Mansfield Relative Strength (Original Version) by stageanalysisThe Mansfield Relative Strength ( Mansfield RS ) is one of the core components of the Stan Weinstein's Stage Analysis method as discussed in his classic book Stan Weinstein's Secrets for Profiting in Bull and Bear Markets .
The Mansfield RS measures the relative performance of the stock compared to an index such as the S&P 500, or to another stock etc.
However, this should not to be confused with the popular RSI (Relative Strength Index developed J. Welles Wilder), which is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and change of price movements on a single stock.
The Mansfield RS indicator consists of the Relative Strength comparison line versus the S&P 500 (default universal setting, but can be edited), and the "Zero Line" – which is the 52 week MA of the Relative Strength line, that's been flattened to create the oscillator style.
How to use the Indicator:
Outperforming – Above the Zero Line
When the Relative Strength line crosses above the Zero Line (it's flattened 52 week RS MA), it is outperforming the index or stock that it's comparing against, and so it is showing stronger relative strength.
Underperforming – Below the Zero Line
When the Relative Strength line crosses below the Zero Line (it's flattened 52 week RS MA), it is underperforming the index or stock that it's comparing against, and so it is showing weaker relative strength.
Settings:
When you first add the indicator is has a coloured background, with a green tint for a postive RS score, and a red tint for a negative RS score. However, this can be turned off, or edited in the indicator settings, in the Style tab. So you can change the colors or remove it and just have the RS line and zero line showing. Both of which can also be edited in the settings.
Change the symbol that it compares against. The default is the S&P 500. But for crypto you might want to use Bitcoin for example. Or you might want to compare against competing stocks in the same peer group, or against the industry group or sector. The choice is yours. But the S&P 500 is a universal measure for the Mansfield RS. So I would recommend leaving it on that unless you have a particular reason to change it as mentioned.
MA Length is also an editable setting. This creates the Zero Line. So it will affect the values of the Mansfield RS if you change it. 52 is the default setting, and is set as such for the weekly chart. So I'd recommend not editing it on the weekly chart, but for other timeframes, different settings can be used.
Relative Strength Comparison
[GTH] Relative Strength, SectorsDisplays the Relative Strength (RS) of a symbol in relation to some common sector ETFs, SPX and NDX (select from drop-down list). This is done by dividing the symbol's price by the chosen sector ETF's price.
You can also select a symbol of your choice to compare against.
Interpretation:
RS line ascending: symbol performs stronger than the sector ETF.
RS line decending: symbol performs weaker than the sector ETF.
In case of error reports: please be specfic. Thanks.
Greater Currency Correlation Matrix (Forex)Other available matrixes I found have a limited number of forex symbols. Consequentially, you need to keep switching them if you want to do a proper analysis. As a result of that, I produced my own currency matrix.
Correlation studies relationships between different price charts.
High correlation may be completely random in the short term, but it may signify a fundamental relationship between the two symbols if calculated over the long term.
For example, the currency of an oil-producing country may rally along with oil, whereas the importer's currency may drop. This means that watching the oil price chart may be worth it for such pairs.
The script includes all Major and Minor pairs with the addition of Gold (XAUEUR) and two optional symbols.
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To avoid too frequent use of security(), I decided to calculate all symbol values from EUR pairs. It should improve performance and keep room for some additional symbols in the future.
Please report any bugs.
Overlay Mini Plot(s) of Correlated Asset(s)Overlay a small plot of a correlated asset of your choosing. Shrink/expand, Set vertical and horizontal position, plot multiple mini-plots via duplicate indicators with varied settings.
Plots the last X bars of any asset; including the live candle currently painting
Useful for low time frame trading when you want to see correlated asset price movement right alongside the price movement you're watching.
Useful for quick and simple comparisons; when you don't want the clutter of split screen or multi-pane view.
Useful for backtesting.
Price scale agnostic; just plots the shape of the recent price action, with several optional labels: Asset+timeframe | Live Price | Highest price over X bars | Lowest price over X bars.
Works fine with all the assets i've tested it on.
~~User inputs~~
-number of bars to paint.
-horizontal offset: plot to right X bars or to left X bars
-vertical offset: shift up or down, shrink or expand; by using 2 'spacer' inputs
-color/transparancy of candles and price labels.
-width (pixels) of candle bodies.
-choose to display price labels or not
-choose to display asset label or not
~~Tips~~
--Add several of these indicators; changing the vertical 'Shift/Shrink' settings on each to visually separate them.
--In the above chart or EurUsd, there are three indicators =>> three mini-plots overlaid: DXY, EurGbp and GbpUsd. Using the following settings for Space Above:Space Below: DXY- 0.1:4.5 | EurGbp- 1.8:1.8 | GbpUsd- 4.5:0.1
--the more you add, the more you'll have to vertically shrink the plots
© twingall
SST Table NewData Table for Update GTT Orders in Stocks....
Updated GTT Order details for SST , also added Relative Strength of Stock compared with NIFTY Index for 55 Days (3 Months) period.
RS line plotted on chart… taken reference of close price of day candle… just a bigger picture of actual RS indicator plotted on chart itself... RS line in red color means below zero line (negative) and green color means above zero line (positive).
Added code for checking RS value on chart for any previous day.
Z-Score DeltaHeavily modified from Z Score by jwammo12
Compares the z-score of two assets, the onscreen one and the reference one configured. If you're familiar, you can think of it as Bollinger Band Percent of Onscreen Asset minus the Bollinger Band Percent of Reference Asset.
It's compared off a simple moving average, due to how standard deviation is calculated.
I view this a more literal meaning of relative strength.
Has the ability to offset or delay in time one to another.
TODO: add MAD and MAD/STD.DEV views
Not my greatest work, but it's functional.
Asset compared to asset/marketThis indicator simply divides an asset to another asset and multiplies the result by 100.
There are the options for choosing a timeframe and symbols. I've also added EMAs.
There's also the option to put red/green background when the EMAs are above the index and are upsloping and vice versa.
Enjoy!
CCI + EMA with RSI Cross StrategyThis strategy uses the CCI + 2 RSIs + 2 EMAs to generate trade signals. Trades are only taken during the normal trading session and all open trades are closed 15 min before the close of the current session. A trailing stop loss is used and is customizable.
Not trading advice, use at your own risk.
Comparative Relative Strength for Crypto (USDT/USD)Comparative Relative Strength for Crypto (USDT/USD)
An adaption of the indicator as published by © bharatTrader->
Please visit the link for details as published by the original coder.
Configured for Crypto by presetting (per filter) for CIX100 usage - either in USDT (Kucoin) or USD (Capitolcom)
MomentumThis indicator will give you the momentum readings (rate of change) for five lookback periods (15m, 60m, 4hr, 24hr, 48hr).
This is useful when backtesting or retroactively logging the readings into your trade journal (there is no way to roll back the Forex Factory momentum screener that I know of).
There are lines drawing in the background which are set to 100% transparency by default, so don't be puzzled when you occasionally see the bubbles for the line plots being highlighted on your chart.
Message me with any questions or suggestions.
ICT index correlated market indicatorThis is not a real indicator, but is what ICT use as indicator for trading futures indexes.
it can only display SP500, Dow Jon Industrial Average and Nasdaq, if someone want other market can copy the code and change some parameters (is more easy than it can appear)
A good idea is using this other market on backtest to confirm the divergence idea of Linda Raske, than use it to spot quickly in real market.
Another idea published by ICT is the "hidden entry pattern", the entry signal appear in ES or YM but I trade NQ for volatility, so I use the trigger of SP500 or Dow to enter in Nasdaq.
Rember always don't trust anybody, do your own backtest and research!
Short & Long Relative StrengthRelative Strength (RS) is a method of identifying stocks which are relatively stronger or weaker as compared the market as a whole or to a relevant benchmark.
To calculate the relative strength of a particular stock, divide the percentage change over some time period by the percentage change of a particular index over the same time period.
The value of RS Indicator oscillates around zero. If value of RS is above ZERO then security is outperforming the benchmark and if value of RS is below ZERO then security is outperforming the benchmark.
Here i have used two RS indicator lines in one indicator - Short Term RS (default value is 65) and Long Term RS (default value is 123).
I have set default benchmark index as Nifty 50 (NSE:NIFTY)
R-Smart - Relative Strength On observing the market for years I learned that Relative Strength will help us in staying invested in strong bullish stocks (relative to primary indices of your country, in my case it's Nifty 50 for India). Once you identify a strong stock, it's important to know if the stock is trending and is in momentum. To identify, trends and momentum, I used ADX and MACD indicators respectively as part of the R-Smart.
In R-Smart, I used Relative Strength primarily to plot the chart, if the Histogram is positive (greater than 0) then the security is bullish. But then how do we know that it's in trend and having momentum. Well the below color code will help you identify them
1. Histogram in Green : Strong Bullish
2. Histogram in Blue : Weak Bullish
3. Histogram in Orange: Bearish
Apart from the above indicator, I would like to use Super Trend to know the immediate support/resistances on the chart.
# StayInvested
# StayProfitable
# ManageYourRisk
Comparative Relative Strength(CRS), ARS,SRS,Beta,RocShows comparative relative strength(CRS) against any benchmark script , if CRS is above ARS line than ARS is Positive and if CRS turns green than SRS is positive and vice versa.
Aryangel_MACD+RSICombination of MACD and RSI, strong signal for buy/sell with MACD and RSI crossover.
Multiple Relative Strength (Multiple RS) (XP)Multiple Relative Strength (Multiple RS) (XP)
You can see three Relative Strength lines.
The lines are thicker going from RS1 to RS2 to RS3, for differentiation.
Using the three RS, you can see long, medium, and short term performance at once.
Relative StrengthRelative strength is a calculation of the price trend of a stock or a financial instrument in comparison to another instrument, stock, or industry. It shall be determined by taking the price of one commodity and dividing it by another.
Relative strength is a strategy used for determining value stocks and is used in momentum investing as well. It involves investing in stocks that have done well, in relation to their index or benchmark. For example, a relative strength investor might pick technology companies that have outperformed the Nasdaq Composite Index or large-cap stocks that are lagging against the S&P 500 index(Adjustable in the settings).
This indiator will give you a plot for relative strength between the current pair with another pair (adjustable in the settings), with a plotshape for RSNHBP & RSNH
Features :
1. Relative Strength
2. Double EMA of Relative Strength
3. RSNHBP & RSNH
How to use it :
1. Adjust All the settings parameter
2. For Alerting, Just use any alert function call, it will give you an alert of RSNHBP and RSNH
Mansfield RSHello,
I hope you like this representation of the Mansfield Relative Strength Indicator.
The calculations have been made based on the following formulas:
Standard Relative Performance indicator
RP = ( stock_close / index_close ) * 100
Mansfield Relative Performance indicator
MRP = (( RP (today) / sma ( RP (today), n)) - 1 ) * 100
Where:
RP = Standard Relative Performance indicator (see above)
SMA = Simple moving average over n days.
n = 52 for weekly charts, and n = 200 on daily charts
Thanks,
TASC 2022.03 Relative Strength Volatility-Adjusted EMA█ OVERVIEW
TASC's March 2022 edition of Traders' Tips includes the "Relative Strength Moving Averages - Part 3: The Relative Strength Volatility-Adjusted Exponential Moving Average" article authored by Vitali Apirine. This is the code that implements the "RS VolatAdj EMA" from the article.
█ CONCEPTS
In a three-part article series, Vitaly Apirine examines ways to filter price movements and define turning points by applying the Relative Strength concept to exponential moving averages . The resulting indicator is more responsive and is intended to account for the relative strength of volatility .
█ CALCULATIONS
The calculation process uses the following steps:
Select an appropriate volatility index (in our case it is VIX ).
Calculate up day volatility (UV) smoothed by a 10-day EMA.
Calculate down day volatility (DV) smoothed by a 10-day EMA.
Take the absolute value of the difference between UV and DV and divide by the sum of UV and DV. This is the Volatility Strength we need.
Calculate a MLTP constant - the weighting multiplier for an exponential moving average.
Combine Volatility Strength and MLTP to create an exponential moving average on current price data.
Join TradingView!
Williams Alligator Trend Filter HeatmapHello I've decided that the alligator lines can be used to find a trend. This script expands on that and checks 10 different multipliers to see trend over the long term and have 10 values. Those 10 values each give a color to one of the 10 lines in turn giving this Fire like plotting. I personaly use this to see if there is fear (red) in the markets or greed (blue), plotted 9 different crypto coins on the chart and have 4 columns in my setup to see the values on different timeframes. In the chart preview this is 1H,30M,10M,1M to see current environment. The colors use alot of data to generate especialy the bottom part, that colors based on a very long time zone.
ETH vs BTC 200W SMA OverextensionHistorically, when BTC suffers a correction and ETH continues to rally, this hints at an impending market-wide correction. In Jan 2018, ETH rallies while BTC corrects, signalling the end of the bull cycle. In May 2021, ETH rallies while BTC ranges between $50-$60k, then a major correction occurs. This indicator attempts to monitor this phenomenon in order to help spot potential macro tops in the cryptocurrency market.
The indicator takes the price of the asset and divides it by the 200 week SMA value. This gives an over/undervaluation in percentage terms. When ETH becomes significantly more overvalued relative to BTC, the indicator will warn of a potential top forming (see red shaded areas).
This is for edutainment purposes only. Don't make financial decisions based on this indicator.
Volume Weighted Real Relative Strength (RS/RW)Volume Weighted Real Relative Strength (VRRS) measures the relative strength of a tickers vs. a benchmark ticker for the market, i.e. $SPY, and a benchmark ticker for the sector it is in. The calculation of VRRS is done as follow:
VRRS = * VolWeighted * 100
Where :
Close is Close price
smaClose is the last simple moving average value.
Ref is Reference ticker
VolWeighted is the volume weighted factor and is defined as (smaVol_short / smaVol_long); where smaVol_short, smaVol_long are the simple moving average of volume calculated for a short period (i.e. 21 period) and long period (i.e. 5 days), respectively.
Feature :
1. It can show two VRRS, one calculated against a market benchmark (i.e. $SPY) and one for a sector benchmark.
2. It shows also the bar plot of the benchmark ticker.
Linear Regression Relative Strength[image/x/iZvwDWEY/
Relative Strength indicator comparing the current symbol to SPY (or any other benchmark). It may help to pick the right assets to complement the portfolio build around core ETFs such as SPY.
The general idea is to show if the current symbol outperforms or underperforms the benchmark (SPY by default) when bought some certain time ago. Relative performance is displayed as percent and is calculated for three different time ranges - short (1 mo by default), mid (1 quarter), and long (half a year). To smooth the volatility, the script uses linear regression to estimate the trend and takes the start and the end points of the linear regression line to compute the relative strength.
It is important to remember that the script shows the gain relative to SPY (or other selected benchmark), not the asset's gain. Therefore, it may indicate that the asset is profitable, but it still may lose value if SPY is in downtrend.
Therefore, it is crucial to check other indicators before making a decision. In the example above, standard linear regression for one quarter is used to indicate the direction of the trend.