Correlative volume sum CTEHello colleagues, How much importance do you give to the volume traded in the candles to support your investments? And if it is important, you analyze the volume of the candle in the assets or correlated pairs to be certain if it is a volume of only that broker or of several?
I would like to share and collaborate with a tool that can help to see the expanded volume, appending the accumulation of the volume traded from up to 3 brokers or exchanges.
I hope this tool is helpful and allows you to make your investments with greater security.
Many times we focus and analyze a single graph, discarding very relevant details present in the correlative graphs, such as the volume between them.
A good way to complement your strategy is to wait for a volume reaction in the historical volume candlestick zones.
I am happy to be part of this community and I hope that my presence in it will be of help, greetings to all.
Correlationtrade
Correlation MeterThis script calculates the covariance and correlation coefficient between two markets using arrays.
Lookback: How many bars to perform the calculation on.
Source: Price source to calculate the correlation on.
Reference Market: The reference market to compare to the current market.
It's a simple indicator, but very useful for determining how correlated your preferred markets to trade are.
A correlation reading of +1.0 means the markets are perfectly positively correlated, a reading of -1.0 means they are perfectly negatively correlated.
If you're not sure what correlation & covariance are then Google the terms with "Investopedia" added to the end - they have some great definitions and examples.
For traders this can be useful for deciding how much risk to spread across two markets that have a high correlation, or how to hedge existing positions by trading a negatively correlated market.
For investors this can be useful for building a truly diversified portfolio.
If a market has a high positive correlation, the black line will stay above zero most of the time. If a market has a high negative correlation, the black line will stay below zero most of the time.
A market with no or little correlation will bounce between the two or hover around zero most of the time.
The example market above is comparing Apple's weekly price action to the S&P500's over the past 20 weeks. It has a high positive correlation as the black line is above zero most of the time.
Good luck with your trading!