NSDT Average 6This is a pretty simple concept that we were asked to put together. It uses 6 Moving Averages, and takes the average of each one, then averages them all together.
If you don't want to use 6, and only 3 for example, then just enter the same length in two of the input fields as pairs.
Example:
For 6, you could use 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60
For 3, you could use 10, 10, 50, 50, 100, 100
It doesn't ploy 6 MA's, it only plots one - the result of the average of an average of an average, etc..
Publishing open source so other can modify as needed.
Moving Averages
Price Volume Trend Crosses This script is a modified version of the Price Volume Trend ( PVT ) that uses a moving average of the PVT as a signal ( sig ) line.
The length of the signal line can be adjusted as needed by changing the "PVTC Signal Length" value inside the indicator settings menu.
"PVTC Signal Type" allows you to pick between EMA and SMA as the signal line.
Logic behind this script:
If PVT > sig it indicates an bullish environment and gets coloured with the UP color.
If PVT < sig it indicates a bearish environment and get coloured with the DOWN color.
Colors can be modified in the indicator settings menu.
Crosses can be highlighted by ticking the "Highlight Crosses" box in the indicator settings menu.
"Fill Gaps" fills the gap between PVT and sig with the prevailing trends color.
PVTC should not be used on its own but in conjunction with other indicators!
Auto trend overlayThis uses a custom moving average where the front half of the measured length is weighted as 2x of the back half. This makes the cma act like a combo of an ma and ema. It can also measure the rate of change of the cma using a varible derivation length to remove noise. When the cma rate of change is positive it can overlay green candles and vice versa when negative.
Anchored Moving Average By Market Mindset - Zero To EndlessAnchored Moving Average?
An anchored moving average (AMA) is created when you select a point on the chart and start calculating the moving average from there. Thus the moving average’s denominator is not fixed but cumulative and dynamic.
In this indicator, I've provided three different types of Anchored Moving Averages, viz., WMA, SMA and VWAP.
WMA is relevant if big moves are there.
SMA is relevant if volume data is not to be considered or if it is not available.
VWAP is the standard anchored MA, which is most commontly used. Is consider the volume data along with the price move.
In this indicator, Auto anchor is time based anchor. A trader can opt for Pivot Type Anchor or Volume Type Anchor or some higher resolution based anchor too. The length of the pivot lookback can also be changed by the user.
It can be used for intraday, swing trading and even for technical based investment purpose.
Xeeder - US Government Bonds AnalysisXeeder - US Government Bonds Analysis (USBA)
The "Xeeder - US Government Bonds Analysis" (USBA) is a comprehensive tool designed to assist traders in analyzing the spread, historical volatility, and correlation between two different U.S. Government Bonds. This indicator is crucial for understanding the relative performance and risk factors between two bond assets.
Details of the Indicator:
Bond Input Settings: This feature allows traders to select two different U.S. Government Bonds from a dropdown list. The bonds range from 1-month to 30-year maturities.
Timeframe Settings: Traders can choose the timeframe for the analysis, such as Daily, Weekly, etc.
Moving Average (MA) Settings: The indicator offers various types of moving averages like SMA, EMA, WMA, etc., for calculating the spread's moving average. Traders can also specify the length of the moving average.
Spread Calculation: The indicator calculates the spread between the selected bonds and plots it on the chart.
Historical Volatility: The indicator calculates and plots the historical volatility of the spread, which is useful for risk assessment.
Correlation Coefficient: This feature calculates the correlation between the two selected bonds over a specified period.
How to Use the Indicator:
Select Bonds: Choose two U.S. Government Bonds from the dropdown list that you are interested in analyzing.
Choose Timeframe: Select the timeframe that aligns with your trading or investment strategy.
Configure MA Settings: Adjust the type and length of the moving average according to your needs.
Analyze Plots: Observe the plotted spread, its moving average, historical volatility, and correlation coefficient to gain insights into the bonds' relative performance and risk factors.
Interpret Data: Use the plotted data to make informed decisions about bond trading or hedging strategies.
Example of Usage:
As a trader focused on swing trading and strategy development, you can use the USBA indicator to:
Select Bonds: Choose bonds that you believe will show significant spread changes based on your macroeconomic and geopolitical analysis.
Adjust Settings: Configure the MA settings to suit your trading strategy.
Analysis and Comparison: Examine the spread, historical volatility, and correlation to identify potential trading opportunities or hedging strategies.
Content Creation: Use the insights gained to write compelling articles on bond market trends, risks, and opportunities, enriching your financial journalism portfolio.
Remember, the USBA indicator is a versatile tool that provides a multi-faceted analysis of U.S. Government Bonds. Always consider your broader trading strategy and market conditions when using this tool.
VWAP with CharacterizationThis indicator is a visual representation of the VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price), it calculates the weighted average price based on trading volume. Essentially, it provides a measure of the average price at which an asset has traded during a given period, but with a particular focus on trading volume. In our case, the indicator calculates the VWAP for the current trading symbol, using a predefined simple moving average (SMA) with a period of 14. This volume-weighted moving average offers a clearer view of the behavior of the VWAP and, of consequence of market dynamics.
One of the distinctive features of this indicator is its ability to provide a more "linear" representation of the data. This means that the data is "smoothed" to remove noise, allowing you to more easily identify the direction of the market trend. This smoother representation is especially useful because the financial market can be subject to significant fluctuations and volatility, and this indicator can help get a more stable view of the trend.
The indicator also offers a visualization of the market trend in a very intuitive way. Using an evaluation of the highs and lows of the last 10 days, determine whether the market is in an uptrend, downtrend, or no trend at all. To make this evaluation even clearer and more immediate, the indicator line is colored dynamically. When the trend is bullish, the line is blue, while in case of a bearish trend, it takes on a distinctive color, such as pink. If the trend is not defined, the line will be colored differently, for example light yellow. This coloration gives traders an immediate visual indication of the prevailing trend, allowing them to make more informed decisions regarding trading operations.
One potential strategy involves watching candles when they cross the VWAP line strongly. If, for example, a candlestick breaks above the VWAP line, we may look for retest areas near key support levels to gauge a potential long entry. In other words, we would consider that the price may have the potential to rise further after breaking above the VWAP line, and we would look to enter a long position to take advantage of this opportunity.
On the other hand, if a candlestick crosses below the VWAP line, we might consider looking for retest areas near the VWAP line itself, which now serves as potential resistance. This could indicate a possible short entry opportunity, as the price may struggle to break above the resistance represented by the VWAP line after breaking it down. In this case, we would look to take advantage of the expected continuation of the downtrend.
In both cases, the idea is to exploit significant movements across the VWAP line as signals of potential reversal or continuation of the trend. This strategy can help identify key entry points based on price behavior relative to the VWAP line.
Weighted Momentum Forecast
The Weighted Momentum Forecast (EWMF) is a predictive indicator designed to forecast the potential direction and magnitude of the next candle's close. It combines the principles of momentum, trend confirmation, and volatility adjustment to make its predictions.
**Components:**
1. **Rate of Change (ROC)**: Measures the momentum of the market.
2. **Average True Range (ATR)**: Represents the market's recent volatility.
3. **Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD)**: Used to confirm the momentum's direction.
4. **Trend Moving Average**: A longer-term moving average to confirm the general trend.
5. **Bollinger Bands**: Adjusts the forecast to account for extreme predictions.
**Logic:**
1. **Momentum Bias**: The crossover and crossunder of the MACD line and its signal line are used to determine the momentum's bias. A crossover indicates a bullish bias, while a crossunder indicates a bearish bias.
2. **Trend Confirmation**: If the current close is above the trend moving average, the indicator has a bullish bias, and vice versa.
3. **Forecast Calculation**: The forecast for the next candle's close is calculated based on the current close, the rate of change, the momentum's bias, and the trend's bias. This value is then adjusted for volatility using the ATR.
4. **Volatility Adjustment**: If the forecasted value is beyond the Bollinger Bands, it's adjusted to be within the bands to account for extreme predictions.
**Usage:**
The EWMF plots a purple line representing the forecasted value of the next candle's close. This forecasted value provides traders with a visual representation of where the price might head in the next period, based on recent momentum, trend, and volatility.
**Note**: This is a heuristic approach and is not guaranteed to be accurate. It's essential to use this indicator in conjunction with other tools, backtest on historical data, and use proper risk management techniques. Always be aware of the inherent risks involved in trading and never risk more than you're willing to lose.
Bunch of WillyThe indicator allows you to track overbought/oversold conditions using the Williams indicator on several higher timeframes of the same ticker on one chart. Based on the relative position of the lines of different timeframes and their position relative to the exponential moving average, you can track the occurrence of situations of simultaneous overbought/oversold of several timeframes, which is a cleaner reversal signal than overbought/oversold on just one chart timeframe. So far the script itself does not indicate these points, but perhaps in one of the next updates I will fix this.
In addition, the exponential moving average can be used to determine the direction of the trend.
Индикатор позволяет на одном графике отслеживать перекупленность/перепроданость по индикатору Вильямса на нескольких более высоких таймфреймах того же тикера. Основываясь на взаимном положении линий разных таймфреймов и их положении относительно экспоненциальной скользящей средней можно отслеживать возникновение ситуаций одновременной перекупленности/перепроданности нескольких таймфреймов что является более чистым разворотным сигналом чем перекупленность/перепроданность на одном лишь таймфрейме графика. Пока скрипт сам не обозначает эти моменты, но возможно в одном из следующих обновлений я это исправлю.
Кроме того по экспоненциальной скользящей средней можно определять направление тренда.
Division with other simbolI choose a symbol, and a source
It returns the division between the new symbol in that source with the current timeframe, and the current symbol with the selected source and the current timeframe
DIV = New symbol / Base symbol
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Elijo un simbolo, y un source
Me devuelve la division entre el nuevo simbolo en ese source con el timeframe actual, y el simbolo actual con el source seleccionado y el timeframe actual
DIV = Nuevo simbolo / Simbolo base
TMA MTFThis indicator plots three different Triple Moving Averages (TMAs) for two different time frames on a price chart:
Middle TMA Line: This is the main TMA line, calculated based on a user-defined number of past bars. It's represented by a solid line on the chart.
Upper TMA Line: This line is calculated by adding a certain multiple of the Average True Range (ATR) to the main TMA line. It helps identify potential resistance levels and is plotted as a solid line.
Lower TMA Line: Similar to the upper line, this line is calculated by subtracting a multiple of the ATR from the main TMA line. It helps identify potential support levels and is also plotted as a solid line.
Additionally, you have the option to overlay these TMA lines on a higher timeframe (HTF) if desired. When you enable this feature, it plots the same three TMA lines but calculated using data from a higher timeframe, which can provide additional context for your trading decisions.
The indicator uses different colors for the TMA lines based on their relationships:
Green: The middle TMA line is above the higher timeframe middle TMA line, suggesting a potential bullish (upward) trend.
Red: The middle TMA line is below the higher timeframe middle TMA line, suggesting a potential bearish (downward) trend.
In addition, it plots the upper and lower TMA lines in shades of purple and maroon, respectively, on the higher timeframe for reference.
Overall, this indicator helps traders identify potential areas of support and resistance and assess the trend direction by comparing the TMA lines of different timeframes.
Variable:
TMA_Period:
This input variable allows you to specify the number of past bars that are used to calculate the main Triple Moving Average (TMA) line. A larger value will result in a smoother TMA line, while a smaller value will make it more responsive to recent price changes.
ATR_Period:
This input variable determines the number of past bars used to calculate the Average True Range (ATR). The ATR is a measure of price volatility. A longer ATR period considers a broader range of price movement, while a shorter period reacts more quickly to recent volatility.
ATR_Multiplier:
This input allows you to set a multiplier for the ATR on the current timeframe. The ATR value is multiplied by this factor to calculate the upper and lower TMA lines. A higher multiplier will result in wider TMA bands, while a lower multiplier will make them narrower.
ATR_Multiplier_HTF:
Similar to ATR_Multiplier, this input sets a multiplier for the ATR on a higher timeframe (HTF). It affects the width of the HTF TMA bands.
TF_1:
This input variable lets you choose the desired higher timeframe (HTF) for the indicator. You can select from various timeframes, including 1 minute, 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 60 minutes, 240 minutes (4 hours), daily (D), weekly (W), monthly (M), or choose "Auto" to let the script automatically determine the HTF based on the current timeframe.
src:
This input allows you to choose the price source used for calculations. By default, it's set to 'close,' which means the closing prices of each bar are used. You can change this to other price sources like 'open,' 'high,' 'low,' or 'ohlc4' (a combination of open, high, low, and close prices).
ma_type:
This input lets you select the type of moving average used in the calculations. You have three options: Weighted Moving Average (WMA), Double Weighted Moving Average (DWMA), and Triple Weighted Moving Average (TWMA).
Plot_TMA_HTF_Midline:
If set to 'true,' it will plot the middle TMA line of the higher timeframe (HTF) on the chart. If set to 'false,' the HTF middle TMA line will not be displayed.
Test - Symbiotic Exiton Measure Enthropic Nexus indicatorThe Symbiotic Exiton Measure Enthropic Nexus (SEMEN) Indicator is a technical analysis tool used in trading and investing. It's name might sound complex, but its function is quite simple - to help traders make informed decisions about buying or selling stocks by predicting market trends.
The SEMEN indicator uses a combination of various factors such as volume, price action, moving averages, and other indicators to generate a single numerical value that represents the overall health of the market. A high reading indicates a strong uptrend, while a low one suggests a downtrend.
Traders can use this information to enter or exit positions with confidence.
In essence, the SEMEN indicator provides a comprehensive view of the market's sentiment and direction, making it an essential tool for any trader or investor looking to make profitable decisions in today's volatile stock markets.
~description generated with Airoboros7b
- The indicator is experimental so use at your own discretion..
Geometrical Mean Moving AverageThe geometric moving average is a type of moving average that calculates the geometric mean of the previous n-periods of the price time series. Unlike the simple moving average that uses the arithmetic mean to continuously calculate the moving average as new price data comes in, the geometric moving average uses the geometric mean formula to get the moving average of the price data as new ones come in.
Why use a geometric moving average?
The geometric moving average differs from the simple moving average in how it is calculated. Most importantly, the geometric mean takes into account the compounding that occurs from period to period.
How can you use a geometric mean moving average?
You can use the GMMA just as you would use any other moving average indicator. You can use it to identify the direction of the trend, and in this case, it can also serve as a support level during an uptrend or a resistance level during a downtrend.
Drawbacks with a geometric moving average
Just like other moving average indicators, the GMA has limitations. Some of them are as follows:
It lags because it uses past price data.
It is pretty useless when the price action is choppy or moving predominantly sideways. During such periods, it can give multiple false signals.
Weighted Oscillator Convergence DivergenceThe Weighted Oscillator Convergence Divergence (WOCD) aims to help traders identify potential trend reversals or momentum shifts in financial markets by calculating and visualizing the difference between a smoothed oscillator (WMA) value and its exponential moving average (EMA) and simple moving average (SMA) counterparts. This indicator is particularly useful for traders who want an alternative perspective on price momentum and divergence.
Key Features:
Inputs:
Length: The user can specify the number of bars to consider for calculations (default is 9).
Smoothing 1: Defines the smoothing factor for the first smoothed value (default is 5).
Smoothing 2: Specifies the smoothing factor for the second smoothed value (default is 7).
Ma Type: There are three types of moving averages you can choose (Wilder, non-lag, Weighted is by default).
Color Settings: Users can customize the indicator's colors for various elements, such as length, smoothing values, and different sections of the histogram.
Calculation:
WOCD calculates the raw oscillator value by subtracting the close price from a 3-period High, Low, Close (HLC3) moving average.
It then applies smoothing to this raw oscillator value using two different methods: exponential moving average (EMA) and simple moving average (SMA) with user-defined smoothing periods.
Histogram Plot:
The indicator plots a histogram based on the difference between the smoothed oscillator and the first smoothed value.
When the histogram is above zero and rising, it is colored according to the "Above Grow" color setting. When it's above zero and falling, it uses the "Fall" color for visualization.
Similarly, when the histogram is below zero and rising, it is colored according to the "Below Grow" color setting, and when it's below zero and falling, it uses the "Fall" color.
Oscillator and Smoothed Values:
The indicator also plots the smoothed oscillator, smoothed value 1 (EMA-based), and smoothed value 2 (SMA-based) on the chart.
Zero Line:
A horizontal line at zero is drawn on the chart for reference.
How to Use the WOCD Indicator:
Trend Identification: Observe the histogram's direction and color. A rising histogram above zero may indicate bullish momentum, while a falling histogram below zero could signal bearish momentum.
Divergence: Look for divergences between price action and the histogram. When the histogram and price move in opposite directions, it can be a potential reversal signal.
Crossovers: Pay attention to crossovers between the smoothed oscillator and its smoothed counterparts (EMA and SMA). These crossovers can indicate changes in trend strength or direction.
Zero Line: The zero line can act as a reference point. Positive histogram values suggest bullish sentiment, while negative values indicate bearish sentiment.
Comparison to MACD Indicator:
The WOCD indicator shares some similarities with the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator but also has distinct differences:
Similarities:
Both WOCD and MACD are momentum oscillators designed to identify potential trend reversals and divergences.
They use moving averages (EMA in the case of MACD) to smooth the raw oscillator values.
Both indicators provide histogram representations of the difference between the oscillator and its smoothed counterpart.
Differences:
WOCD uses a 3-period High, Low, Close (HLC3) moving average to calculate the raw oscillator value, whereas MACD uses the difference between two exponential moving averages (usually 12-period and 26-period EMAs).
The smoothing in WOCD employs both EMA and SMA, while MACD exclusively uses EMA.
WOCD allows users to customize colors for various elements, enhancing visual clarity.
OKX: MA CrossoverEXAMPLE Scripte from my stream , how to use OKX webhooks for create strategy on Pine with real\demo trading on your OKX account. This strategy only for test the functional forward orders to OKX. The backtest not included commisions and other.
OKX MA Crossover. This strategy generate JSONs for place orders on the exchange by alerts and webhooks.
In the script 2 function to generate entry and exit orders, and input parameters that needed for setup exchange.
Use it for test this stack and to write you own strategy for trade on the OKX Exchange.
Daily TrendDescription:
The "Daily Trend" script is a powerful technical analysis tool designed for TradingView. This indicator helps traders identify key support and resistance levels based on daily price data. It offers a visual representation of these levels, along with other technical indicators like Exponential Moving Averages (EMA), Supertrend, and Parabolic SAR.
Features:
Past Candle Price Levels: This script calculates and displays past daily candle price levels, including R1, R2, R3, R4, S1, S2, S3, and S4. These levels are vital for identifying potential reversals and breakout points.
Exponential Moving Average (EMA): The script includes an EMA indicator with a customizable period to help traders spot the trend direction and potential crossovers.
Supertrend Indicator: The Supertrend indicator is used to identify trend changes. It plots the Supertrend line and highlights the trend direction with color-coded regions.
Parabolic SAR: The Parabolic SAR indicator is integrated into the script to assist traders in identifying potential entry and exit points in the market.
Customizable Alerts: Traders can customize the indicator by choosing which past candle price levels and other features to display on the chart.
How to Use:
Apply the "Daily Trend" script to your TradingView chart.
Customize the indicator by enabling or disabling specific features, such as past candle price levels and EMA.
Pay attention to the color-coded regions for Supertrend and Parabolic SAR to determine the current trend direction.
Look for potential reversal or bounce signals based on the indicator's signals and the price action.
Consider using this script in conjunction with your trading strategy for enhanced technical analysis.
Risk Warning: Trading involves significant risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always practice proper risk management and consider the broader context of the market before making trading decisions.
Tribute to David PaulI made this indicator as a tribute to the late David Paul .
He mentioned quite a lot about 89 periods moving average (especially on 4h), also the 21 and 55.
I put up some entries when three ma are crossed by price in the same direction, bull/bear backgrounds and a color code for candles because who doesn't love the feeling of a lasting trend.
To be more specific :
The indicator plots sma21, sma55, sma89 and AMA = (sma21+sma55+sma89)/3
When the closing price crosses the highest of the 3 sma, it is considered a bullish confirmation.
At this moment two lines appear, one on the bottom of the candle that crossed, one on the crossing point.
The lowest line can be used as the stop loss value of a long.
The highest line can be used as an entry point for a long.
When the closing price crosses the lowest of the 3 sma, it is considered a bearish confirmation.
At this moment two lines appear, one on the top of the candle that crossed, one on the crossing point.
The highest line can be used as the stop loss value of a short.
The lowest line can be used as an entry point for shorts.
When the closing price is above AMA, it is considered a bullish confirmation.
At this time a blue background appears at the crossing point.
The highest line can be used as the stop loss value for a long.
The starting point of the background can be used as the entry point for a long.
When the closing price is below AMA, it is considered a bearish confirmation.
At this time a red background appears at the crossing point.
The highest line can be used as the stop loss value for a short.
The starting point of the background can be used as the entry point for a short.
When the price is above 3 sma the candles turn blue. Signifying an upward trend.
When the price is below 3 sma the candles turn red. Signifying a bearish trend.
When the price is neither simultaneously above nor below the 3 sma, the candles are gray and the background linked to AMA becomes less vivid. Meaning a loss of vitality of the current trend or an absence of a clear trend.
Ideally, you should take a position towards "Real Long/Short Entry", set your stop loss towards "Ideal Long/Short Entry", and close the trade either when the background ends (riskier but more potential), or when the candles become gray (more conservative but noisier).
In the inputs, you can modify the display rules (explained in the tooltips), by default everything is displayed.
AI SuperTrend - Strategy [presentTrading]
█ Introduction and How it is Different
The AI Supertrend Strategy is a unique hybrid approach that employs both traditional technical indicators and machine learning techniques. Unlike standard strategies that rely solely on traditional indicators or mathematical models, this strategy integrates the power of k-Nearest Neighbors (KNN), a machine learning algorithm, with the tried-and-true SuperTrend indicator. This blend aims to provide traders with more accurate, responsive, and context-aware trading signals.
*The KNN part is mainly referred from @Zeiierman.
BTCUSD 8hr performance
ETHUSD 8hr performance
█ Strategy, How it Works: Detailed Explanation
SuperTrend Calculation
Volume-Weighted Moving Average (VWMA): A VWMA of the close price is calculated based on the user-defined length (len). This serves as the central line around which the upper and lower bands are calculated.
Average True Range (ATR): ATR is calculated over a period defined by len. It measures the market's volatility.
Upper and Lower Bands: The upper band is calculated as VWMA + (factor * ATR) and the lower band as VWMA - (factor * ATR). The factor is a user-defined multiplier that decides how wide the bands should be.
KNN Algorithm
Data Collection: An array (data) is populated with recent n SuperTrend values. Corresponding labels (labels) are determined by whether the weighted moving average price (price) is greater than the weighted moving average of the SuperTrend (sT).
Distance Calculation: The absolute distance between each data point and the current SuperTrend value is calculated.
Sorting & Weighting: The distances are sorted in ascending order, and the closest k points are selected. Each point is weighted by the inverse of its distance to the current point.
Classification: A weighted sum of the labels of the k closest points is calculated. If the sum is closer to 1, the trend is predicted as bullish; if closer to 0, bearish.
Signal Generation
Start of Trend: A new bullish trend (Start_TrendUp) is considered to have started if the current trend color is bullish and the previous was not bullish. Similarly for bearish trends (Start_TrendDn).
Trend Continuation: A bullish trend (TrendUp) is considered to be continuing if the direction is negative and the KNN prediction is 1. Similarly for bearish trends (TrendDn).
Trading Logic
Long Condition: If Start_TrendUp or TrendUp is true, a long position is entered.
Short Condition: If Start_TrendDn or TrendDn is true, a short position is entered.
Exit Condition: Dynamic trailing stops are used for exits. If the trend does not continue as indicated by the KNN prediction and SuperTrend direction, an exit signal is generated.
The synergy between SuperTrend and KNN aims to filter out noise and produce more reliable trading signals. While SuperTrend provides a broad sense of the market direction, KNN refines this by predicting short-term price movements, leading to a more nuanced trading strategy.
Local picture
█ Trade Direction
The strategy allows traders to choose between taking only long positions, only short positions, or both. This is particularly useful for adapting to different market conditions.
█ Usage
ToolTips: Explains what each parameter does and how to adjust them.
Inputs: Customize values like the number of neighbors in KNN, ATR multiplier, and moving average type.
Plotting: Visual cues on the chart to indicate bullish or bearish trends.
Order Execution: Based on the generated signals, the strategy will execute buy/sell orders.
█ Default Settings
The default settings are selected to provide a balanced approach, but they can be modified for different trading styles and asset classes.
Initial Capital: $10,000
Default Quantity Type: 10% of equity
Commission: 0.1%
Slippage: 1
Currency: USD
By combining both machine learning and traditional technical analysis, this strategy offers a sophisticated and adaptive trading solution.
MA Support & Resistance SignalThis indicator is to show MA Support/Resistance and trend of a stock.
It contains three (3) Moving Averages that can be set to SMA or EMA:
1. Upper Line : SMA 5 (default)
2. Lower Line : SMA 20 (default)
3. Support/Resistance Line : SMA 10 (default)
Other signals:
1. Bull and Blue Dotted Line signal: Upper Line (SMA 5) crossover with Lower Line (SMA 20).
2. Bear and Red Dotted Line signal: Lower Line (SMA 20) crossover with Upper Line (SMA 5).
3. Red Triangle signal: Price closes below Support/Resistance Line (SMA 10).
4. Green Bar signal: Price breaks Support/Resistance Line (SMA 10).
The way how I use it:
- Since I don't like my chart to be crowded with a lot of moving averages, I will disable SMA 5 and SMA 10 and will only leave SMA 20 as my final support line.
- Entry when only:
1. Bull signal appeared.
2. Green bar appeared, or;
3. Price rebound on SMA 20.
I let the script open so that you guys can custom it based on your own preferences. Hope you guys enjoy it.
Moving Average Cross trade PLAbstract
This script evaluates the potential trading proceeding and loss of the moving average cross strategy and plot it as a chart.
We can use it as a reference to whether we follow the original trading signals or not.
Introduction
Moving average cross is a popular trading strategy.
The strategy suggests traders buy when the short term moving average is above the long term moving average and sell when the short term moving average is below the long term moving average.
However, just like the most technical indicators, the signals are not always accurate.
This problem causes traders don't have sufficient confidence to trade with these signals.
On the other hand, the natural risk management suggests us only invest after major risks are past.
Therefore, we wait until many counterexamples of trading signals are past.
What will happen if we imagine that following a specific trading signal is a fund?
We can evaluate the potential trading proceeding and loss and plot it as a chart.
And then, we can measure how much loss may encounter in many worst cases and regard it as a reference to whether we follow the original trading signals or not.
How it works
1. Determine the instruments and time frames we are interested in.
2. Determine the long term moving average and the short term moving average.
3. The strategy suggests traders buy when the short term moving average is above the long term moving average and sell when the short term moving average is below the long term moving average.
4. The potential trading proceeding and loss is plotted as a chart.
5. There are two colors in the chart. One is when the short term moving average is above the long term moving average and the other is when the short term moving average is below the long term moving average.
6. We can observe the local maximum and the local minimum or apply other indicators we are interested in on the numbers it provides.
Parameters
x_type1 = How to compute the short term moving average. The option diff means the price several days ago.
x_src1 = How to summarize the price of a trading day. It depends on the open, high, low or close prices.
x_ma1 = How many days included in the short term moving average. When it is 1, the signal becomes when the price is above or below a single moving average.
x_type2 = How to compute the long term moving average
x_src2 = How to summarize the price of a trading day. It depends on the open, high, low or close prices.
x_ma2 = How many days included in the long term moving average
Conclusion
This indicator can quantize the potential trading proceeding and loss and can imply when following the original trading signals is good or not.
Combining the instruments which are long term investible and use this indicator to avoid potential risks, we can make proceeding better than holding the major stock markets.
Median of Means Estimator Median of Means (MoM) is a measure of central tendency like mean (average) and median. However, it could be a better and robust estimator of central tendency when the data is not normal, asymmetric, have fat tails (like stock price data) and have outliers. The MoM can be used as a robust trend following tool and in other derived indicators.
Median of means (MoM) is calculated as follows, the MoM estimator shuffles the "n" data points and then splits them into k groups of m data points (n= k*m). It then computes the Arithmetic Mean of each group (k). Finally, it calculate the median over the resulting k Arithmetic Means. This technique diminishes the effect that outliers have on the final estimation by splitting the data and only considering the median of the resulting sub-estimations. This preserves the overall trend despite the data shuffle.
Below is an example to illustrate the advantages of MoM
Set A Set B Set C
3 4 4
3 4 4
3 5 5
3 5 5
4 5 5
4 5 5
5 5 5
5 5 5
6 6 8
6 6 8
7 7 10
7 7 15
8 8 40
9 9 50
10 100 100
Median 5 5 5
Mean 5.5 12.1 17.9
MoM 5.7 6.0 17.3
For all three sets the median is the same, though set A and B are the same except for one outlier in set B (100) it skews the mean but the median is resilient. However, in set C the group has several high values despite that the median is not responsive and still give 5 as the central tendency of the group, but the median of means is a value of 17.3 which is very close to the group mean 17.9. In all three cases (set A, B and C) the MoM provides a better snapshot of the central tendency of the group. Note: The MoM is dependent on the way we split the data initially and the value might slightly vary when the randomization is done sevral time and the resulting value can give the confidence interval of the MoM estimator.
Trend_Trader_WMA (Momentum)<---> Caution! This is first test version of indicator. I am ready to get more ideas+feedback to develop it more. <--->
The "Momentum_Trader_WMA" indicator is a versatile technical analysis tool designed to help traders identify potential trend changes and momentum shifts in the market. It combines multiple indicators and moving averages to provide a comprehensive view of price action and momentum.
Key Features:
Weighted Moving Averages (WMAs): The indicator calculates two different WMAs with user-defined lengths, providing a smoothed representation of price data.
Average True Range (ATR) Bands: ATR is used to calculate dynamic bands around the WMA Average. These bands can help traders gauge market volatility and potential breakout points. The color of the ATR bands can be seen as an early signal of trends or the continuation of current trends.
Commodity Channel Index (CCI): CCI is a momentum oscillator that measures the relative strength of price changes. The indicator calculates CCI values based on a user-defined period.
Exponential Moving Average (EMA) of CCI: An EMA of CCI is plotted to help identify trends and momentum shifts.
Color-Coded Bands: The ATR bands change colors based on CCI conditions, providing visual cues for potential trading opportunities. When ATR bands transition from narrow (indicating low volatility) to wide (indicating increased volatility), it can be seen as an early signal of a potential trend change or the continuation of the current trend.
Buy and Sell Signals: The indicator generates buy and sell signals based on crossovers of WMAs and CCI thresholds, making it easier for traders to identify entry and exit points.
Customizable Moving Averages: Traders can enable or disable different moving averages (e.g., SMA, EMA, WMA, RMA, VWMA, HMA) with various periods and colors to adapt the indicator to their trading preferences.
CCI Dot Alerts: Dots are displayed at the bottom of the chart based on CCI values, helping traders spot extreme CCI conditions.
How to Use:
Trend Identification: The WMAs and ATR bands can help identify the current trend direction and its strength. When the WMAs are in an uptrend (green) and the ATR bands widen, it may indicate a strong bullish trend. Conversely, when the WMAs are in a downtrend (red) and the ATR bands narrow, it may suggest a weakening bearish trend.
Momentum Confirmation: The CCI and its EMA provide insights into market momentum. Look for CCI crossovers above 100 for potential bullish momentum and below -100 for potential bearish momentum.
Buy and Sell Signals: Pay attention to the buy and sell signals generated by the indicator. Buy when the WMAs cross over and CCI crosses above 100. Sell when the WMAs cross under and CCI crosses below -100.
ATR Bands as Early Signals: The color changes in the ATR bands can be seen as early signals of trends or the continuation of current trends. Wide ATR bands may indicate increased volatility and potential trend changes, while narrow ATR bands suggest reduced volatility and potential trend continuation.
Moving Averages: Customize the indicator by enabling or disabling specific moving averages according to your preferred trading strategy.
CCI Dots: Use the CCI dots to identify extreme CCI conditions, which may indicate overbought or oversold market conditions.
PS:
Recommended to use Indicator with price action conecpts(eg. support and resistance) as they play important role in any market.
Buy and sell signals are not really accurate. I would personally look for trend shift in WMA middle line and confirmation from CCI dots at bottom. For example. If middle line turns green and within recent 3-4 candles (or next 3-4 candles) dots tunrns green also, that means momentum has been rised in the direction of bulls.
pls, take s/r concepts first when working. I am thinking to add more precise buy sell signal method to make it easier to trade.
Good luck with your trades :)
ROCkin RSIROCkin RSI Indicator
Overview
The "ROCkin RSI" indicator combines the traditional Relative Strength Index (RSI) with an innovative approach using the Rate of Change (ROC) to offer a new way to visualize and interpret market momentum. By averaging the slope of the RSI over time and allowing for different types of moving averages, this indicator aims to help traders identify trending and reversal patterns more efficiently.
Features
RSI Calculations: The core of the indicator is based on the standard Relative Strength Index, an oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements. The RSI oscillates between 0 and 100 and is usually used to identify overbought or oversold conditions.
Rate of Change of Price (ROC): Instead of simply plotting the RSI, this indicator calculates the Rate of Change of the closing price, essentially looking at how steep the RSI curve is over a user-defined period.
Smoothing: To reduce noise and make the curve smoother, the slope of the RSI is averaged over a given number of periods, which can either be a Simple Moving Average (SMA) or an Exponential Moving Average (EMA).
Column Plots: The smoothed RSI slope is plotted as columns, where the color of the columns (red or green) indicates whether the slope is positive or negative.
Optional RSI Moving Average: The indicator also offers an optional feature to plot a moving average of the smoothed RSI slope, aiding in trend identification.
Inputs
RSI Periods: The number of periods used to calculate the RSI.
Slope Periods: The number of periods used for calculating the Rate of Change.
Average Periods: The number of periods used for smoothing the RSI slope.
Type of Average: Choose between EMA (Exponential Moving Average) and SMA (Simple Moving Average) for smoothing.
Show RSI Moving Average: Toggle this to either show or hide the moving average of the smoothed RSI slope.
Moving Average Period: The period used for calculating the RSI Moving Average.
Moving Average Type: Choose between EMA and SMA for the RSI Moving Average.
How to Interpret
Positive Slope (Red Columns): Indicates upward momentum in the RSI, which may imply a bullish trend.
Negative Slope (Green Columns): Indicates downward momentum in the RSI, suggesting a possible bearish trend.
RSI Moving Average: Acts as a signal line to confirm the trend. When the smoothed RSI slope is above its moving average, it confirms the bullish trend, and when it's below, it confirms the bearish trend.
Practical Use
Entry/Exit Signals: Consider entering a long position when the columns of the green histogram cross above the moving average. Conversely, consider entering a short position when the columns cross under when red. The higher the columns the more likely the trade will be a good one.
Fine-Tuning and Optimization
It's crucial to understand that the default settings might not be optimal for all trading scenarios. The effectiveness of the ROCkin RSI indicator can vary based on the asset you're trading, the market conditions, and your trading style. Therefore, it's highly recommended to play with the settings and study the historical performance on the chart to grasp how the indicator behaves.
By experimenting with different periods for RSI, the Rate of Change, and the moving averages, you can tailor the indicator to better suit your needs. Studying how the indicator would have performed in the past can help you understand its potential strengths and weaknesses. Once you've got a feel for how it operates, you can then optimize the settings to align with your trading strategy and risk tolerance.
ATR Based EMA Price Targets [SS]As requested...
This is a spinoff of my EMA 9/21 cross indicator with price targets.
A few of you asked for a simple EMA crossover version and that is what this is.
I have, of course, added a bit of extra functionality to it, assuming you would want to transition from another EMA indicator to this one, I tried to leave it somewhat customizable so you can get the same type of functionality as any other EMA based indicator just with the added advantage of having an ATR based assessment added on. So lets get into the details:
What it does:
Same as my EMA 9/21, simply performs a basic ATR range analysis on a ticker, calculating the average move it does on a bullish or bearish cross.
How to use it:
So there are quite a few functions of this indicator. I am going to break them down one by one, from most basic to the more complex.
Plot functions:
EMA is Customizable: The EMA is customizable. If you want the 200, 100, 50, 31, 9, whatever you want, you just have to add the desired EMA timeframe in the settings menu.
Standard Deviation Bands are an option: If you like to have standard deviation bands added to your EMA's, you can select to show the standard deviation band. It will plot the standard deviation for the desired EMA timeframe (so if it is the EMA 200, it will plot the Standard Deviation on the EMA 200).
Plotting Crossovers: You can have the indicator plot green arrows for bullish crosses and red arrows for bearish crosses. I have smoothed out this function slightly by only having it signal a crossover when it breaks and holds. I pulled this over to the alert condition functions as well, so you are not constantly being alerted when it is bouncing over and below an EMA. Only once it chooses a direction, holds and moves up or down, will it alert to a true crossover.
Plotting labels: The indicator will default to plotting the price target labels and the EMA label. You can toggle these on and off in the EMA settings menu.
Trend Assessment Settings:
In addition to plotting the EMA itself and signaling the ATR ranges, the EMA will provide you will demographic information about the trend and price action behaviour around the EMA. You can see an example in the image below:
This will provide you with a breakdown of the statistics on the EMA over the designated lookback period, such as the number of crosses, the time above and below the EMA and the amount the EMA has remained within its standard deviation bands.
Where this is important is the proportion assessment. And what the proportion assessment is doing is its measuring the amount of time the ticker is spending either above or below the EMA.
Ideally, you should have relatively equal and uniform durations above and below. This would be a proportion of between 0.5 and 1.5 Above to Below. Now, you don't have to remember this because you can ask the indicator to do the assessment for you. It will be displayed at the bottom of your chart in a table that you can toggle on and off:
Example of a Uniform Assessment:
Example of a biased assessment:
Keep in mind, if you are using those very laggy EMAs (like the 50, 200, 100 etc.) on the daily timeframe, you aren't going to get uniformity in the data. This is because, stocks are technically already biased to the upside over time. Thus, when you are looking at the big picture, the bull bias thesis of the stock market is in play.
But for the smaller and moderate timeframes, owning to the randomness of price action, you can generally get uniformity in data representation by simply adjusting your lookback period.
To adjust your lookback period, you simply need to change the timeframe for the ATR lookback length. I suggest no less than 500 and probably no more than 1,500 candles, and work within this range. But you can use what the indicator indicates is appropriate.
Of course, all of these charts can be turned off and you are left with a clean looking EMA indicator:
And an example with the standard deviation bands toggled on:
And that, my friends, is the indicator.
Hopefully this is what you wanted, let me know if you have any suggestions.
Enjoy and safe trades!