC, ETH, SOL, etc.).
Tune the TP percentages (longTP1Pct, longTP2Pct, etc.) based on volatility.
Use the dashboard to monitor trend state and trade progress.
Combine with additional tools (like support/resistance or volume) for higher confluence.
Use the date filter to run backtests over defined periods.
⚠️ Risk Management Notice
This strategy does not include stop losses by default. It is designed to exit based on trend reversal or take-profit limits.
Always backtest thoroughly and use realistic sizing.
Do not risk more than 5–10% of your account on any trade.
Past results do not guarantee future performance. This tool is for educational and research purposes.
🧬 What Makes This Original
Trend Harvester PRO was built from scratch with tightly integrated logic:
ZLEMA tracks early trend direction with low lag
ROC confirms momentum in the same direction
Volatility filter avoids false setups
Multi-bar confirmation and cooldown logic control trade pacing
Dual TP exits manage partial profit-taking
A live dashboard makes real-time tracking intuitive
Unlike mashups of indicators with no synergy, each component here directly supports the quality of trade decisions, and the logic is modular, transparent, and non-repainting.
Trend Targets [AlgoAlpha]OVERVIEW
This script combines a smoothed trend-following model with dynamic price rejection logic and ATR-based target projection to give traders a complete visual framework for trading trend continuations. It overlays on price and automatically detects potential trend shifts, confirms rejections near dynamic support/resistance, and displays calculated stop-loss and take-profit levels to support structured risk-reward management. Unlike traditional indicators that only show trend direction or signal entries, this tool brings together a unique mix of signal validation, volatility-aware positioning, and layered profit-taking to guide decision-making with more context.
CONCEPTS
The core trend logic is built on a custom Supertrend that uses an ATR-based band structure with long smoothing chains—first through a WMA, then an EMA—allowing the trend line to respond to major shifts while ignoring noise. A key addition is the use of rejection logic: the script looks for consolidation candles that "hug" the smoothed trend line and counts how many consecutive bars reject from it. This behavior often precedes significant moves. A user-defined threshold filters out weak tests and highlights only meaningful rejections.
FEATURES
Trend Detection : Automatically identifies trend direction using a smoothed Supertrend (WMA + EMA), with shape markers on trend shifts and color-coded bars for clarity.
Rejection Signals : Detects price rejections at the trend line after a user-defined number of consolidation bars; plots ▲/▼ icons to highlight strong continuation setups.
Target Projection : On trend confirmation, plots entry, stop-loss (ATR-based), and three dynamic take-profit levels based on customizable multiples.
Dynamic Updates : All levels (entry, SL, TP1–TP3) auto-adjust based on volatility and are labeled in real time on the chart.
Customization : Users can tweak trend parameters, rejection confirmation count, SL/TP ratios, smoothing lengths, and appearance settings.
Alerts : Built-in alerts for trend changes, rejection events, and when TP1, TP2, or TP3 are reached.
Chart Overlay : Plots directly on price chart with minimal clutter and clearly labeled levels for easy trading.
USAGE
Start by tuning the Supertrend factor and ATR period to fit your asset and timeframe—higher values will catch bigger swings, lower values catch faster moves. The confirmation count should match how tightly you want to filter rejection behavior—higher values make signals rarer but stronger. When the trend shifts, the indicator colors the bars and line accordingly, and if enabled, plots the full entry-TP-SL structure. Rejection markers appear only after enough qualifying bars confirm price pressure at the trend line. This is especially useful for continuation plays where price retests the trend but fails to break it. All calculations are based on volatility (ATR), so targets naturally adjust with market conditions. Add alerts to get notified of important signals even when away from the chart.
Trend Strength MeterThe Trend Strength Meter (TSM) is a powerful and versatile indicator designed to help traders identify market trends, measure their strength, and detect potential reversals with ease. This indicator combines the power of moving averages, divergence detection, and a clean, customizable dashboard to provide actionable insights for traders of all levels.
How It Works
Trend Strength Calculation:
1. The TSM calculates the trend strength using the difference between two Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs): a fast EMA (default: 20) and a slow EMA (default: 50).
2. The difference is expressed as a percentage of the slow EMA, providing a clear measure of the trend's strength and direction.
Histogram Visualization:
1. A color-coded histogram visually represents the trend strength:
Green: Bullish trend
Red: Bearish trend
Gray: Neutral or no significant trend
2. A smoothed trend strength line (SMA of the trend strength) is also plotted for better clarity.
Divergence Detection:
1. The indicator detects bullish and bearish divergences using the RSI (Relative Strength Index) and price action.
2. Bullish Divergence: Price makes a lower low, but RSI makes a higher low, signaling potential upward momentum.
3. Bearish Divergence: Price makes a higher high, but RSI makes a lower high, signaling potential downward momentum.
=> Divergences are marked with arrows on the chart:
Green Arrow: Bullish divergence
Red Arrow: Bearish divergence
Dashboard:
1. A clean and informative dashboard displays key information:
Trend Strength Value: The current strength of the trend
Trend Direction: Bullish, Bearish, or Neutral
Last Signal: Buy, Sell, or None (based on divergence signals)
The dashboard is fully customizable and can be positioned anywhere on the chart (e.g., top-right, bottom-left, center, etc.).
Key Features
1. Trend Strength Measurement: Quickly identify the strength and direction of the trend.
2. Divergence Detection: Spot potential reversals before they occur with bullish and bearish divergence signals.
3. Customizable Dashboard: Move the dashboard to your preferred location on the chart for better visibility.
4. User-Friendly Design: Clean visuals and intuitive color coding make it easy to interpret market conditions.
5. Actionable Signals: Provides clear Buy/Sell signals based on divergence, helping traders make informed decisions.
How to Use
1. Trend Confirmation:
Use the histogram and trend strength value to confirm the current market trend.
Green bars indicate a bullish trend, while red bars indicate a bearish trend.
2. Divergence Signals:
Look for divergence arrows (green for bullish, red for bearish) to anticipate potential reversals.
Combine divergence signals with other technical analysis tools for higher accuracy.
3. Dashboard Insights:
Monitor the dashboard for real-time updates on trend strength, direction, and the latest signal.
Use the "Last Signal" (Buy/Sell) to validate your trading decisions.
4. Custom Settings:
Adjust the EMA lengths and divergence lookback period to suit your trading style and timeframe.
Position the dashboard anywhere on the chart for convenience.
Best Practices
1. Use the TSM in conjunction with other indicators or price action analysis for confirmation.
2. Test the indicator on different timeframes to find the one that works best for your strategy.
3. Always practice proper risk management when trading.
Disclaimer
This indicator is a tool to assist in technical analysis and should not be used as a standalone trading strategy. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own research and consult with a financial advisor before making trading decisions.
Trend Hunter Scalping [Daddin Algo]Trend Hunter Scalping Strategy Description
This strategy is a comprehensive scalping system designed to capture high-frequency trading opportunities within short timeframes. It combines multiple technical indicators to assess trend direction, momentum, volatility, and volume dynamics. Importantly, all parameters are user-adjustable, allowing the strategy to be optimized for various market conditions and individual preferences.
Technical Indicators and Settings
EMA (Exponential Moving Average):
The EMA is calculated based on a user-defined period. Rather than being fixed (e.g., a 200-period EMA), the period is adjustable to suit different market conditions. The position of the price relative to the EMA helps confirm the overall trend.
RSI & RSIOver:
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) measures momentum and the speed of price changes. Entry signals are generated when the RSI crosses its moving average. Additionally, overbought and oversold thresholds (set by the user) add an extra layer of confirmation for the signals.
ADX:
The Average Directional Index (ADX) assesses the strength of the current trend. When the ADX is above a user-specified threshold, the signals are considered more reliable. This helps in filtering out signals during weak trending periods.
Bollinger Bands:
Bollinger Bands gauge market volatility. The settings—including the length and the multiplier—are adjustable, providing flexibility to accommodate tightening or expanding volatility conditions.
Parabolic SAR:
This indicator identifies dynamic support and resistance levels, confirming the trend direction and helping pinpoint potential entry and exit points.
Pivot Levels (Fibonacci):
Calculated from the previous period's high, low, and close, pivot points and Fibonacci levels indicate potential reversal points and serve as support and resistance levels. These levels provide context for setting trailing stops and managing risk.
Volume Filter:
A volume condition ensures that trading signals are only considered valid when the current volume exceeds a multiple of its short-term moving average. This filter is adjustable, helping to confirm the strength of the market move.
Daddin Line:
Derived from a short-term moving average of the closing prices with a user-defined offset, the Daddin Line acts as an additional confirmation tool. Its parameters can be customized to better align with specific trading environments.
Trading Logic and Management
Signal Direction and Entry:
The strategy can generate both long (buy) and short (sell) signals, or be limited to one direction based on user preference. Entry orders are executed when all the selected indicator conditions are met. Additionally, maximum consecutive trade limits are implemented to help control risk.
Exit & Take Profit:
Trades are exited automatically when a user-defined profit percentage is reached. This take-profit percentage is flexible, enabling adjustments to match different market conditions or trading goals.
Trailing Stop (Dynamic Stop Loss):
A trailing stop mechanism is implemented using Fibonacci pivot levels. Once a position is open, the stop loss is dynamically updated as the price moves favorably. This ensures that profits are protected while minimizing losses in case of a sudden reversal.
Additional Features and Backtesting
Time Filtering (Backtesting):
The strategy includes a date range filter for backtesting. Users can define the start and end dates to evaluate the strategy’s performance during specific market periods, making it easier to assess its historical effectiveness.
Customizable Parameters:
Every indicator and risk management setting is fully customizable. This adaptability allows traders to tailor the strategy to different assets, timeframes, and market environments, ensuring optimal performance across diverse trading scenarios.
Conclusion
The Trend Hunter Scalping strategy effectively integrates multiple technical indicators to validate trends and manage risks efficiently. Its highly flexible, user-adjustable parameters make it adaptable to varying market conditions, providing traders with a robust framework for capturing quick trading opportunities.This strategy is designed to optimize both entry and exit points while offering comprehensive risk management controls.
Trend CounterTREND COUNTER is a Trend Exhaustion Indicator that tracks the persistence of price movements over a series of bars, helping traders identify potential trend exhaustion and reversals.
It compares each bar's value (typically the closing price) to a previous bar from a set lookback period (the lookback bar), counting consecutive bullish or bearish price movements.
The count resets when the trend reverses, signaling a potential shift in momentum.
• Price movement is considered bullish if the current price exceeds the lookback bar's price, incrementing the bullish count with each consecutive occurrence.
• Price movement is considered bearish if the current price is lower than the lookback bar's price, incrementing the bearish count with each consecutive occurrence.
• The count resets when the trend reverses.
• The user sets the threshold for sequence resets by defining the maximum number of consecutive occurrences.
• The count may reset before a trend reversal if it surpasses the user-defined threshold.
This type of indicator is useful for detecting trends, trend exhaustion, overbought or oversold conditions, and potential reversal points, helping traders anticipate market turns.
• Sequential occurrences gauge trend strength.
A long sequence of bullish bars suggests strong upward momentum, while consecutive bearish bars indicate sustained downward pressure.
This helps traders assess whether a trend is likely to continue or weaken.
• Identify thresholds for potential reversal points.
Counting consecutive bullish or bearish price movements can highlight overextended trends.
A trend reaching a predefined threshold may signal an upcoming reversal or momentum slowdown.
• Identify potential entry or exit points.
If trends are showing signs of exhaustion after a certain number of consecutive price movements, traders may use this for timing adjustments to their position.
• Assess risk.
Understanding trend strength helps traders better adjust stop-loss or take-profit levels.
Sequential counting provides a structured approach to trade management.
Visualization & Customization
The Sequential Momentum indicator visually represents consecutive bullish or bearish price movements to define trends and highlight key shifts.
• The bullish/bearish bar sequences are based on user-defined thresholds.
• Customizable bar coloring, labels, and plot shapes enhanced trend visualization.
• Dynamic color transitions make trend shifts easily identifiable.
Tracking consecutive bullish or bearish price movements can be effective when combined with other indicators or applied in specific market conditions (e.g., trending or volatile markets).
However, its reliability depends on market conditions and the trader’s interpretation.
This indicator is best used as a complementary tool rather than a standalone signal, helping traders visualize and quantify market momentum within a broader strategy.
Trend Trading IndicatorTrend Trading Indicator – Pine Script v5
Overview
The Trend Trading Indicator is designed to help traders identify market trends quickly and effectively. It highlights uptrends and downtrends using Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs) and provides clear buy and sell signals. The indicator is especially useful for detecting insider movements, marketing-driven price pumps, and potential death spirals in crypto and stock markets.
Key Features
✅ Fast-acting trend detection based on EMAs
✅ Clear buy & sell signals marked in blue (BUY) and red (SELL)
✅ Trend zones visually highlighted:
Green for bullish trends (uptrend)
Red for bearish trends (downtrend)
✅ Bold and visible labels for buy and sell signals
✅ Protects against insider selling & marketing hype cycles
✅ Alerts for crossover events
How It Works
Exponential Moving Averages (EMAs)
Short EMA (default: 50-period) represents fast market movement.
Long EMA (default: 100-period) represents slower trends.
When short EMA crosses above long EMA, it signals a buy opportunity.
When short EMA crosses below long EMA, it signals a sell opportunity.
Trend Zones
The area between the two EMAs is color-filled for better trend visualization.
Green Fill: Indicates a bullish trend where short EMA is above long EMA.
Red Fill: Indicates a bearish trend where short EMA is below long EMA.
Buy & Sell Labels
Buy Signal: Blue label “BUY” appears below the candle.
Sell Signal: Red label “SELL” appears above the candle.
Text is in black & bold for better visibility.
Alerts
Custom alerts notify traders when buy or sell conditions occur.
How to Use
Works best in crypto, forex, and stock markets.
Can be used in trend-following or breakout strategies.
Best suited for medium to long-term trades (adjust EMA settings for scalping).
This Trend Trading Indicator helps traders stay ahead of the market by visually identifying strong trends while reducing risks from insider manipulation and death spirals. 🚀
Trend Signals with TP & SL [UAlgo] StrategyThe "Trend Signals with TP & SL Strategy" is a trading strategy designed to capture trend continuation signals while incorporating sophisticated risk management techniques. This strategy is tailored for traders who wish to capitalize on trending market conditions with precise entry and exit points, automatically calculating Take Profit (TP) and Stop Loss (SL) levels based on either Average True Range (ATR) or percentage values. The strategy aims to enhance trade management by preventing multiple simultaneous positions and dynamically adapting to changing market conditions.
This strategy is highly configurable, allowing traders to adjust sensitivity, the ATR calculation method, and the cloud moving average length. Additionally, the strategy can display buy and sell signals directly on the chart, along with visual representation of entry points, stop losses, and take profits. It also features a cloud-based trend analysis using a MACD-driven color fill that indicates the strength and direction of the trend.
🔶 Key Features
Configurable Trend Continuation Signals:
Source Selection: The strategy uses the midpoint of the high-low range as the default source, but it is adjustable.
Sensitivity: The sensitivity of the trend signals can be adjusted using a multiplier, ranging from 0.5 to 5.
ATR Calculation: The strategy allows users to choose between two ATR calculation methods for better adaptability to different market conditions.
Cloud Moving Average: Traders can adjust the cloud moving average length, which is used in conjunction with MACD to provide a visual trend indication.
Take Profit & Stop Loss Management:
ATR-Based or Percent-Based: The strategy offers flexibility in setting TP and SL levels, allowing traders to choose between ATR-based multipliers or fixed percentage values.
Dynamic Adjustment: TP and SL levels are dynamically adjusted according to the selected method, ensuring trades are managed based on real-time market conditions.
Prevention of Multiple Positions:
Single Position Control: To reduce risk and enhance strategy reliability, the strategy includes an option to prevent multiple positions from being opened simultaneously.
Visual Trade Indicators:
Buy/Sell Signals: Clearly displays buy and sell signals on the chart for easy interpretation.
Entry, SL, and TP Lines: Draws lines for entry price, stop loss, and take profit directly on the chart, helping traders to monitor trades visually.
Trend Cloud: A color-filled cloud based on MACD and the cloud moving average provides a visual cue of the trend’s direction and strength.
Performance Summary Table:
In-Chart Statistics: A table in the top right of the chart displays key performance metrics, including total trades, wins, losses, and win rate percentage, offering a quick overview of the strategy’s effectiveness.
🔶 Interpreting the Indicator
Trend Signals: The strategy identifies trend continuation signals based on price action relative to an ATR-based threshold. A buy signal is generated when the price crosses above a key level, indicating an uptrend. Conversely, a sell signal occurs when the price crosses below a level, signaling a downtrend.
Cloud Visualization: The cloud, derived from MACD and moving averages, changes color to reflect the current trend. A positive cloud in aqua suggests an uptrend, while a red cloud indicates a downtrend. The transparency of the cloud offers further nuance, with more solid colors denoting stronger trends.
Entry and Exit Management: Once a trend signal is generated, the strategy automatically sets TP and SL levels based on your chosen method (ATR or percentage). The stop loss and take profit lines will appear on the chart, showing where the strategy will exit the trade. If the price reaches either the SL or TP, the trade is closed, and the respective line is deleted from the chart.
Performance Metrics: The strategy’s performance is tracked in real-time with an in-chart table. This table provides essential information about the number of trades executed, the win/loss ratio, and the overall win rate. This information helps traders assess the strategy's effectiveness and make necessary adjustments.
This strategy is designed for those who seek to engage with trending markets, offering robust tools for entry, exit, and overall trade management. By understanding and leveraging these features, traders can potentially improve their trading outcomes and risk management.
🔷 Related Script
🔶 Disclaimer
Use with Caution: This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered as financial advice. Users should exercise caution and perform their own analysis before making trading decisions based on the indicator's signals.
Not Financial Advice: The information provided by this indicator does not constitute financial advice, and the creator (UAlgo) shall not be held responsible for any trading losses incurred as a result of using this indicator.
Backtesting Recommended: Traders are encouraged to backtest the indicator thoroughly on historical data before using it in live trading to assess its performance and suitability for their trading strategies.
Risk Management: Trading involves inherent risks, and users should implement proper risk management strategies, including but not limited to stop-loss orders and position sizing, to mitigate potential losses.
No Guarantees: The accuracy and reliability of the indicator's signals cannot be guaranteed, as they are based on historical price data and past performance may not be indicative of future results.
Trend and Reversal ScannerHello Traders!
The TRN Trend and Reversal Scanner highlights in a user-friendly and easy to read table trend and reversal signals from up to 20 assets of your choosing. With it, you can efficiently monitor your preferred instruments simultaneously without jumping from one chart to the next. You will never miss a signal again. The indicator automatically finds swing-based up and down trends, bullish and bearish divergences, detects ranges and range breakouts as well as trend and reversal signals by the built-in trend detection algorithm called TRN Bars. Furthermore, you can conveniently stay updated with real-time alerts, notifying you whenever the scanner finds interesting market situations.
Feature List
Swing-based up and down trend detection
Divergence detection for any given (Custom) Indicator
Price range and breakout detection
Bar trend and reversal detection
Scanner alerts
The value of this indicator is to support traders to easily identify trend-based signals in an automated way and across many different markets at the same time. The trader saves a lot of time scanning the markets for up and down swings, divergences, consolidations and bar pattern-based trends and reversals, since finding and alerting these signals is done automatically for the trader.
For a visualization of the detected signals, you can add the TRN Bars and the Swing Suite indicator to your chart.
How does Trend Scanner work?
On the right side of the chart, you can find a table displaying the symbols monitored by the TRN Trend and Reversal Scanner for signal detection (first column). The table provides information on the status of each symbol. This visual representation allows you to quickly identify evolving signals across different symbols, helping you stay informed and make timely trading decisions.
The scanner operates specifically on the timeframe you are currently viewing, ensuring that the detected signals align precisely with your trading perspective.
In the following, we will describe the different signals displayed in the different columns of the table
Column 1 – Symbols
Column 2 – Bar Trend & Signals
Column 3 – Up & Down Swing Trend
Column 4 – Ranges & Range Breakouts
Column 5 – Bullish Divergences
Column 6 – Bearish Divergences
Bar Trend & Signals
In the second column, you can observe the status of TRN Bars, the built-in trend detection algorithm.
UP – Uptrend
DN – Downtrend
REV (Green) – Bullish Reversal Bar
REV (Red) – Bearish Reversal Bar
CON (Green) – Bullish Continuation Bar
CON (Red) – Bearish Continuation Bar
B/O (Green) – Bullish Range Breakout Bar
B/O (Red) – Bearish Range Breakout Bar
TRN Bars is designed to spot bullish and bearish trends and reversals. The trend analysis is based on a new algorithm that weights several different inputs:
classical and advanced bar patterns and their statistical frequency
probability distributions of price expansions after certain bar patterns
bar information such as wick length in %, overlapping of the previous bar in % and many more
historical trend and consolidation analysis
It provides high-probability trend continuation analysis and reversal detections.
Up and Downtrend
The second column (Trend) indicates whether the price of the asset moves within an uptrend (UP) or a downtrend (DN), as detected by our unique swing detection algorithm, on the selected timeframe.
The swing detection algorithm identifies pivot points (swings) with high accuracy. It works in real-time and does not need a look-a-head to find swings.
Ranges & Range Breakouts
The third column provides insights into the price behavior of a symbol within the selected timeframe, as analyzed by the range feature of the TRN Bars algorithm.
ACTIVE – Price moves within a price range
UP – Breakout detected
DN – Breakdown detected
UP CONF – Breakout confirmed
DN CONF – Breakdown confirmed
The bar range feature automatically finds consolidations where the price range of several consecutives bars is rather small. The detection of the bar ranges includes among other things the overlapping percentage of these bars.
Divergence Detection for any given (Custom) Indicator
The divergence detector finds with unrivaled precision bullish and bearish as well as regular and hidden divergences. The main difference compared to other divergences indicators is that this indicator finds rigorously the extreme peaks of each swing, both in price and in the corresponding indicator. This precision is unmatched and therefore this is one of the best divergences detectors.
The build in divergence detector works with any given indicator, even custom ones. In addition, there are 11 built-in indicators. Most noticeable is the cumulative delta indicator, which works astonishingly well as a divergence indicator. Full list:
External Indicator (see next section for the setup)
Awesome Oscillator (AO)
Commodity Channel Index (CCI)
Cumulative Delta Volume (CDV)
Chaikin Money Flow (CMF)
Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)
Money Flow Index (MFI)
Momentum
On Balance Volume (OBV)
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
Stochastic
Williams Percentage Range (W%R)
Another highlight of the divergence detection is that it works with every indicator, even custom ones. To do this, you must add the (custom) indicator to your chart. Afterwards, simply go to the “Divergence Detection” section in the indicator settings and choose "External Indicator". If the custom indicator has one reference value, then choose this value in the “External Indicator (High)” field. If there are high and low values (e.g. candles), then you also must set the “External Indicator Low” field.
The visualization of the divergence detection is represented in the fifth column (Div Bull) and the sixth and last column (Div Bear).
REG – Regular divergence detected
HID – Hidden divergence detected
Scanner Alerts
You can opt to receive alerts for the following scenarios:
Detected up and down swings
Detected bullish and bearish divergences
Detected bar trend changes
Confirmed Reversal Bars
Confirmed Continuation Bars
Confirmed ange breakouts
The alert function is activated for all symbols listed in the scanner and corresponds to the timeframe of the chart you are currently viewing. This ensures that you receive alerts specifically tailored to the symbols and timeframe you are interested in.
Risk Disclaimer
The content, tools, scripts, articles, and educational resources offered by TRN Trading are intended solely for informational and educational purposes. Remember, past performance does not ensure future outcomes.
Trend Line XrossTrend Line Xross (TLX) Uses User Input Points to draw trendlines and displays the exact intersection point of those trendlines.
This is the public indicator of the practical application for this intersection method included in my entry for Pinefest #1.
To determine the exact intersection point I am using the y-intercept method as seen below.
The code is notated for more information on the technical workings.
One difference to note between this version and the pinefest version is that I had to change the line drawings to use bar_index values so that I can use line.get_price() to grab the current value of the line to make alerts from.
Additionally, there are alerts built-in to this version for every type of cross on all of the visible lines.
Enjoy!
YinYang TrendTrend Analysis has always been an important aspect of Trading. There are so many important types of Trend Analysis and many times it may be difficult to identify what to use; let alone if an Indicator can/should be used in conjunction with another. For these exact reasons, we decided to make YinYang Trend. It is a Trend Analysis Toolkit which features many New and many Well Known Trend Analysis Indicators. However, everything in there is added specifically for the reason that it may work well in conjunction with the other Indicators prevalent within. You may be wondering, why bother including common Trend Analysis, why not make everything unique? Ideally, we would, however, you need to remember Trend Analysis may be one of the most common forms of charting. Therefore, many other traders may be using similar Trend Analysis either through plotting manually or within other Indicators. This all boils down to Psychology; you are trading against other traders, who may be seeing some of the similar information you are, and therefore, you may likewise want to see this information. What affects their trading decisions may affect yours as well.
Now enough about Trend Analysis, what is within this Indicator, and what does it do? Well, first let’s quickly mention all of its components, then we will, through a Tutorial, discuss each individually and finally how each comes together as a cohesive whole. This Indicator features many aspects:
Bull and Bear Signals
Take Profit Signals
Bull and Bear Zones
Information Tables displaying: (Boom Meter, Bull/Bear Strength, Yin/Yang State)
16 Cipher Signals
Extremes
Pivots
Trend Lines
Custom Bollinger Bands
Boom Meter Bar Colors
True Value Zones
Bar Strength Indexes
Volume Profile
There are many things to cover within our Tutorial so let's get started, chronologically from the list above.
Tutorial:
Bull and Bear Signals:
We’ve zoomed out quite a bit for this example to help give you a broader aspect of how these Bull and Bear signals work. When a signal appears, it is displaying that there may be a large amount of Bullish or Bearish Trend Analysis occurring. These signals will remain in their state of Bull or Bear until there is enough momentum change that they change over. There are a couple Options within the Settings that dictate when/where/why these signals appear, and this example is using their default Settings of ‘Medium’. They are, Purchase Speed and Purchase Strength. Purchase Speed refers to how much Price Movement is needed for a signal to occur and Purchase Strength refers to how many verifications are required for a signal to occur. For instance:
'High' uses 15 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Medium' uses 10 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Low' uses 5 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Very Low' uses 3 verifications to ensure signal strength.
By default it is set to Medium (10 verifications). This means each verification is worth 10%. The verifications used are also relevant to the Purchase Speed; meaning they will be verified faster or slower depending on its speed setting. You may find that Faster Speeds and Lower Verifications may work better on Higher Time Frames; and Slower Speeds and Higher Verifications may work better on Lower Time Frames.
We will demonstrate a few examples as to how the Speed and Strength Settings work, and why it may be beneficial to adjust based on the Time Frame you’re on:
In this example above, we’ve kept the same Time Frame (1 Day), and scope; but we’ve changed Purchase Speed from Medium->Fast and Purchase Strength from Medium-Very Low. As you can see, it now generates quite a few more signals. The Speed and Strength settings that you use will likely be based on your trading style / strategy. Are you someone who likes to stay in trades longer or do you like to swing trade daily? Likewise, how do you go about identifying your Entry / Exit locations; do you start on the 1 Day for confirmation, then move to the 15/5 minute for your entry / exit? How you trade may determine which Speed and Strength settings work right for you. Let's jump to a lower Time Frame now so you can see how it works on the 15/5 minute.
Above is what BTC/USDT looks like on the 15 Minute Time Frame with Purchase Speed and Strength set to Medium. You may note that the signals require a certain amount of movement before they get started. This is normal with Medium and the amount of movement is generally dictated by the Time Frame. You may choose to use Medium on a Lower Time Frame as it may work well, but it may also be best to change it to a little slower.
We are still on the 15 Minute Time Frame here, however we simply changed Purchase Speed from Medium->Slow. As you can see, lots of the signals have been removed. Now signals may ‘hold their ground’ for much longer. It is important to adjust your Purchase Speed and Strength Settings to your Time Frame and personalized trading style accordingly.
Above we have now jumped down to the 5 Minute Time Frame. Our Purchase Speed is Slow and our Purchase Strength is Medium. We can see it looks pretty good, although there is some signal clustering going on in the middle there. If we change our Settings, we may be able to get rid of that.
We have changed our Purchase Speed from Slow->Snail (Slowest it can go) and Purchase Strength from Medium->Very Low (Lowest it can go). Changing it from Slow-Snail helped get rid of the signal clustering. You may be wondering why we lowered the Strength from Medium->Very Low, rather than going from Medium->High. This is a use case scenario and one you’ll need to decide for yourself, but we noticed when we changed the Speed from Slow->Snail that the signal clustering was gone, so then we checked both High and Very Low for Strengths to see which produced the best looking signal locations.
Please remember, you don’t have to use it the exact way we’ve displayed in this Tutorial. It is meant to be used to suit your Trading Style and Strategy. This is why we allow you to modify these settings, rather than just automating the change based on Time Frames. You’ll likely need to play around with it, as you’ll notice different settings may work better on certain pairs and Time Frames than others.
Take Profit Signals:
We’ve reset our Purchase Settings, everything is on defaults right now at Medium. We’ve enabled Take Profit signals. As you can see there are both Take Profit signals for the Bulls and the Bears. These signals are not meant to be used within automation. In fact, none of this indicator is. These signals are meant to show there has been a strong change in momentum, to such an extent that the signal may switch from its current (Bull or Bear) and now may be a good time to Take Profit. Your Take Profit Settings likewise has a Speed and Strength, and you can set them differently than your Purchase Settings. This is in case you want to Take Profit in a different manner than your Purchase Signals. For instance:
In the example above we’ve kept Purchase Strength and Speed at Medium but we changed our Take Profit Speed from Medium->Snail and our Take Profit Strength from medium->Very Low. This greatly reduces the amount of Take Profit signals, and in some cases, none are even produced. This form of Take Profit may act more as a Trailing Take Profit that if it’s not hit, nothing appears.
In this example we have changed our Purchase Speed from Medium->Fast, our Purchase Strength from Medium->Very Low. We’ve also changed our Take Profit Speed from Snail->Medium and kept our Take Profit Strength on Very Low. Now we may get our signals quicker and likewise our Take Profit may be more rare. There are many different ways you can set up your Purchase and Take Profit Settings to fit your Trading Style / Strategy.
Bull and Bear Zones:
We have disabled our Take Profit locations so that you can see the Bull and Bear Zones. These zones change color when the Signals switch. They may represent some strong Support and Resistance locations, but more importantly may be useful for visualizing changes in momentum and consolidation. These zones allow you to see various Moving Averages; and when they start to ‘fold’ (cross) each other you may see changes in momentum. Whereas, when they’re fully stretched out and moving all in the same direction, it can provide insight that the current rally may be strong. There is also the case where they look like they’re ‘twisted’ together. This happens when all of the Moving Averages are very close together and may be a sign of Consolidation. We will go over a few examples of each of these scenarios so you can understand what we’re referring to.
In this example above, there are a few different things happening. First we have the yellow circle, where the final and slowest Moving Average (MA) crossed over and now all of the MA’s that form the zone are Bullish. You can see this in the white circle where there are no MA’s that are crossing each other. Lastly, within the blue circle, we can see how some of the faster MA’s are crossing under each other. This is a bullish momentum change. The Faster moving MA’s will always be the first ones to cross before the Slower ones do. There is a color scheme in place here to represent the Speed of the MA within the Zone. Light blue is the fastest moving Bull color -> Light Green and finally -> Dark Green. Yellow is the fastest moving Bear color -> Orange and finally -> Red / Dark Red within the Zone.
Next we will review a couple different examples of what Consolidation looks like and why it is very important to look out for. Consolidation is when Most, if not All of the MA’s are very tightly ‘twisted’ together. There is very little spacing between almost all of the MA’s in the example above; highlighted by the white circle. Consolidation is important as it may indicate a strong price movement in either direction will occur soon. When the price is consolidating it means it has had very little upwards or downwards movement recently. When this happens for long enough, MA’s may all get very similar in value. This may cause high volatility as the price tries to break out of Consolidation. Let's look at another example.
Above we have two more examples of what Consolidation looks like and how high Volatility may occur after the Consolidation is broken. Please note, not all Consolidation will create high Volatility but it is something you may want to look out for.
Information Tables displaying: (Boom Meter, Bull/Bear Strength, Yin/Yang State):
Information tables are a very important way of displaying information. It contains 3 crucial pieces of information:
Boom Meter
Bull/Bear Strength
Yin/Yang State
Boom Meter is a meter that goes from 0-100% and displays whether the current price is Dumping (0 - 29%), Consolidating (30 - 70%) or Pumping (71 - 100%). The Boom Meter is meant to be a Gauge to how the price is currently fairing. It is composed of ~50 different calculations that all vary different weights to calculate its %. Many of the calculations it uses are likewise used in other things, such as the Bull/Bear Strength, Bull/Bear Zone MA cross’, Yin/Yang State, Market Cipher Signals, RSI, Volume and a few others. The Boom Meter, although not meant to be used solely to make purchase decisions, may give you a good idea of current market conditions considering how many different things it evaluates.
Bull/Bear Strength is relevant to your Purchase Speed and Strength. It displays which state it is currently in, and the % it is within that state. When a % hits 0, is when the state changes. When states change, they always start at 100% initially and will go down at the rate of Purchase Strength (how many verifications are needed). For instance, if your Purchase Strength is set to ‘Medium’ it will move 10% per verification +/-, if it is set to High, it will move 6.67% per verification +/-. Bull/Bear Strength is a good indicator of how well that current state is fairing. For instance if you started a Long when the state changed to Bull and now it is currently at Bull with 20% left, that may be a good indication it is time to get out (obviously refer to other data as well, but it may be a good way to know that the state is 20% away from transitioning to Bear).
Yin/Yang State is the strongest MA cross within our Indicator. It is unique in the sense that it is slow to change, but not so much that it moves slowly. It isn’t as simple as say a Golden/Death Cross (50/200), but it crosses more often and may hold similar weight as it. Yin stands for Negative (Bearish) and Yang stands for Positive (Bullish). The price will always be in either a state of Yin or Yang, and just because it is in one, doesn’t mean the price can’t/won’t move in the opposite direction; it simply means the price may be favoring the state it is in.
16 Cipher Signals:
Cipher Signals are key visuals of MA cross’ that may represent price movement and momentum. It would be too confusing and hard to decipher these MA’s as lines on a chart, and therefore we decided to use signals in the form of symbols instead. There are 12 Standard and 4 Predictive/Confirming Cipher signals. The Standard Cipher signals are composed of 6 Bullish and 6 Bearish (they all have opposites that balance each other out). There can never be 2 of the same signal in a row, as the Bull and Bear cancel each other out and it's always in a state of one or the other. When all 6 Bullish or Bearish signals appear in a row, very closely together, without any of the opposing signals it may represent a strong momentum movement is about to occur.
If you refer to the example above, you’ll see that the 6 Bullish Cipher signals appeared exactly as mentioned above. Shortly after the Green Circle appeared, there was a large spike in price movement in favor of the Bulls. Cipher signals don’t need to appear in a cluster exactly like the white circle in this photo for momentum to occur, but when it does, it may represent volatility more than if it is broken up with opposing signals or spaced out over a longer time span.
Above is an example of the opposite, where all 6 Bearish Cipher signals appeared together without being broken by a Bullish Cipher signal or being too far spaced out. As you can see, even though past it there was a few Bullish signals, they were quickly reversed back to Bearish before a large price movement occurred in favor of the Bears.
In the example above we’ve changed Cipher signals to Predictive and Confirming. Support Crosses (Green +) and Blood Diamonds (Red ♦) are the normal Cipher Signals that appear within the Standard Set. They are the first Cipher Signal that appears and are the most common ones as well. However, just because they are the first, that doesn’t mean they aren’t a powerful Cipher signal. For this reason, there are Predictive and Confirming Cipher signals for these. The Predictive do just that, they appear slightly sooner (if not the same bar) as the regular and the Confirming appear later (1+ bars usually). There will be times that the Predictive appears, but it doesn’t resort to the Regular appearing, or the Regular appears and the Confirming doesn’t. This is normal behavior and also the purpose of them. They are meant to be an indication of IF they may appear soon and IF the regular was indeed a valid signal.
Extremes:
Extremes are MA’s that have a very large length. They are useful for seeing Cross’ and Support and Resistance over a long period of time. However, because they are so long and slow moving, they might not always be relevant. It’s usually advised to turn them on, see if any are close to the current price point, and if they aren’t to turn them off. The main reason being is they stretch out the chart too much if they’re too far away and they also may not be relevant at that point.
When they are close to the price however, they may act as strong Support and Resistance locations as circled in the example above.
Pivots:
Pivots are used to help identify key Support and Resistance locations. They adjust on their own in an attempt to keep their locations as relevant as possible and likewise will adjust when the price pushes their current bounds. They may be useful for seeing when the Price is currently testing their level as this may represent Overbought or Oversold. Keep in mind, just because the price is testing their levels doesn’t mean it will correct; sometimes with high volatility or geopolitical news, movement may continue even if it is exhibiting Overbought or Oversold traits. Pivots may also be useful for seeing how far the price may correct to, giving you a benchmark for potential Take Profit and Stop Loss locations.
Trend Lines:
Trend Lines may be useful for identifying Support and Resistance locations on the Vertical. Trend Lines may form many different patterns, such as Pennants, Channels, Flags and Wedges. These formations may help predict and drive the price in specific directions. Many traders draw or use Indicators to help create Trend Lines to visualize where these formations will be and they may be very useful alone even for identifying possible Support and Resistance locations.
If you refer to the previous example, and now to this example, you’ll notice that the Trend Line that supported it in 2023 was actually created in June 2020 (yellow circle). Trend Lines may be crucial for identifying Support and Resistance locations on the Vertical that may withhold over time.
Custom Bollinger Bands:
Bollinger Bands are used to help see Movement vs Consolidation Zones (When it's wide vs narrow). It's also very useful for seeing where the correction areas may be. Price may bounce between top and bottom of the Bollinger Bands, unless in a pump or dump. The Boom Meter will show you whether it is currently: Dumping, Consolidation or Pumping. If combined with Boom Meter Bar Colors it may be a good indication if it will break the Bollinger Band (go outside of it). The Middle Line of the Bollinger Band (White Line) may be a very strong support / resistance location. If the price closes above or below it, it may be a good indication of the trend changing (it may indicate one of the first stages to a pump or dump). The color of the Bollinger Bands change based on if it is within a Bull or Bear Zone.
What makes this Bollinger Band special is not only that it uses a custom multiplier, but it also incorporates volume to help add weight to the calculation.
Boom Meter Bar Colors:
Boom Meter Bar Colors are a way to see potential Overbought and Oversold locations on a per bar basis. There are 6 different colors within the Boom Meter bar colors. You have:
Overbought and Very Bullish = Dark Green
Overbought and Slightly Bullish = Light Green
Overbought and Slight Bearish = Light Red
Oversold and Very Bearish = Dark Red
Oversold and Slightly Bearish = Orange
Oversold and Slightly Bullish = Light Purple
When there is no Boom Meter Bar Color prevalent there won’t be a color change within the bar at all.
Just because there is a Boom Meter Bar Color change doesn’t mean you should act on it purchase or sell wise, but it may be an indication as to how that bar is fairing in an Overbought / Oversold perspective. Boom Meter Bar Colors are mainly based on RSI but do take in other factors like price movement to determine if it is Overbought or Oversold. When it comes to Boom Meter Bar Color, you should take it as it is, in the sense that it may be useful for seeing how Individual bars are fairing, but also note that there may be things such as:
When there is Very Overbought (Dark Green) or Very Oversold (Dark Red), during massive pump or dumps, it will maintain this color. However, once it has lost ‘some’ momentum it will likely lose this color.
When there has been a massive Pump or Dump, and there is likewise a light purple or light red, this may mean there is a correction or consolidation incoming.
True Value Zones:
True Value zones are our custom way of displaying something that is similar to a Bollinger Band that can likewise twist like an MA cross. The main purpose of it is to display where the price may reside within. Much like a Bollinger Band it has its High and Low within its zone to specify this location. Since it has the ability to cross over and under, it has the ability to specify what it thinks may be a Bullish or Bearish zone. This zone uses its upper level to display what may be a Resistance location and its lower level to display what may be a Support location. These Support and Resistance locations are based on Momentum and will move with the price in an attempt to stay relevant.
You may use these True Values zones as a gauge of if the price is Overbought or Oversold. When the price faces high volatility and moves outside of the True Value Zones, it may face consolidation or likewise a correction to bring it back within these zones. These zones may act as a guideline towards where the price is currently valued at and may belong within.
Bar Strength Indexes:
Bar Strength Indexes are our way of ranking each bar in correlation to the last few. It is based on a few things but is highly influenced on Open/Close/High/Low, Volume and how the price has moved recently. They may attempt to ‘rate’ each bar and how Bullish/Bearish each of these bars are. The Green number under the bar is its Bullish % and the Red number above the bar is its Bearish %. These %’s will always equal 100% when combined together. Bar Strength Indexes may be useful for seeing when either Bullish or Bearish momentum is picking up or when there may be a reversal / consolidation.
These Bar Strength Indexes may allow you to decipher different states. If you refer to the example above, you may notice how based on how the numbers are changing, you may see when it has entered / exited Bullish, Bearish and Consolidation. Likewise, if you refer to the current bar (yellow circle), you can see that the Bullish % has dropped from 93 to 49; this may be signifying that the Bullish movement is losing momentum. You may use these changes in Bar Indexes as a guide to when to enter / end trades.
Volume Profile:
Volume Profile has been something that has been within TradingView for quite some time. It is a very useful way of seeing at what Horizontal Price there has been the most volume. This may be very useful for seeing not only Support and Resistance locations based on Volume, but also seeing where the majority of Limit Orders are placed. Limit Orders are where traders decide they want to either Buy / Sell but have the order placed so the trade won’t happen until the price reaches a certain amount. Either through many orders from many traders, or a single order from a ‘Whale’ (trader with a lot of capital); you may see Support and Resistance at specific Price Points that have large Volume.
Many Volume Profile Indicators feature a breakdown of all the different locations of volume, along with a Point Of Control (POC) line to designate where the most Volume has been. To try and reduce clutter within our already very saturated Toolkit Indicator, we’ve decided to strip our Volume Profile to only display this POC line. This may allow you to see where the crucial Volume Support and Resistance is without all of the clutter.
You may be wondering, well how important is this Volume Profile POC line and how do I go about using it? Aside from it being a gauge towards where Support and Resistance may be within Volume, it may also be useful for identifying good Long/Short locations. If you think of the line as a ‘Battle’ between the Bulls and Bears, they’re both fighting over that line. The Bears are wanting to break through it downwards, and the Bulls are wanting to break through it upwards. When one side has temporarily won this battle, this means they may have more Capital to push the price in their direction. For instance, if both the Bulls and the Bears are fighting over this POC price, that means the Bears think that price is a good spot to sell; however, the Bulls also deem that price to be a good point to buy. If the Bulls were to win this battle, that means the Bears either canceled their orders to reevaluate, or all of their orders have been completed from the Bulls buying them all. What may happen after that is, if the Bulls were able to purchase all of these Limit Sell Orders, then they may still have more Capital left to continue to pressure the price upwards. The same may be true for if the Bears were to win this ‘Battle’.
How to use YinYang Trend as a cohesive whole:
Hopefully you’ve read and understand how each aspect of this Indicator works on its own, as knowing how/what they each do is important to understanding how it is used as a cohesive whole. Due to the fact that this Toolkit of an Indicator displays so much data, you may find it easier to use and understand when you’re zoomed in a little, somewhat like we are in this example above.
If we refer to the example above, you may like us, deduce a few things:
1. The current price may be VERY Overbought. This may be seen by a few different things:
The Boom Meter Bar Colors have been exhibiting a Dark Green color for 6 bars in a row.
The price has continuously been moving the High (red) Pivot Upwards.
Our Boom Meter displays ‘Pumping’ at 100%.
The price broke through a Downward Trend Line that was created in February of 2022 at 45,000 like it was nothing.
The Bar Strength Index hit a Bullish value of 93%.
The Price broke out of the Bollinger Bands and continues to test its upper levels.
The Low is much greater than our fastest moving MA that creates the Purchase Zones.
The Price is vastly outside of the True Value Zone.
The Bar Strength Index of our current bar is 50% bullish, which is a massive decrease from the previous bar of 93%. This may indicate that a correction is coming soon.
2. Since we’ve identified the current price may be VERY Overbought, next we need to identify if/when/to where it may correct to:
We’ve created a new example here to display potential correction areas. There are a few places it has the ability to correct to / within:
The downward Trend Line (red) below the current bar sitting currently at 32,750. This downward Trend Line is at the same price point as the Fastest MA of our Purchase Zone which may provide some decent Support there.
Between two crucial Pivot heights, within a zone of 30,000 to 31,815. This zone has the second fastest MA from the Purchase Zone right near the middle of it at 31,200 which may act as a Support within the Zone. Likewise there is the Bollinger Band Basis which is also resting at 30,000 which may provide a strong Support location here.
If 30,000 fails there may be a correction all the way to the bottom of our True Value Zone and the top of one of our Extremes at 27,850.
If 27,850 fails it may correct all the way to the bottom of our Purchase Zone / lowest of our Extremes at 27,350.
If all of the above fails, it may test our Volume Profile POC of 26,430. If this POC fails, the trend may switch to Bearish and continue further down to lower levels of Support.
The price can always correct more than the prices mentioned above, but considering overall this Indicator is favoring the Bulls, we will tailor this analysis in Favor of the Bullish Momentum maintaining even during this correction. For these reasons, we think the price may correct between the 30,000 and 31,815 zone before continuing upwards and maintaining this Bullish Momentum.
Please note, these correction estimates are just that, they’re estimates. Aside from the fact that the price is very overbought right now and our Bar Strength Index may be declining (bar hasn’t closed yet); the Boom Meter Strength remains at 100%, meaning there may not be much Bearish momentum changes happening yet. We just want to show you how an Preemptive analysis may be done before there are even Bearish Cipher Signals appearing.
Using this Indicator, you may be able to decipher Entry and Exits. In the previous example, we went over how you may use it to see where a correction (Exit / Take Profit) may be and how far this correction may go. In this example above we will be discussing how to identify Entry locations. We will be discussing a Bullish Buy entry but the same rules apply for a Bearish Sell Entry just the opposite with the Cipher Signals.
If you refer to where we circled in white, this is where the Purchase Zones faced Consolidation. When the Purchase Zones all get tight and close together like that, this may represent Volatility and Momentum in either direction may occur soon.
This was then followed by all 6 of the Standard Cipher Signals closely in succession to each other. This means the Momentum may be favoring the Bulls. If this was likewise all 6 of the Bearish Cipher Signals closely in succession, than the momentum change would favor the Bears.
If you were looking for an entry, and you saw Consolidation with the Purchase Zones and then shortly after you saw the Green Circle and Blue Flag (they can swap order); this may now be a good Entry location.
We will conclude this Tutorial here. Hopefully this has taught you how this Trend Analysis Toolkit may help you locate multiple different types of important Support and Resistance locations; as well as possible Entry and Exit locations.
Settings:
1. Bull/Bear Zones:
1.1. Purchase Speed (Bull/Bear Signals and Take Profit Signals):
Speed determines how much price movement is needed for a signal to occur.
'Sonic' uses the extremities to try and get you the best entry and exit points, but is so quick, its speed may reduce accuracy.
'Fast' may attempt to capitalize on price movements to help you get SOME or attempt to lose LITTLE quickly.
'Medium' may attempt to get you the most optimal entry and exit locations, but may miss extremities.
'Slow' may stay in trades until it is clear that momentum has changed.
'Snail' may stay in trades even if momentum has changed. Snail may only change when the price has moved significantly (This may result in BIG gains, but potentially also BIG losses).
1.2. Purchase Strength (Bull/Bear Signals and Take Profit Signals):
Strength ensures a certain amount of verifications required for signals to happen. The more verifications the more accurate that signal is, but it may also change entry and exit points, and you may miss out on some of the extremities. It is highly advised to find the best combination between Speed and Strength for the TimeFrame and Pair you are trading in, as all pairs and TimeFrames move differently.
'High' uses 15 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Medium' uses 10 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Low' uses 5 verifications to ensure signal strength.
'Very Low' uses 3 verifications to ensure signal strength.
2. Cipher Signals:
Cipher Signals are very strong EMA and SMA crosses, which may drastically help visualize movement and help you to predict where the price will go. All Symbols have counter opposites that cancel each other out (YinYang). Here is a list, in order of general appearance and strength:
White Cross / Diamond (Predictive): The initial indicator showing trend movement.
Green Cross / Diamond (Regular): Confirms the Predictive and may add a fair bit of strength to trend movement.
Blue Cross / Diamond (Confirming): Confirms the Regular, showing the trend might have some decent momentum now.
Green / Red X: Gives momentum to the current trend direction, possibly confirming the Confirming Cross/Diamond.
Blue / Orange Triangle: may confirm the X, Possible pump / dump of decent size may be coming soon.
Green / Red Circle: EITHER confirms the Triangle and may mean big pump / dump is potentially coming, OR it just hit its peak and signifies a potential reversal correction. PAY ATTENTION!
Green / Red Flag: Oddball that helps confirm trend movements on the short term.
Blue / Yellow Flag: Oddball that helps confirm trend movements on the medium term (Yin / Yang is the long term Oddball).
3. Bull/Bear Signals:
Bear and Bull signals are where the momentum has changed enough based on your Purchase Speed and Strength. They generally represent strong price movement in the direction of the signal, and may be more reliable on higher TimeFrames. Please don’t use JUST these signals for analysis, they are only meant to be a fraction of the important data you are using to make your technical analysis.
4. Take Profit Signals:
Take Profit signals are guidelines that momentum has started to change back and now may be a good time to take profit. Your Take Profit signals are based on your Take Profit Speed and Strength and may be adjusted to fit your trading style.
5. Information Tables:
Information tables display very important data and help to declutter the screen as they are much less intrusive compared to labels. Our Information tables display: Boom Meter, Purchase Strength of Bull/Bear Zones and Yin/Yang State.
Boom Meter: Uses over 50 different calculations to determine if the pair is currently 'Dumping' (0-29%), 'Consolidating' (30-70%), or 'Pumping' (71-100%).
Bull / Bear Strength: Shows the strength of the current Bull / Bear signal from 0-100% (Signals start at 100% and change when they hit 0%). The % it moves up or down is based on your 'Purchase Strength'.
Yin / Yang state: Is one of the strongest EMA/SMA crosses (long term Oddball) within this Indicator and may be a great indication of which way the price is moving. Do keep in mind if the price is consolidating when changing state, it may have the highest chance of switching back also. Once momentum kicks in and there is price movement the state may be confirmed. Refer to other Cipher Symbols, Extremes, Trend, BOLL, Boom %, Bull / Bear % and Bar colors when Bull / Bear Zones are consolidating and Yin / Yang State changes as this is a very strong indecision zone.
6. Bull / Bear Zones:
Our Bull / Bear zones are composed of 8 very important EMA lengths that may act as not only Support and Resistance, but they help to potentially display consolidation and momentum change. You can tell when they are getting tight and close together it may represent consolidation and when they start to flip over on each other it may represent a change in momentum.
7. MA Extremes:
Our MA Extremes may be 3 of the most important long term moving averages. They don’t always play a role in trades as sometimes they’re way off from the price (cause they’re extreme lengths), but when they are around price or they cross under or over each other, it may represent large changes in price are about to occur. They may be very useful for seeing strong resistance / support locations based on price averages. Extremes may transition from a Support to a Resistance based on its position above or below them and how many times the price has either bounced up off them (Supporting) or Bounced back down after hitting them (Resistance).
8. Pivots:
Pivots may be a very important indicator of support and resistance for horizontal price movement. Pivots may represent the current strongest Support and Resistance. When the Pivot changes, it means a new strong Support or Resistance has been created. Sometimes you'll notice the price constantly pushes the pivot during a massive Pump or Dump. This is normal, and may indicate high levels of volatility. This generally also happens when the price is outside of the Bollinger Bands and is also Over or Undervalued. The price usually consolidates for a while after something like this happens before more drastic movement may occur.
9. Trend Lines:
Trend lines may be one of the best indicators of support and resistance for diagonal price movement. When a Trend Line fails to hold it may be a strong indication of a dump. Keep a close eye to where Upward and Downward Trend Lines meet. Trend lines can create different trading formations known as Pennants, Flags and Wedges. Please familiarize yourself with these formations So you know what to look for.
10. Bollinger Bands (BOLL):
Bollinger Bands may be very useful, and ours have been customized so they may be even more accurate by using a modified calculation that also incorporates volume.
Bollinger Bands may be used to see Movement vs Consolidation Zones (When it’s wide vs narrow). It also may be very useful for seeing where the correction areas are likely to be. Price may bounce between top and bottom of the BOLL, unless perhaps in a pump or dump. The Boom Meter may show you whether it is currently: Dumping, Consolidation or Pumping, along with Boom Meter Bar Colors, may be a good indication if it will break the BOLL. The Middle Line of the BOLL (White Line) may be a very strong support / resistance line. If the price closes above or below it, it may be a good indication of the trend changing (it may be one of the first stages to a pump or dump).
11. Boom Meter Bar Colors:
Boom Meter bar colors may be very useful for seeing when the bar is Overbought or Underbought. There are 6 different types of boom meter bar colors, they are:
Dark Green: RSI may be very Overbought and price going UP (May be in a big pump. NOTICE, chance of small dump correction if Cherry Red bar appears).
Light Green: RSI may be slightly Overbought and price going UP (chance of small pump).
Light Purple: RSI may be very Underbought and price going UP (May have chance of small correction).
Dark Red: RSI may be very Underbought and price going DOWN (May be in a big dump. NOTICE, chance of small pump correction if Light Purple bar appears).
Light Orange: RSI may be slightly Underbought and price going DOWN (chance of small dump).
Cherry Red: RSI may be very Overbought and price going DOWN (Chance of small correction).
12. True Value Zone:
True Value Zones display zones that represent ranges to show what the price may truly belong within. They may be very useful for knowing if the Price is currently not valued correctly, which generally means a correction may happen soon. True Value Zones can swap from Bullish to Bearish and are represented by Red for Bearish and Green for Bullish. For example, if the price is ABOVE and OUTSIDE of the True Value Zone, this means it may be very overvalued and might correct to go back inside the True Value Zone. This correction may be done by either dumping in price back into the zone, or consolidating horizontally back into it over a longer period of time. Vice Versa is also true if it is BELOW and OUTSIDE of the True Value Zone.
13. Bar Strength Index:
Bar Strength Index may display how Bullish/Bearish the current bar is. The strength is important to help see if a pump may be losing momentum or vice versa if a dump may correct. Keep in mind, the Bar Strength Index does a small 'refresh' to account for new bars. It may help to keep the Index more accurate.
14. Volume Profile:
Volume Profiles may be important to know where the Horizontal Support/Resistance is in Price base on Volume. Our Volume Profile may identify the point where the most volume has occurred within the most relevant timeframe. Volume Profiles are helpful at identifying where Whales have their orders placed. The reason why they are so helpful at identifying whales is when the volume is profiled to a specific area, there may likely be lots of Limit Buy and/or Sells around there. Limit Buys may act as Support and Limit Sells may act as Resistance. It may be very useful to know where these lie within the price, similar to looking at Order Book Data for Whale locations.
If you have any questions, comments, ideas or concerns please don't hesitate to contact us.
HAPPY TRADING!






















