SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open//@version=5
indicator("SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open", overlay=true)
// Exchange Time (New York)
sess = input.session("0930-1600", "Regular Session (ET)")
// Detect session and 9:30 AM bar
inSession = time(timeframe.period, sess)
// Capture the 9:30 AM open
var float open930 = na
if inSession
// If this is the first bar of the session (9:30 AM)
if time(timeframe.period, sess) == na
open930 := open
else
open930 := na
// Calculate movement from 9:30 AM open
up10 = close >= open930 + 10
dn10 = close <= open930 - 10
// Plot reference lines
plot(open930, "9:30 AM Open", color=color.orange)
plot(open930 + 10, "+10 Level", color=color.green)
plot(open930 - 10, "-10 Level", color=color.red)
// Alert conditions
alertcondition(up10, title="SPX Up +10", message="SPX moved UP +10 from the 9:30 AM open")
alertcondition(dn10, title="SPX Down -10", message="SPX moved DOWN -10 from the 9:30 AM open")
// Plot signals on chart
plotshape(up10, title="+10 Hit", style=shape.labelup, color=color.green, text="+10", location=location.belowbar, size=size.tiny)
plotshape(dn10, title="-10 Hit", style=shape.labeldown, color=color.red, text="-10", location=location.abovebar, size=size.tiny)
المؤشرات والاستراتيجيات
SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open//@version=5
indicator("SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open", overlay=true)
// Exchange Time (New York)
sess = input.session("0930-1600", "Regular Session (ET)")
// Detect session and 9:30 AM bar
inSession = time(timeframe.period, sess)
// Capture the 9:30 AM open
var float open930 = na
if inSession
// If this is the first bar of the session (9:30 AM)
if time(timeframe.period, sess) == na
open930 := open
else
open930 := na
// Calculate movement from 9:30 AM open
up10 = close >= open930 + 10
dn10 = close <= open930 - 10
// Plot reference lines
plot(open930, "9:30 AM Open", color=color.orange)
plot(open930 + 10, "+10 Level", color=color.green)
plot(open930 - 10, "-10 Level", color=color.red)
// Alert conditions
alertcondition(up10, title="SPX Up +10", message="SPX moved UP +10 from the 9:30 AM open")
alertcondition(dn10, title="SPX Down -10", message="SPX moved DOWN -10 from the 9:30 AM open")
// Plot signals on chart
plotshape(up10, title="+10 Hit", style=shape.labelup, color=color.green, text="+10", location=location.belowbar, size=size.tiny)
plotshape(dn10, title="-10 Hit", style=shape.labeldown, color=color.red, text="-10", location=location.abovebar, size=size.tiny)
SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open//@version=5
indicator("SPX +10 / -10 From 9:30 Open", overlay=true)
// Exchange Time (New York)
sess = input.session("0930-1600", "Regular Session (ET)")
// Detect session and 9:30 AM bar
inSession = time(timeframe.period, sess)
// Capture the 9:30 AM open
var float open930 = na
if inSession
// If this is the first bar of the session (9:30 AM)
if time(timeframe.period, sess) == na
open930 := open
else
open930 := na
// Calculate movement from 9:30 AM open
up10 = close >= open930 + 10
dn10 = close <= open930 - 10
// Plot reference lines
plot(open930, "9:30 AM Open", color=color.orange)
plot(open930 + 10, "+10 Level", color=color.green)
plot(open930 - 10, "-10 Level", color=color.red)
// Alert conditions
alertcondition(up10, title="SPX Up +10", message="SPX moved UP +10 from the 9:30 AM open")
alertcondition(dn10, title="SPX Down -10", message="SPX moved DOWN -10 from the 9:30 AM open")
// Plot signals on chart
plotshape(up10, title="+10 Hit", style=shape.labelup, color=color.green, text="+10", location=location.belowbar, size=size.tiny)
plotshape(dn10, title="-10 Hit", style=shape.labeldown, color=color.red, text="-10", location=location.abovebar, size=size.tiny)
Unusual Volume//@version=5
indicator("Unusual Volume", overlay=false)
// --- Inputs ---
len = input.int(20, "Average Volume Length", minval=1)
mult = input.float(2.0, "Unusual Volume Multiplier", step=0.1)
// --- Calculations ---
avgVol = ta.sma(volume, len)
ratio = volume / avgVol
isBigVol = ratio > mult
// --- Plots ---
plot(volume, "Volume", style=plot.style_columns,
color = isBigVol ? color.new(color.green, 0) : color.new(color.gray, 60))
plot(avgVol, "Average Volume", color=color.orange)
// Mark unusual volume bars
plotshape(isBigVol, title="Unusual Volume Marker",
location=location.bottom, style=shape.triangleup,
color=color.green, size=size.tiny, text="UV")
// Optional: show ratio in Data Window
var label ratioLabel = na
Daily % Change TableDaily % Change Table — Indicator Summary
This indicator provides a compact performance summary for daily candles, designed for backtesting and daily-session analysis. It displays a table in the top-right corner of the chart showing three key percentage-change statistics based on the current candle:
1. Prior Change
Percentage move from the close two days ago to the prior day’s close.
Useful for understanding momentum and context heading into the current session.
2. Change
Percentage move from the prior day's close to the current candle’s close.
Shows today’s full-session change.
3. Premarket
Percentage move from the prior day's close to the current day’s open.
Helps quantify overnight sentiment and gap activity.
Features
Clean, unobtrusive table display
Automatically updates on the most recent bar
Designed for use on Daily timeframe
Useful for gap analysis, backtesting, and volatility/momentum studies
Unusual Volume//@version=5
indicator("Unusual Volume", overlay=false)
// --- Inputs ---
len = input.int(20, "Average Volume Length", minval=1)
mult = input.float(2.0, "Unusual Volume Multiplier", step=0.1)
// --- Calculations ---
avgVol = ta.sma(volume, len)
ratio = volume / avgVol
isBigVol = ratio > mult
// --- Plots ---
plot(volume, "Volume", style=plot.style_columns,
color = isBigVol ? color.new(color.green, 0) : color.new(color.gray, 60))
plot(avgVol, "Average Volume", color=color.orange)
// Mark unusual volume bars
plotshape(isBigVol, title="Unusual Volume Marker",
location=location.bottom, style=shape.triangleup,
color=color.green, size=size.tiny, text="UV")
// Optional: show ratio in Data Window
var label ratioLabel = na
Buy vs Sell Volume//@version=5
indicator("Buy vs Sell Volume", overlay=false)
buyVol = close > open ? volume : 0
sellVol = close < open ? volume : 0
plot(buyVol, "Buy Volume", color=color.green)
plot(sellVol, "Sell Volume", color=color.red)
Morning ORB FVG Trigger✅ Overview
Morning ORB FVG Trigger is a complete intraday trading framework built around:
A Morning Opening Range Breakout (ORB)
The first Fair Value Gap (FVG) after that breakout
Strict risk management and position sizing
Optional HTF trend filter (Daily / Weekly / Monthly)
Optional Daily ATR filter to avoid extreme days
The script is designed for futures / indices / FX on intraday charts up to 15 minutes and for traders who want a clean, mechanical entry framework with clear risk.
🧠 Core idea
Define a morning opening range (e.g. 09:30–09:45).
Wait for a clean breakout above/below that range.
After the breakout, wait for the first FVG in breakout direction,
confirmed by the next candle (no immediate full reclaim).
Use a chosen stop logic + R:R factor to build risk/reward boxes.
Calculate position size based on your account risk.
(Optional) Only take trades:
In the direction of the HTF EMA trend (D/W/M).
On days where the morning range is within a band of the Daily ATR.
You can also disable all signals/boxes and use the script just as a visual ORB tool.
⏰ 1. ORB / Morning Range
Inputs (Main section)
Morning Range Session
Time window of the opening range in exchange time
Example: 09:30–09:45 for a 15-minute ORB.
You can type custom ranges (e.g. 09:30–09:35 for a 5-minute ORB).
Risk/Reward (TP factor)
Multiplier for the take-profit distance relative to the stop.
2.0 = TP is 2× the stop distance
1.5 = TP is 1.5× the stop distance
Show ORB range
If enabled, draws:
ORB high/low lines
ORB labels (e.g. 15min ORB high / low)
Optional midline
Extend ORB lines to the right (bars)
How many bars to extend the ORB high/low horizontally beyond the ORB itself.
Trade box width (bars)
Horizontal width (in bars) of:
Red risk box (entry–stop)
Green reward box (entry–TP)
Implementation details
The ORB is always calculated on 1-minute data internally, so it stays precise even on 5m/15m charts.
The script only works on intraday timeframes up to 15 minutes.
📦 2. FVG Block
Group: “FVG”
Threshold %
Minimum size of an FVG in % of price.
0 = every FVG
Higher values = only larger gaps
Auto threshold (from volatility)
If enabled, the minimum FVG size is derived from historical volatility
instead of a fixed percentage.
Allow breakout FVG partly inside ORB
Off (default): the FVG must lie fully outside the ORB.
On: the breakout FVG itself may still overlap the ORB a bit,
as long as it is the first one attached to the breakout move.
Enable FVG entry signals, boxes & alerts
On: full system – FVG detection, entry labels, risk/TP boxes, alerts.
Off: no entries, no risk/TP boxes, no alerts.
You only get the ORB and (optionally) the HTF dashboard, so you can trade your own setups.
Entry mode
Entry mode (Mid / Edge / NextOpen)
Mid – Entry at the midpoint of the FVG.
Edge – Long at the upper FVG edge, short at the lower FVG edge.
NextOpen – No limit order in the gap. Entry is placed at the next bar open after FVG confirmation.
Edge offset (ticks)
Additional offset for Edge entries:
Long:
+ticks = a bit above the FVG (more conservative)
-ticks = deeper into the FVG (more aggressive)
Short:
+ticks = a bit below the FVG
-ticks = deeper into the FVG
FVG detection logic
Uses a LuxAlgo-style 3-candle FVG pattern (gap between candle 1 and 3).
Only one FVG is taken: the first valid FVG after the ORB breakout in breakup direction.
The FVG candle is the middle bar; the script:
Detects the FVG on the previous bar.
Waits for the current bar to confirm it:
Bullish: current low must stay above the lower FVG boundary
Bearish: current high must stay below the upper FVG boundary
Only then an entry signal is generated.
🛑 3. Stop Logic
Group: “Stop Logic”
Stop mode (PrevBar / Pivot / FVG Candle)
PrevBar – Stop at the low/high of the candle before the FVG
(tight/aggressive).
FVG Candle – Stop at the low/high of the FVG candle itself
(medium).
Pivot – Stop at the most recent swing high/low
using pivotLeft / pivotRight pivots (more conservative).
Ticks (stop buffer)
Offset (in ticks) from the selected stop level.
> 0 = further away (more room, more risk)
< 0 = closer (tighter stop)
Pivot left / Pivot right
Number of candles left/right to define a swing high/low
when using Pivot stop mode.
Typical intraday values: 2–3.
The script also sanity-checks the stop:
if the calculated stop would be invalid (e.g. above entry in a long), it moves it by a minimal distance (2 ticks) to keep a valid risk.
📈 4. HTF Trend Filter (Daily / Weekly / Monthly)
Group: “HTF Trend Filter”
Enable HTF trend filter
If enabled, trades are only allowed:
Long when at least 2 of D/W/M closes are above their EMA
Short when at least 2 of D/W/M closes are below their EMA
EMA length (D/W/M)
EMA length for all three higher timeframes (Daily, Weekly, Monthly).
This helps focus entries in the direction of the dominant higher-timeframe trend.
📊 5. ATR Filter (Daily)
Group: “ATR Filter (Daily)”
Use daily ATR filter
If enabled, the height of the ORB (ORB high – ORB low) must be within
a band of the Daily ATR to allow any signals.
Daily ATR length
ATR period on the Daily timeframe.
Min ORB size vs ATR
Lower bound:
Example: 0.3 → ORB must be at least 0.3 × Daily ATR
0.0 = no minimum.
Max ORB size vs ATR
Upper bound:
Example: 1.5 → ORB must be ≤ 1.5 × Daily ATR
0.0 = no maximum.
If the ORB is too small (choppy) or too large (exhausted move), no breakout or FVG signal will be generated on that day.
🧭 6. HTF Dashboard & Signal Labels
Group: “HTF Trend Dashboard”
Show HTF dashboard
Draws a small label at the top of the chart showing:
HTF Trend (EMA X)
D: UP/FLAT/DOWN
W: UP/FLAT/DOWN
M: UP/FLAT/DOWN
Dashboard position
Top Right, Top Center, Top Left – places the dashboard at the top.
Over Risk Info – no top dashboard; instead, the HTF trend info is shown as a label near the risk box when a new signal appears.
Lookback (bars) for top anchor
How many bars to use to determine the top price level for dashboard placement.
Show HTF trend above risk box on signal
Only relevant if Dashboard position = Over Risk Info.
When enabled, a small HTF label appears near the risk box for each new trade.
Signal label vertical offset (ticks)
Vertical spacing between risk info label and HTF label.
Minimum spacing HTF/Risk (ticks)
Ensures a minimum vertical distance so the two labels don’t overlap.
HTF signal label X offset (bars)
Horizontal offset (left/right) relative to the risk info label.
⏳ 7. ORB–FVG Filters (Session & Time Window)
Group: “ORB FVG Filter”
Only same session day
If enabled, FVG entries are only allowed on the same calendar day
as the ORB. When the date changes, all state & drawings are reset.
Limit hours after ORB
Enables a time window after the ORB end.
Trading window after ORB (hours)
Length of that window in hours.
Example: 2.0 → FVG signals only in the first 2 hours after ORB end.
💰 8. Risk Management & Position Sizing
Group: “Risk Management”
Calculate position size
If enabled, the script computes suggested mini and micro contract size for you.
Account size
Your trading account size (in account currency).
Risk mode
Percent – risk is a % of account size (Account risk %).
Fixed amount – risk is a fixed dollar amount (Fixed risk ($)).
Account risk %
Risk per trade as a percentage of account size (e.g. 1.0 for 1%).
Fixed risk ($)
Fixed risk per trade in dollars when using Fixed amount mode.
Micro factor (vs mini)
How much a micro contract is worth relative to a mini.
Example:
0.1 → one micro moves 1/10 of one mini.
Risk Info label
For each new trade, a label is shown above the boxes with:
Stop distance in price and $ risk per mini
Max risk allowed for the trade
Suggested mini and micro size
Text like:
Suggested: 2 mini
Suggested: 5 micro
or Suggested: no trade
This makes the script especially useful for prop-firm rules or strict risk discipline.
🎨 9. Visual Style (Boxes, Labels, ORB Lines)
Group: “Box & Label Style (Trade)”
Label font size (Very small, Small, Normal, Large)
Entry label BG / text color
Stop label BG / text color
TP label BG / text color
Risk info BG / text color
Risk box color (entry–stop zone)
Reward box color (entry–TP zone)
Group: “ORB Style”
ORB high line color
ORB low line color
ORB line width
ORB label font size
ORB label background color
ORB label text color
Show ORB midline
ORB midline color / width / style (Solid / Dashed / Dotted)
⚠️ 10. Alerts
Group: “Alerts”
The script defines three alert conditions:
Long entry FVG breakout
Triggered when a new long signal appears.
Short entry FVG breakout
Triggered when a new short signal appears.
FVG entry (long/short)
Generic alert for any new signal (long or short).
To use them:
Add the indicator to the chart.
Open the Alerts dialog → “Condition”.
Select this script and one of the alert conditions.
Set your preferred expiration and notification settings.
Alerts only fire when Enable FVG entry signals, boxes & alerts is on.
🧩 11. How the trading logic flows (summary)
Build ORB on 1-minute data during the selected session.
Optionally reject the day if ORB is outside the ATR bounds.
Wait for a breakout (close above high or below low), respecting HTF trend filter.
After breakout, look for the first valid FVG in that direction:
Outside the ORB (unless breakout FVG allowed inside)
Confirmed by the next candle (no full reclaim)
Once confirmed:
Compute entry, stop, target.
Draw risk/reward boxes and all labels.
Optionally show HTF signal label over the risk info.
Trigger alerts if enabled.
If you disable FVG signals, only steps 1–3 (plus dashboard) are effectively active.
⚠️ 12. Notes & Disclaimer
Script is intended for intraday trading up to 15-minute timeframes.
All signals are mechanical and do not guarantee profitability.
Always backtest and forward-test on your own data before risking real money.
This script is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice.
🚀 Quick-start guide
Add the script to your chart
Use an intraday timeframe ≤ 15 minutes (1m, 3m, 5m, 15m).
Works best on liquid indices, futures, FX and large-cap stocks.
Set the Morning Range
In “Morning Range Session” choose the exchange’s opening window.
Examples
US index futures (CME): 08:30–08:45 or 08:30–08:35
US stocks (NYSE/Nasdaq): 09:30–09:45 or 09:30–09:35
The ORB is always calculated on 1-minute data internally, so the range stays accurate on higher intraday charts.
Keep the default filters at first
HTF Trend Filter: ON
EMA length = 20
This will only allow trades in the direction of the dominant D/W/M trend.
ATR Filter: OFF (optional; you can enable later once you’re comfortable).
Use the full trade system
In the FVG group leave
“Enable FVG entry signals, boxes & alerts” = ON
Entry mode: Mid
Stop mode: FVG Candle or PrevBar
Risk/Reward: 2.0 as a starting point.
Set your risk
Turn on “Calculate position size”.
Enter your Account size and choose either:
Risk mode = Percent (e.g. 1.0 = 1% per trade), or
Risk mode = Fixed amount (e.g. $250 per trade).
The risk info label will show:
Stop distance in price and $/contract
Max allowed risk
Suggested mini and micro contract size.
Enable alerts (optional)
Open the Alerts dialog → Condition: this script.
Choose one of:
Long entry FVG breakout
Short entry FVG breakout
FVG entry (long/short)
Choose “Once per bar” or “Once per bar close”, and your preferred notification type.
Replay & journal
Use the TradingView bar replay tool to step through past days.
Focus on:
How the ORB defines the structure.
How the first confirmed FVG outside the ORB behaves.
Whether the risk/TP levels fit your own style and product.
🎛 Recommended settings & profiles
These are starting points, not rules. Always adapt to the instrument and your own risk tolerance.
1. Conservative / Trend-following
Timeframe: 5m or 15m
Morning Range Session: 15-minute ORB around the cash or futures open
FVG
Threshold %: 0.05–0.1 (filter out very small gaps)
Auto threshold: OFF (keep it simple)
Allow breakout FVG partly inside ORB: OFF
Enable FVG entry signals/boxes/alerts: ON
Entry mode: Mid
Stop Logic
Stop mode: Pivot
Pivot left/right: 2–3
Stop buffer: +1–2 ticks
HTF Trend Filter
Enabled: ON
EMA length: 20
ATR Filter
Enabled: ON
Daily ATR length: 14
Min ORB vs ATR: 0.3–0.4
Max ORB vs ATR: 1.2–1.5
Risk Management
Risk mode: Percent
Account risk: 0.5–1.0%
Idea: Only trade when the higher-timeframe trend supports the move and the opening range is of a “normal” size for the current volatility.
2. Balanced / Intraday directional
Timeframe: 3m or 5m
FVG
Threshold %: 0.02–0.05
Auto threshold: ON (lets the script adapt to volatility)
Allow breakout FVG partly inside ORB: ON
(first breakout FVG may partly sit inside the ORB)
Entry mode: Edge
Edge offset (ticks): 0 or +1
Stop Logic
Stop mode: FVG Candle
Stop buffer: 0–1 ticks
HTF Trend Filter
Enabled: ON
ATR Filter
Enabled: OFF (optional)
Risk Management
Risk mode: Percent
Account risk: 1.0–1.5% (if this fits your plan)
Idea: Slightly more aggressive entries at the gap edge, still aligned with HTF trend, but with more flexibility on ATR.
3. Aggressive / Scalping around the ORB
Timeframe: 1m or 3m
FVG
Threshold %: 0.0–0.02
Auto threshold: ON
Allow breakout FVG partly inside ORB: ON
Entry mode: NextOpen or Edge with a negative offset (deeper into the gap)
Stop Logic
Stop mode: PrevBar
Stop buffer: 0 or -1 tick
HTF Trend Filter
Enabled: OFF (or ON but treat as soft guidance)
ATR Filter
Enabled: OFF
Risk Management
Risk mode: Percent
Account risk: lower, e.g. 0.25–0.5% per trade
Idea: More trades and tighter stops. Best for experienced traders who understand the limitations of scalping and whipsaw risk.
Final reminder
All of these are templates, not guarantees:
Always check how the system behaves on your market and session.
Start on replay and demo before trading real money.
Adjust filters (HTF, ATR, thresholds) until the signals fit your personal approach.
🐻 BEARISH SHORT SCREENER v2 - High Probability DowntrendScreener helps identify stocks below 20, 50, and 200 day moving averages with a strong probability of a continued downtrend.
Minervini VCP Pattern -Indian ContextThis script implements Mark Minervini's Trend Template and VCP (Volatility Contraction Pattern) pattern, specifically adapted for Indian stock markets (NSE). It helps identify stocks that are in strong uptrends and ready to break out.
Core Concepts Explained
1. What is the Minervini Trend Template?
Mark Minervini's method identifies stocks in Stage 2 uptrends - the sweet spot where institutional money is accumulating and stocks show the strongest momentum. Think of it as finding stocks that are "leaders" rather than "laggards."
2. What is VCP (Volatility Contraction Pattern)?
A VCP occurs when:
Stock price consolidates (moves sideways) after an uptrend
Price swings get tighter and tighter (like a coiled spring)
Volume dries up (fewer people trading)
Then it breaks out with force.
You can customize the strategy settings without editing code.
Key Settings:
Minimum Price (₹50): Filters out penny stocks that are too volatile
Min Distance from 52W Low (30%): Stock should be at least 30% above its yearly low
Max Distance from 52W High (25%): Stock should be within 25% of its yearly high (showing strength)
Moving Average Periods: 10, 50, 150, 200 days (industry standard)
Minimum Volume (100,000 shares): Ensures the stock is liquid enough to trade
Indian Market Adaptation: The default values (₹50 minimum, volume thresholds) are adjusted for NSE stocks, which behave differently than US markets.
The script pulls weekly chart data even when you're viewing daily charts.
Why it matters: Weekly trends are more reliable than daily noise. Professional traders use weekly charts to confirm the bigger picture.
What are Moving Averages (MAs)?
Simple averages of closing prices over X days
They smooth out price action to show trends
Think of them as the "average cost" of buyers over different time periods
The 4 Key MAs:
10 MA (Fast): Very short-term trend
50 MA: Short to medium-term trend
150 MA: Medium to long-term trend
200 MA: Long-term trend (the "grandfather" of all MAs)
Why Weekly MAs?
The script also calculates 10 and 50 MAs on weekly data for additional confirmation of the bigger trend.
The script Finds the highest and lowest prices over the past 52 weeks (1 year).
Why it matters:
Stocks near 52-week highs are showing strength (institutions buying)
Stocks far from 52-week lows have "room to run" upward
This is a psychological level that influences trader behaviour.
What is Volume here ?
The number of shares traded each day
High volume = many traders interested (conviction)
Low volume = lack of interest (weakness or consolidation)
Volume in VCP:
During consolidation (sideways movement), volume should dry up - this shows sellers are exhausted and buyers are holding. When volume spikes on a breakout, it confirms the move.
NSE Context: Indian stocks often have different volume patterns than US stocks, so the 50-day average is used as a baseline.
Relative Strength vs Nifty:
Example:
If your stock is up 20% and Nifty is up 10%, your stock has strong RS
If your stock is up 5% and Nifty is up 15%, your stock has weak RS (avoid it!)
Why it matters: The best performing stocks almost always have strong relative strength before major moves.
The 13 Minervini Conditions:-
Condition 1: Price > 50/150/200 MA
Meaning: Current price must be above ALL three major moving averages.
Why: This confirms the stock is in a clear uptrend. If price is below these MAs, the stock is weak or in a downtrend.
Condition 2: MA 50 > 150 > 200
Meaning: The moving averages themselves must be in proper order.
Analogy: Think of this like layers in a cake - short-term on top, long-term at bottom. If they're tangled, the trend is unclear.
Condition 3: 200 MA Rising (1 Month)
Meaning: The 200 MA today must be higher than it was 20 days ago.
Why: This confirms the long-term trend is UP, not flat or down. The means "20 bars ago."
Condition 4: 50 MA Rising
Meaning: The 50 MA today must be higher than 5 days ago.
Why: Confirms short-term momentum is accelerating upward.
Condition 5: Within 25% of 52-Week High
Meaning: Current price should be within 25% of its 1-year high.
Example:
52-week high = ₹1000
Current price must be above ₹750 (within 25%)
Why: Strong stocks stay near their highs. Weak stocks fall far from highs.
Condition 6: 30%+ Above 52-Week Low (OPTIONAL)
Meaning: Stock should be at least 30% above its yearly low.
Note: The script marks this as "SECONDARY - Optional" because the other conditions are more important. However, it's still a good confirmation.
Condition 7: Price > 10 MA
Meaning: Very short-term strength - price above the 10-day moving average.
Why: Ensures the stock hasn't just rolled over in the immediate term.
Condition 8: Price >= ₹50
Meaning: Filters out stocks below ₹50.
Why: In Indian markets, stocks below ₹50 tend to be penny stocks with poor liquidity and higher manipulation risk.
Condition 9: Weekly Uptrend
Meaning: On the weekly chart, price must be above both weekly MAs, and they must be properly aligned.
Why: Confirms the bigger picture trend, not just daily fluctuations.
Condition 10: 150 MA Rising
Meaning: The 150 MA is trending upward over the past 10 days.
Why: Another confirmation of medium-term trend health.
Condition 11: Sufficient Volume
Meaning: Average volume must exceed 100,000 shares (or your custom setting).
Why: Ensures you can actually buy/sell the stock without moving the price too much (liquidity).
Condition 12: RS vs Nifty Strong
Meaning: The stock's relative strength vs Nifty must be improving.
Why: You want stocks that are outperforming the market, not underperforming.
Condition 13: Nifty in Uptrend
Meaning: The Nifty 50 index itself must be above its 50 MA.
Why: "A rising tide lifts all boats." It's easier to make money in individual stocks when the overall market is bullish.
VCP Requirements:
Volatility Contracting: Price swings getting tighter (coiling spring)
Volume Drying Up: Fewer shares trading + trending lower
The Setup: When volatility contracts and volume dries up WHILE all 13 trend conditions are met, you have a VCP setup ready to explode.
What You See on Chart:
Colored Lines: 10 MA (green), 50 MA (blue), 150 MA (orange), 200 MA (red)
Blue Background: Trend template conditions met (watch zone)
Green Background: Full VCP setup detected (buy zone)
↟ Symbol Below Price: New VCP buy signal just triggered
Information Table:
What it does: Creates a checklist table on your chart showing the status of all conditions.
Table Structure:
Column 1: Condition name
Column 2: Status (✓ green = met, ✗ red = not met)
Final Row: Shows "BUY" (green) or "WAIT" (red) based on full VCP setup status.
Dos:
Example:
Account size: ₹5,00,000
Risk per trade: 1% = ₹5,000
Entry: ₹1000
Stop loss: ₹920 (8% below)
Distance to stop: ₹80
Shares to buy: ₹5,000 / ₹80 = 62 shares
Exit Strategy:
Sell 1/3 at +20% profit
Sell another 1/3 at +40% profit
Let the final 1/3 run with a trailing stop
Always exit if price closes below 10 MA on heavy volume
What This Script Does NOT Do:
Guarantee profits - No strategy works 100% of the time
Account for news events - Earnings, regulatory changes, etc.
Consider fundamentals - Company financials, debt, management quality
Adapt to market crashes - Works best in bull markets
Best Market Conditions:
✅ Nifty in uptrend (above 50 MA)
✅ Market breadth positive (more stocks advancing)
✅ Sector rotation happening
❌ Avoid in bear markets or high volatility periods
References:
Trade Like a Stock Market Wizard by Mark Minervini
Think & Trade Like a Champion by Mark Minervini
Chart attached: AU Small Finance Bank as on EoD dated 28/11/25
This script is a powerful tool for educational purpose only, remember: It's a tool, not a crystal ball. Use it to find high-probability setups, then apply proper risk management and patience. Good luck!
LazyTradeLazyTrade is a clean, high-confidence trend-following indicator built on TradingView’s non-repainting SuperTrend V6 engine. It adds intelligent RSI confirmation, profit-tracking labels, trend-flip markers, and optional background shading to highlight momentum shifts. Designed for intraday and swing traders who want fast, reliable signals without chart clutter.
Features:
• Non-repainting Buy/Sell signals
• Smart RSI confirmation (Aggressive / Standard / Conservative)
• Auto P&L between opposite signals
• Trend-flip circles and transparent background zones
• Clean visual structure optimized for daily and leveraged ETF trading
A simple, intuitive tool that keeps you aligned with the dominant trend—no noise, no over-complication.
Heikin Ashi Background ColorHighlights the background of traditional candle sticks with the corresponding heiken ashi candle colour in order to avoid switching back and forth between heiken ashi and traditional candle sticks
Heikin Ashi Background Color for candles highlights the back ground candle with the corresponding heiken ashi candle colour
while still showing the exact japanese candle stick price action
Prev/Current Day Open & Close (RamtinFX)Draws three transparent vertical lines marking the previous day’s close, the current day’s open, and the current day’s close.
The Trade Plan 9 & 15 EMA⭐ What Are EMAs?
An Exponential Moving Average (EMA) gives more weight to recent prices, making it more responsive than a simple moving average.
9-EMA = very fast, reacts quickly to price changes
15-EMA = slightly slower, smooths short-term noise
Together they help identify momentum shifts.
📈 How the 9/15 EMA Strategy Works
1. Buy Signal (Bullish Crossover)
You enter a long (buy) trade when:
➡ 9 EMA crosses above the 15 EMA
This suggests momentum is shifting upward and a new uptrend may be forming.
2. Sell Signal (Bearish Crossover)
You enter a short (sell) trade or exit long positions when:
➡ 9 EMA crosses below the 15 EMA
This suggests momentum is turning downward.
🔧 How Traders Typically Use It
Entry
Wait for a clear crossover.
Confirm with price closing on the same side of EMAs.
Some traders add confirmation using RSI, MACD, or support/resistance.
Exit
Several options:
Exit when the opposite crossover occurs.
Exit at predetermined risk-reward levels (e.g., 1:2).
Use trailing stop below/above EMAs.
👍 Strengths
Easy to follow
Good for fast-moving markets
Works well on trending markets
Minimal indicators needed
👎 Weaknesses
Whipsaws in sideways markets
Many false signals on very low timeframes
Works best with additional filters
🕒 Common Timeframes
Scalping: 1m, 5m
Day trading: 5m, 15m
Swing trading: 1H, 4H
Previous/Current Day High/Low/Open/Close LevelsThis Pine Script creates a TradingView indicator that displays key price levels from previous and current trading days. Here's what it does:
Main Features
Price Level Display:
Previous Day High (PDH) - Highest price from yesterday
Previous Day Low (PDL) - Lowest price from yesterday
Previous Day Close (PDC) - Closing price from yesterday
Current Day Open (DO) - Opening price of today
Intraday High (IDH) - Highest price reached so far today
Intraday Low (IDL) - Lowest price reached so far today
Key Settings
Days Back - Shows levels for the last 1-30 days (default: 5 days)
Line Extension - Projects lines forward beyond the current candle (default: 25 bars)
Toggle Controls - Turn each level on/off individually
Customizable Colors - Each level has its own color (red for highs, green for lows, etc.)
Labels - Optional text labels (PDH, PDL, etc.) positioned on left or right side
How It Works
The script draws horizontal lines at these key price levels throughout the trading day. Lines break at each new day to avoid connecting across sessions. Dashed connector lines extend to the labels for easy identification.
This is particularly useful for intraday traders who watch these levels for potential support/resistance zones and breakout opportunities.
Future High LinePlot a horizontal line from the current high n bars into the future. Line is user configurable.
Works well with Ichimoku Cloud. When line (26 bars) rises into an overhead cloud, this often signals bullish price movement.
Exhaustion Zone [by rukich]🟠 OVERVIEW
The indicator shows asset exhaustion — an area of interest where potential buying opportunities can be considered.
🟠 COMPONENTS
The indicator is based on a combination of fundamental tools designed to properly react to price movement and volatility.
It is displayed on the chart as a green line. When the price touches the indicator line, the candle lights up and is highlighted in green.
🟠 HOW TO USE
The best timeframes for using the indicator: 1D and 3D.
Since the indicator is used on higher timeframes, the price rarely reaches the indicator line, but it often shows a strong reaction when it does, which suggests that the indicator can be used for investment purposes.
Since the zone suggests potential buying opportunities, it’s best to act from the zone only when a reaction is confirmed. Confirmation may include a candle close beyond nearby fractals or the invalidation of the nearest resistance zone.
🟠 CONCLUSION
The indicator highlights an area of interest where, upon confirmation of a reaction, buying opportunities may be considered.
PyraTime Harmonic 369Concept and Methodology PyraTime Harmonic 369 is a quantitative time-projection tool designed to apply Modular Arithmetic to market analysis. Unlike linear time indicators, this tool projects non-linear integer sequences derived from Digital Root Summation (Base-9 Reduction).
The core logic utilizes the mathematical progression of the 3-6-9 constants. By anchoring to a user-defined "Origin Pivot," the script projects three distinct harmonic triads to identify potential Temporal Confluence—moments where mathematical time cycles align with price action.
Technical Features This script focuses on the Standard Scalar (1x) projection of the Digital Root sequence:
The Root-3 Triad (Red): Projects intervals of 174, 285, 396. (Mathematical Sum: 1+7+4=12→3)
The Root-6 Triad (Green): Projects intervals of 417, 528, 639. (Mathematical Sum: 4+1+7=12→3, inverted)
The Root-9 Triad (Blue): Projects intervals of 741, 852, 963. (Mathematical Sum: 7+4+1=12→3... completion to 9)
How to Use
Set Anchor: Input the time of a significant High or Low in the settings.
Select Resolution: This tool is optimized for 1-minute (Micro-Harmonics) and 15-minute (Intraday Harmonics) charts.
Analyze Clusters: The vertical lines represent calculated harmonic intervals. Traders look for "Clusters" where a Root-3 and Root-9 cycle land on adjacent bars, indicating a high-probability pivot.
System Architecture & Version Comparison This script represents the foundational layer of the PyraTime ecosystem.
This Script (PyraTime Harmonic 369):
Scalar: Standard 1x Multiplier only.
Focus: Intraday & Micro-structure (1m, 15m).
Engine: Core Digital Root Integers.
PyraTime Harmonic Matrix (Advanced Edition):
Scalar Engine: Unlocks Quad-Fractal (4x), Tri-Fractal (3x), and Bi-Fractal (2x) multipliers for institutional cycle analysis.
Apex Logic: Auto-detection of the "963" Completion Sequence (Gold Highlight).
Event Horizon: Includes a live Predictive Dashboard that calculates the time-delta to the next harmonic event across all scalar groups.
Disclaimer This tool is for the educational analysis of Number Theory in financial markets. It projects time intervals and does not predict price direction. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Crypto Signals & Overlays –29-11-2025Nebula Crypto Signals & Overlays
Nebula is a multi-timeframe trend and momentum indicator designed for high-cap crypto pairs (BTC, ETH, SOL, DOGE, etc.).
• Uses 21/50/200 EMAs + higher-timeframe EMA for trend filtering
• RSI and Bollinger Bands for momentum and squeeze detection
• Generates BUY/SELL labels on trend-side pullbacks
• ATR line as a dynamic stop/target guide, plus pivot-based support/resistance zones
• Background colors: green = bullish regime, red = bearish regime, yellow = low-volatility squeeze
Not financial advice. Always backtest and use proper risk management before trading live.
5-Day SMAPine Script v5 indicator that plots a 5-day Simple Moving Average with configurable styling options:
Features:
5-Day SMA: Calculates the simple moving average of the closing price over 5 periods
Configurable Line Color: Choose any color for the line through the settings
Configurable Line Style: Select between Solid, Dashed, or Dotted lines
Line Width: Adjustable from 1 to 5 pixels
The SMA will automatically adjust to your chart's timeframe - whether you're viewing 1-minute, 1-hour, daily, or any other timeframe, it will calculate the moving average over the last 5 periods of that timeframe.






















