Relative Volume - ETHEREUMRelative Volume indicator that pulls data from 9 different Ethereum exchanges. Please note that this indicator only works with ETH and will not use data from your current chart.
Includes the following exchanges:
BYBIT:ETHUSD
BITFINEX:ETHUSD
BITSTAMP:ETHUSD
INDEX:ETHUSD
COINBASE:ETHUSD
FTX:ETHUSD
PHEMEX:ETHUSD
BITTREX:ETHUSD
POLONIEX:ETHUSDT
Institutions
Relative Volume - BITCOINRelative Volume indicator that pulls data from 9 different Bitcoin exchanges. Please note that this indicator only works with BTC and will not use data from your current chart.
Includes the following exchanges:
BYBIT:BTCUSD
BITFINEX:BTCUSD
BITSTAMP:BTCUSD
INDEX:BTCUSD
COINBASE:BTCUSD
FTX:BTCUSD
PHEMEX:BTCUSD
BITTREX:BTCUSD
POLONIEX:BTCUSDT
Relative VolumeVolume can be a very useful tool if used correctly. Relative volume is designed to filter out the noise and highlight anomalies assisting traders in tracking institutional movements. This tool can be used to identify stop loss hunters and organized dumps. It uses a variety of moving averages to hide usual activity and features an LSMA line to show trend. Trend columns are shown to highlight activity and can be seen at bottom of the volume columns, this is done using ZLSMA and LSMA.
The above chart shows an example of 2 indicators being used on the 15 min chart. The bottom indicator is set to the 1 min chart. Traders can see a large dump on the 1 min chart as institutions wipe out any tight stop losses. Next they buy back in scooping up all those long positions.
This is an example layout using a split screen setup and multiple timeframes ranging from 1 min to 30 mins. This gives a clear indication of trends and make it easy to pickup on institutional behaviour. Tip: Double clicking indicator background will maximize RVOL to the split screen window.
Modified Chaikin OscillatorThis is a modified version of the Chaikin Oscillator. The idea is to find accumulation and distribution phases in the market to identify when institutions are building their positions.
It uses acc/dist but as an oscillator, just like the Chaikin Oscillator, but not to find overbought or oversold areas, but to find trends. It functions like a MACD. It takes a fast moving average of the acc/dist and a slow moving average of the acc/dist, and plots the differense to create the oscillator, and uses a signal line to use for entries.
A strong signal is when the oscillator crosses the signal line while the signal line is on he right side of 0. So a crossover (long) when the signal line is below 0 woul be a weak signal, while a crossover (long) when the signal line is above 0 would be a strong signal.
By default, tick volume is discarded in the calculation, which makes this version behave a bit differently than the standard Chaikin Oscillator. This is because the indicator is mostly used to trade CFD's. If used to trade stocks for example, it is better to include the volume by unchecking that checkbox in the indicator settings.
BRIGHT GREEN = Strong signal LONG (signal line is above 0)
DARK GREEN = Weak signal LONG (signal line is below 0)
BRIGHT RED = Strong signal SHORT (signal line is below 0)
DARK RED = Weak signal SHORT (signal line is above 0)