Hybrid Strategy with Position Control & Breakout Filter//@version=6
indicator('Hybrid Strategy with Position Control & Breakout Filter', overlay=true)
// === INPUTS ===
emaFastLen = input.int(8, 'Fast EMA')
emaSlowLen = input.int(21, 'Slow EMA')
rsiLen = input.int(14, 'RSI Length')
rsiOverbought = input.int(70, 'RSI Overbought')
rsiOversold = input.int(30, 'RSI Oversold')
macdFast = input.int(12, 'MACD Fast')
macdSlow = input.int(26, 'MACD Slow')
macdSignal = input.int(9, 'MACD Signal')
volatilityMultiplier = input.float(1.0, 'ATR Multiplier for Volatility Filter')
// === CALCULATIONS ===
emaFast = ta.ema(close, emaFastLen)
emaSlow = ta.ema(close, emaSlowLen)
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLen)
= ta.macd(close, macdFast, macdSlow, macdSignal)
atr = ta.atr(14)
// === VOLATILITY FILTER ===
volatilityThreshold = ta.sma(atr, 14) * volatilityMultiplier
isVolatile = atr > volatilityThreshold
// === OPENING SPIKE LOGIC (first 15 mins of session only) ===
sessionStart = timestamp("America/New_York", year, month, dayofmonth, 9, 30)
first15Min = time >= sessionStart and time < sessionStart + 15 * 60 * 1000
openingBreakout = first15Min and close > open and ta.change(close) > atr * 1.5
// === POSITION TRACKING ===
var int position = 0 // 0 = no position, 1 = long, -1 = short
// === ENTRY CONDITIONS ===
longCondition = ((ta.crossover(emaFast, emaSlow) and rsi < rsiOverbought and macdLine > signalLine and isVolatile) or openingBreakout) and position != 1
shortCondition = ta.crossunder(emaFast, emaSlow) and rsi > rsiOversold and macdLine < signalLine and isVolatile and position != -1
// === EXIT CONDITIONS ===
exitLong = ta.crossunder(emaFast, emaSlow)
exitShort = ta.crossover(emaFast, emaSlow)
// === SIGNAL PLOTS ===
buySignal = longCondition
sellSignal = shortCondition
plotshape(buySignal, title='Buy Signal', location=location.belowbar, color=color.green, style=shape.triangleup, size=size.small, text='BUY')
plotshape(sellSignal, title='Sell Signal', location=location.abovebar, color=color.red, style=shape.triangledown, size=size.small, text='SELL')
// === STATE MANAGEMENT ===
if (longCondition)
position := 1
if (shortCondition)
position := -1
if (exitLong and position == 1)
position := 0
if (exitShort and position == -1)
position := 0
// === PLOT EMAs ===
plot(emaFast, color=color.orange, title='Fast EMA')
plot(emaSlow, color=color.blue, title='Slow EMA')
Options
Hybrid Strategy with Position Control//@version=6
indicator('Hybrid Strategy with Position Control', overlay=true)
// === INPUTS ===
emaFastLen = input.int(8, 'Fast EMA')
emaSlowLen = input.int(21, 'Slow EMA')
rsiLen = input.int(14, 'RSI Length')
rsiOverbought = input.int(70, 'RSI Overbought')
rsiOversold = input.int(30, 'RSI Oversold')
macdFast = input.int(12, 'MACD Fast')
macdSlow = input.int(26, 'MACD Slow')
macdSignal = input.int(9, 'MACD Signal')
// === CALCULATIONS ===
emaFast = ta.ema(close, emaFastLen)
emaSlow = ta.ema(close, emaSlowLen)
rsi = ta.rsi(close, rsiLen)
= ta.macd(close, macdFast, macdSlow, macdSignal)
// === POSITION TRACKING ===
var int position = 0 // 0 = no position, 1 = long, -1 = short
// === ENTRY CONDITIONS ===
longCondition = ta.crossover(emaFast, emaSlow) and rsi < rsiOverbought and macdLine > signalLine and position != 1
shortCondition = ta.crossunder(emaFast, emaSlow) and rsi > rsiOversold and macdLine < signalLine and position != -1
// === EXIT CONDITIONS (Optional logic for reset) ===
exitLong = ta.crossunder(emaFast, emaSlow)
exitShort = ta.crossover(emaFast, emaSlow)
// === SIGNAL PLOTS ===
buySignal = longCondition
sellSignal = shortCondition
plotshape(buySignal, title='Buy Signal', location=location.belowbar, color=color.green, style=shape.triangleup, size=size.small, text='BUY')
plotshape(sellSignal, title='Sell Signal', location=location.abovebar, color=color.red, style=shape.triangledown, size=size.small, text='SELL')
// === STATE MANAGEMENT ===
if (longCondition)
position := 1
if (shortCondition)
position := -1
// Reset position if trend reverses
if (exitLong and position == 1)
position := 0
if (exitShort and position == -1)
position := 0
// === PLOT EMAs ===
plot(emaFast, color=color.orange, title='Fast EMA')
plot(emaSlow, color=color.blue, title='Slow EMA')
Efficient Options Entry Signals (Call/Put/Spreads)Add to TradingView as a new Indicator Script.
Works on all timeframes, but defaults are tuned for daily/5m/15m.
Arrows and labels will show precise entries/exits for calls, puts, and debit spreads based on volatility.
Only efficient, trend-confirmed trades—no whipsaw overload!
All input parameters adjustable in the script UI.
PM + BOS + FVG Indicator & AlertsHey team it's Tanner, I have created Nitros strategy into a custom indicator, it's only the PM BOS FVG model, I will add a HOD/LOD BOS FVG custom indicator eventually, this indicator is setup to give you alerts as well. or if you just want a clean FVG indicator and or PM level indicator this works too. mess with the settings to your liking and DM me on circle or discord if you have feedback or questions, thanks team.
Option Auto Anchored VWAPThis indicator automatically shows two Anchored VWAP lines.
The first gets placed on the very first candle of the chart.
The second is set on the last or current day you select in the settings.
StockMarketWolf 9/20 EMA VWAP MACD StrategyThis strategy is all about catching momentum in the market by combining some of the most trusted technical indicators—moving averages, VWAP, and MACD—to help you spot better trade opportunities with more confidence.
Here’s the simple idea:
Use the 9 and 20 EMA crossover to spot when the short-term trend is turning up or down.
Check that the price is trading above or below the VWAP (the average price weighted by volume for the day) to confirm the overall market sentiment.
Use the MACD to make sure momentum is supporting your trade—no point jumping in if momentum isn’t backing it up.
How it works:
Go long when the 9 EMA crosses above the 20 EMA, price is above VWAP, and MACD is signaling positive momentum.
Go short when the 9 EMA crosses below the 20 EMA, price is below VWAP, and MACD shows bearish momentum.
Exit the trade when these signals flip or momentum fades.
Why it’s useful:
It helps you avoid trading against the trend by using the VWAP filter.
The MACD momentum check cuts down on fake breakouts.
It’s straightforward and works well on popular day trading charts like the 5-minute timeframe.
Great for high-volume stocks and futures like SPY, QQQ, or ES futures.
Things to keep in mind:
It doesn’t throw out signals all day — you get quality over quantity.
Like any strategy, it’s not perfect and can struggle during sideways markets.
Sticking to the rules and having patience is key.
All in all, this is a solid, no-nonsense strategy that mixes trend and momentum in a way that makes trading feel a bit more clear and less noisy. Perfect if you want a systematic approach without overcomplicating things.
Option Volume Wave FlowOption Wave graph. Takes into consideration call/put volume to identify the wave of where money is moving to. Goal is to identify fake outs
Ultimate SuperTrend with Support and ResistanceModified ST with Support and resistance levels. This was developed by SAM team to provide a singular indicator to trade in NIFTY. It can also be used in other securities.
Based on the trading style, can be used for Sell and Buy trades. Provide your comments and guidance.
Recent Swing High/Low Linesit gives the recent swing highs and lows.
for options buyers, they can simply enter on a trade when an opposite option (at the money) goes below the recent swing low.
2Saucy custom MA'sEMA's 9/21/50/200 - Designated for "scalping" 1m/3m/5m/15/1h/4h. Works best as it EMA's move faster with price.
SMA's 10/20/50/200 - Works more for swing trading and/or finding setups on weekly and daily time frames.
By combining these two simultaneously trading intra-day is made much simpler.
Yours truly,
#2Saucy
Dynamic 5% Below SuperTrend ResistanceA indicator which give me horizontal line 5% distant from supertrend price and price of this indicator should be on the price bar
Support & Resistance by O Dinesh BabuThis Script is Specifically Designed to Work with NIFTY, BANKNIFTY & FINNIFTY Indices Only..
For Optimal Results, Please Wait for the 1st 15-Minute Candle to Complete Before Initiating Any Trades..
Wishing All Traders the Very Best in Their Journey..
Warm Regards,
O. Dinesh Babu
Son of Mr. & Mrs. O. Asha Rama Krishna
Hourly Divider with Opening Price🕐 Hour Lines with Opening Price — Utility Indicator
This lightweight TradingView script helps short-term option traders quickly visualize hourly structure and bias.
What it does:
Draws a vertical blue line at the start of each new hour
Draws a horizontal yellow line from the opening price of the hour, extending until the next hour
Purpose:
This tool makes it easy to:
Track hourly price context on lower timeframes like 1-minute
See how far price moves relative to the hourly open
Identify mean-reversion or breakout conditions around hourly transitions
Best used on:
1-minute (1m) charts, where understanding the position of price relative to the hourly open can inform "Up or Down" binary trades.
Intraday Reversal Pro1. CALL (Long/Buy) Setup
Green "CALL" label appears below a candle:
The system thinks a bullish reversal is likely.
This happens when there’s a liquidity sweep (price sweeps below recent lows), an FVG (Fair Value Gap) below price, RSI is oversold, and short-term EMA is above the long-term EMA.
Red dashed line (Stop Loss):
This is your suggested stop loss (for a call/long option) — place it at or just below this line.
Green dashed line (Take Profit):
This is your suggested take profit (for the option) — consider exiting here for a 2:1 reward/risk trade.
2. PUT (Short/Sell) Setup
Red "PUT" label appears above a candle:
The system thinks a bearish reversal is likely.
This happens when there’s a liquidity sweep above recent highs, an FVG above price, RSI is overbought, and short-term EMA is below the long-term EMA.
Red dashed line (Stop Loss):
This is your suggested stop loss (for a put/short option) — place it at or just above this line.
Green dashed line (Take Profit):
This is your suggested take profit (for the put/short option).
How to Trade with It:
Wait for a CALL or PUT label to appear (ideally after a sweep + FVG).
Enter your option position at/near the signal candle close.
Set your stop loss at the red dashed line (for calls, below; for puts, above).
Take profit at the green dashed line.
Optional: Use alerts to be notified when a new signal appears.
SMA Crossover Strategy with TP/SL📊 Strategy Description: SMA Crossover Strategy with TP/SL
This is a Simple Moving Average (SMA) Crossover Strategy designed to help traders identify trend reversals and manage trades with proper risk-reward logic.
🔹 Entry Logic:
Buy Signal: When the Fast SMA crosses above the Slow SMA → indicating a bullish trend.
Sell Signal: When the Fast SMA crosses below the Slow SMA → indicating a bearish trend.
🔹 Exit Logic:
Take Profit: The strategy exits the position when price reaches a user-defined profit target.
Stop Loss: The trade is closed if price moves against the position beyond the specified stop-loss limit.
⚙️ Parameters:
Fast SMA Length: Number of candles used for fast moving average (default: 10)
Slow SMA Length: Number of candles used for slow moving average (default: 30)
Take Profit (%): Profit target in percentage (default: 0.10%)
Stop Loss (%): Maximum allowed loss per trade (default: 0.10%)
✅ Additional Features:
Strategy backtesting supported
Visual arrows for Buy/Sell signals
Bar coloring based on trend
Alert conditions for Buy/Sell crossover signals
🧠 Suggested Use:
Works best on 1 min, 5 hour, or daily timeframes.
Can be applied to stocks, crypto, forex, or indices.
Ideal for trend-following traders who want automation with risk control.
Position Size Calculator with Fees# Position Size Calculator with Portfolio Management - Manual
## Overview
The Position Size Calculator with Portfolio Management is an advanced Pine Script indicator designed to help traders calculate optimal position sizes based on their total portfolio value and risk management strategy. This tool automatically calculates your risk amount based on portfolio allocation percentages and determines the exact position size needed while accounting for trading fees.
## Key Features
- **Portfolio-Based Risk Management**: Calculates risk based on total portfolio value
- **Tiered Risk Allocation**: Separates trading allocation from total portfolio
- **Automatic Trade Direction Detection**: Determines long/short based on entry vs stop loss
- **Fee Integration**: Accounts for trading fees in position size calculations
- **Risk Factor Adjustment**: Allows scaling of position size up or down
- **Visual Display**: Shows all calculations in a clear, color-coded table
- **Automatic Risk Calculation**: No need to manually input risk amount
## Input Parameters
### Total Portfolio ($)
- **Purpose**: The total value of your investment portfolio
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
- **Example**: If your total portfolio is worth $100,000, enter 100000
### Trading Portfolio Allocation (%)
- **Purpose**: The percentage of your total portfolio allocated to active trading
- **Default**: 20.0%
- **Range**: 0.0% to 100.0%
- **Step**: 0.01
- **Example**: If you allocate 20% of your portfolio to trading, enter 20
### Risk from Trading (%)
- **Purpose**: The percentage of your trading allocation you're willing to risk per trade
- **Default**: 0.1%
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
- **Example**: If you risk 0.1% of your trading allocation per trade, enter 0.1
### Entry Price ($)
- **Purpose**: The price at which you plan to enter the trade
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
### Stop Loss ($)
- **Purpose**: The price at which you will exit if the trade goes against you
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
### Risk Factor
- **Purpose**: A multiplier to scale your position size up or down
- **Default**: 1.0 (no scaling)
- **Range**: 0.0 to 10.0
- **Step**: 0.1
- **Examples**:
- 1.0 = Normal position size
- 2.0 = Double the position size
- 0.5 = Half the position size
### Fee (%)
- **Purpose**: The percentage fee charged per transaction
- **Default**: 0.01% (0.01)
- **Range**: 0.0% to 1.0%
- **Step**: 0.001
## How Risk Amount is Calculated
The script automatically calculates your risk amount using this formula:
```
Risk Amount = Total Portfolio × Trading Allocation (%) × Risk % ÷ 10,000
```
### Example Calculation:
- Total Portfolio: $100,000
- Trading Allocation: 20%
- Risk per Trade: 0.1%
**Risk Amount = $100,000 × 20 × 0.1 ÷ 10,000 = $20**
This means you would risk $20 per trade, which is 0.1% of your $20,000 trading allocation.
## Portfolio Structure Example
Let's say you have a $100,000 portfolio:
### Allocation Structure:
- **Total Portfolio**: $100,000
- **Trading Allocation (20%)**: $20,000
- **Long-term Investments (80%)**: $80,000
### Risk Management:
- **Risk per Trade (0.1% of trading)**: $20
- **Maximum trades at risk**: Could theoretically have 1,000 trades before risking entire trading allocation
## How Position Size is Calculated
### Trade Direction Detection
- **Long Trade**: Entry price > Stop loss price
- **Short Trade**: Entry price < Stop loss price
### Position Size Formulas
#### For Long Trades:
```
Position Size = -Risk Factor × Risk Amount / (Stop Loss × (1 - Fee) - Entry Price × (1 + Fee))
```
#### For Short Trades:
```
Position Size = -Risk Factor × Risk Amount / (Entry Price × (1 - Fee) - Stop Loss × (1 + Fee))
```
## Output Display
The indicator displays a comprehensive table with color-coded sections:
### Portfolio Information (Light Blue Background)
- **Portfolio (USD)**: Your total portfolio value
- **Trading Portfolio Allocation (%)**: Percentage allocated to trading
- **Risk as % of Trading**: Risk percentage per trade
### Trade Setup (Gray Background)
- **Entry Price**: Your specified entry price
- **Stop Loss**: Your specified stop loss price
- **Fee (%)**: Trading fee percentage
- **Risk Factor**: Position size multiplier
### Risk Analysis (Red Background)
- **Risk Amount**: Automatically calculated dollar risk
- **Effective Entry**: Actual entry cost including fees
- **Effective Exit**: Actual exit value including fees
- **Expected Loss**: Calculated loss if stop loss is hit
- **Deviation from Risk %**: Accuracy of risk calculation
### Final Result (Blue Background)
- **Position Size**: Number of shares/units to trade
## Usage Examples
### Example 1: Conservative Long Trade
- **Total Portfolio**: $50,000
- **Trading Allocation**: 15%
- **Risk per Trade**: 0.05%
- **Entry Price**: $25.00
- **Stop Loss**: $24.00
- **Risk Factor**: 1.0
- **Fee**: 0.01%
**Calculated Risk Amount**: $50,000 × 15% × 0.05% ÷ 100 = $3.75
### Example 2: Aggressive Short Trade
- **Total Portfolio**: $200,000
- **Trading Allocation**: 30%
- **Risk per Trade**: 0.2%
- **Entry Price**: $150.00
- **Stop Loss**: $155.00
- **Risk Factor**: 2.0
- **Fee**: 0.01%
**Calculated Risk Amount**: $200,000 × 30% × 0.2% ÷ 100 = $120
**Actual Risk**: $120 × 2.0 = $240 (due to risk factor)
## Color Coding System
- **Green/Red Header**: Trade direction (Long/Short)
- **Light Blue**: Portfolio management parameters
- **Gray**: Trade setup parameters
- **Red**: Risk-related calculations and results
- **Blue**: Final position size result
## Best Practices
### Portfolio Management
1. **Keep trading allocation reasonable** (typically 10-30% of total portfolio)
2. **Use conservative risk percentages** (0.05-0.2% per trade)
3. **Don't risk more than you can afford to lose**
### Risk Management
1. **Start with small risk factors** (1.0 or less) until comfortable
2. **Monitor your total exposure** across all open positions
3. **Adjust risk based on market conditions**
### Trade Execution
1. **Always validate calculations** before placing trades
2. **Account for slippage** in volatile markets
3. **Consider position size relative to liquidity**
## Risk Management Guidelines
### Conservative Approach
- Trading Allocation: 10-20%
- Risk per Trade: 0.05-0.1%
- Risk Factor: 0.5-1.0
### Moderate Approach
- Trading Allocation: 20-30%
- Risk per Trade: 0.1-0.15%
- Risk Factor: 1.0-1.5
### Aggressive Approach
- Trading Allocation: 30-40%
- Risk per Trade: 0.15-0.25%
- Risk Factor: 1.5-2.0
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
1. **Position Size shows 0**
- Verify all portfolio inputs are greater than 0
- Check that entry price differs from stop loss
- Ensure calculated risk amount is positive
2. **Very small position sizes**
- Increase risk percentage or risk factor
- Check if your risk amount is too small for the price difference
3. **Large risk deviation**
- Normal for very small positions
- Consider adjusting entry/stop loss levels
### Validation Checklist
- Total portfolio value is realistic
- Trading allocation percentage makes sense
- Risk percentage is conservative
- Entry and stop loss prices are valid
- Trade direction matches your intention
## Advanced Features
### Risk Factor Usage
- **Scaling up**: Use risk factors > 1.0 for high-confidence trades
- **Scaling down**: Use risk factors < 1.0 for uncertain trades
- **Never exceed**: Risk factors that would risk more than your comfort level
### Multiple Timeframe Analysis
- Use different risk factors for different timeframes
- Consider correlation between positions
- Adjust trading allocation based on market conditions
## Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and planning purposes only. Always verify calculations manually and consider market conditions, liquidity, and correlation between positions. The automated risk calculation assumes you're comfortable with the mathematical relationship between portfolio allocation and individual trade risk. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results, and all trading involves risk of loss.
MA Crossover Strategy with TP/SL (5 EMA Filter)How the Strategy Works on a 5-Minute Chart:
Data Input (5-Minute Candles):
Every single data point (candle) on your chart will represent 5 minutes of price action (Open, High, Low, Close for that 5-minute period).
All calculations (MAs, EMA, signals) will be based on these 5-minute price data points.
Moving Average Calculations:
Fast MA (10-period SMA): This will be the Simple Moving Average of the closing prices of the last 10 five-minute candles. It reacts relatively quickly to recent price changes.
Slow MA (30-period SMA): This will be the Simple Moving Average of the closing prices of the last 30 five-minute candles. It represents a slightly longer-term trend compared to the Fast MA.
5 EMA (5-period EMA): This is the Exponential Moving Average of the closing prices of the last 5 five-minute candles. Being an EMA, it gives more weight to the most recent 5-minute prices, making it very responsive to immediate price action.
Signal Generation (Entry Conditions):
Long Entry Signal:
The 10-period SMA crosses above the 30-period SMA (indicating a potential bullish shift in the short-to-medium term trend).
AND the current 5-minute candle's closing price is above the 5-period EMA (confirming that the immediate price momentum is also bullish and supporting the crossover).
If both conditions are met at the close of a 5-minute candle, a "Buy" signal is generated.
Short Entry Signal:
The 10-period SMA crosses below the 30-period SMA (indicating a potential bearish shift).
AND the current 5-minute candle's closing price is below the 5-period EMA (confirming immediate bearish momentum).
If both conditions are met at the close of a 5-minute candle, a "Sell" signal is generated.
Trade Execution:
When a signal is triggered, the strategy enters a trade (long or short) at the closing price of that 5-minute candle.
Immediately upon entry, it places two contingent orders:
Take Profit (Target): Set at 2% (by default) away from your entry price. For a long trade, it's 2% above; for a short trade, 2% below.
Stop Loss: Set at 1% (by default) away from your entry price. For a long trade, it's 1% below; for a short trade, 1% above.
The trade will remain open until either the Take Profit or Stop Loss price is hit by subsequent 5-minute candles.
Implications for Trading on a 5-Minute Chart:
Increased Trade Frequency: You will likely see many more signals and trades compared to higher timeframes (like 1-hour or daily charts). This means more potential opportunities but also more transaction costs (commissions, slippage).
Sensitivity to Noise: Lower timeframes are more prone to "market noise" – small, random price fluctuations that don't indicate a true trend. While the 5 EMA filter helps, some false signals might still occur.
Faster Price Action: Price movements can be very rapid on a 5-minute chart. Your take profit or stop loss levels might be hit very quickly, sometimes within the same or next few candles.
Parameter Optimization is Crucial: The default MA lengths (10, 30) and EMA (5) might not be optimal for every asset or market condition on a 5-minute chart. You'll need to backtest extensively and potentially adjust these lengths, as well as the targetPerc and stopPerc, to find what works best for the specific instrument you're trading.
Risk Management: The fixed percentage stop loss is vital on a 5-minute chart due to its volatility. Without it, a few unfavorable moves could lead to significant losses.
Easy Position Size Calculator with Fees# Easy Position Size Calculator with Fees - Manual
## Overview
The Easy Position Size Calculator is a Pine Script indicator designed to help traders calculate the optimal position size for their trades while accounting for trading fees. This tool automatically determines whether you're planning a long or short position and calculates the exact position size needed to risk a specific dollar amount.
## Key Features
- **Automatic Trade Direction Detection**: Determines if you're going long or short based on entry price vs stop loss
- **Fee Integration**: Accounts for trading fees in position size calculations
- **Risk Management**: Calculates position size based on your specified risk amount
- **Risk Factor Adjustment**: Allows you to scale your position size up or down
- **Visual Display**: Shows all calculations in a clear, organized table
## Input Parameters
### Entry Price ($)
- **Purpose**: The price at which you plan to enter the trade
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
### Stop Loss ($)
- **Purpose**: The price at which you will exit the trade if it goes against you
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
### Risk ($)
- **Purpose**: The maximum dollar amount you're willing to lose on this trade
- **Default**: 0.0
- **Range**: Any positive value
- **Step**: 0.01
### Risk Factor
- **Purpose**: A multiplier to scale your position size up or down
- **Default**: 1.0 (no scaling)
- **Range**: 0.0 to 10.0
- **Step**: 0.1
- **Examples**:
- 1.0 = Normal position size
- 2.0 = Double the position size
- 0.5 = Half the position size
### Fee (%)
- **Purpose**: The percentage fee charged per transaction (buy/sell)
- **Default**: 0.01% (0.01)
- **Range**: 0.0% to 1.0%
- **Step**: 0.001
## How It Works
### Trade Direction Detection
The script automatically determines your trade direction:
- **Long Trade**: Entry price > Stop loss price
- **Short Trade**: Entry price < Stop loss price
### Position Size Calculation
#### For Long Trades:
```
Position Size = -Risk Factor × Risk Amount / (Stop Loss × (1 - Fee) - Entry Price × (1 + Fee))
```
#### For Short Trades:
```
Position Size = -Risk Factor × Risk Amount / (Entry Price × (1 - Fee) - Stop Loss × (1 + Fee))
```
### Fee Adjustment
The script accounts for fees on both entry and exit:
- **Long trades**: You pay fees when buying (entry) and selling (exit)
- **Short trades**: You pay fees when shorting (entry) and covering (exit)
## Output Display
The indicator displays a table with the following information:
### Trade Information
- **Trade Type**: Shows whether it's a LONG, SHORT, or INVALID trade
- **Entry Price**: Your specified entry price
- **Stop Loss**: Your specified stop loss price
- **Fee (%)**: The fee percentage being used
### Risk Parameters
- **Risk Amount**: The dollar amount you're willing to risk
- **Risk Factor**: The multiplier being applied
### Calculated Values
- **Effective Entry**: The actual cost per share including fees
- **Effective Exit**: The actual exit value per share including fees
- **Expected Loss**: The calculated loss if stop loss is hit
- **Deviation from Risk %**: Shows how close the expected loss is to your target risk
- **Position Size**: The number of shares/units to trade
## Usage Examples
### Example 1: Long Trade
- Entry Price: $100.00
- Stop Loss: $95.00
- Risk Amount: $500.00
- Risk Factor: 1.0
- Fee: 0.01%
**Result**: The script will calculate how many shares to buy so that if the stop loss is hit, you lose approximately $500 (accounting for fees). Position Size: 99.61152
### Example 2: Short Trade
- Entry Price: $50.00
- Stop Loss: $55.00
- Risk Amount: $300.00
- Risk Factor: 1.0
- Fee: 0.01%
**Result**: The script will calculate how many shares to short so that if the stop loss is hit, you lose approximately $300 (accounting for fees). Position Size: 59.87426
## Important Notes
### Validation Requirements
For the script to work properly, all of the following must be true:
- Entry price > 0
- Stop loss > 0
- Risk amount > 0
- Entry price ≠ Stop loss (to determine direction)
### Negative Position Sizes
The script may show negative position sizes, which is normal:
- **Negative values for long trades**: Represents shares to buy
- **Negative values for short trades**: Represents shares to short
### Risk Deviation
The "Deviation from Risk %" shows how closely the calculated position size matches your target risk. Small deviations are normal due to:
- Fee calculations
- Rounding
- Market precision
## Color Coding
The table uses color coding for easy identification:
- **Green**: Long trade information
- **Red**: Short trade information
- **Gray**: Invalid trade (when inputs are incorrect)
- **Blue**: Final position size
- **Red background**: Risk-related calculations
## Troubleshooting
### Common Issues
1. **Position Size shows 0**
- Check that all inputs are greater than 0
- Ensure entry price is different from stop loss
2. **Trade Type shows INVALID**
- Verify that entry price and stop loss are both positive
- Make sure entry price ≠ stop loss
3. **Large Risk Deviation**
- This is normal for very small position sizes
- Consider adjusting your risk amount or price levels
## Best Practices
1. **Always validate your inputs** before placing actual trades
2. **Double-check the trade direction** shown in the table
3. **Review the expected loss** to ensure it aligns with your risk management
4. **Consider the effective entry/exit prices** which include fees
5. **Use appropriate risk factors** - avoid extreme values that could lead to overexposure
## Disclaimer
This tool is for educational and planning purposes only. Always verify calculations manually and consider market conditions, liquidity, and other factors before placing actual trades. The script assumes that fees are charged on both entry and exit transactions.
Volume Shelf Breakout WatcherThis indicator detects potential breakout opportunities from high-volume price shelves (HVNs) using a custom volume profile engine. It scans the past 100 bars (adjustable) to identify price ranges with heavy volume accumulation, then monitors for a breakout when price is near the top of that range.
To increase accuracy, it optionally confirms momentum using:
✅ MACD bullish crossover
✅ RSI > 55
✅ Volume spike above 20-bar average
When all enabled conditions are met, the indicator highlights the bar with a green label and background shading, and can trigger alerts for trade setups.
Use this indicator to:
Identify volume-based consolidation zones
Anticipate price surges through low-volume areas ("volume gaps")
Catch breakouts with momentum confirmation
Inputs:
Volume Profile Range (bars)
HVN Sensitivity (top % of volume)
MACD confirmation toggle
RSI level toggle
Volume spike toggle
Ideal for:
Traders looking to enter early on momentum moves as price escapes compression zones into areas of less resistance.
Option Maxpain & WallsThis simple script plots three lines on your chart based on options data: Call Wall, Put Wall and Max Pain. These three numbers must be obtained elsewhere. While Tradingview has delayed options data, to my knowledge Pinescript does not allow looping through this data to calculate the numbers within the script. So the user must obtain or calculate them elsewhere then type them into the input dialog. Labels and alerts are included as user options.
Fear and Greed Index [DunesIsland]The Fear and Greed Index is a sentiment indicator designed to measure the emotions driving the stock market, specifically investor fear and greed. Fear represents pessimism and caution, while greed reflects optimism and risk-taking. This indicator aggregates multiple market metrics to provide a comprehensive view of market sentiment, helping traders and investors gauge whether the market is overly fearful or excessively greedy.How It WorksThe Fear and Greed Index is calculated using four key market indicators, each capturing a different aspect of market sentiment:
Market Momentum (30% weight)
Measures how the S&P 500 (SPX) is performing relative to its 125-day simple moving average (SMA).
A higher value indicates that the market is trading well above its moving average, signaling greed.
Stock Price Strength (20% weight)
Calculates the net number of stocks hitting 52-week highs minus those hitting 52-week lows on the NYSE.
A greater number of net highs suggests strong market breadth and greed.
Put/Call Options (30% weight)
Uses the 5-day average of the put/call ratio.
A lower ratio (more call options being bought) indicates greed, as investors are betting on rising prices.
Market Volatility (20% weight)
Utilizes the VIX index, which measures market volatility.
Lower volatility is associated with greed, as investors are less fearful of large market swings.
Each component is normalized using a z-score over a 252-day lookback period (approximately one trading year) and scaled to a range of 0 to 100. The final Fear and Greed Index is a weighted average of these four components, with the weights specified above.Key FeaturesIndex Range: The index value ranges from 0 to 100:
0–25: Extreme Fear (red)
25–50: Fear (orange)
50–75: Neutral (yellow)
75–100: Greed (green)
Dynamic Plot Color: The plot line changes color based on the index value, visually indicating the current sentiment zone.
Reference Lines: Horizontal lines are plotted at 0, 25, 50, 75, and 100 to represent the different sentiment levels: Extreme Fear, Fear, Neutral, Greed, and Extreme Greed.
How to Interpret
Low Values (0–25): Indicate extreme fear, which may suggest that the market is oversold and could be due for a rebound.
High Values (75–100): Indicate greed, which may signal that the market is overbought and could be at risk of a correction.
Neutral Range (25–75): Suggests a balanced market sentiment, neither overly fearful nor greedy.
This indicator is a valuable tool for contrarian investors, as extreme readings often precede market reversals. However, it should be used in conjunction with other technical and fundamental analysis tools for a well-rounded view of the market.