eBacktesting - Learning: InducementeBacktesting - Learning: Inducement
Inducement is the “trap” move that often shows up right before a real push. Price briefly takes an internal swing level (a small high/low), pulls traders in the wrong direction, and then snaps back — usually right before continuing toward the larger objective.
How to study it:
- First, get a simple trend bias (are we making higher highs/higher lows, or lower highs/lower lows?).
- Watch the most recent internal swing level inside that trend.
- An inducement often looks like a quick sweep through that internal level, followed by a close back on the “correct” side.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
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eBacktesting - Learning: RSI DivergenceseBacktesting - Learning: RSI Divergences is meant to train your eye to spot when a trend is losing momentum before price fully turns.
How to study it (step-by-step)
1. Start with the trend
- First decide if price is generally trending up or down (higher highs / higher lows vs lower highs / lower lows).
- Divergences matter most after a trend has been running for a while.
2. Look for the “mismatch”
- Bearish divergence: price prints higher highs, but RSI prints lower highs.
- This often shows up near the end of a strong bullish run, when buyers are still pushing price up but with less momentum.
- Bullish divergence: price prints lower lows, but RSI prints higher lows.
- This can show up near the end of a bearish move, when selling pressure is fading.
3. Treat divergence as a warning, not an entry
- The key lesson: divergence often signals trend weakness, not an instant reversal.
- After a divergence appears, study what happens next: stalling, ranging, a pullback, or a full reversal.
4. Add simple confirmation
- Practice waiting for something obvious after the divergence:
a break of a small support/resistance level,
a shift in swing structure,
or a clear rejection candle from a key area.
- This helps you avoid taking every divergence as a trade signal.
5. Use it inside eBacktesting (best practice)
- Replay the chart and pause on each divergence mark.
- Log:
Where it happened (after a long run or in the middle of chop?),
Whether price stalled first or reversed immediately,
What confirmation appeared (if any),
The best “invalidation” idea (what would prove you wrong?).
- Over time you’ll see which divergences are meaningful for your market and session, and which ones are noise.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Power of 3eBacktesting - Learning: Power of 3 highlights ICT’s “Power of 3” intraday story:
- Accumulation: price builds a quiet range
- Manipulation: a sweep grabs liquidity above or below that range (the classic stop hunt)
- Distribution: the real move expands away from that range, often in the opposite direction of the sweep
Use it to train your eyes to recognize when price is likely “setting up” vs when the session is actually “moving,” and to build a clean daily narrative around liquidity and expansion.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Liquidity GrabseBacktesting - Learning: Liquidity Grabs highlights moments when price pushes just beyond a recent swing high or swing low (where many stops tend to sit) and then quickly returns back inside the level. This behavior is often called a stop run, sweep, or liquidity grab.
Traders study these events because they can reveal:
- Where liquidity is “resting” (obvious highs/lows)
- A quick sweep and rejection (often a wick)
- When a breakout attempt is actually a trap
- A full candle close through the level, followed by an immediate reversal back inside (classic breakout trap)
- Potential areas where price may reverse or accelerate after stops are taken
Use it as a training tool to build pattern recognition and improve your patience around key levels, especially during active sessions where sweeps happen frequently.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Buy/Sell-side LiquidityeBacktesting - Learning: Buy/Sell-side Liquidity
Buy-side and sell-side liquidity are some of the most important “magnets” in day trading. When price forms obvious swing highs and swing lows, stop-loss orders often build up just above those highs (buy-side liquidity) and just below those lows (sell-side liquidity). Markets frequently move into these areas to “take” that liquidity before making the next meaningful move.
This indicator helps you spot those potential liquidity pools and highlights when price reaches them. Use it to study:
- where stops are likely resting above highs / below lows
- how often price sweeps those areas before reversing
- how liquidity runs can trigger the next expansion or trend continuation
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Cup & HandleeBacktesting - Learning: Cup & Handle
The Cup & Handle is a classic continuation pattern that often appears during strong trends. It shows a market that “cools off” (the cup), then does a smaller pullback (the handle), and may be ready for another push in the original direction.
This indicator helps you spot:
- Potential Cup & Handle formations as they develop
- When a handle forms (the final “pause” before continuation)
- The breakout moment, when price pushes above the rim level
It’s designed to support structured practice: you can replay charts and train your eyes to recognize the pattern, understand the context around it, and build consistent execution rules.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Head & ShoulderseBacktesting - Learning: Head & Shoulders
Head & Shoulders is one of the most recognizable reversal patterns in day trading. It helps you spot moments when a trend may be losing strength and a turn becomes more likely—often around a “neckline” level where the market either breaks and continues the reversal, or holds and keeps trending.
This indicator highlights both:
- Head & Shoulders (bearish): potential shift from bullish strength to bearish reversal
- Inverse Head & Shoulders (bullish): potential shift from bearish strength to bullish reversal
It marks the structure on the chart (left shoulder, head, right shoulder) and flags the moment the pattern is confirmed, so you can practice reading the story behind price action instead of guessing.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
Trend Cloud with Buy/Sell Text [wjdtks255]Indicator Title: Trend Cloud with Buy/Sell Signal Pro
Short Description
A high-probability trend-following indicator based on Supertrend dynamics, enhanced with a Volume Filter to pinpoint explosive entries while minimizing false breakouts.
Detailed Description (Overview)
The Trend Cloud with Buy/Sell Text is designed for traders who prioritize clarity and momentum. It visualizes market trends through a "Trend Cloud" system and generates real-time BUY/SELL signals only when price action is backed by significant trading volume.
Key Technical Pillars
Dynamic Trend Cloud: Fills the area between the price and the Supertrend line, providing immediate visual feedback on trend strength and potential support/resistance zones.
Smart Volume Filter: A unique logic that compares current volume against a 20-period moving average. Labels only appear when a trend shift occurs with above-average volume, filtering out weak "fakeouts."
No-Repaint Labels: Signals are calculated and fixed at the close of the candle, ensuring that the BUY/SELL text remains permanent for reliable historical backtesting and live execution.
The Alpha Hunter Strategy (How to Trade)
1. Long Entry (Buy)
Condition: The cloud turns Aqua and a "BUY" label appears below the candle.
Confirmation: Ensure the price remains above the Aqua Trend Line.
Volume Check: The indicator automatically verifies if the volume is higher than the 20-period average before displaying the label.
Exit: Exit when a "SELL" signal appears or the price closes below the Aqua line.
2. Short Entry (Sell)
Condition: The cloud turns Red and a "SELL" label appears above the candle.
Confirmation: Price should stay below the Red Trend Line.
Exit: Exit when a "BUY" signal appears or the price closes above the Red line.
Input Parameters & Optimization
ATR Period (Default: 10): Determines the sensitivity to price volatility.
ATR Factor (Default: 3.0): Controls the distance of the trend line. Increase to 3.5 - 4.0 to reduce noise in choppy markets.
Volume Filter (Toggle): When enabled, only high-momentum signals are shown.
Recommended Usage
Best Timeframes: 15m, 1h, 4h.
Asset Classes: Highly effective for Crypto (BTC/ETH) and high-volume stocks.
eBacktesting - Learning: Equal Highs & LowseBacktesting - Learning: Equal Highs & Lows helps you spot Equal Highs (EQH) and Equal Lows (EQL) — price areas where the market has paused or reacted multiple times at nearly the same level.
These zones often act like “magnets” because many traders place stops and pending orders around them. When price returns, it can lead to a quick grab (a sweep) and reversal, or it can break through and continue. Learning to recognize EQH/EQL can improve your timing, help you anticipate where volatility may appear, and give you clearer areas for invalidation and targets.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Fibonacci RetracementeBacktesting - Learning: Fibonacci Retracement helps you practice one of the most common “pullback” tools in trading: Fibonacci retracements.
It automatically finds the most recent swing and draws your chosen Fibonacci levels (for example 0.382, 0.5, 0.618, 0.786) so you can clearly see where price is pulling back into “discount/premium” areas. When price taps a level (or the Golden Zone), the indicator marks it so you can review what happened next and build pattern recognition.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Trend LineseBacktesting - Learning: Trend Lines helps you spot clean trend lines automatically, using real swing points (highs/lows) and confirming a line only after it’s “respected” multiple times.
What you’ll see on the chart
- Uptrend lines (support) when price is making higher lows
- Downtrend lines (resistance) when price is making lower highs
- A simple way to study structure, spot “respect” of a trend line, and understand when a trend may be weakening
- Trend line breaks are based on candle closes, not just quick wicks, so the signals are clearer
You can also keep a few older lines on the chart, making it easy to review past reactions and build pattern recognition.
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Support & ResistanceeBacktesting - Learning: Support & Resistance helps you spot the price levels where the market repeatedly reacts, bounces, or rejects — the classic “floors” (support) and “ceilings” (resistance) that many day traders use to plan entries, stops, and targets.
This indicator automatically marks historical support and resistance levels right where they formed, so you can scroll back and study how price respected (or broke) those zones over time. It also highlights important moments when a level is broken, showing you how a broken resistance can later act like support (and vice-versa).
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Change of CharactereBacktesting - Learning: Change of Character helps you spot a “Change of Character” (CHoCH) — the moment price stops behaving one way and starts behaving the other.
It does this by tracking clear swing highs and swing lows, then marking the first **candle close** that breaks structure **against** the current move:
- Bullish CHoCH: price shifts from making lower structure to breaking above a key swing high.
- Bearish CHoCH: price shifts from making higher structure to breaking below a key swing low.
Use CHoCH to practice timing: early trend shifts, reversals, and potential new legs — especially when combined with your usual confluence (liquidity, premium/discount, key levels, sessions, etc.).
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: Order BlockseBacktesting – Learning: Order Blocks helps you spot Order Blocks on your chart in a clean, beginner-friendly way.
When price breaks structure, the indicator highlights the last opposite candle that often becomes a key reaction zone later (the Order Block). You’ll see the OB marked as a zone, and when price comes back and mitigates it (returns into the zone), that OB is removed so your chart stays uncluttered and focused on what matters now.
This indicator is built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: BreakoutseBacktesting - Learning: Breakouts highlights ranges & breakout behaviors in a clean, visual way.
It automatically:
- Detects consolidation ranges (tight price action) and draws a range box
- Marks a breakout only when a candle CLOSES outside the range (no wick-only breakouts)
Adds a label on the breakout candle (↑ bullish breakout / ↓ bearish breakout)
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with the eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
eBacktesting - Learning: FVGeBacktesting - Learning: FVG is an indicator in the eBacktesting Learning series: a collection of tools designed to help new traders understand the most important concepts in trading through clear, visual examples directly on the chart.
This indicator highlights Fair Value Gaps (FVGs): areas where price moved so quickly that it left behind an imbalance. These zones often act like "magnets" for future price action and can become important areas to watch for reactions, continuations, or reversals.
To keep the chart clean and the learning process practical, FVGs are only displayed when they remain relevant, meaning they are not instantly cleared by the very next candle. This helps beginners focus on the imbalances that actually persist and are more likely to matter.
Each FVG is drawn as a zone with a midpoint line and will visually update as price interacts with it:
Touched when price trades into the zone
Filled when price completely clears the zone
These indicators are built to pair perfectly with eBacktesting extension, where traders can practice these concepts step-by-step. Backtesting concepts visually like this is one of the fastest ways to learn, build confidence, and improve trading performance.
Educational use only. Not financial advice.
Range Breakout Statistics [Honestcowboy]⯁ Overview
The Range Breakout Statistics uses a very simple system to detect ranges/consolidating markets. The principle is simple, it looks for areas where the slope of a moving average is flat compared to past values. If the moving average is flat for X amount of bars that's a range and it will draw a box.
The statistics part of the script is a bit more complicated. The aim of this script is to expand analysis of trading signals in a different way than a regular backtest. It also highlights the polyline tool, one of my favorite drawing tools on the tradingview platform.
⯁ Statistics Methods
The script has 2 different modes of analyzing a trading signals strength/robustness. It will do that for 2 signals native to the script.
Upper breakout: first price breakout at top of box, before max bars (100 bars by default)
Lower breakout: first price breakout at bottom of box, before max bars
The analysis methods themselves are straightforward and it should be possible for tradingview community to expand this type of analysis to other trading signals. This script is a demo for this analysis, yet some might still find the native signals helpful in their trading, that's why the script includes alerts for the 2 native signals. I've also added a setting to disable any data gathering, which makes script run faster if you want to automate it.
For both of the analysis methods it uses the same data, just with different calculations and drawing methods. The data set is all past price action reactions to the signals saved in a matrix. Below a chart for explaining this visually.
⯁ Method 1: Averages Projection
The idea behind this is that just showing all price action that happened after signal does not give actionable insights. It's more a spaghetti jumble mess of price action lines. So instead the script averages the data out using 3 different approaches, all selectable in the settings menu.
Geometric Average: useful as it accurately reflects compound returns over time, smoothing out the impact of large gains or losses. Accounts for volatility drift.
Arithmetic Average: a standard average calculation, can be misleading in trading due to volatility drift. It is the most basic form of averaging so I included it.
Median: useful as any big volatility huge moves after a signal does not really impact the mean as it's just the middle value of all values.
These averages are the 2 lines you will find in the middle of the projection. Having a clear difference between a lower break average and upper break average price reaction can signal significance of the trading signal instead of pure chaos.
Outside of this I also included calculations for the maximum and minimum values in the dataset. This is useful for seeing price reactions range to the signal, showing extreme losses or wins are possible. For this range I also included 2 matrices of highs and lows data. This makes it possible to draw a band between the range based on closing price and the one using high/low data.
Below is a visualisation of how the averages data is shown on chart.
⯁ Method 2: Equity Simulation
This method will feel closer to home for traders as it more closely resembles a backtest. It does not include any commissions however and also is just a visualisation of price reaction to a signal. This method will simulate what would happen if you would buy at the breakout point and hold the trade for X amount of bars. With 0 being sell at same bar close. To test robustness I've given the option to visualise Equity simulation not just for 1 simulation but a bunch of simulations.
On default settings it will draw the simulations for 0 bars holding all the way to 10 bars holding. The idea behind it is to check how stable the effect is, to have further confirmation of the significance of the signal. If price simulation line moves up on average for 0 bars all the way to 10 bars holding time that means the signal is steady.
Below is a visualisation of the Equity Simulation.
⯁ Signal filtering
For the boxes themselves where breakouts come from I've included a simple filter based on the size of the box in ATR or %. This will filter out all the boxes that are larger top to bottom than the ATR or % value you setup.
⯁ Coloring of Script
The script includes 5 color themes. There are no color settings or other visual settings in the script, the script themes are simple and always have colors that work well together. Equity simulation uses a gradient based on lightness to color the different lines so it's easier to differentiate them while still upper breaks having a different color than lower breaks.
This script is not created to be used in conjunction with other scripts, it will force you into a background color that matches the theme. It's purpose is a research tool for systematic trading, to analyse signals in more depth.
Metaverse color theme:
⯁ Conclusion
I hope this script will help traders get a deeper understanding of how different assets react to their assets. It should be possible to convert this script into other signals if you know how to code on the platform. It is my intention to make more publications that include this type of analysis. It is especially useful when dealing with signals that do not happen often enough, so a regular backtest is not enough to test their significance.
Volatility Trend Score [BackQuant]Volatility Trend Score
Overview
Volatility Trend Score is a trend-strength and regime-evaluation indicator built to measure directional persistence, not just direction. Most trend tools answer “up or down” using slope, crossovers, or a single condition. This indicator answers a more useful question for real trading: “How consistently is trend structure holding up once volatility is accounted for?”
It does this by building a volatility-scaled trailing structure (ATR-based) and then scoring how that structure evolves over a configurable lookback range. The output is a continuous score that rises when trend is persistent and decays when price action becomes noisy, mean-reverting, or unstable.
What it is measuring (the real goal)
This indicator is not trying to predict reversals. It is trying to quantify whether the market is behaving like a trend market or a chop market. It focuses on:
Persistence: does structure keep pushing in one direction bar after bar?
Stability: are pullbacks being absorbed without breaking the trailing structure?
Regime: is the market trending strongly enough to justify directional bias?
If you already have entries from other systems, this becomes a high-quality trend filter and trade management layer.
Core idea
At its foundation, the indicator combines two parts:
A volatility-adjusted trailing level derived from ATR and a user-defined factor.
A rolling persistence score that compares the current trail to prior trail values over a configurable loop window.
The trailing structure adapts to volatility and enforces one-sided movement, while the scoring logic converts that behavior into a numeric measure of trend quality.
Inputs and what they actually control
Average True Range Period (calc_p)
Defines the ATR window used to estimate volatility. A higher value smooths the volatility estimate and makes the trailing structure less reactive.
Factor (atr_factor)
Scales the ATR band size. Higher values widen the trailing band, filtering more noise, reducing flip frequency, and generally producing slower but more stable regimes.
For Loop Start/End (start/end)
Defines the comparison window used to build the score. It effectively sets how many historical trail values the current trail is compared against.
Shorter ranges produce a faster, more responsive score.
Longer ranges produce a slower, more “confidence-based” score that only climbs when trend persistence is sustained.
Long/Short Thresholds (thresL/thresS)
Convert a continuous score into regime thresholds.
Long threshold is a “trend quality requirement” for bullish bias.
Short threshold is used as a deterioration / breakdown trigger via crossunder logic.
Volatility-adjusted trailing structure
The trailing line is built from ATR bands around price:
up = close + ATR * factor
dn = close - ATR * factor
Then a trailing value is maintained with one-sided ratcheting behavior:
If dn rises above the previous trail, the trail steps up (ratchets upward).
If up drops below the previous trail, the trail steps down (ratchets downward).
This “ratchet” behavior is important. It prevents the trail from oscillating with small countertrend moves, forcing the trail to represent meaningful structure rather than micro-noise. On-chart, this trail often behaves like dynamic support/resistance in trends.
Why the trail is a better base than raw price
Price itself is noisy, and volatility changes the meaning of “big move” vs “small move.” By anchoring structure to ATR:
A move is interpreted relative to current volatility, not in absolute points.
High-volatility chop is less likely to be misread as a trend.
Trend structure is normalized across assets and timeframes more reliably.
This is why the score remains usable even when switching from low-vol assets to high-vol crypto pairs.
Trend scoring logic
The score is built by repeatedly comparing the current trailing value to trailing values from prior bars across a loop window:
If current trail > trail , add +1
If current trail < trail , add -1
This is a persistence test, not a momentum calculation. In a strong trend, the trail should generally keep stepping in the trend direction, so current values will be greater than many past values (bullish) or lower than many past values (bearish). In chop, the trail fails to progress meaningfully, so the score compresses, oscillates, or bleeds out.
How to interpret the score
Think of the score as a “trend conviction meter”:
High positive values: bullish persistence, structure is advancing consistently.
Low positive values: bullish bias may exist, but trend quality is weak or unstable.
Near zero: indecision, range behavior, or frequent structure challenges.
Negative values: bearish dominance or sustained deterioration in structure.
The speed of score change matters too:
Fast expansion suggests a fresh regime gaining traction.
Slow grind suggests mature trend continuation.
Rapid compression often signals consolidation, exhaustion, or a transition phase.
Signals and regime transitions
This script uses two different styles of conditions (important detail):
Long condition: score > long threshold (state-based, persistent while true).
Short condition: crossunder(score, short threshold) (event-based trigger).
That means:
Long bias can remain active as long as score stays above the long threshold.
Short regime flips are triggered at the moment the score breaks down through the short threshold.
On the chart, long/short shapes are only plotted when the regime flips (first bar of the change), not on every bar, using:
Long shape when signal becomes 1 and previous signal was -1
Short shape when signal becomes -1 and previous signal was 1
This keeps signals clean and avoids spam, making it usable for alerts and regime tagging.
Visual presentation
The indicator is designed to work both as a panel oscillator and as an on-chart overlay:
Score plot (oscillator): color reflects active regime state.
Optional trail on price: volatility-scaled structure line on chart.
Optional threshold reference lines: clear regime boundaries.
Optional candle coloring: makes regime obvious without reading the panel.
Optional background shading: useful for quick scanning and backtesting visually.
You can use only the score, only the trail, or both together depending on your workflow.
Practical use cases
1) Trend filter for systems
Use the score as a regime gate:
Allow long entries only when score is above the long threshold.
Avoid longs when score compresses toward zero or loses the threshold.
Treat the short threshold break as “trend is no longer healthy.”
This often improves system expectancy by reducing exposure during low-conviction conditions.
2) Trend quality grading
Instead of treating all uptrends as equal:
Higher score = higher persistence, better continuation odds.
Score plateau = trend losing pressure, continuation becomes less reliable.
Score decay while price rises = trend is getting weaker under the hood.
This is useful for position sizing or deciding whether to add to winners.
3) Trade management and exits
Two complementary tools exist here:
Trail line can act as a dynamic stop reference or structure invalidation level.
Score behavior can be used to scale out when persistence fades (before a full flip).
Many traders use the trail for “hard structure” and the score for “soft deterioration.”
4) Breakout confirmation vs fakeouts
A breakout that immediately fails to build score is often low quality.
Healthy breakouts usually come with score expansion as structure advances.
Fakeouts often revert quickly, score fails to climb, and regime stays unstable.
Tuning guidelines
These are general behaviors you can expect when adjusting settings:
Higher ATR period and factor: slower regimes, fewer flips, cleaner structure.
Lower ATR period and factor: faster reaction, more sensitivity, more noise risk.
Longer loop range: score becomes more “confidence-based,” slower to change.
Shorter loop range: score becomes more “tactical,” faster but more jittery.
A good way to tune is to pick the trail behavior first (ATR period and factor), then tune the score window (loop) to match how quickly you want “trend conviction” to build.
Market behavior focus
Volatility Trend Score is most valuable in markets where volatility shifts frequently and fake trends are common, especially crypto. It is designed to:
Stay out of low-quality chop where most indicators whipsaw.
Quantify when volatility is being expressed directionally (constructive trend).
Provide a clean regime framework for filtering, alignment, and management.
Summary
Volatility Trend Score converts volatility-adjusted structure into a quantified measure of trend persistence. By combining an ATR-based trailing mechanism with a rolling comparison score, it provides a more reliable read on trend quality than single-condition indicators. It is best used as a regime filter, a trend strength gauge, and a trade management layer, helping you stay aligned with strong directional phases while avoiding low-conviction envir
RSI Divergence Pro Price Overlay High-Prob v6RSI Divergence Pro — Comprehensive Usage Guide
1) What This Indicator Does (in plain English)
Goal: Detect high-probability reversal (and optionally continuation) points using RSI divergences, then draw clean visual lines on price (red/bearish, green/bullish) and attach a % Strength label to help you quickly decide if it’s worth trading.
Core logic:
• Finds confirmed peaks and valleys using ta.pivothigh and ta.pivotlow.
• Bearish: Price makes Higher High while RSI makes Lower High.
• Bullish: Price makes Lower Low while RSI makes Higher Low.
• Filters for high probability: RSI near OB/OS, min RSI diff, ATR scaling, pivot spacing.
• Draws lines on price chart and attaches % Strength label.
• Alerts trigger only when a new divergence line is drawn.
2) Inputs & What Each One Means
• RSI Period: Shorter = more reactive; longer = smoother.
• Pivot Left/Right: Controls peak/valley confirmation.
• RSI Overbought/Oversold: Default 60/40; tighten for lower TFs.
• Min RSI Divergence: Minimum difference between RSI pivots.
• ATR Length & Min Price Move vs ATR: Ensures structural change.
• Bars Between Pivots: Avoid micro noise and stale signals.
• Hidden Divergence toggle: OFF for reversal; ON for continuation.
3) The % Strength Label — What It Represents
Combines RSI divergence magnitude (60%), Price move vs ATR (30%), OB/OS proximity (10%).
Interpretation:
• 80–100%: A-grade signals.
• 60–79%: Good, tradable with confirmation.
• 40–59%: Caution.
• <40%: Usually skip.
4) High-Probability Trading Workflow (H1)
1. Step 1: Scan & identify the signal.
2. Step 2: Confirm with price action (structure break or engulfing).
3. Step 3: Entry (conservative or aggressive).
4. Step 4: Stop placement (pivot ±0.5×ATR).
5. Step 5: Take profit & management (TP1 1×ATR, TP2 2×ATR, trail).
5) Confluence & Filters
• EMA slope confirmation.
• Structure alignment with S/R zones.
• Volatility regime check.
6) Example Scenarios
• A) Bearish Classic Divergence: HH price + LH RSI, Strength 83%.
• B) Bullish Classic Divergence: LL price + HL RSI, Strength 68%.
• C) Hidden Bullish Divergence: HL price + LL RSI, Strength 75%.
7) Common Pitfalls & How to Avoid Them
• Forcing signals in dead volatility.
• Taking divergences in strong trends without confirmation.
• Ignoring pivot spacing.
8) Tuning for Your Style
• H1 defaults: RSI 10, pivots 5/5, thresholds 60/40.
• M15/M5: thresholds 65/35, min RSI diff 10–12.
• H4/D1: thresholds 58/42, ATR multiple 0.4–0.6.
9) Multi-Asset Notes
• FX majors: overlap session ideal.
• Indices: require engulfing confirmation.
• Crypto: use ATR multiple ≥0.7.
10) Alerts — How to Use Them
• Set alerts Once per bar close.
• Alert names: Bearish RSI Divergence, Bullish RSI Divergence.
11) Backtesting & Forward Testing
• Define rules: entry, stop, TP.
• Track Strength % bins.
12) Troubleshooting & Diagnostics
• No lines? Loosen thresholds.
• Too many lines? Tighten thresholds.
13) Quick Operator’s Checklist
• Signal present?
• Location near S/R?
• Confirmation present?
14) Future Upgrade Options
• Session filter (London–NY overlap).
• EMA slope confirmation.
• Structure-break confirmation.
• Alert text enhancements.
BULL Whale Finder + BTC 1hBULL Whale Finder + BTC 1h is a long-only strategy designed to capture strong impulsive moves in Bitcoin.
It trades expansion (Whale) bars that appear in the direction of the trend, confirmed by the 200-period moving average on both 1H and 4H, with price holding above the 20-period moving average.
Entries focus on impulsive moves that originate from structural zones, not late breakouts.
Risk management is fully automated:
ATR-based initial stop
Automatic profit protection (Pay-Self)
Adds and partial exits based on the expansion-bar sequence
A protected runner managed with a trailing stop
The user only sets the risk per trade (MLPT).
All other parameters are hardcoded and locked to prevent over-optimization.
👉 Ready for backtesting, discretionary execution, or full automation.
Long Only - Double EMA + SessionOverview
This is a high-probability Long-Only trend-following strategy designed primarily for the 65-minute and 4-hour timeframes. It utilizes a dual-layered filter system to align trades with both macro and mid-term market momentum, ensuring entries only occur during healthy uptrends. The strategy is optimized for volatile, high-growth assets like TSLA and MSFT.
How It Works
The strategy relies on three primary pillars of technical analysis to confirm an "A+" setup:
Macro Trend Filter (200 EMA): We only look for long opportunities when the price is above the 200-period Exponential Moving Average. This keeps the strategy on the right side of the long-term trend and avoids "buying the dip" during major bear markets.
Momentum Filter (50 EMA): The 50 EMA acts as a local trend filter. By requiring price to be above both EMAs, we ensure the medium-term momentum is also bullish.
The Trigger (Stochastic RSI): We enter when the Stochastic RSI K-line crosses above the 20 level (Oversold). This identifies local "oversold" pullbacks within a larger uptrend.
Risk Management & Exit Plan
This strategy is built with professional-grade capital preservation in mind:
Trailing Stop-Loss: A 5% trailing stop follows the price as it moves in our favor. This protects unrealized profits and helps mitigate the drawdown during sudden reversals.
Dynamic Profit Target: The strategy exits automatically if the Stochastic RSI K-line reaches the 97 level, capturing gains at the peak of momentum.
Session Filter: To avoid the "noise" of pre-market and low-volume afternoon trading, the strategy is restricted to the Market Open (9:30 AM EST) window where institutional volume is highest.
Backtesting Notes
Realistic Simulation: This strategy includes a 0.05% commission and 2 ticks of slippage to reflect real-world execution costs.
Recommended Assets: Optimized for Nasdaq-100 components and high-volume growth stocks.
Timeframe: Best performance found on 65m or 4h intervals.
Delta/Volume Bubble Strategy [Quant Z-Score] Maxxed VersionDelta/Volume Bubble Signals Maxxed Verison
This indicator combines advanced volume delta analysis with smart filtering to generate high-conviction intraday signals on futures like YM, ES, and NQ (5-minute charts perform particularly well in testing).
Special thanks to L&L Capital for the LNL Trend System, which provides the excellent dynamic chop detection and cloud visuals used here.
A very BIG thanks to tncylyv for the original volume delta bubble script — its Z-score normalization on extreme volume/delta is the foundation of the core detection logic.This entire system is now possible thanks to TradingView's addition of Volume Delta data in the Footprint chart, allowing accurate lower-timeframe delta aggregation without external feeds. Core Concept the indicator identifies extreme volume/delta spikes — moments when significant buying or selling pressure appears — and only signals when multiple confluence filters align. This results in lower-frequency, higher-quality trades that aim to capture institutional momentum while avoiding noise.
How It Works — Key Components Volume Delta Detection (The Heart of the System) Uses TradingView's built-in footprint delta (aggregated from lower TF, default 1-second bars).
Calculates absolute delta and applies a rolling Z-score (default lookback 60 bars) to normalize extremes across different volatility regimes and instruments.
Bubbles visualize spikes above threshold (default 1.7σ).
BUY/SELL signals require the same threshold plus additional filters.
Absorption Filter (Enabled by Default) Detects high volume/delta with minimal price movement ("effort vs result" failure = trapped traders).
Purple glow on bubbles + optional alert.
Signals are suppressed on absorption bars to avoid counter-trend traps.
Trend Filter (Nadaraya-Watson from jdehorty as default) Non-repainting kernel regression line for smooth, adaptive trend following.
Signals only fire when price is on the correct side of the trend line (above for longs, below for shorts). Can be disabled or switched to EMA/WMA/KAMA.
LNL Chop Filter (Tight Mode by Default) Dynamic ATR-based stop zones from L&L's system.
When stop levels appear on both sides of price = sideways/chop (no-go zone).
Signals completely suppressed during chop.
Usage Tips Best on intraday futures (YM 5-min has shown strong results in testing).
Defaults are tuned for balance: 1.7σ threshold, Tight LNL mode, absorption on.
Strategy version (separate script) adds LNL trailing stops for actual backtesting/exits.
Customize freely — try different LNL modes (Net for wider range), trend types, or Z-thresholds.
Also available the matching indicator by yours truly.
Important: Forward Test Thoroughly This indicator was refined on historical data, so there's always risk of over-fitting.
Always forward test on live or paper accounts for weeks/months before real capital: Validate across different market regimes (trending, ranging, high/low volatility).
Compare out-of-sample periods.
Adjust one parameter at a time and re-validate forward.
Markets change — what worked yesterday may need tweaking tomorrow.
Feel free to use, modify, and share. Good luck, and trade well! — Max






















