Trend Blend
Trend blend is my new indicator. I use it to identify my bias when trading and filter out fake setups that are going in the wrong direction.
Trend blend utilises the 9 EMA (Red), 21 EMA (Black), and if you trade futures or Bitcoin, you can also use the VWAP (Blue).
There is also a table at the top right that displays the chart time frame bias
I prefer to use the 1-hour time frame for bias and execute the trades on 5-minute charts, mainly, and sometimes on the 1-minute for a smaller stoploss.
Here's an example of the trade I took during the London session on XAU/USD
1 hour bias was Bearish
Price broke out of the range
I waited for the London session to open, where I ended up taking a short on the 5-minute time frame as we broke out of the pre-London range
Entry was at the Fair Value Gap (5-minute bias was also Bearish as price traded into the FVG)
Stoploss was at the last high
Take Profit was the next major support level
Another set that I like to trade with the Trend blend is when price is trending bullish and price trades inside the 9 and 21 EMA, and there is a bullish candle closer above the 9 EMA with Stoploss below the low of the bullish candle and Take profit between 1-2 Risk to Reward
Same when there's a bearish trend, I wait for price to trade inside the 9 and 21 EMA, and I'll take sells when a bearish candle closes below the 9 EMA.
This setup works best in strong trends, or it can be used to enter a trade on a pullback or to scale into an existing trade.
Moving_average
PRO Investing - LevelPRO Investing - Level
📊 Dynamic Support/Resistance
This indicator plots the PRO Investing Level, defined as the midpoint between the highest high and lowest low over the past 252 trading days (default lookback period, equivalent to ~1 year). It acts as a key mean-reversion reference level, useful for identifying potential support/resistance zones or market equilibrium levels.
Features:
🕰️ Option to display only today’s level or historical levels.
⚙️ Customizable lookback period for flexibility across timeframes and strategies.
📉 Teal line plotted directly on the chart, highlighting this institutional-grade level.
Ideal for traders looking to anchor price action to significant historical ranges—particularly useful in mean-reversion, breakout, or volatility compression strategies.
OBV with MA & Bollinger Bands by Marius1032OBV with MA & Bollinger Bands by Marius1032
This script adds customizable moving averages and Bollinger Bands to the classic OBV (On Balance Volume) indicator. It helps identify volume-driven momentum and trend strength.
Features:
OBV-based trend tracking
Optional smoothing: SMA, EMA, RMA, WMA, VWMA
Optional Bollinger Bands with SMA
Potential Combinations and Trading Strategies:
Breakouts: Look for price breakouts from the Bollinger Bands, and confirm with a rising OBV for an uptrend or falling OBV for a downtrend.
Trend Reversals: When the price touches a Bollinger Band, examine the OBV for divergence. A bullish divergence (price lower low, OBV higher low) near the lower band could signal a reversal.
Volume Confirmation: Use OBV to confirm the strength of the trend indicated by Bollinger Bands. For example, if the BBs indicate an uptrend and OBV is also rising, it reinforces the bullish signal.
1. On-Balance Volume (OBV):
Purpose: OBV is a momentum indicator that uses volume flow to predict price movements.
Calculation: Volume is added on up days and subtracted on down days.
Interpretation: Rising OBV suggests potential upward price movement. Falling OBV suggests potential lower prices.
Divergence: Divergence between OBV and price can signal potential trend reversals.
2. Moving Average (MA):
Purpose: Moving Averages smooth price fluctuations and help identify trends.
Combination with OBV: Pairing OBV with MAs helps confirm trends and identify potential reversals. A crossover of the OBV line and its MA can signal a trend reversal or continuation.
3. Bollinger Bands (BB):
Purpose: BBs measure market volatility and help identify potential breakouts and trend reversals.
Structure: They consist of a moving average (typically 20-period) and two standard deviation bands.
Combination with OBV: Combining BBs with OBV allows for a multifaceted approach to market analysis. For example, a stock hitting the lower BB with a rising OBV could indicate accumulation and a potential upward reversal.
Created by: Marius1032
HOG Super CrossHOG Super Cross – Trend-Confirmed Crossover System
📊 Overview
Blends crossover signals with trend confirmation logic using dual moving averages. Designed to highlight directional strength while reducing noise from false breakouts or sideways action.
⚙️ How It Works
• Two MAs (Fast and Slow) – default: 9 and 21
• Crossover arrows appear when the Fast MA crosses the Slow MA
• Slope dots appear when the Fast MA slope flips direction (up/down)
• Trend confirmation requires:
– Price is above/below the Slow MA
– Fast MA is on the same side
– Both MA slopes are aligned
• Fast MA color-coded for clarity:
– Green = Bull trend
– Red = Bear trend
– Gray = Neutral
🎯 Inputs
• Source (price)
• Fast MA Length
• Slow MA Length
• MA Type (EMA, SMA, WMA, HMA)
✅ Benefits
• Entry arrows filtered by structural and slope alignment
• Optional slope dots offer early momentum signals
• Clean chart view—only fast MA is shown for minimal clutter
• Repaint-safe—signals plot on confirmed bar closes
📈 Use Cases
• Signal confirmation on 1H, 4H, or Daily trend trades
• Use alongside volume, momentum, or market structure tools
• Turn off dots/arrows for pure trend-only view
⚠️ Notes
• Not a complete strategy—best used with a broader system
• Trend confirmation improves crossover reliability in live markets
10 Moving AveragesThis indicator arises from the need to visualize in the same chart several moving averages of different types and time periods. In this case, the indicator includes 10 slots for moving averages of different types, including all those available in PineScript Version 6: Simple Moving Average (SMA), Exponential Moving Average (EMA), Weighted Moving Average (WMA), Hull Moving Average (HMA), Relative Moving Average (RMA), Symmetrically-Weighted Moving Average (SWMA), Arnaud Legoux Moving Average (ALMA), Volume-Weighted Moving Average (VWMA) and Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP).
The indicator is particularly useful, especially and specifically, to be able to visualize moving averages of different types and timeframes on the same chart, so it should not be used indiscriminately, but rather as a useful tool to identify trends with different moving averages, so that the management of orders is as simple as possible, since it is also possible to choose how many averages the user wants to observe on his chart, from none to 10 spaces.
PAC INDEXThis indicator plots a Price Action Channel (PAC) using a Smoothed Moving Average (SMMA) of highs and lows, and overlays these bands directly on the main chart. It uses standard Heiken Ashi calculations (not the built-in function) to highlight price structure with an emphasis on trend exhaustion and volatility.
Features
Plots PAC High and PAC Low –
Customizable channel boundaries using SMMA smoothing (user sets lookback length).
Heiken Ashi Calculation (manual):
Heiken Ashi open, close, high, and low are computed per-bar for deeper trend insight.
Visual Channel Fill:
The space between PAC High and Low is filled for instant trend identification.
Condition Markers:
Dots appear above bars when the Heiken Ashi close exceeds the PAC High (potential overextension or momentum).
Dots appear below bars when the Heiken Ashi close falls below the PAC Low (potential exhaustion or reversal).
Configurable:
User can adjust the smoothing length to fit different trading styles or market volatility.
⸻
How To Use
Add to any chart and timeframe (works on all symbols).
Watch the channel:
When Heiken Ashi closes break above the PAC High, price may be in a strong trend or overbought zone.
When Heiken Ashi closes break below the PAC Low, price may be in an exhaustion or potential reversal zone.
Adjust the “Length” parameter for tighter (shorter) or wider (longer) channels depending on your strategy.
Use as a filter for trade entries/exits or to confirm momentum and exhaustion within your price action framework
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Notes
All calculations are performed directly in the script for transparency and customization.
This indicator is not a buy/sell signal system—interpret breakouts and channel extremes within your own trade plan.
Chebyshev-Gauss Convergence DivergenceThe Chebyshev-Gauss Convergence Divergence is a momentum indicator that leverages the Chebyshev-Gauss Moving Average (CG-MA) to provide a smoother and more responsive alternative to traditional oscillators like the MACD. For more information see the moving average script:
How it works:
It calculates a fast CG-MA and a slow CG-MA. The CG-MA uses Gauss-Chebyshev quadrature to compute a weighted average, which can offer a better trade-off between lag and smoothness compared to simple or exponential MAs.
The Oscillator line is the difference between the fast CG-MA and the slow CG-MA.
A Signal Line, which is a simple moving average of the Oscillator line, is plotted to show the average trend of the oscillator.
A Histogram is plotted, representing the difference between the Oscillator and the Signal Line. The color of the histogram bars changes to indicate whether momentum is strengthening or weakening.
How to use:
Crossovers: A buy signal can be generated when the Oscillator line crosses above the Signal line. A sell signal can be generated when it crosses below.
Zero Line: When the Oscillator crosses above the zero line, it indicates upward momentum (fast MA is above slow MA).When it crosses below zero, it indicates downward momentum.
Divergence: Like with the MACD, look for divergences between the oscillator and price action to spot potential reversals.
Histogram: The histogram provides a visual representation of the momentum. When the bars are growing, momentum is increasing. When they are shrinking, momentum is fading.
CGMALibrary "CGMA"
This library provides a function to calculate a moving average based on Chebyshev-Gauss Quadrature. This method samples price data more intensely from the beginning and end of the lookback window, giving it a unique character that responds quickly to recent changes while also having a long "memory" of the trend's start. Inspired by reading rohangautam.github.io
What is Chebyshev-Gauss Quadrature?
It's a numerical method to approximate the integral of a function f(x) that is weighted by 1/sqrt(1-x^2) over the interval . The approximation is a simple sum: ∫ f(x)/sqrt(1-x^2) dx ≈ (π/n) * Σ f(xᵢ) where xᵢ are special points called Chebyshev nodes.
How is this applied to a Moving Average?
A moving average can be seen as the "mean value" of the price over a lookback window. The mean value of a function with the Chebyshev weight is calculated as:
Mean = /
The math simplifies beautifully, resulting in the mean being the simple arithmetic average of the function evaluated at the Chebyshev nodes:
Mean = (1/n) * Σ f(xᵢ)
What's unique about this MA?
The Chebyshev nodes xᵢ are not evenly spaced. They are clustered towards the ends of the interval . We map this interval to our lookback period. This means the moving average samples prices more intensely from the beginning and the end of the lookback window, and less intensely from the middle. This gives it a unique character, responding quickly to recent changes while also having a long "memory" of the start of the trend.
Chebyshev-Gauss Moving AverageThis indicator applies the principles of Chebyshev-Gauss Quadrature to create a novel type of moving average. Inspired by reading rohangautam.github.io
What is Chebyshev-Gauss Quadrature?
It's a numerical method to approximate the integral of a function f(x) that is weighted by 1/sqrt(1-x^2) over the interval . The approximation is a simple sum: ∫ f(x)/sqrt(1-x^2) dx ≈ (π/n) * Σ f(xᵢ) where xᵢ are special points called Chebyshev nodes.
How is this applied to a Moving Average?
A moving average can be seen as the "mean value" of the price over a lookback window. The mean value of a function with the Chebyshev weight is calculated as:
Mean = /
The math simplifies beautifully, resulting in the mean being the simple arithmetic average of the function evaluated at the Chebyshev nodes:
Mean = (1/n) * Σ f(xᵢ)
What's unique about this MA?
The Chebyshev nodes xᵢ are not evenly spaced. They are clustered towards the ends of the interval . We map this interval to our lookback period. This means the moving average samples prices more intensely from the beginning and the end of the lookback window, and less intensely from the middle. This gives it a unique character, responding quickly to recent changes while also having a long "memory" of the start of the trend.
Advanced Moving Average ChannelAdvanced Moving Average Channel (MAC) is a comprehensive technical analysis tool that combines multiple moving average types with volume analysis to provide a complete market perspective.
Key Features:
1. Dynamic Channel Formation
- Configurable moving average types (SMA, EMA, WMA, VWMA, HMA, TEMA)
- Separate upper and lower band calculations
- Customizable band offsets for precise channel adjustment
2. Volume Analysis Integration
- Multi-timeframe volume analysis (1H, 24H, 7D)
- Relative volume comparison against historical averages
- Volume trend detection with visual indicators
- Price-level volume distribution profile
3. Market Context Indicators
- RSI integration for overbought/oversold conditions
- Channel position percentage
- Volume-weighted price levels
- Breakout detection with visual signals
Usage Guidelines:
1. Channel Interpretation
- Price within channel: Normal market conditions
- Price above upper band: Potential overbought condition
- Price below lower band: Potential oversold condition
- Channel width: Indicates market volatility
2. Volume Analysis
- High relative volume (>150%): Strong market interest
- Low relative volume (<50%): Weak market interest
- Volume trend arrows: Indicate increasing/decreasing market participation
- Volume profile: Shows price levels with highest trading activity
3. Trading Signals
- Breakout arrows: Potential trend continuation
- RSI extremes: Confirmation of overbought/oversold conditions
- Volume confirmation: Validates price movements
Customization:
- Adjust MA length for different market conditions
- Modify band offsets for tighter/looser channels
- Fine-tune volume analysis parameters
- Customize visual appearance
This indicator is designed for traders who want to combine price action, volume analysis, and market structure in a single, comprehensive tool.
Best EMA FinderThis script, Best EMA Finder, is based on the same original logic as the Best SMA Finder I published previously. Although it was not the initial goal of the project, several users asked for an EMA version, so here it is.
The script scans a wide range of Exponential Moving Average (EMA) lengths, from 10 to 500, and identifies the one that historically delivered the most robust performance on the current chart. The choice to stop at 500 is deliberate: beyond that point, EMA curves tend to flatten and converge, adding processing time without meaningful differences in signals or outcomes.
Each EMA is evaluated using a custom robustness score:
Profit Factor × log(Number of Trades) × sqrt(Win Rate)
Only EMA lengths that exceed a user-defined minimum number of trades are considered valid. Among these, the one with the highest robustness score is selected and displayed on the chart.
A table summarizes the results:
- Best EMA length
- Total number of trades
- Profit Factor
- Win Rate
- Robustness Score
You can adjust:
- Strategy type: Long Only or Buy & Sell
- Minimum number of trades required
- Table visibility
This script is designed for analysis and optimization only. It does not execute trades or handle position sizing. Only one open trade per direction is considered at a time.
3 EMA + SupertrendThree EMAs: Helps you identify the general trend direction and potential crossovers.
When the Fast EMA crosses above the Medium or Slow EMAs, it may indicate a bullish trend, and vice versa for bearish trends.
Supertrend: Works as a trend filter. You can use it to identify overall market conditions:
When the Supertrend is green, it indicates an uptrend.
When the Supertrend is red, it indicates a downtrend.
Combination: The EMAs help you confirm the trend, and the Supertrend can act as a filter or confirmation tool for your entries and exits.
Potential Strategy Idea:
Long Entry: When the Fast EMA crosses above the Medium EMA, and the Supertrend is green.
Short Entry: When the Fast EMA crosses below the Medium EMA, and the Supertrend is red.
Exit: You can use either the Supertrend turning from green to red (for long exits) or vice versa.
Moving Average Candles**Moving Average Candles — MA-Based Smoothed Candlestick Overlay**
This script replaces traditional price candles with smoothed versions calculated using various types of moving averages. Instead of plotting raw price data, each OHLC component (Open, High, Low, Close) is independently smoothed using your selected moving average method.
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### 📌 Features:
- Choose from 13 MA types: `SMA`, `EMA`, `RMA`, `WMA`, `VWMA`, `HMA`, `T3`, `DEMA`, `TEMA`, `KAMA`, `ZLEMA`, `McGinley`, `EPMA`
- Fully configurable moving average length (1–1000)
- Color-coded candles based on smoothed Open vs Close
- Works directly on price charts as an overlay
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### 🎯 Use Cases:
- Visualize smoothed market structure more clearly
- Reduce noise in price action for better trend analysis
- Combine with other indicators or strategies for confluence
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> ⚠️ **Note:** Since all OHLC values are based on moving averages, these candles do **not** represent actual market trades. Use them for trend and structure analysis, not trade entries based on precise levels.
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*Created to support traders seeking a cleaner visual representation of price dynamics.*
Adaptive Dual MA Trend FilterAdaptive Dual MA Trend Filter is a versatile Pine Script™ indicator that delivers clear, reliable trend signals using customizable moving averages:
Dual‑Stage Filtering – Apply any traditional MA (SMA, EMA, VWMA, HMA, RMA, TEMA, DEMA, FRAMA, TRIMA) or advanced smoothing (ALMA, T3) as your “main” and “filter” MAs. The filter MA is double‑smoothed for noise suppression, then converted into a robust “double‑filtered” baseline.
Flexible Inputs – Select lengths, sources (close, high, low, hl2), offsets, sigma, and volume factors to tailor the responsiveness and smoothness to your favorite timeframe or asset class.
Intuitive Signals – The script detects confirmed bullish (green) and bearish (red) trend shifts as:
Circle marker on the MA line
Triangle arrows below/above bars
Full candles and MA line colored by current trend
Clean Overlay – Works directly on your price chart, with optional semi‑transparent fills for extra visual clarity.
Theme Support – Choose from Vibrant, Pastel, Neon, Classic, Monochrome, Solarized, or Material palettes for seamless chart styling.
Ideal for swing traders and intraday scalpers alike, Multi‑Source Double‑Filter Trend offers both “set‑and‑forget” simplicity and deep customization for power users.
Usage
Add to chart → Inputs → tweak MA types/lengths
Watch for color changes and markers
Combine with volume or momentum filters for entry confirmation
Enjoy clearer trend identification and smoother trade signals!
Disclaimer
This script is for educational and informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Use at your own risk.
Velez Price Action Signals (with 20 & 200 SMA)Velez Price Action Signals – With 20 & 200 SMA Overlay
This TradingView Pine Script is a clean and powerful reversal signal tool inspired by Oliver Velez’s price action philosophy, enhanced with trend context via two Simple Moving Averages.
🔍 Signal Logic
Buy Signal:
Current candle sweeps below the previous 5-bar low (liquidity grab).
Candle is bullish (close > open).
The lower wick is significantly larger than the body (e.g. ratio > 1.5).
Sell Signal:
Current candle sweeps above the previous 5-bar high.
Candle is bearish (close < open).
The upper wick is significantly larger than the body.
Signals appear as BUY/SELL labels on the chart (non-repainting).
MA Dispersion+MA Dispersion+ — read the “breathing space” between your moving-averages
Get instant feedback on trend strength, volatility expansion and mean-reversion — across any timeframe.
MA Dispersion+ turns the humble moving-average stack into a single, easy-to-read oscillator that tells you at a glance whether price is coiling or fanning out.
🧩 What it does
Plugs into your favourite MA setup
• Pick the classic 5 / 20 / 50 / 200 lengths or disable any combination with one click.
• Choose the MA engine you trust — SMA, EMA, RMA, VWMA or WMA.
• Works on any timeframe thanks to TradingView’s security() engine.
Measures “spread”
For every bar it calculates the absolute distance of each selected MA from their average.
The tighter the stack, the lower the value; the wider the fan, the higher the value.
Adds professional-grade controls
• Weighting — let short-term MAs dominate (Inverse Length), keep everything equal, or dial in your own custom weights.
• Normalisation — convert the raw distance into a percentage of price, ATR multiples, or scale by the MAs’ own mean so you can compare symbols of any price or volatility.
🔍 How traders use it
Trend confirmation – rising dispersion while price breaks out = momentum is genuine.
Volatility squeeze – dispersion parking near zero warns that a big move is loading.
Multi-TF outlook – drop one pane per timeframe (e.g. 5 m, 1 h, 1 D) and see which layer of the market is driving.
Mean-reversion plays – spikes that fade quickly often coincide with exhaustion and snap-backs.
⚙️ Quick-start
Add MA Dispersion+ to your chart.
Set the pane’s timeframe in the first input.
Tick the MA lengths you actually use.
(Optional) Pick a weighting scheme and a normaliser.
Repeat the indicator for as many timeframes as you like — each instance keeps its own settings.
✨ Why you’ll love it
Zero clutter – one orange line tells you what four separate MAs whisper.
Configurable yet bullet-proof – all lengths are hard-coded constants, so Pine never complains.
Context aware – normalisation lets you compare BTC’s $60 000 chaos with EURUSD’s four--decimals calm.
Lightweight – no labels, no drawings, no background processing — perfect for mobile and multi-pane layouts.
Give MA Dispersion+ a try and let your charts breathe — you’ll never look at moving-average ribbons the same way again.
Happy trading!
CAN INDICATORCAN Moving Averages Indicator - Feature Guide
1. Multiple Moving Averages (20 MAs)
- Supports up to 20 individual moving averages
- Each MA can be independently configured:
- Enable/Disable toggle
- Length (period) setting
- Type selection (SMA, EMA, DEMA, VWMA, RMA, WMA)
- Color customization
- Individual timeframe settings when global timeframe is disabled
Pre-configured MA Settings:
1. MA1-8: SMA type
- Lengths: 20, 50, 100, 200, 365, 489, 600, 1460
2. MA9-20: EMA type
- Lengths: 30, 60, 120, 240, 300, 400, 500, 700, 800, 900, 1000, 2000
2. Global Timeframe Settings
Location: Global Settings group
Features:
- Use Global Timeframe: Toggle to use one timeframe for all MAs
- Global Timeframe: Select the timeframe to apply globally
3. Label Display Options
Location: Main Inputs section
Controls:
- Show MA Type: Display MA type (SMA, EMA, etc.)
- Show MA Length: Display period length
- Show Resolution: Display timeframe
- Label Offset: Adjust label position
4. Cross Alerts System
Location: Cross Alerts group
Features:
1. Price Crosses:
- Alerts when price crosses any selected MA
- Select MA to monitor (1-20)
- Triggers on crossover/crossunder
2. MA Crosses:
- Alerts when one MA crosses another
- Select fast MA (1-20)
- Select slow MA (1-20)
- Triggers on crossover/crossunder
5. Relative Strength (RS) Analysis
Location: Relative Strength group
Features:
- Select any MA to monitor (1-20)
- Compares MA to its own average
- Adjustable RS Length (default 14)
- Visual feedback via background color:
- Green: MA above its average (uptrend)
- Red: MA below its average (downtrend)
- Customizable colors and transparency
6. Moving Average Types Available
1. **SMA** (Simple Moving Average)
- Equal weight to all prices
2. **EMA** (Exponential Moving Average)
- More weight to recent prices
3. **DEMA** (Double Exponential Moving Average)
- Reduced lag compared to EMA
4. **VWMA** (Volume Weighted Moving Average)
- Incorporates volume data
5. **RMA** (Running Moving Average)
- Smoother than EMA
6. **WMA** (Weighted Moving Average)
- Linear weight distribution
Usage Tips
1. **For Trend Following:**
- Enable longer-period MAs (MA4-MA8)
- Use cross alerts between long-term MAs
- Monitor RS for trend strength
2. **For Short-term Trading:**
- Focus on shorter-period MAs (MA1-MA3, MA9-MA11)
- Enable price cross alerts
- Use multiple timeframe analysis
3. **For Multiple Timeframe Analysis:**
- Disable global timeframe
- Set different timeframes for each MA
- Compare MA relationships across timeframes
4. **For Performance:**
- Disable unused MAs
- Limit active alerts to necessary pairs
- Use RS selectively on key MAs
Multi-Symbol Trend DashboardMulti-Symbol Trend Dashboard - MA Cross Trend Monitor
Short Description
A customizable dashboard that displays trend direction across multiple symbols and timeframes using moving average crossovers.
Full Description
Overview
This Multi-Symbol Trend Dashboard allows you to monitor trend direction across 7 different symbols and 5 timeframes simultaneously in a single view. The dashboard uses moving average crossovers to determine trend direction, displaying bullish trends in green and bearish trends in red.
Key Features
Multi-Symbol Monitoring : Track up to 7 different trading instruments at once
Multi-Timeframe Analysis: View 5 different timeframes simultaneously for each instrument
Customizable Moving Averages: Choose between SMA, EMA, or WMA with adjustable periods
Visual Clarity: Color-coded cells provide immediate trend identification
Flexible Positioning: Place the dashboard anywhere on your chart
Customizable Appearance: Adjust sizes, colors, and text formatting
How It Works
The dashboard calculates a fast MA and slow MA for each symbol-timeframe combination. When the fast MA is above the slow MA, the cell shows green (bullish). When the fast MA is below the slow MA, the cell shows red (bearish).
Use Cases
Get a bird's-eye view of market trends across multiple instruments
Identify potential trading opportunities where multiple timeframes align
Monitor your watchlist without switching between charts
Spot divergences between related instruments
Track market breadth across sectors or related instruments
Notes and Limitations
Limited to 7 symbols and 5 timeframes due to TradingView's security request limits
Uses simple MA crossover as trend determination method
Dashboard is most effective when displayed on a dedicated chart
Performance may vary on lower-end devices due to multiple security requests
Settings Explanation
MA Settings: Configure the periods and types of moving averages
Display Settings: Adjust dashboard positioning and visual elements
Trading Instruments: Select which symbols to monitor (defaults to major forex pairs)
Timeframes: Choose which timeframes to display (default: M15, H1, H4, D1, W1)
Colors: Customize the color scheme for bullish/bearish indications and headers
This dashboard provides a straightforward way to maintain situational awareness across multiple markets and timeframes, helping traders identify potential setups and market conditions at a glance.
Moving Average ToolkitMoving Average Toolkit - Advanced MA Analysis with Flexible Source Input
A powerful and versatile moving average indicator designed for maximum flexibility. Its unique source input feature allows you to analyze moving averages of ANY indicator or price data, making it perfect for creating custom combinations with RSI, Volume, OBV, or any other technical indicator.
Key Features:
• Universal Source Input:
- Analyze moving averages of any data: Price, Volume, RSI, MACD, Custom Indicators
- Perfect for creating advanced technical setups
- Identify trends in any technical data
• 13 Moving Average Types:
- Traditional: SMA, EMA, WMA, RMA, VWMA
- Advanced: HMA, T3, DEMA, TEMA, KAMA, ZLEMA, McGinley, EPMA
• Dual MA System:
- Compare two different moving averages
- Independent settings for each MA
- Perfect for multiple timeframe analysis
• Visual Offset Analysis:
- Dynamic color changes based on momentum
- Fill between current and offset values
- Clear visualization of trend strength
Usage Examples:
• Price Trend: Traditional MA analysis using price data
• Volume Trend: Apply MA to volume for volume trend analysis
• RSI Trend: Smooth RSI movements for clearer signals
• Custom: Apply to any indicator output for unique insights
Settings:
• Fully customizable colors for bull/bear conditions
• Adjustable offset periods
• Independent length settings
• Optional second MA for comparison
Perfect for:
• Advanced technical analysts
• Multi-indicator strategy developers
• Custom indicator creators
• Traders seeking flexible analysis tools
This versatile toolkit goes beyond traditional moving averages by allowing you to apply sophisticated MA analysis to any technical data, creating endless possibilities for custom technical analysis strategies.
AllMA Trend Radar [trade_lexx]📈 AllMA Trend Radar is your universal trend analysis tool!
📊 What is AllMA Trend Radar?
AllMA Trend Radar is a powerful indicator that uses various types of Moving Averages (MA) to analyze trends and generate trading signals. The indicator allows you to choose from more than 30 different types of moving averages and adjust their parameters to suit your trading style.
💡 The main components of the indicator
📈 Fast and slow moving averages
The indicator uses two main lines:
- Fast MA (blue line): reacts faster to price changes
- Slow MA (red line): smoother, reflects a long-term trend
The combined use of fast and slow MA allows you to get trend confirmation and entry/exit points from the market.
🔄 Wide range of moving averages
There are more than 30 types of moving averages at your disposal:
- SMA: Simple moving average
- EMA: Exponential moving average
- WMA: Weighted moving average
- DEMA: double exponential MA
- TEMA: triple exponential MA
- HMA: Hull Moving Average
- LSMA: Moving average of least squares
- JMA: Eureka Moving Average
- ALMA: Arnaud Legoux Moving Average
- ZLEMA: moving average with zero delay
- And many others!
🔍 Indicator signals
1️⃣ Fast 🆚 Slow MA signals (intersection and ratio of fast and slow MA)
Up/Down signals (intersection)
- Buy (Up) signal:
- What happens: the fast MA crosses the slow MA from bottom to top
- What does the green triangle with the "Buy" label under the candle look
like - What does it mean: a likely upward trend reversal or an uptrend strengthening
- Sell signal (Down):
- What happens: the fast MA crosses the slow MA from top to bottom
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" mark above the candle
- What does it mean: a likely downtrend reversal or an increase in the downtrend
Greater/Less signals (ratio)
- Buy signal (Greater):
- What happens: the fast MA becomes higher than the slow MA
- What does it look like: a green triangle with a "Buy" label under the candle
- What does it mean: the formation or confirmation of an uptrend
- Sell signal (Less):
- What happens: the fast MA becomes lower than the slow MA
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" mark above the candle
- What does it mean: the formation or confirmation of a downtrend
2️⃣ Signals ⚡️ Fast MA (fast MA and price)
Up/Down signals (intersection)
- Buy signal (Up Fast):
- What happens: the price crosses the fast MA from bottom to top
- What does it look like: a green triangle with a "Buy" label under the candle
- What does it mean: a short-term price growth signal
- Sell signal (Down Fast):
- What happens: the price crosses the fast MA from top to bottom
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" label above the candle
- What does it mean: a short-term price drop signal
Greater/Less signals (ratio)
- Buy signal (Greater Fast):
- What happens: the price is getting higher than the fast MA
- What does it look like: a green triangle with a "Buy" label under the candle
- What does it mean: the price is above the fast MA, which indicates an upward movement
- Sell signal (Less Fast):
- What happens: the price is getting lower than the fast MA
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" mark above the candle
- What does it mean: the price is under the fast MA, which indicates a downward movement
3️⃣ Signals 🐢 Slow MA (slow MA and price)
Up/Down signals (intersection)
- Buy signal (Up Slow):
- What happens: the price crosses the slow MA from bottom to top
- What does it look like: a green triangle with a "Buy" label under the candle
- What does it mean: a potential medium-term upward trend reversal
- Sell signal (Down Slow):
- What happens: the price crosses the slow MA from top to bottom
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" label above the candle
- What does it mean: a potential medium-term downward trend reversal
Greater/Less signals (ratio)
- Buy signal (Greater Slow):
- What happens: the price is getting above the slow MA
- What does it look like: a green triangle with a "Buy" label under the candle
- What does it mean: the price is above the slow MA, which indicates a strong upward movement
- Sell signal (Less Slow):
- What is happening: the price is getting below the slow MA
- What does it look like: a red triangle with a "Sell" mark above the candle
- What does it mean: the price is under the slow MA, which indicates a strong downward movement
🛠 Filters to filter out false signals
1️⃣ Minimum distance between the signals
- What it does: sets the minimum number of candles between signals of the same type
- Why it is needed: it prevents the appearance of too frequent signals, especially during periods of high volatility
- How to set it up: Set a different value for each signal type (default: 3-5 bars)
- Example: if the value is 3 for Up/Down signals, after the buy signal appears, the next buy signal may appear no earlier than 3 bars later
2️⃣ Advanced indicator filters
🔍 RSI Filter
- What it does: Checks the Relative Strength Index (RSI) value before generating a signal
- Why it is needed: it helps to avoid countertrend entries and catch reversal points
- How to set up:
- For buy signals (🔋 Buy): set the RSI range, usually in the oversold zone (for example, 1-30)
- For sell signals (🪫 Sell): set the RSI range, usually in the overbought zone (for example, 70-100)
- Example: if the RSI = 25 (in the range 1-30), the buy signal will be confirmed
📊 MFI Filter (Cash Flow Index)
- What it does: analyzes volumes and the direction of price movement
- Why it is needed: confirms signals with data on the activity of cash flows
- How to set up:
- For buy signals (🔋 Buy): set the MFI range in the oversold zone (for example, 1-25)
- For sell signals (🪫 Sell): set the MFI range in the overbought zone (for example, 75-100)
- Example: if MFI = 80 (in the range of 75-100), the sell signal will be confirmed
📈 Stochastic Filter
- What it does: analyzes the position of the current price relative to the price range
- Why it is needed: confirms signals based on overbought/oversold conditions
- How to configure:
- You can configure the K Length, D Length and Smoothing parameters
- For buy signals (🔋 Buy): set the stochastic range in the oversold zone (for example, 1-20)
- For sell signals (🪫 Sell): set the stochastic range in the overbought zone (for example, 80-100)
- Example: if stochastic = 15 (is in the range of 1-20), the buy signal will be confirmed
🔌 Connecting to trading strategies
The indicator provides various connectors to connect to your trading strategies.:
1️⃣ Individual connectors for each type of signal
- 🔌Fast vs Slow Up/Down MA Signal🔌: signals for the intersection of fast and slow MA
- 🔌Fast vs Slow Greater/Less MA Signal🔌: signals of the ratio of fast and slow MA
- 🔌Fast Up/Down MA Signal🔌: signals of the intersection of price and fast MA
- 🔌Fast Greater/Less MA Signal🔌: signals of the ratio of price and fast MA
- 🔌Slow Up/Down MA Signal🔌: signals of the intersection of price and slow MA
- 🔌Slow Greater/Less MA Signal🔌: Price versus slow MA signals
2️⃣ Combined connectors
- 🔌Combined Up/Down MA Signal🔌: combines all the crossing signals (Up/Down)
- 🔌Combined Greater/Less MA Signal🔌: combines all the signals of the ratio (Greater/Less)
- 🔌Combined All MA Signals🔌: combines all signals (Up/Down and Greater/Less)
❗️ All connectors return values:
- 1: buy signal
- -1: sell signal
- 0: no signal
📚 How to start using AllMA Trend Radar
1️⃣ Selection of types of moving averages
- Add an indicator to the chart
- Select the type and period for the fast MA (default: DEMA with a period of 14)
- Select the type and period for the slow MA (default: SMA with a period of 14)
- Experiment with different types of MA to find the best combination for your trading style
2️⃣ Signal settings
- Turn on the desired signal types (Up/Down, Greater/Less)
- Set the minimum distance between the signals
- Activate and configure the necessary filters (RSI, MFI, Stochastic)
3️⃣ Checking on historical data
- Analyze how the indicator works based on historical data
- Pay attention to the accuracy of the signals and the presence of false alarms
- Adjust the settings if necessary
4️⃣ Introduction to the trading strategy
- Decide which signals will be used to enter the position.
- Determine which signals will be used to exit the position.
- Connect the indicator to your trading strategy through the appropriate connectors
🌟 Practical application examples
Scalping strategy
- Fast MA: TEMA with a period of 8
- Slow MA: EMA with a period of 21
- Active signals: Fast MA Up/Down
- Filters: RSI (range 1-40 for purchases, 60-100 for sales)
- Signal spacing: 3 bars
Strategy for day trading
- Fast MA: TEMA with a period of 10
- Slow MA: SMA with a period of 20
- Active signals: Fast MA Up/Down and Fast vs Slow Greater/Less
- Filters: MFI (range 1-25 for purchases, 75-100 for sales)
- Signal spacing: 5 bars
Swing Trading Strategy
- Fast MA: DEMA with a period of 14
- Slow MA: VWMA with a period of 30
- Active signals: Fast vs Slow Up/Down and Slow MA Greater/Less
- Filters: Stochastic (range 1-20 for purchases, 80-100 for sales)
- Signal spacing: 8 bars
A strategy for positional trading
- Fast MA: HMA with a period of 21
- Slow MA: SMA with a period of 50
- Active signals: Slow MA Up/Down and Fast vs Slow Greater/Less
- Filters: RSI and MFI at the same time
- The distance between the signals: 10 bars
💡 Tips for using AllMA Trend Radar
1. Select the types of MA for market conditions:
- For trending markets: DEMA, TEMA, HMA (fast MA)
- For sideways markets: SMA, WMA, VWMA (smoothed MA)
- For volatile markets: KAMA, AMA, VAMA (adaptive MA)
2. Combine different types of signals:
- Up/Down signals work better when moving from a sideways trend to a directional
one - Greater/Less signals are optimal for fixing a stable trend
3. Use filters effectively:
- The RSI filter works great in trending markets
- MFI filter helps to confirm the strength of volume movement
- Stochastic filter works well in lateral ranges
4. Adjust the minimum distance between the signals:
- Small values (2-3 bars) for short-term trading
- Average values (5-8 bars) for medium-term trading
- Large values (10+ bars) for long-term trading
5. Use combination connectors:
- For more reliable signals, connect the indicator through the combined connectors
💰 With the AllMA Trend Radar indicator, you get a universal trend analysis tool that can be customized for any trading style and timeframe. The combination of different types of moving averages and advanced filters allows you to significantly improve the accuracy of signals and the effectiveness of your trading strategy!
Oil/gas ratio MAOil/Gas Ratio-Based Equivalent Price
This indicator calculates the gas-equivalent price based on the current oil price and a defined oil/gas ratio. It helps identify relative overvaluation or undervaluation of natural gas compared to oil.
Features:
- Choose between a static or dynamic (SMA-based) oil/gas ratio
- Displays the fair value of gas derived from oil prices
- Works with any oil ticker symbol (e.g. BRENT, USOIL, etc.)
Useful for traders analyzing intermarket relationships and looking for relative value signals between energy commodities.