Trajectory Channel (VWAP Highs/Lows) [Euler-Inspired]This script identifies and visualizes key price trajectories by connecting recent pivot highs and lows on the weekly timeframe using either VWAP or Heikin-Ashi closes. It draws fully extended trend lines between the two most recent qualifying pivot highs (in red) and lows (in green), allowing traders to interpret natural directional channels—similar to manual trajectory plotting.
Inspired by Euler’s method of approximating paths, this tool avoids clutter by selectively connecting pivots that align with structural movement, providing traders with long-term support and resistance trajectories.
Use the sensitivity input to control how strictly pivots are defined, and toggle between VWAP-based or Heikin-Ashi-based pivots depending on your strategy.
Indicators and strategies
Universal Valuation | Lyro RSUniversal Valuation
⚠️Disclaimer: This indicator is a tool for technical analysis and does not provide guaranteed results. It should be used in conjunction with other analysis methods and proper risk management practices. The creators of this indicator are not responsible for any financial decisions made based on its signals.
Overview
The Universal Valuation indicator helps identify whether the market is undervalued/cheap or overvalued/expensive. And another mode this indicator offers is This cutting-edge tool works flawlessly ACROSS ALL TIMEFRAMES & TICKERS/CHARTS.
By combining regular TradingView indicators & some of our valuation indicators basic/simple with advanced statistical functions, this indicator offers a powerful, universal valuation tool.
Key Features
INPUTS: The Universal Valuation indicator offers flexibility through its customizable input sections. The "Indicator Settings" let you adjust lengths for the raw indicators and statistical functions. The "Signals" section defines thresholds for background color changes, helping you visually spot key market moments. The "Colors" section allows you to pick from pre-defined schemes or personalize colors for better clarity. Lastly, the "Tables" section gives you full control over the UV table’s size and positioning, including options to overlay it on the chart or place it in the allocated space.
A DEEPER INSIGHT: This indicator is built around three distinct categories: "UVM Andromeda," "UVM Sentinel," and "UVM Nexus." Each category has three different drivers. The statistical function powering this indicator is the Z-score. The Z-score is an incredibly powerful tool that helps determine if the market is overvalued/expensive or undervalued/cheap, offering critical insights for traders."
Plotting: The plotted value represents the average of all the drivers. In other words, it is the combined average of all 9 Z-scored indicators, providing a balanced and comprehensive market valuation.
What is Z-score? & Why does this system use it?
Z-score is an advanced statistical function used to measure how far a value deviates from the average in a data set. The formula for Z-score is: (x - h) / o, where x is the observed value, h is the average (mean) of the data set, and o is the standard deviation.
This system uses the Z-score because it helps determine whether the market is overvalued or undervalued based on historical data and how we apply the calculation. By measuring how far a value deviates from the average, the Z-score provides a clearer and more objective valuation of market conditions. In our case, a Z-score of -3 indicates an undervalued market, while a Z-score of 3 signals an overvalued market.
UVM Andromeda:
UVM stands for Universal Valuation Model, which is the core of this indicator. Andromeda, one of the most stunning galaxies in the universe, inspired by its name. We chose this name because a powerful indicator should not only be effective but also visually appealing.
You might be wondering what drives UVM Andromeda. The three key drivers are Price, RSI, and ROC. These indicators are pre-defined, while the "Indicator Settings" allow you to adjust the length of the Z-score calculation, refining how the model analyzes market conditions.
UVM Sentinel:
Sentinel, refers to a guard or watchman, someone or something that keeps watch and provides protection. In our case this name refers to a model that actively observes market conditions, acting as a vigilant tool that signals important shifts in valuation.
Wondering what drives UVM Sentinel? The three key drivers are BB%, CCI, and Crosby. While these indicators are simple on their own, applying our Z-score function elevates them to a whole new level, enhancing their ability to detect market conditions with greater accuracy.
UVM Nexus:
We chose the name Nexus simply because it sounds cool—there’s no deeper meaning behind it for us. However, the word itself does have a meaning; it refers to a connection or link between multiple things.
The three key drivers for UVM Nexus are the Sharpe, Sortino, and Omega ratios. These are all asset performance metrics, but by applying the Z-score, we transform them into powerful valuation indicators/drivers, giving you a deeper insight into market conditions.
Why do we use 9 different indicators instead of 1?
That's a great question, and the answer is quite simple. Think of it like this: if you have one super soldier, and they miss a shot, it’s game over. But if you have many soldiers, even if one misses, the others can step in and take the shot. The strength of using multiple indicators lies in their collective power – if one misses, the others still provide valuable insights, making the overall system more reliable.
Final Thoughts:
In our Universal Valuation indicator, you have the flexibility to customize it however you like using our inputs. The system is divided into three distinct categories, with each category containing three indicators. The value plotted on the chart is the average of all nine indicators. We apply the Z-score, an advanced statistical function, to each of these nine indicators. The final plotted average is the average of all the Z-scores, giving you a comprehensive and refined market valuation. This indicator can work on any timeframe & chart ticker.
EMA và SMA kết hợp
SMA 20 (Simple Moving Average – a slower and more stable average)
EMA 34 (Exponential Moving Average – a faster and more responsive average)
These help traders analyze the price trend:
When the EMA crosses above the SMA → it can be a buy signal.
When the EMA crosses below the SMA → it can be a sell signal.
Multi Timeframe 50EMA CloudDescription:
The Multi Timeframe 50EMA Cloud is a powerful tool for multi-timeframe trend analysis. This indicator allows you to display the 50-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) and its volatility "cloud" from several higher timeframes directly on any chart.
Features:
* See the 50EMA cloud from multiple timeframes at once: 15m, 1H, 4H, and 1D.
* Flexible controls: Easily turn each timeframe’s cloud on or off in the settings - overlay as many as you want.
* Distinct colors: Each timeframe has customizable colors for its EMA line, cloud and borders to keep your chart clear and organized.
* Universal perspective: Great for identifying higher timeframe support and resistance, confluence zones and market structure without switching charts.
How it works:
Each enabled EMA cloud is plotted with a band above and below the EMA line, showing ± one-quarter standard deviation (stdev) of price. This "cloud" highlights short-term volatility around the higher timeframe EMA, making it easier to spot dynamic support, resistance and trend strength.
Best for:
* Day traders and swing traders who want to track key EMAs from multiple timeframes on a single chart
* Identifying multi-timeframe confluence, trend direction and volatility zones
Tip:
Try overlaying the 15m, 1H, and 4H EMA clouds on lower timeframe charts (e.g., 1m, 5m, or 15m) for deeper market insight and better trade timing.
⚠️ Important Notice
This tool is provided for educational and informational purposes only . It is designed to assist in technical analysis learning and visual chart study.
It is not intended to be used as financial advice, a buy/sell signal, or any form of investment recommendation .
By using this indicator, you acknowledge that all actions you take are your own and you assume full responsibility for any decisions made.
Kyber Cell's – TTM Squeeze Pro
Kyber Cell's TTM Squeeze Pro is an all-in-one overlay that rebuilds John Carter’s TTM Squeeze, then layers on two extra confirmation tools—ALMA trend and a scroll-aware VWAP—so you can track contraction, momentum, trend and value without stacking indicators.
⸻
What each visual means
• Candles = Momentum histogram
Instead of a separate lower pane, every bar is tinted by a linear-regression slope:
• Rising & above zero → aqua→blue (bullish strength)
• Falling & below zero → yellow→red (bearish strength)
• Dots above the bars = Squeeze status
I’ve modernized Carter’s original black→red→orange→green sequence (it didn't feel natural to me):
• Blue “Cool” – bands wide apart, no compression yet
• Orange “Warming” – loose compression building
• Red “Ready” – tightest compression, watch for release
• Green “GO!” – first bar the squeeze fires (breakout begins)
• I added a Red/Green Backdrop that tracks the squeeze so you can easily identify the entry and exit based on the squeeze momentum. Appears only after a squeeze fires. Stays green while momentum remains > 0, red while it is < 0. Clears when momentum flips or a new squeeze starts.
• ALMA ribbon
A 50-period Arnaud Legoux moving average (user-tunable).
Price and ribbon rising above it → bullish tilt; price under a falling ribbon → bearish tilt.
• VWAP with optional σ bands
Anchored to the left-most visible bar every time you pan/zoom, so it always reflects the range on your screen. Staying above VWAP supports longs; below supports shorts.
• Entry labels
A triangle ▲/▼ or arrow ↑/↓ (your choice) prints on the exact bar a squeeze fires. Color, size and ATR padding are adjustable.
Key inputs you can adjust
• Squeeze length, Bollinger σ, three Keltner multipliers (High/Mid/Low).
• ALMA length, offset (0 = fast, 1 = smooth) and sigma.
• VWAP on/off, deviation-band σ (set to 0 to hide bands).
• Marker shape, size, colours and vertical padding in ATR multiples.
Typical workflow
1. Watch dot color: blue → orange → red.
2. When the dot flips green, momentum bar confirms aqua/blue (bull) or yellow/red (bear).
3. Enter in the direction of the bar color if price is also on the supportive side of ALMA and/or VWAP.
4. Trail until momentum changes side, the backdrop disappears, or your target is hit.
Disclaimer — This script is for educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Test thoroughly and manage risk before live trading.
50/100 EMA Crossover with Candle Confirmation📘 **50/100 EMA Crossover with Candle Confirmation – Strategy Description**
The **50/100 EMA Crossover with Candle Confirmation** is a trend-following strategy designed to filter high-probability entries by combining exponential moving average (EMA) crossovers with strong price action confirmation. This strategy aims to reduce false signals commonly associated with EMA-only systems by requiring a **candle close confirmation in the direction of the trend**, making it more reliable for intraday or swing trading across Forex, crypto, and stock markets.
---
### 🔍 **Core Logic**
* The strategy is based on the interaction of the **50 EMA** (fast-moving average) and the **100 EMA** (slow-moving average).
* **Trend direction** is determined by the crossover:
* **Bullish Trend**: When the 50 EMA crosses **above** the 100 EMA.
* **Bearish Trend**: When the 50 EMA crosses **below** the 100 EMA.
* To **filter out false breakouts**, a **candle confirmation** is used:
* For a **Buy signal**: After a bullish crossover, wait for a strong bullish candle (e.g., full-body green candle) to **close above both EMAs**.
* For a **Sell signal**: After a bearish crossover, wait for a strong bearish candle to **close below both EMAs**.
---
### ✅ **Entry Conditions**
**Buy Entry:**
* 50 EMA crosses above 100 EMA.
* Latest candle closes **above both EMAs**.
* Candle must be bullish (green/full body preferred).
**Sell Entry:**
* 50 EMA crosses below 100 EMA.
* Latest candle closes **below both EMAs**.
* Candle must be bearish (red/full body preferred).
---
### 🛑 **Exit or Take-Profit Options**
* **Fixed TP/SL**: 1:2 or 1:3 risk-reward.
* **Trailing Stop**: Based on recent swing highs/lows or ATR.
* **EMA Exit**: Exit trade when the candle closes on the opposite side of 50 EMA.
---
### ⚙️ **Best Settings**
* **Timeframes**: 5M, 15M, 1H, 4H (works well on most).
* **Markets**: Forex, Crypto (e.g., BTC/ETH), Indices (e.g., NASDAQ, NIFTY50).
* **Recommended filters**:
* Use with RSI divergence or volume confirmation.
* Avoid using during high-impact news (especially on lower timeframes).
---
### 🧠 **Why This Works**
The 50/100 EMA crossover provides a **medium-term trend signal**, reducing noise seen in fast EMAs (like 9 or 21). The candle confirmation adds a **momentum filter**, ensuring price supports the directional bias. This makes it suitable for traders who want a balance of trend and entry precision without overcomplicating with too many indicators.
---
### 📈 **Advantages**
* Simple yet effective for identifying trends.
* Filters out fakeouts using candle confirmation.
* Easy to automate in Pine Script or other trading bots.
* Can be combined with support/resistance or SMC zones for better confluence.
---
### ⚠️ **Limitations**
* May lag slightly in ranging markets.
* Late entries possible due to confirmation candle.
* Works best with additional volume or volatility filter.
Previous-Day High–Low BoxThe indicator automatically plots a translucent box covering the entire previous trading day’s high-to-low range—with dashed extension lines at those levels and a date watermark centered inside—so you can instantly see yesterday’s key price boundaries on any intraday chart.
CerberusFX Custom Time LineCerberusFX Custom Time Line
🧠 How it works:
Detects when time passes the target.
Sets a should_plot flag.
Waits for the next bar, even on Renko.
Plots the line once, then resets.
🧪 Tested on:
Renko
Heikin Ashi
1min–1D regular timeframes
3-Bar Compression Reversal Pattern//@version=5
indicator("3-Bar Compression Reversal Pattern", overlay=true)
// Get candle OHLCs
open1 = open
close1 = close
body1 = math.abs(close1 - open1)
open2 = open
close2 = close
body2 = math.abs(close2 - open2)
// 2nd candle body < 50% of 1st
secondSmall = body2 < (0.5 * body1)
// 3rd candle engulfs both 1st and 2nd
lowAll = math.min(low , low )
highAll = math.max(high , high )
engulfAll = (high > highAll) and (low < lowAll)
// Final condition
patternDetected = secondSmall and engulfAll
// Plot signal
plotshape(patternDetected, location=location.belowbar, color=color.green, style=shape.labelup, size=size.small, title="Pattern Signal")
alertcondition(patternDetected, title="3-Bar Reversal Alert", message="3-Bar Compression Reversal Pattern Detected!")
Volatility Radar + Classic StochVolatility Radar + Classic Stoch
This indicator detects volatility squeezes by measuring Bollinger Bands tightness relative to recent history and confirms potential breakout strength using multiple factors:
Bollinger Bands bandwidth percentile to identify tight and super-tight squeezes
TTM Squeeze confirmation via Keltner Channels
Volume spikes indicating rising market interest
ADX trend strength to gauge directional momentum
Classic Stochastic oscillator to signal overbought/oversold conditions
A composite volatility score ranks the overall setup strength with intuitive color-coded background and a real-time label.
Use this tool to anticipate volatility expansions and improve timing for breakout trades.
My script//@version=5
indicator("Volume in Crores", overlay=false)
vol_crores = volume / 1e7
plot(vol_crores, title="Volume (Cr)", style=plot.style_columns, color=color.new(color.blue, 0))
showLabels = input.bool(true, title="Show Volume Labels")
labelOffset = input.int(1, title="Label Offset (bars)")
if showLabels and bar_index % 5 == 0
label.new(x=bar_index - labelOffset, y=vol_crores, text=str.tostring(vol_crores, "#.##") + " Cr", style=label.style_label_up, size=size.small, color=color.white, textcolor=color.black)
Vertical Lines at Specific NY Timesthese time zones indicates london session and new york session accumulation manipulation and distribution at than spesific time zones
Alinhamento H1 + H4 com Fundo Colorido MACD Alignment Strategy: H1 + H4
This script highlights candles on the H1 chart with a colored background when there's full alignment between H1 and H4 based on the classic MACD (12,26,9) and EMA 200.
✅ Bullish background (green):
Price is above the EMA 200 on both H1 and H4
On both H1 and H4:
MACD line is above the Signal line
Histogram is green and above zero
MACD is above zero
❌ Bearish background (red):
Price is below the EMA 200 on both H1 and H4
On both H1 and H4:
MACD line is below the Signal line
Histogram is red and below zero
MACD is below zero
Use this tool to visually confirm trend alignment between timeframes and filter high-probability entries.
Relative Strength RSI with LevelsThis is a relative Strength Indicator used for comparing the performance of the Stock analyzed with the SPX, with a single line moving above or below a midline signaling over- or underperformance when compared to S&P500 SPX Index
kinetic test123mattThe Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is not the kind of agency most Americans think about often.
In fact, there’s a decent chance you’ve never even heard of it outside of a few advanced social studies classes in high school or college.
The NRC was originally established back in 1975 as a successor to the United States Atomic Energy Commission. Then, just a few years later, in 1979, there was a partial meltdown in the Unit 2 reactor at the Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station.
That disaster was mercifully averted, but the event left a lasting impact on the still-developing agency…
Following Three Mile Island, the NRC was widely perceived as risk-averse. They developed a licensing process that could be counted among the most bureaucratic and byzantine in history.
Just securing the NRC’s approval for a new nuclear reactor could take years (in some cases over a decade) and cost hundreds of millions of dollars. And that’s before you even start breaking ground!
Bringing Georgia’s 3 and 4 reactor units at Plant Vogtle online was estimated to cost $14 billion at first. However, due to various delays in the approval process and subsequent contracting issues, costs ballooned to more than $30 billion, with a wait of 15 years.
Sounds like a nightmare, right?
Don’t worry — it gets worse!
So far, we’ve only been talking about large light-water reactors (LWRs). Perish the thought, but those are the kinds of reactors the NRC is actually optimized to work with.
Newer technologies, such as small modular reactors (SMRs) or molten salt reactors (MSRs), are evaluated on a case-by-case basis. And it just so happens that the NRC has neither the manpower nor the realistic expertise to evaluate these developments comprehensively.
That means even for the companies that can develop next-generation nuclear technology, they’re going to face a huge production bottleneck when it comes to the NRC approving the projects.
Sesión Asiatica 5-10 PM México + EMAs + Cruces# Asian Session EMA Crossover Indicator
## Overview
This Pine Script indicator is designed specifically for trading during the Asian session (5-10 PM Mexico time) and focuses on EMA crossover signals with visual markers.
## Key Features
### 1. **Multiple EMAs Display**
- **EMA 8** (Blue line) - Short-term trend
- **EMA 13** (Green line) - Medium-term trend
- **EMA 21** (Yellow line) - Intermediate trend
- **EMA 55** (Red line) - Long-term trend
- Toggle option to show/hide all EMAs
### 2. **Asian Session Focus**
- Configured for Mexico timezone (America/Mexico_City)
- Active trading window: 5:00 PM - 10:00 PM Mexico time
- Crossover signals only trigger during this session
### 3. **EMA 8/13 Crossover Detection**
- **Bullish Signal**: Green triangle (↑) appears below price when EMA 8 crosses above EMA 13
- **Bearish Signal**: Red triangle (↓) appears above price when EMA 8 crosses below EMA 13
- Signals only occur during Asian session hours
### 4. **Alert System**
- Real-time alerts for bullish crossovers
- Real-time alerts for bearish crossovers
- Alerts only fire during Asian session
## Configuration Options
- Customizable EMA periods (default: 8, 13, 21, 55)
- Show/hide EMAs toggle
- Show/hide crossover signals toggle
- Timezone selection (Mexico City, GMT-6, GMT-5)
- Session time adjustment
## Use Case
Ideal for traders who focus on Asian market hours and use EMA crossover strategies for entry signals. The indicator helps identify momentum shifts during the Asian session while filtering out noise from other trading sessions.
7 EMA CloudThe "7 EMA Cloud" script was likely flagged because it reuses the core concept of EMA clouds (shading areas between multiple EMAs to visualize trends, support/resistance, and momentum) without crediting the original inventor, Ripster (author ripster47 on TradingView). This concept is prominently associated with Ripster's "EMA Clouds" indicator, which popularized filling spaces between EMA pairs for trading signals. TradingView's house rules require crediting authors when reusing open-source ideas or code, even if not a direct copy-paste, and mandate significant improvements where the original forms a small proportion of the script. Your version adds features like multiple color modes (Classic rainbow, Monochrome, Heatmap), customizable signal sizes, and crossover alerts between the first and last EMA, which are enhancements, but the foundational EMA ribbon/cloud idea needs explicit attribution in the description and ideally code comments to comply.
Additionally, the description might be seen as not fully self-contained (e.g., it uses promotional language like "Advanced" and "Adaptive Trend & Signal Suite" without deeply explaining calculations or use cases), potentially violating rules against relying on code or external references for clarity.
To fix this, republish a new version with proper credits, ensure the description is detailed and standalone, and emphasize your improvements (e.g., the 7 Fibonacci-based EMAs, color modes, and signals). Do not reuse the flagged script—create a fresh one. Here's a compliant description you can use:
7 EMA Cloud Indicator
Overview
The 7 EMA Cloud overlays seven exponential moving averages (EMAs) with Fibonacci-inspired periods and fills the spaces between them with customizable "clouds" to visually represent trend strength, direction, and convergence/divergence. It includes crossover signals between the shortest and longest EMAs for potential entry/exit points, with adjustable visual modes for different trading styles. This helps traders identify bullish/bearish momentum, support/resistance zones, and overextensions in trending or ranging markets.
This script builds on the EMA cloud concept popularized by Ripster (ripster47) in their "EMA Clouds" indicatortradingview.com, where areas between EMA pairs are shaded for trend analysis. Improvements include a fixed set of 7 Fibonacci EMAs, multiple color schemes (Classic rainbow, Monochrome grayscale, Heatmap for intensity), user-selectable signal sizes, and transparency controls. Released under the Mozilla Public License 2.0.
Key Features
7 EMAs with Clouds: EMAs at periods 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, and 144; clouds filled between consecutive pairs to show alignment (tight clouds for consolidation, wide for trends).
Color Modes:
Classic: Rainbow gradients (blue to purple) for vibrant distinction.
Monochrome: Grayscale shades for minimalistic charts.
Heatmap: Red-to-blue spectrum to highlight "hot" (volatile) vs. "cool" (stable) areas.
Crossover Signals: Triangle markers (up for bullish, down for bearish) when the shortest EMA crosses the longest; sizes from Tiny to Huge.
Display Options: Toggle EMA lines on/off, adjust cloud transparency (0-100%), and enable alerts for crossovers.
Alerts: Notifications for "Bullish EMA Crossover" (EMA1 > EMA7) and "Bearish EMA Crossover" (EMA1 < EMA7).
How It Works
EMA Calculations: Each EMA is computed using ta.ema(close, period), with periods based on Fibonacci sequences for natural market rhythm alignment.
Clouds: Filled via fill() between plot pairs, with colors derived from the selected mode and transparency applied.
Signals: Detected with ta.crossover(ema1, ema7) and ta.crossunder(ema1, ema7), plotted as shapes with mode-specific colors (e.g., green/lime for bull, red for bear).
Customization: Inputs grouped into EMA Settings (periods), Display Settings (visibility, colors, transparency), and Signal Settings (size).
Customization Options
EMA Periods: Individually adjustable (defaults: 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144).
Show EMAs: Toggle to hide lines and focus on clouds.
Cloud Transparency: 0% for solid fills, 100% for invisible (default 80%).
Color Mode: Switch between Classic, Monochrome, or Heatmap.
Signal Size: Tiny, Small, Normal, Large, or Huge for crossover markers.
Ideal Use Case
Suited for swing or trend-following on any timeframe (e.g., 15m-1h for intraday, daily for swings) and assets (stocks, forex, crypto, futures). Enter long on bullish crossovers above aligned clouds; exit on bearish signals or cloud widenings. Use Monochrome for clean charts or Heatmap for volatility emphasis. Combine with volume or RSI for confirmation.
Why It's Valuable
By expanding Ripster's EMA cloud idea with multi-mode visuals and integrated signals, this indicator provides a versatile, at-a-glance tool for trend assessment—reducing noise while highlighting key shifts. It's more adaptive than basic MA ribbons, with Fibonacci periods adding a layer of harmonic analysis.
Note: Test on historical data or demo accounts. Not financial advice—incorporate risk management. Optimized for Pine Script v5; some features may vary on non-overlay charts.
Liquidity Swings [Nix]Liquidity Swings Indicator!
It marks recent swing highs and lows on the chart using lines and labels.
Another great feature is that it tracks whether those swing levels are SWEPT (price crosses them again) and either:
Removes swept levels, or
Fades them to indicate they’ve been taken.
You can customize:
Number of swings shown.
Colors, styles, and visibility of lines/labels.
Whether to show highs, lows, or both.
Useful for liquidity analysis.
Usually when these special swings are swept, you can consider moving stops to BE. This is because there should be enough stop losses at the swing points to liquidate others and give more fuel to your trade direction!