[F][IND] - Time Range HighlighterDescription:
Introducing the Time Range Highlighter script for TradingView – a precision tool designed to enhance your chart analysis experience with a focus on simplicity and functionality. This script caters to traders who find value in isolating specific time intervals for a more detailed market study, akin to the concept of trading "macros".
Key Features:
1. Effortless Customization:
Define and highlight your preferred time ranges effortlessly. Tailor the script to align with your trading strategy by setting specific start and end times for enhanced precision.
2. Multi-Interval Support:
Seamlessly analyze multiple time ranges concurrently. Toggle between highlighted intervals with ease, allowing for a comprehensive examination of various market conditions without cluttering your chart.
3. Enable/Disable On-Demand:
Maintain control over the clutter on your chart. The enable/disable feature lets you activate or deactivate the highlighted time ranges at your discretion, ensuring a clean and unobstructed view when needed.
4. Focused Chart Analysis:
By visually emphasizing chosen time intervals, the script facilitates a focused analysis of critical market movements, enabling traders to identify patterns and trends with efficiency. This feature is particularly beneficial for those employing trading "macros" to filter out noise and concentrate on key periods.
Usage Instructions:
1. Apply the Time Range Highlighter script to your TradingView chart.
2. Customize the script settings to define specific time ranges tailored to your trading preferences.
3. Toggle between enabled and disabled states as needed to maintain clarity on your chart.
4. Leverage the script to streamline your chart analysis process and make more informed trading decisions, especially when employing trading "macros" to focus on specific market intervals.
Disclaimer:
This indicator is provided for educational purposes only. Trading involves risk, and users should consult with a financial professional before making any trading decisions.
Your Feedback Matters!
Please feel free to comment or reach out if you have any improvement suggestions or if you would like to request the development of a specific indicator. Your feedback is invaluable!
Поиск скриптов по запросу "range"
Average Range Levels [Pro+]Description:
The Average Range Levels builds on the concepts of ADR projections showcased in its lite version.
Average Daily Range (ADR) is a common metric used to measure volatility in an asset. It calculates the average difference between the highest and lowest price over a time interval – normally five days.
The Inner Circle Trader teaches the importance of this metric from an algorithmic point of view; in particular the 1/3ADR price level is deemed to be a threshold used to determine the area at which a Judas Swing – false move to trick market participants, protraction, manipulation – might exhaust.
Another key difference in the ICT-use of this metric compared to the classic approach is that the average range is calculated from New York midnight Time, rather than the daily candle's open.
This exact concept was upscaled to higher Timeframe fractals obtaining the Average Weekly Range (AWR) and the Average Monthly Range (AMR). The latter two metrics are anchored at the first Monday’s midnight (New York Time) of the respective interval – however they also have the option to be anchored at the True Week Open (Tuesday’s Daily Open) and True Month Open (Second Week Open).
It is crucial to remember that the elements of Time are key when it comes to interpreting how price action will, or won't, react to these levels: what Time of the day is it? what day of the week? what week of the month?
If one thinks about the Power of Three of a candle (Accumulation, Manipulation Distribution), it is highly unlikely that a Manipulation event will happen later in the candle’s development – seeing the 1/3ADR hold in London session or New York open, seeing the 1/3AWR hold on Tuesday or Wednesday, or seeing price race to the 1/3AMR early on in the month gives undeniable edge to an Analyst.
Apart from the 1/3 level seen from a Judas perspective, the opposing 1/3 level, and the full AR projections, are excellent algorithmic levels at which we will see orderflow or reactions worth studying. These can be take profit targets, reversal opportunities, pyramid entries, …
Last but not least, the tool is equipped with a Data Table. You have a clear narrative but you are unsure of when price will expand? Track the previous 5 ARs and the current Range for Daily, Weekly, and Monthly – the smaller the AR the higher the chance for an expansion, the larger the AR the higher the chance for a consolidation.
Tool Features:
Auto Color the drawings based on your chart’s background or choose your own
Decide whether to consider daily candles, or New York (00:00 to 00:00 NY Time) for the basis of the calculation
Show the last 10 Historical Levels
– See the AR Range, the AR price levels and 1/3AR price levels by hovering over the text labels
Plot the AR levels from their Time Anchor, or as offset markers on the side for a cleaner look
Show/Hide all elements individually
In the Idea below, you can see how INDEX:BTCUSD hit the 1/3AMR level at the end of the second week of the month. The subsequent rejection from this level suggests we might have witnessed a Judas Swing, hence we flip to bullish bias.
In the more recent AWR levels, we can see how price did not touch any level until friday – this is a consolidation week with low probability setups. This was expected, if one looks at the precious two week's ranges and respective average ranges in the Data Table: both breached the AR value, due to to the great expansion higher.
Lastly for the ADR levels we can see how the Judas higher got beautifully stopped at the 1/3 level, and the full ADR level on the opposite side catches price while it falls.
To Get Access, and Level Up see the Author's Instructions below!
This indicator is available only on the TradingView platform.
⚠️ Intellectual Property Rights ⚠️
While this tool's base concepts are public, its interpretation, code, and presentation are protected intellectual property. Unauthorized copying or distribution is prohibited.
⚠️ Terms and Conditions ⚠️
This financial tool is for educational purposes only and not financial advice. Users assume responsibility for decisions made based on the tool's information. Past performance doesn't guarantee future results. By using this tool, users agree to these terms.
NSDT Regular CandlesWhen using Range charts on TradingView, the only candle appearance option is "Range Bars", which are those little thin ones that can be hard to see.
So I made this candle indicator that can be used to plot Regular Candles over the Range Bars for a standard view.
Here is the same chart - only showing the original Range Bars
Zazzamira 50-25-25 Trend System Alerts OnlyPublishing my trading system script. It consist of several conditions to happen in order to open a trade. Work best on ES/MES 5 minute timeframe.
I like to use it with this settings:
- UTC -6 (don't tick Exchange Timezone)
and rest as default
To enter a trade, the following conditions must be met: Entry 1: the opening range (8:30AM - 9:15AM UTC-6) must be defined and the price must close above or below the opening range on the 5-minute timeframe. This entry condition defines the trade direction (above = long / below = short). Once the opening range is defined, the Trend-Based Fib Extension is applied from the range high to the range low (and vice versa). Fib levels are required for Exit conditions. Entry 2: the 8 - 27 - 67 - 97 EMAs must be defined. If the EMAs value order is 8 > 27 > 67 > 97, long-only trades are allowed. If the EMAs value order is 8 < 27 < 67 < 97, short-only trades are allowed. This entry condition filters fake breakouts of Entry 1. Entry 3: no trades are allowed after 12:59 UTC-6 (2PM EST). Entry 4: if Entry 1, Entry 2, and Entry 3 conditions are valid and the price hasn't reached the 23.6% Fib line, an entry order can be set at the range high/long with 4 contracts. To exit a trade, the following conditions must be met: Exit 1 (Stop loss): set a trailing stop based on 2.1x ATR (14) from entry. Exit 2: take 50% profits at the 23.6% Fib and leave trailing stop untouched. Exit 3: if Exit 2 triggers, take 50% (25% of total entry) off at 61.8% Fib, leaving Exit 2 trailing stop values valid. Exit 4: exit the full position at the FIB 100% value. Exit 5: all trades must be closed at 3pm UTC-6 (4PM EST). So basically Take Profit are 50%-25%-25% of position.
Code has been written by © Hiubris_Indicators who has been an amazing coder and gave me the possibility to make this script public so a really big shoutout to him.
This indicator only works for alerts, please check version without alerts to backtest or tweaks. This indicator is meant to be used to automate the system via webhooks
Stockbee Momentum BurstThis is a script to color code bars based on the bullish- and bearish combination.
Bullish Combination
Percent: Price >= 4% from yesterday and Volume today > Yesterday
Dollar: Price >= 0.9 dollar from open
Base Requirements
- Price > Yesterday's close
- Price > Open
- Price is within 30% of high
- Todays price range >= Yesterdays price range
- Yesterday's move <= 2%
- Volume >= 100 000
Bearish Combination
Percent: Price <= 4% from yesterday and Volume today > Yesterday
Dollar: Price <= 0.9 dollar from open
Base Requirements
- Price < Yesterday's close
- Price < Open
- Price is within 30% of low
- Todays price range >= Yesterdays price range
- Yesterday's move >= -2%
- Minimum volume for each of last 3 days >= 100 000
Momentum Filter
These are based on the 10 and 20 EMA crossover, where the former above would indicate upward momentum and below downward momentum. This can help to narrow down the color code to continuation phases. The linked option will override all other momentum filters, bullish candles will be displayed when EMA 10 > 20 and bearish candles when EMA 10 < 20.
ORBox | by Octopu$📈 ORBox | by Octopu$
ORBox is a Box for the Opening Range Breakout
The Box is added automatically according to the User preferences through GUI
This Indicator includes a Dropdown selection for which Range for the Breakout you want to use
ORBox has built-in Alerts for when the Breakout happens according to your preferences
Works in any Timeframe with any Ticker
(Using SPY 5m just as an example:)
www.tradingview.com
SPY
Features:
• Opening Breakout Range (ORB)
• Dropdown menu selection to choose which TF to watch
• Built-in Alerts for Momentum Awareness
Options:
• Customization for Box Colors and Sizes
• Display ORB for Current Day or Previous
Notes:
v1.0
ORBox Indicator release
Changes and updates can come in the future for additional functionalities or per requests.
Did you like it? Shoot me a message! I'd appreciate if you dropped by to say thanks.
- Octopu$
🐙
Expected Range and SkewThis is an open source and updated version of my previous "Confidence Interval" script. This script provides you with the expected range over a given time period in the future and the skew of that range. For example, if you wanted to know the expected 1 standard deviation range of MSFT over the next 20 days, this will tell you that. Additionally, this script will also tell you the skew of the expected range.
How to use this script:
1) Enter the length, this will determine the number of data points used in the calculation of the expected range.
2) Enter the amount of time you want projected forward in minutes, hours, and days.
3) Input standard deviation of the expected range.
4) Pick the type of data you want shown from the dropdown menu. Your choices are either the expected range or the skew of the expected range.
5) Enter the x and y coordinates of the label (optional). This is useful so it doesn't impede your view of the plot.
Here are a few notes about this script:
First, the expected range line gives you the width of said range (upper bound - lower bound), and the label will tell you specifically what the upper and lower bounds of the expected range are.
Second, this script will work on any of the default timeframes, but you need to be careful with how far out you try to project the expected range depending on the timeframe you're using. For example, if you're using the 1min timeframe, it probably won't do you any good trying to project the expected range over the next 20 days; or if you're using the daily timeframe it doesn't make sense to try to project the expected range for the next 5 hours. You can tell if the time horizon you're trying to project doesn't work well with the chart timeframe you're using if the current price is outside of either the upper or lower bounds provided in the label. If the current price is within the upper and lower bounds provided in the label, then the time horizon that you're projecting over is reasonable for the chart timeframe you're using.
Third, this script does not countdown automatically, so the time provided in the label will stay the same. For example, in the picture above, the expected range of Dow Futures over the next 23 days from January 12th, 2021 is calculated. But when tomorrow comes it won't count down to 22 days, instead it will show the range over the next 23 days from January 13th, 2021. So if you want the time horizon to change as time goes on you will have to update this yourself manually.
Lastly, if you try to set an alert on this script, you will get a warning about it possibly repainting. This is because of the label, not the plot itself. The label constantly updates itself, which triggers the warning. I tested setting alerts on this script both with and without the inclusion of the label, and without the label the repainting warning did not occur. So remember, if you set an alert on this script you will get a warning about it possibly repainting, but this is because of the label constantly updating, not the plot itself.
[astropark] trade yesterday rangeDear followers,
today a nice scalping tool for day trading on low time frames (1-3-5 minutes)!
Each day the indicator will print some important levels and ranges related to the trading day before:
yesterday high (black line)
yesterday day range averange (silver line)
yesterday low (black line)
average between yesterday high and yesterday average, together with a resistance range (red)
average between yesterday low and yesterday average, together with a support range (green)
two extension ranges above yesterday high (first is blue, second is red)
two extension ranges below yesterday low (first is blue, second is green)
Trading levels is one of most effective trading tecniques:
once a level is broken upwards, you can long (buy) the bullish retest with stoploss below recent low
once a level is broken downwards, you can short (sell) the bearish retest with stoploss below recent high
consolidation below or at a resistance level is bullish, so long (buy) breakout upwards and long more on a bullish retest of broken level
consolidation above or at a support level is bearish, so short (sell) breakout downwards and short more on a bearish retest of broken level
many times you see a level to be tested 2 or 3 times: short (sell) double and triple top, long (buy) double or triple bottom
Here you can see the levels described above and basic usage in a consolidation trading day:
A trader who wants to be a winner must understand that money and risk management are very important, so manage your position size and always have a stop loss in your trades.
Here you can see many examples on how to use this indicator.
Triple top on yesterday range high: perfect short setup (5 take profits targets in the example)
Resistance levels broken: long setup on bullish retest (2 take profits targets in the example)
Double top and support broken: 2 short setups (2 and 3 take profits targets in the example)
Here some examples how to basically use the indicator in a consolidation trading day: short (sell) resistance levels, long (buy) support levels
This is a premium indicator , so send me a private message in order to get access to this script.
Match on Selectable Percentage Change + RangeIndicator Overview:
Match on Selectable Percentage Change + Range is a powerful analytical tool designed for traders and analysts who want to identify historical price bars that match a specific percentage variation, and then evaluate how price evolved in the following days. It combines precision filtering with visual tabular feedback, making it ideal for pattern recognition, backtesting, and scenario analysis.
What It Does
This indicator scans historical bars to find instances where the percentage change between two consecutive closes matches a user-defined target (± a customizable tolerance). Once matches are found, it displays:
The date of each match (most recent first)
The actual variation searched
The percentage change after 2, 10, 20, and 30 bars
The min-max range (in %) over those same periods
All results are shown in a dynamic table directly on the chart.
Inputs & Controls
Input Description
Which variation do you want to analyze? (%)
Set the target percentage change to look for (e.g. 2.5%)
% deviation from the variation to be considered (%) Define the tolerance range around the target (e.g. ±0.5%)
Bars to analyze (max 9999) Set how many past bars to scan
Show match table Toggle to enable/disable the entire table
Show percentage variations (2d, 10d, 20d, 30d) Toggle to show/hide post-match percentage changes
Show min-max ranges (2d, 10d, 20d, 30d) Toggle to show/hide post-match high/low ranges
Table Structure
Each row in the table represents a historical match. Columns include:
Date: When the match occurred
Variation in: The actual % change that triggered the match
2d / 10d / 20d / 30d: % change after those days
Min-Max 2d / 10d / 20d / 30d: Range of price movement after those days
Color coding helps quickly identify bullish (green) vs bearish (red) outcomes.
Use Cases
Backtesting: See how similar past moves evolved over time
Scenario modeling: Estimate potential outcomes after a known variation
Pattern recognition: Spot recurring setups or volatility clusters
Risk analysis: Understand post-variation drawdowns and upside potential
Tips for Use
Use tighter deviation (e.g. 0.3%) for precision, or wider (e.g. 1%) for broader pattern capture.
Combine with other indicators to validate setups (e.g. volume, RSI, trend filters).
Toggle off variation or range columns to focus only on the metrics you need.
Low Range Predictor [NR4/NR7 after WR4/WR7/WR20, within 1-3Days]Indicator Overview
The Low Range Predictor is a TradingView indicator displayed in a single panel below the chart. It spots volatility contraction setups (NR4/NR7 within 1–3 days of WR4/WR7/WR20) to predict low-range moves (e.g., <0.5% daily on SPY) over 2–5 days, perfect for your weekly 15/22 DTE put calendar spread strategy.
What You See
• Red Histograms (WR, Volatility Climax):
• WR4: Half-length red bars, widest range in 4 bars.
• WR7: Three-quarter-length red bars, widest in 7 bars.
• WR20: Full-length red bars, widest in 20 bars.
• Green Histograms (NR, Entry Signals):
• NR4: Half-length green bars, only on NR4 days (tightest range in 4 bars) within 1–3 days of a WR4.
• NR7: Full-length green bars, only on NR7 days within 1–3 days of a WR7.
• Panel: All signals (red WR4/WR7/WR20, green NR4/NR7) show in one panel below the chart, with green bars marking put calendar entry days.
Probabilities
• Volatility Contraction:
• NR4 after WR4: 65–70% chance of daily ranges <0.5% on SPY for 2–5 days (ATR drops 20–30%). Occurs ~2–3 times/month.
• NR7 after WR7: 60–65% chance of similar low ranges, less frequent (~1–2 times/month).
• Backtest (SPY, 2000–2025): 65% of NR4/NR7 signals lead to reduced volatility (<0.7% daily range) vs. 50% for random days.
• Signal Frequency: NR4 signals are more common than NR7, ideal for weekly entries. WR20 provides context but isn’t tied to NR signals.
Dual Volume Profiles: Session + Rolling (Range Delineation)Dual Volume Profiles: Session + Rolling (Range Delineation)
INTRO
This is a probability-centric take on volume profile. I treat the volume histogram as an empirical PDF over price, updated in real time, which makes multi-modality (multiple acceptance basins) explicit rather than assumed away. The immediate benefit is operational: if we can read the shape of the distribution, we can infer likely reversion levels (POC), acceptance boundaries (VAH/VAL), and low-friction corridors (LVNs).
My working hypothesis is that what traders often label “fat tails” or “power-law behavior” at short horizons is frequently a tail-conditioned view of a higher-level Gaussian regime. In other words, child distributions (shorter periodicities) sit within parent distributions (longer periodicities); when price operates in the parent’s tail, the child regime looks heavy-tailed without being fundamentally non-Gaussian. This is consistent with a hierarchical/mixture view and with the spirit of the central limit theorem—Gaussian structure emerges at aggregate scales, while local scales can look non-Gaussian due to nesting and conditioning.
This indicator operationalizes that view by plotting two nested empirical PDFs: a rolling (local) profile and a session-anchored profile. Their confluence makes ranges explicit and turns “regime” into something you can see. For additional nesting, run multiple instances with different lookbacks. When using the default settings combined with a separate daily VP, you effectively get three nested distributions (local → session → daily) on the chart.
This indicator plots two nested distributions side-by-side:
Rolling (Local) Profile — short-window, prorated histogram that “breathes” with price and maps the immediate auction.
Session Anchored Profile — cumulative distribution since the current session start (Premkt → RTH → AH anchoring), revealing the parent regime.
Use their confluence to identify range floors/ceilings, mean-reversion magnets, and low-volume “air pockets” for fast traverses.
What it shows
POC (dashed): central tendency / “magnet” (highest-volume bin).
VAH & VAL (solid): acceptance boundaries enclosing an exact Value Area % around each profile’s POC.
Volume histograms:
Rolling can auto-color by buy/sell dominance over the lookback (green = buying ≥ selling, red = selling > buying).
Session uses a fixed style (blue by default).
Session anchoring (exchange timezone):
Premarket → anchors at 00:00 (midnight).
RTH → anchors at 09:30.
After-hours → anchors at 16:00.
Session display span:
Session Max Span (bars) = 0 → draw from session start → now (anchored).
> 0 → draw a rolling window N bars back → now, while still measuring all volume since session start.
Why it’s useful
Think in terms of nested probability distributions: the rolling node is your local Gaussian; the session node is its parent.
VA↔VA overlap ≈ strong range boundary.
POC↔POC alignment ≈ reliable mean-reversion target.
LVNs (gaps) ≈ low-friction corridors—expect quick moves to the next node.
Quick start
Add to chart (great on 5–10s, 15–60s, 1–5m).
Start with: bins = 240, vaPct = 0.68, barsBack = 60.
Watch for:
First test & rejection at overlapping VALs/VAHs → fade back toward POC.
Acceptance beyond VA (several closes + growing outer-bin mass) → traverse to the next node.
Inputs (detailed)
General
Lookback Bars (Rolling)
Count of most-recent bars for the rolling/local histogram. Larger = smoother node that shifts slower; smaller = more reactive, “breathing” profile.
• Typical: 40–80 on 5–10s charts; 60–120 on 1–5m.
• If you increase this but keep Number of Bins fixed, each bin aggregates more volume (coarser bins).
Number of Bins
Vertical resolution (price buckets) for both rolling and session histograms. Higher = finer detail and crisper LVNs, but more line objects (closer to platform limits).
• Typical: 120–240 on 5–10s; 80–160 on 1–5m.
• If you hit performance or object limits, reduce this first.
Value Area %
Exact central coverage for VAH/VAL around POC. Computed empirically from the histogram (no Gaussian assumption): the algorithm expands from POC outward until the chosen % is enclosed.
• Common: 0.68 (≈“1σ-like”), 0.70 for slightly wider core.
• Smaller = tighter VA (more breakout flags). Larger = wider VA (more reversion bias).
Max Local Profile Width (px)
Horizontal length (in pixels) of the rolling bars/lines and its VA/POC overlays. Visual only (does not affect calculations).
Session Settings
RTH Start/End (exchange tz)
Defines the current session anchor (Premkt=00:00, RTH=your start, AH=your end). The session histogram always measures from the most recent session start and resets at each boundary.
Session Max Span (bars, 0 = full session)
Display window for session drawings (POC/VA/Histogram).
• 0 → draw from session start → now (anchored).
• > 0 → draw N bars back → now (rolling look), while still measuring all volume since session start.
This keeps the “parent” distribution measurable while letting the display track current action.
Local (Rolling) — Visibility
Show Local Profile Bars / POC / VAH & VAL
Toggle each overlay independently. If you approach object limits, disable bars first (POC/VA lines are lighter).
Local (Rolling) — Colors & Widths
Color by Buy/Sell Dominance
Fast uptick/downtick proxy over the rolling window (close vs open):
• Buying ≥ Selling → Bullish Color (default lime).
• Selling > Buying → Bearish Color (default red).
This color drives local bars, local POC, and local VA lines.
• Disable to use fixed Bars Color / POC Color / VA Lines Color.
Bars Transparency (0–100) — alpha for the local histogram (higher = lighter).
Bars Line Width (thickness) — draw thin-line profiles or chunky blocks.
POC Line Width / VA Lines Width — overlay thickness. POC is dashed, VAH/VAL solid by design.
Session — Visibility
Show Session Profile Bars / POC / VAH & VAL
Independent toggles for the session layer.
Session — Colors & Widths
Bars/POC/VA Colors & Line Widths
Fixed palette by design (default blue). These do not change with buy/sell dominance.
• Use transparency and width to make the parent profile prominent or subtle.
• Prefer minimal? Hide session bars; keep only session VA/POC.
Reading the signals (detailed playbook)
Core definitions
POC — highest-volume bin (fair price “magnet”).
VAH/VAL — upper/lower bounds enclosing your Value Area % around POC.
Node — contiguous block of high-volume bins (acceptance).
LVN — low-volume gap between nodes (low friction path).
Rejection vs Acceptance (practical rule)
Rejection at VA edge: 0–1 closes beyond VA and no persistent growth in outer bins.
Acceptance beyond VA: ≥3 closes beyond VA and outer-bin mass grows (e.g., added volume beyond the VA edge ≥ 5–10% of node volume over the last N bars). Treat acceptance as regime change.
Confluence scores (make boundary/target quality objective)
VA overlap strength (range boundary):
C_VA = 1 − |VA_edge_local − VA_edge_session| / ATR(n)
Values near 1.0 = tight overlap (stronger boundary).
Use: if C_VA ≥ 0.6–0.8, treat as high-quality fade zone.
POC alignment (magnet quality):
C_POC = 1 − |POC_local − POC_session| / ATR(n)
Higher C_POC = greater chance a rotation completes to that fair price.
(You can estimate these by eye.)
Setups
1) Range Fade at VA Confluence (mean reversion)
Context: Local VAL/VAH near Session VAL/VAH (tight overlap), clear node, local color not screaming trend (or flips to your side).
Entry: First test & rejection at the overlapped band (wick through ok; prefer close back inside).
Stop: A tick/pip beyond the wider of the two VA edges or beyond the nearest LVN, a small buffer zone can be used to judge whether price is truly rejecting a VAL/VAH or simply probing.
Targets: T1 node mid; T2 POC (size up when C_POC is high).
Flip: If acceptance (rule above) prints, flip bias or stand down.
2) LVN Traverse (continuation)
Context: Price exits VA and enters an LVN with acceptance and growing outer-bin volume.
Entry: Aggressive—first close into LVN; Conservative—retest of the VA edge from the far side (“kiss goodbye”).
Stop: Back inside the prior VA.
Targets: Next node’s VA edge or POC (edge = faster exits; POC = fuller rotations).
Note: Flatter VA edge (shallower curvature) tends to breach more easily.
3) POC→POC Magnet Trade (rotation completion)
Context: Local POC ≈ Session POC (high C_POC).
Entry: Fade a VA touch or pullback inside node, aiming toward the shared POC.
Stop: Past the opposite VA edge or LVN beyond.
Target: The shared POC; optional runner to opposite VA if the node is broad and time-of-day is supportive.
4) Failed Break (Reversion Snap-back)
Context: Push beyond VA fails acceptance (re-enters VA, outer-bin growth stalls/shrinks).
Entry: On the re-entry close, back toward POC.
Stop/Target: Stop just beyond the failed VA; target POC, then opposite VA if momentum persists.
How to read color & shape
Local color = most recent sentiment:
Green = buying ≥ selling; Red = selling > buying (over the rolling window). Treat as context, not a standalone signal. A green local node under a blue session VAH can still be a fade if the parent says “over-valued.”
Shape tells friction:
Fat nodes → rotation-friendly (fade edges).
Sharp LVN gaps → traversal-friendly (momentum continuation).
Time-of-day intuition
Right after session anchor (e.g., RTH 09:30): Session profile is young and moves quickly—treat confluence cautiously.
Mid-session: Cleanest behavior for rotations.
Close / news: Expect more traverses and POC migrations; tighten risk or switch playbooks.
Risk & execution guidance
Use tight, mechanical stops at/just beyond VA or LVN. If you need wide stops to survive noise, your entry is late or the node is unstable.
On micro-timeframes, account for fees & slippage—aim for targets paying ≥2–3× average cost.
If acceptance prints, don’t fight it—flip, reduce size, or stand aside.
Suggested presets
Scalp (5–10s): bins 120–240, barsBack 40–80, vaPct 0.68–0.70, local bars thin (small bar width).
Intraday (1–5m): bins 80–160, barsBack 60–120, vaPct 0.68–0.75, session bars more visible for parent context.
Performance & limits
Reuses line objects to stay under TradingView’s max_lines_count.
Very large bins × multiple overlays can still hit limits—use visibility toggles (hide bars first).
Session drawings use time-based coordinates to avoid “bar index too far” errors.
Known nuances
Rolling buy/sell dominance uses a simple uptick/downtick proxy (close vs open). It’s fast and practical, but it’s not a full tape classifier.
VA boundaries are computed from the empirical histogram—no Gaussian assumption.
This script does not calculate the full daily volume profile. Several other tools already provide that, including TradingView’s built-in Volume Profile indicators. Instead, this indicator focuses on pairing a rolling, short-term volume distribution with a session-wide distribution to make ranges more explicit. It is designed to supplement your use of standard or periodic volume profiles, not replace them. Think of it as a magnifying lens that helps you see where local structure aligns with the broader session.
How to trade it (TL;DR)
Fade overlapping VA bands on first rejection → target POC.
Continue through LVN on acceptance beyond VA → target next node’s VA/POC.
Respect acceptance: ≥3 closes beyond VA + growing outer-bin volume = regime change.
FAQ
Q: Why 68% Value Area?
A: It mirrors the “~1σ” idea, but we compute it exactly from empirical volume, not by assuming a normal distribution.
Q: Why are my profiles thin lines?
A: Increase Bars Line Width for chunkier blocks; reduce for fine, thin-line profiles.
Q: Session bars don’t reach session start—why?
A: Set Session Max Span (bars) = 0 for full anchoring; any positive value draws a rolling window while still measuring from session start.
Changelog (v1.0)
Dual profiles: Rolling + Session with independent POC/VA lines.
Session anchoring (Premkt/RTH/AH) with optional rolling display span.
Dynamic coloring for the rolling profile (buying vs selling).
Fully modular toggles + per-feature colors/widths.
Thin-line rendering via bar line width.
Candle Range Detector by TradeTech AnalysisCandle Range Detector by TradeTech Analysis
This advanced indicator identifies and visualizes price compression zones based on inside bar formations, then tracks how price behaves around those zones — offering valuable insights into liquidity sweeps, range expansions, and trap/mitigation behavior.
The script builds upon the foundational concept of range-based price action, commonly used by institutional traders, and adds automation, mitigation tracking, and sweep detection to map how price reacts around these critical ranges.
🔍 How It Works:
• Range Formation: A new range is detected when the current candle forms entirely within the high and low of the previous candle (i.e., an inside bar). This behavior often indicates price compression and potential breakout zones.
• Range Extension: Once a range is confirmed, the script projects upper and lower boundaries (using either a percentage-based multiplier or Fibonacci log extension), providing context for expected breakout zones.
• Mitigation Tracking: The script continuously monitors whether price breaks above or below the projected extensions, marking that range as mitigated — useful for confirming whether liquidity was absorbed.
• Sweep Detection: If price re-visits a mitigated zone and shows signs of a liquidity sweep (via wick + close behavior), the indicator triggers visual sweep labels and optional alerts.
🧠 Optional Visual Enhancements:
• Highlight range-forming candles with light blue background (toggle on/off)
• Midpoint dotted line for symmetry analysis
• Labels for “Range High” and “Range Low” for visual clarity
• Dynamic box drawing that adapts upon mitigation or continuation
⚙️ Customizable Features:
• Choose between Normal and Fibonacci-based detection modes
• Toggle visibility of range boxes, extension lines, and sweep markers
• Configure sweep alerts, mitigation window size, and visual transparency
⸻
🧪 Use Cases
• Identify consolidation zones before major price moves
• Confirm liquidity sweeps for entry/exit traps
• Visualize and test mitigation behavior of past zones
• Combine with Order Flow or Volume Profile tools to enhance context
⸻
⚠️ This is a fully original implementation that goes beyond classical inside-bar scanners by incorporating mitigation, extension projection, and liquidity sweeps — making it a powerful tool for intraday, swing, and even Smart Money-based trading setups.
3CRGANG - TRUE RANGEThis indicator helps traders identify key support and resistance levels using dynamic True Range calculations, while also providing a multi-timeframe trend overview. It plots True Range levels as horizontal lines, marks breakouts with arrows, and displays trend directions across various timeframes in a table, making it easier to align trades with broader market trends.
What It Does
The 3CRGANG - TRUE RANGE indicator calculates dynamic support and resistance levels based on the True Range concept, updating them as price breaks out of the range. It also analyzes trend direction across multiple timeframes (M1 to M) and presents the results in a table, using visual cues to indicate bullish, bearish, or neutral conditions.
Why It’s Useful
This script combines True Range analysis with multi-timeframe trend identification to provide a comprehensive tool for traders. The dynamic True Range levels help identify potential reversal or continuation zones, while the trend table allows traders to confirm the broader market direction before entering trades. This dual approach reduces the need for multiple indicators, streamlining analysis across different timeframes and market conditions.
How It Works
The script operates in the following steps:
True Range Calculation: The indicator calculates True Range levels (support and resistance) using price data (close, high, low) from a user-selected timeframe. It updates these levels when price breaks above the upper range (bullish breakout) or below the lower range (bearish breakout).
Line Plotting: Two styles are available:
"3CR": Plots one solid line after a breakout (green for bullish, red for bearish) and removes the opposing line.
"RANGE": Plots both upper and lower range lines as dotted lines (green for support, red for resistance) until a breakout occurs, then solidifies the breakout line.
Multi-Timeframe Trend Analysis: The script analyzes trend direction on multiple timeframes (M1, M5, M15, M30, H1, H4, D, W, M) by comparing the current close to the True Range levels on each timeframe. A trend is:
Trend Table: A table displays the trend direction for each timeframe, with color-coded backgrounds (green for bullish, red for bearish) and triangles to indicate the trend state.
Breakout Arrows: When price breaks above the upper range, a green ▲ arrow appears below the bar (bullish). When price breaks below the lower range, a red ▼ arrow appears above the bar (bearish).
Bullish (▲): Price is above the upper range.
Bearish (▼): Price is below the lower range.
Neutral (△/▽): Price is within the range, with the last trend indicated by an empty triangle (△ for last bullish, ▽ for last bearish).
Alerts: Breakout alerts can be set for each timeframe, with options to filter by trading sessions (e.g., New York, London) or enable all-day alerts.
Underlying Concepts
The script uses the True Range concept to define dynamic support and resistance levels, which adjust based on price action to reflect the most relevant price zones. The multi-timeframe trend analysis leverages the same True Range logic to determine trend direction, providing a consistent framework across all timeframes. The combination of breakout signals and trend confirmation helps traders align their strategies with both short-term price movements and longer-term market trends.
Use Case
Breakout Trading: Use the True Range lines and arrows to identify breakouts. For example, a green ▲ arrow below a bar with price breaking above the upper range suggests a potential long entry.
Trend Confirmation: Check the trend table to ensure the breakout aligns with the broader trend. For instance, a bullish breakout on the 1H chart is more reliable if the D and W timeframes also show bullish trends (▲).
Range Trading: When price is within the True Range (dotted lines in "RANGE" style), consider range-bound strategies, buying near support and selling near resistance, while monitoring the table for potential trend shifts.
Settings
Input Timeframe: Select the timeframe for True Range calculations (default: chart timeframe).
True Range Style: Choose between "3CR" (single line after breakout) or "RANGE" (both lines until breakout) (default: 3CR).
Change Symbol: Compare a different ticker if needed (default: chart symbol).
Color Theme: Select "LIGHT THEME" or "DARK THEME" for colors, or enable custom colors (default: LIGHT THEME).
Table Position: Set the trend table’s position (center, right, left) (default: right).
Multi Res Alerts Setup: Enable/disable breakout alerts for each timeframe (default: enabled for most timeframes).
Sessions Alerts: Filter alerts by trading sessions (e.g., New York, London) or enable all-day alerts (default: most sessions enabled).
Chart Notes
The chart displays the script’s output on XAUUSD (1H timeframe), showing:
Candlesticks representing price action.
True Range lines (green for support, red for resistance) in "3CR" style, with solid lines after breakouts and dotted lines during range-bound periods.
Arrows (green ▲ below bars for bullish breakouts, red ▼ above bars for bearish breakouts) indicating range breakouts.
A trend table in the top-right corner labeled "TREND EA," showing trend directions across timeframes (M1 to M) with triangles (▲/▼ for active trends, △/▽ for last trend) and color-coded backgrounds (green for bullish, red for bearish).
Notes
The script uses the chart’s ticker by default but allows comparison with another symbol if enabled.
Trend data for higher timeframes (e.g., M) may not display if the chart’s history is insufficient.
Alerts are triggered only during selected trading sessions unless "ALL DAY ALERTS" is enabled.
Disclaimer
This indicator is a tool for analyzing market trends and does not guarantee trading success. Trading involves risk, and past performance is not indicative of future results. Always use proper risk management.
[itradesize] ICT Opening range
This indicator automatically annotates the opening ranges of the AM and PM sessions. It should be used on the 1-minute timeframe , although you can check and build a further models when using a 2-3-4 or even 5-minute timeframe. You can customize this under the settings tab.
Additionally, it includes features such as standard deviations and the initial fair value gap presented. Everything is based on what ICT said in his algorithmic timing video.
The algorithm will continue to adjust prices higher or lower until it reaches a predetermined target price. This process will occur within specific time frames: the last 10 minutes before the hour and the first 10 minutes after a new hour begins.
For the AM session opening range, this is from 9:30 to 10:00 , and for the PM session, it's from 13:30 to 14:00 . Defining these ranges allows us to identify the first presented fair value gaps there, as the algorithm is designed to leave these signatures for smart money. This process of time-based delivery precision repeats every day. You can build a whole New York model on this.
It's important to journal and backtest your results results. If the market breaks the opening range on either side and there is evident liquidity, it is highly likely that it will pursue that liquidity.
However, before doing so, the market should retrace back to the first fair value gap if it hasn’t already occurred or back to the 0.75 or 0.5 level of the range at maximum.
When does this happen? Typically, when a macro event occurs— for example, during the lunch macro from 11:30 to 12:00 . In most cases, you can expect a retracement during lunch macro. If the market retraces beyond these levels, there is a higher probability that the expected scenario will not play out.
The algorithm primarily refers to the 30-minute opening range each time. The standard deviation levels can be used to establish algorithmic delivery targets and anticipate another run after the PM session opening range has occurred. The AM session often helps determine the likely direction of movement after the PM session range concludes.
The PM macro runs from 15:15 to 15:45 . At this time, the market will typically operate within the narrative that is currently underway.
Open Range Candle [TradeWithRon]This Open Range Break indicator is a tool designed to help traders identify and visualize key price levels using the Opening Range Breakout (ORB) strategy. This indicator dynamically plots critical levels such as the high, low, and middle of a predefined range, along with Fibonacci retracement levels for further analysis. It also features several customization options to fit various trading styles.
Key Features:
Session Setup: Allows the user to set the time offset in GMT - or + to adjust the ORB session to their local time zone.
The default ORB session is set at 9:45 AM but can be adjusted based on user preferences.
Warning: Only supports 5-minute and 15-minute timeframes.
Visual Customization:
Line Styles: Users can choose from Solid, Dotted, or Dashed lines to represent key price levels.
Color Adjustments: Customizable colors for the high, middle, and low levels of the range, as well as Fibonacci levels and vertical lines.
Labeling Options: The labels can be customized in terms of size and color, helping to keep the chart clean and clear.
Fibonacci Retracement Levels: Fibonacci retracement levels are automatically drawn between the high and low of the range. Users can toggle these on or off and customize the offset to suit different trading instruments.
Time-Based Visuals: A vertical line is drawn at the start of the ORB session, providing a clear visual marker of where the breakout starts. This is useful for pinpointing key trade setups.
The indicator supports both 5-minute and 15-minute timeframes.
EMA Integration: The user can enable an Exponential Moving Average (EMA) on any chosen timeframe with adjustable parameters such as the length and color, providing additional trend context.
Dynamic Labeling: The indicator labels the high, middle, and low points of the ORB with custom text. These labels are updated in real-time as new data becomes available.
Limit on Lines and Labels: The indicator allows for a limit on the number of lines and labels drawn to maintain a clean chart, preventing unnecessary clutter as more ORB levels are plotted.
Daily Bias Information: The indicator assesses the daily trend bias (bullish or bearish) based on the relationship between the open and close prices for the last three daily candles, providing context for the current trading session.
Countdown Timer: The remaining time until the end of the current session is displayed in a countdown format, which helps traders to time their entries and exits more precisely.
How To Use:,
- Set the Timeframe to 15 minutes.
- Adjust the Time Zone Offset if needed, based on your local time zone.
- Enable the Show ORB feature for the first 15-minute candle to be drawn as the opening range. - The indicator will automatically mark the high, middle, and low points of the range.
Identify Breakout Points:
Bullish Breakout: If the price breaks above the high of the 15-minute opening range, this indicates a potential bullish breakout. The indicator will plot a vertical line marking the breakout point for further confirmation.
Bearish Breakout: If the price breaks below the low of the 15-minute opening range, this signals a potential bearish breakout. Again, the indicator will plot the breakout point with a vertical line for easy identification.
🔶 Disclaimer
Use with Caution: This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only and should not be considered as financial advice. Users should exercise caution and perform their own analysis before making trading decisions based on the indicator's signals.
Not Financial Advice: The information provided by this indicator does not constitute financial advice, and the creator (Tradewithron) shall not be held responsible for any trading losses incurred as a result of using this indicator.
Backtesting Recommended: Traders are encouraged to backtest the indicator thoroughly on historical data before using it in live trading to assess its performance and suitability for their trading strategies.
Risk Management: Trading involves inherent risks, and users should implement proper risk management strategies, including but not limited to stop-loss orders and position sizing, to mitigate potential losses.
No Guarantees: The accuracy and reliability of the indicator's signals cannot be guaranteed, as they are based on historical price data and past performance may not be indicative of future
Average Daily Range ProjectionsCreates a trailing high and low projection based on the Average Daily Range.
Track the Session High and Low to determine the Daily Range.
Average the Daily Range by a fixed Period to create an Average Daily Range .
Track the Prior Daily Range .
Track the Current Daily Range .
Track the % of Range completion relative to the CDR & ADR(P).
From the Session Low, project an Average Daily Range High by adding the ADR.
From the Session High, project an Average Daily Range Low by subtracting the ADR.
When %R reaches 100% or greater, the ADR HI & LO will lock, showing the range break out or break down. As the Session High and Low create the Daily Range, observe the reaction of price as it reaches the limit of the expected daily range.
On strongly trending days, CDR is likely greater than PDR and ADR(P). Price can break away.
On ranging days, %R may fail to reach 100% and CDR may be lesser than PDR and ADR(P). Price can bounce around within the bounds of ADR HI & LO.
Morning RangeOverview
The Morning Range Indicator highlights the high and low of the market session from 6 AM to 10AM, providing key levels for potential breakout trades. The box dynamically updates in real-time, extending until 4 PM, and adjusts color based on price action.
This tool is ideal for traders looking to identify breakout opportunities and visualize key intraday price ranges.
How It Works
Session High & Low (6 AM - 10 AM)
The indicator tracks the highest high and lowest low within this time window.
Once 10 AM passes, the high and low are locked in and will not change.
Box Extends Until 4 PM
The session box remains visible throughout the trading day.
It provides a visual reference for potential breakout zones.
Dynamic Box Coloring
Gray (Neutral): Neither high nor low is broken.
Green: Only the high is broken before 4 PM.
Red: Only the low is broken before 4 PM.
Yellow: Both high and low are broken before 4 PM.
Live Updating Box
The box appears as soon as the session begins at 6 AM.
It dynamically updates the high and low until 10 AM.
Alerts for Breakouts
This indicator includes built-in alert conditions, so you can set up TradingView alerts without modifying the script.
Morning Range High Broken → Triggers when price breaks above the morning high.
Morning Range Low Broken → Triggers when price breaks below the morning low.
To set alerts:
Click the Alerts (⏰) icon in TradingView.
Select Condition → "Morning Range High Broken" or "Morning Range Low Broken".
Choose your preferred notification method (popup, email, webhook, etc.).
Click Create to activate the alert.
Who This Is For
✔ Intraday & Scalp Traders – Identify key breakout levels for short-term trades.
✔ Futures & Forex Traders – Works great for markets like NQ, ES, Gold, and FX pairs.
✔ Breakout & Reversal Traders – Use the high/low boundaries as support & resistance levels.
Customization
This indicator automatically updates every day and requires no manual input.
You can change alert settings via TradingView’s built-in alert system.
How to Use This Indicator
Watch for breakouts above/below the morning range as potential trade opportunities.
Combine with volume, momentum indicators, or footprint charts for confirmation.
Use the box color to visually assess whether price action is bullish (green), bearish (red), or ranging (gray).
Balance Price Range (BPR) IndicatorOverview
The BPR with Directional Momentum-Filtered Breakouts indicator is designed to identify Balanced Price Ranges (BPR) and d etect high-probability breakouts and breakdowns with directional momentum confirmation . By leveraging historical BPR structures, EMA-based momentum filtering , and a trade cooldown mechanism , this script provides a structured approach to identifying potential trading opportunities while reducing false signals.
This invite-only indicator is ideal for traders who seek precise breakout confirmation, reduced noise, and trend-following logic while maintaining flexibility through adjustable parameters.
How It Works
The script follows a multi-step breakout detection process by integrating multiple key technical components:
1. Balanced Price Range (BPR) Detection:
• A Balanced Candle is identified when the price remains within a specific percentage of its range midpoint.
• These BPR zones represent areas of equilibrium , where a breakout or breakdown is likely to occur.
• The script historically tracks BPR levels across the entire chart to monitor price action around key areas.
2. Momentum-Filtered Breakout & Breakdown Logic:
• Bullish Breakout: Occurs when the price breaks above the historical BPR high with bullish momentum.
• Bearish Breakdown: Occurs when the price breaks below the historical BPR low with bearish momentum.
• Momentum Confirmation: Each breakout requires a strong directional move, measured against the Exponential Moving Average (EMA) .
• Only confirmed breakouts are marked, reducing the likelihood of false signals in choppy markets.
3. Candle-Based Background Visualization:
• Grey Background: Represents a Balanced Price Range (BPR), indicating potential breakout zones.
• Green Background: Indicates a Bullish Breakout when the price successfully breaks and holds above the BPR high.
• Red Background: Indicates a Bearish Breakdown when the price drops below the BPR low.
4. Trade Cooldown Mechanism:
• Prevents consecutive signals from triggering too frequently.
• Default cooldown period: 5 bars (adjustable).
• Ensures that trades are not clustered, improving signal quality.
5. EMA for Trend Direction & Confirmation:
• A 20-period EMA (default, adjustable) is used to confirm trade direction.
• Breakouts above the EMA align with uptrend continuation.
• Breakdowns below the EMA align with downtrend momentum.
Key Features
✔️ Historical BPR Detection – Tracks past BPR levels across the entire chart for structured breakout zones.
✔️ Momentum-Based Breakouts – Ensures breakouts are confirmed by directional price movement before generating signals.
✔️ Candle-Based Background Logic – Subtle candle highlights rather than full background fills, for better chart clarity.
✔️ Trade Cooldown Period – Prevents consecutive buy/sell signals within a defined period, improving signal efficiency.
✔️ Dynamic EMA Confirmation – Ensures trades align with the overall trend, reducing counter-trend trades.
✔️ Customizable Inputs – Adjust breakout thresholds, EMA length, and cooldown periods as per trading style.
✔️ Works Across Multiple Timeframes – Can be applied to intraday, swing, and positional trading strategies.
How to Use
1. Look for Balanced Price Ranges ( BPR )
• These zones highlight equilibrium areas where price is likely to break out.
• Grey-shaded candles indicate potential breakout zones.
2. Monitor for Bullish or Bearish Breakouts
• A green candle background signals a bullish breakout above BPR.
• A red candle background signals a bearish breakdown below BPR.
• The EMA filter helps confirm whether the breakout aligns with the prevailing trend.
3. Follow the Cooldown Logic
• After a breakout signal, wait for the cooldown period before another trade is allowed.
• This helps filter out noisy price action and prevents excessive trading.
4. Use Alongside Other Indicators
• Works well with volume analysis, support/resistance levels, and price action strategies.
• Can be combined with other momentum indicators for further trade confirmation.
Why This Combination?
Unlike generic breakout indicators, this script uniquely combines:
• BPR historical structures for defining potential breakout zones.
• Momentum-based breakout filtering using EMA confirmation.
• Trade cooldown logic to avoid excessive trading signals.
• Subtle candle-based highlights instead of cluttered full-background fills.
This structured approach makes the indicator more robust, adaptive, and reliable in different market conditions.
Why It’s Worth Using?
🔹 Avoid False Breakouts: Built-in momentum confirmation prevents weak or fake breakouts.
🔹 Clean Visualization: No excessive overlays—just precise, meaningful background coloring for breakouts.
🔹 Works in Any Market: Use on stocks, crypto, forex, indices, and commodities across different timeframes.
🔹 User-Friendly & Customizable: Fine-tune parameters to match individual trading styles.
⚠️ Note: This is an Invite-Only script. Access is granted to selected users.
✅ If you find it useful, consider incorporating it into your trend-following & breakout trading strategies.
🚀 Optimize your trading with structured breakout detection! 🚀
Unmitigated 50% of the RangeThis indicator is designed to display unmitigated 50% zones of price ranges within two swing (High and Low) points. The 50% level serves as a probable target for retracements before the price resumes its movement in the direction of the most recent swing. The underlying theory is that Price Action tends to correct unbalanced price zones by returning to 50% of the range.
The indicator identifies highs and lows utilizing the “Left Swing Sensitivity” setting, which detects the high/low points within the specified number of bars. It then ensures that the zone meets a minimum size requirement, configured via the “Minimum Leg Size” setting, to filter out smaller legs/zones that would not provide sufficient profit and loss opportunities for entries at 50% and take profit at the most recent swing point.
To prevent duplication of zones when the price is gradually moving up, an "Auto Adjust Levels" setting is available. Enabled by default, this feature automatically cleans up smaller zones, retaining only the primary zone between the most recent swing point and the outer swing.
Additionally, the indicator automatically removes mitigated zones where the price has returned to the 50% level, thus maintaining clean charts.
There are several visualization settings available, offering comprehensive control over what is displayed on the charts:
Control the color and style of the lines representing the 1, 0, and 50% levels.
Choose whether to display labels and if they should show the price at the rendered levels.
Optionally extend the lines/labels to the right for each level.
Market Open Range Breakaway v1.2Script Name: Market Open Range Breakaway 1.2
This TradingView script, "Market Open Range Breakaway," highlights the market's opening range for a user-selected day of the week. It calculates the high and low prices during a specified period after the market opens, plots these levels, and tracks the opening price. The script dynamically adjusts for time zones and only displays data during market hours on the chosen day, with optional background shading for the defined range period.
Purpose: Identifies and highlights the market's opening range for a selected day of the week.
Features: Calculates and plots the high, low, and open price during the market's opening range.
Configurable range duration (e.g., 15, 30, or 60 minutes).
Automatically adjusts for different time zones.
Displays levels only during market hours on the target day.
Optional background shading for the opening range.
Inputs: Target day of the week.
Opening range duration.
Use Case: Ideal for traders looking to analyze breakout levels or price movements around the opening range.
Multi-Timeframe RangeThe Multi-Timeframe Range Indicator is designed for traders looking to monitor key price levels across various timeframes (Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Quarterly, and Yearly) directly on their charts. This indicator draws boxes and mid-lines for each timeframe’s high, low, and midpoint, enabling users to visualize price ranges and assess potential areas of support and resistance more effectively.
Features:
Dynamic Range Boxes: Displays the high, low, and midpoint levels for each specified timeframe, with customizable colors for easy differentiation.
Visual Cues for Monday’s Levels: Highlights Monday’s high, low, and midpoint levels each week to support intraday trading setups and weekly trend analysis.
Multi-Timeframe Flexibility: Easily toggle between timeframes to view ranges from daily to yearly, making this indicator suitable for both short-term and long-term traders.
Ideal Use Cases:
Identify key support and resistance zones based on multiple timeframes.
Assess weekly and monthly trends using the Monday range levels.
Gain insights into market structure across various timeframes.
Swing Data - Optimized SK60
v. 1.83
indicator adjust to time frame.
This Pine Script code generates a trading indicator that calculates and displays various data points on a stock, including Average Daily Range (ADR%), Market Cap, Current Volume, Free Cash Flow (FCF) Yield %, Float %, whether moving averages (MA) are inline, and the moving averages of certain indexes like the Russell 2000, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500. Here’s a breakdown of the script and how to use it.
Key Concepts and Functionality
Indicator Definition: The script begins by defining the indicator with a title (Swing Data - Optimized ADR%...) and short title (Optimized Swing Data), which will appear on the chart. The overlay=true command ensures that the indicator is drawn on the main price chart rather than in a separate pane.
Sector and Ticker:
s = syminfo.tickerid: This stores the ticker ID of the stock being analyzed.
sector = syminfo.sector: This retrieves the sector to which the stock belongs. If the sector information is unavailable, it assigns the value "N/A".
Dynamic Inputs: Several input parameters allow you to customize the indicator:
adrp_len: Defines the length for ADR% calculation.
len: Defines the moving average length for volume.
tbl_size, bg_col, and txt_col: Control the table's appearance, including the size of the text, background color, and text color.
posTable: Allows positioning of the table on the chart. Options include top-left, top-right, bottom-left, and bottom-right.
show_empty_row: Adds an empty row above the displayed values if set to true.
Volume Unit Handling (f_vol_unit): This function converts volume into appropriate units, like thousands (K), millions (M), or billions (B), to make volume easier to read. It’s applied to both the current volume and the average daily volume.
Moving Averages for Indexes (f_ma_indexes): This function calculates the 10-day, 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day simple moving averages (SMAs) for an index (such as Russell 2000 or Nasdaq 100). It also checks whether the MAs are inline, meaning if shorter MAs are above longer MAs, which is usually a bullish sign. It returns the result as "YES" or "NO" and assigns a color (green for yes, red for no).
Volume and Price Data: The script fetches several important data points:
vol_display: Current volume in human-readable units.
avgDaVol: Average daily volume.
adrp: Average Daily Range (ADR%) over a specified length.
fcf_yield_percent: Free Cash Flow Yield percentage.
ADR Calculation: The ADR% is calculated using the formula 100 * (ta.sma(high / low, adrp_len) - 1) and is fetched for the daily timeframe.
FCF Yield Color Logic: The Free Cash Flow yield is classified into three categories:
Green: Undervalued if FCF yield is over 5%.
Yellow: Neutral between 2-5%.
Red: Overvalued if below 2%.
MA's Inline Check for the Stock: The script checks if the stock's 10-day, 20-day, 50-day, and 200-day moving averages are inline (i.e., in a bullish alignment where shorter MAs are higher than longer MAs).
Float % Calculation: The float percentage is calculated as the ratio of float shares outstanding (FSO) to total shares outstanding (TSO). The color is set based on its breakout potential:
Red: Below 20% (manipulation risk).
Green: 20-50% (ideal breakout range).
Yellow: Above 50%.
Price Change %: The script calculates the percentage change in price between the current and previous close.
Volume Color Logic: The color of the "Current Volume" is based on whether it indicates buying or selling pressure:
Green: Volume is higher than average, and the price increased more than ADR%.
Red: Volume is higher than average, and the price decreased more than ADR%.
Yellow: Default color if neither condition is met.
Market Cap: The market cap is calculated by multiplying the total shares outstanding (TSO) by the current close price, and it’s displayed in a human-readable unit (K, M, or B).
Display Table:
A table is created to display all the calculated data in an organized manner. It includes fields for Market Cap, Avg Volume, ADR%, Current Volume, FCF Yield %, Float %, MA's Inline status, and Sector. Additionally, it shows the inline status for the Russell 2000, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500.
How to Use:
Customization: Users can customize the inputs, including the length of ADR% and volume moving averages, and adjust the table size, text color, and position.
Visualization: The indicator provides a comprehensive table on the chart showing key data points for technical analysis, including whether moving averages are inline for both the stock and major indexes.
This indicator is particularly useful for swing traders or technical analysts who want a clear overview of a stock’s volume, volatility (via ADR%), and the alignment of moving averages, combined with fundamental metrics like market cap and free cash flow yield.
ICT Balance Price Range [UAlgo]The "ICT Balance Price Range " indicator identifies and visualizes potential balance price ranges (BPRs) on a price chart. These ranges are indicative of periods where the market exhibits balance between bullish and bearish forces, often preceding significant price movements.
🔶 What is Balanced Price Range (BPR) ?
Balanced Price Range is a concept based on Fair Value Gap. Balanced price range (BPR) is the area on price chart where two opposite fair value gaps overlap.
When price approaches the Balanced Price Range (BPR), we assume that the price will react quickly and strongly here. This is because its the combination of two fair value gaps and being a good point of interest for smart money traders.
🔶 Key Features:
Bars to Consider: Determines the number of bars to evaluate for BPR conditions.
Threshold for BPR: Sets the minimum range required for a valid BPR to be identified.
Remove Old BPR: Option to automatically remove invalidated BPRs from the chart.
Bearish/Bullish Box Color: Customizable colors for visual representation of bearish and bullish BPRs.
🔶 Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only.
It should not be considered as financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any financial instrument.
The use of this indicator involves inherent risks, and users should employ their own judgment and conduct their own research before making any trading decisions. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
🔷 Related Scripts
Fair Value Gaps (FVG)






















