Search Engine Optimization Overview
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TradingView – Track All Markets
Where the world charts, chats and trades markets. We're a supercharged super-charting platform and social network for traders and investors. Free to sign up.
Seo
Title
The title tag is perfect.
TradingView – Track All Markets
Meta description
The meta description tag is good.
Where the world charts, chats and trades markets. We're a supercharged super-charting platform and social network for traders and investors. Free to sign up.
Headings
The headings are properly set.
  1. Look first / Then leap.Always an informed investment decision. First you prepare, then you go for it.
  1. Market summary
  2. Trade ideas
  3. Snaps
  4. News flow
  5. Sparks
  6. Community favorites right now
  7. US Stocks
  8. Highest volume
  9. Unusual volume
  10. Gainers
  11. Losers
  12. Crypto
  13. Market cap ranking
  14. DeFi by market cap
  15. Community
  16. Pine scripts
  17. Educational ideas
  18. Video ideas
  19. Streams
  20. Brokers
  21. Love in every #TradingView
  22. Ready to start?
Content keywords
The content has relevant keywords.
tradingviewtrackallmarkets
Image keywords
There are 233 images with missing alt attributes.
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SEO friendly URL
The URL is SEO friendly.
https://www.tradingview.com/
404 page
The website has 404 error pages.
https://www.tradingview.com/404-56bd733bc791a9e6ca01412addbe536a
Robots.txt
The webpage can be accessed by search engines.
Noindex
The webpage does not have a noindex tag set.
In-page links
The webpage contains more than 150 links.
  1. https://www.tradingview.com/
  2. Get started
  3. BTCUSD
  4. TSLA
  5. AAPL
  6. Explore features
  7. Market summary
  8. S&P 500
  9. Nasdaq 100
  10. Bitcoin Index
  11. U.S. Dollar Index
  12. Dow 30
  13. Russell 2000
  14. Apple
  15. Advanced Micro Devices Inc
  16. Amazon Com Inc
  17. Tesla, Inc
  18. Netflix, Inc
  19. Meta Platforms, Inc
  20. Crypto Market Cap
  21. Bitcoin
  22. Ethereum
  23. Solana
  24. Uniswap
  25. Luna / U.S. Dollar
  26. EUR/USD
  27. GBP/USD
  28. USD/JPY
  29. AUD/USD
  30. USD/CAD
  31. USD/CHF
  32. Gold
  33. Silver
  34. Crude Oil
  35. Natural Gas
  36. Corn
  37. Bitcoin
  38. US 10Y
  39. Euro 10Y
  40. Germany 10Y
  41. Japan 10Y Yield
  42. UK 10Y
  43. India 10Y
  44. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/?symbol=CME_MINI%3AES1!
  45. Trade ideas
  46. Too fast, too furious for Natural Gas?
  47. After a sharp drop in August, Natural Gas futures is now sitting close to the long-term uptrend support which has marked key reversal points since June 2020. Our question is whether prices have fallen too fast and too soon? We question “too furious” when we look at the RSI which currently points to oversold levels. Hitting a low close to 24, the last time RSI reached such an oversold level, in February 2017, prices rallied close to 35% over the next 2 months. We also note the formation of RSI divergence now, like the one we observed during the 2017 period. If history is any guide, from a technical perspective we can expect some upside for Natural Gas in the coming 2 months. We question “too fast” as we are at the dawn of the seasonality trade. With demand for Natural gas used for heating generally rising as winter months are approaching, we can reflect on the seasonality behavior of Natural Gas prices over the past winters. A simple strategy of buying in the middle of October and waiting for the winter months gives a 70% win-rate when we look back at the past 10 years. Could we expect the same this winter? On top of these, we think there are a few structural factors that might boost natural gas demand in the US over a longer-term horizon. 1) The recent announcement by the Biden administration that ruled out a ban or curbs on natural gas exports this winter, and Europe’s struggle with the energy crisis spell good news for Natural Gas’s demand. 2) Current Natural gas storage levels are also below the 5-year average as reported by the US EIA . 3) A move away from coal as agreed in the COP26 means alternative energy sources are bound to replace coal. With many coal-powered plants being refurbished to work with natural gas, we see structural demand rising as more of these plants come online. Natural gas’s current technical levels point oversold to us, with the seasonality trade potentially on the cards and an overall supportive macro backdrop, we lean bullish on Natural gas. As Natural Gas is considered a highly volatile contract, we can use the Average True Range (ATR) to set our stops. In this case, we follow the rule of thumb to multiply the ART by 2, which sets our stop at roughly 4.550. Entry at 5.200, stop at 4.550. Target at 6.400. The charts above were generated using CME’s Real-Time data available on TradingView. Inspirante Trading Solutions is subscribed to both TradingView Premium and CME Real-time Market Data which allows us to identify trading set-ups in real-time and express our market opinions. If you have futures in your trading portfolio, you can check out on CME Group data plans available that suit your trading needs www.tradingview.com Disclaimer: The contents in this Idea are intended for information purpose only and do not constitute investment recommendation or advice. Nor are they used to promote any specific products or services. They serve as an integral part of a case study to demonstrate fundamental concepts in risk management under given market scenarios.
  48. Editors' picks
  49. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/NYMEX-NG1!/
  50. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/NG1!/hGmKQ9mR-Too-fast-too-furious-for-Natural-Gas/
  51. by inspirante
  52. 6
  53. Gold is still an inflationary hedge asset, why?
  54. My answer is definitely a Yes! But why many say no. It is because they are looking at Gold from a very microscopic view; into its day-to-day to week-to-week movement. But if we analyse Gold from a macro perspective, we will able to appreciate Gold better, that it is still an inflationary hedge asset. And from today’s case study, we will also learn why it is time to get into Gold again at around this price. Content: • Gold is still an inflationary hedge asset, why? • When to enter into the Gold market again? For investor, you can invest into the physical Gold, Gold ETFs, funds and even those mining stocks that pay dividend. For traders, I would like to trade into Futures. COMEX E-Mini Gold Qo1! 0.25 per troy ounce = $12.50 1.00 = $50 1650 to 1750 = 100 x $50 = US$5,000 COMEX Micro Gold MGC1! COMEX Regular Gold GC1! Disclaimer: • What presented here is not a recommendation, please consult your licensed broker. • Our mission is to create lateral thinking skills for every investor and trader, knowing when to take a calculated risk with market uncertainty and a bolder risk when opportunity arises. Stay tuned for our next episode in this series, we will discuss more on the insight of inflation and rising interest rates. More importantly, how to use this knowledge, turning it to our advantage in these challenging times for all of us. CME Real-time Market Data help identify trading set-ups in real-time and express my market views. If you have futures in your trading portfolio, you can check out on CME Group data plans available that suit your trading needs www.tradingview.com
  55. Editors' picks
  56. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/COMEX-GC1!/
  57. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/GC1!/WtAvn78Q-Gold-is-still-an-inflationary-hedge-asset-why/
  58. by konhow
  59. 3
  60. 1INCH Road to the value area
  61. First of all, Wait for confirmed breakout on the asset. As long as the value area low on a local support zone holds, we are only thinking in long direction. Risk reward here is 3:1 which is a little bit riskier than usual. but the potential of this trade is increasing every time it breaks levels and gets away from value area low. For a potential swing failure keep your eyes on the breakdown of the value area low and keep eyes on the volume. After it get's back to the area it will be a really high potential of hitting targets
  62. Editors' picks
  63. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/1INCHUSDT/
  64. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/1INCHUSDT/LebFn3kd-1INCH-Road-to-the-value-area/
  65. by Dandady
  66. 11
  67. Long WTI & Short Brent as price differential tightens?
  68. Oil Brent continues to trade at a premium of more than $8 per barrel to WTI oil , with the price difference between the two oil benchmarks increasing significantly and well above its historical average this year. One of the primary drivers of the widening Brent/WTI price spread has been a significant increase in the availability of North American crude, which has created more downward price pressure on the WTI market. The US government has injected180 million barrels of crude into the market through scheduled Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) releases as of October 18, 2022, to help resolve the market supply disruption created by Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine and to help cut energy costs. U.S. SPR releases are now complete, and crude oil reserves in the United States are at their lowest point since 1983, according to the latest estimates from EIA. The possibility that the Democrats would suffer a loss in the midterm elections in two weeks might rule out the possibility of more SPR releases being made at a later stage. In this scenario, the forces that pushed the price of WTI below that of Brent would diminish significantly. As a result, the price spread between the two oil benchmarks may return to tighter levels. Going long on WTI and short on Brent is one way to reflect the idea of closing this oil price gap. Throughout 2021, the difference between WTI and Brent was on average about -$2/bbl and ranged from -$4.5/bbl to parity levels. A mean reversion to the period prior to US SPR releases would suggest an increase from current prices of about $6.5/bbl. If, on the other side, the spread widens again and breaks through the -$10/bbl threshold, the strategy will be proven incorrect.
  69. Editors' picks
  70. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/NYMEX-CL1!/
  71. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/CL1!/hgNX3fqw-Long-WTI-Short-Brent-as-price-differential-tightens/
  72. by Capitalcom
  73. 7
  74. What's the best trading advice you've ever heard?
  75. Hey everyone! 👋 Last year, we asked the community to share some of the best trading advice they’ve ever heard, and we got a ton of great (and hilarious) responses . This week, with a slow and choppy market across almost all asset classes and the full benefit of hindsight over the last year, we thought it would be fun to revisit this question now that most assets are in a bear market. So: What IS the best trading advice you've ever heard? It can be an individual investment idea, or broader trading "principles”. No matter what it is, we’d love to hear it. The best two replies (as decided by the TradingView team) get a TradingView mug. Contest ends Wednesday at noon EST when we will announce the winners. Have a great week! -Team TradingView ❤️❤️ We also asked you to share some of the WORST trading advice you've ever heard, and that prompted lots of great replies as well. Be sure to check those out 😂
  76. Editors' picks
  77. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/NASDAQ-PYPL/
  78. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/PYPL/gtwPvGRi-What-s-the-best-trading-advice-you-ve-ever-heard/
  79. by TradingView
  80. 289
  81. Land of Rising Sun and Falling Yen
  82. CME: Micro USD/JPN Futures ( CME_MINI:M6J1! ) On September 21st, the Fed raised interest rate for the fifth time to 3.00-3.25%. The very next day, Bank of Japan decided to keep the country’s short-term interest rate at -0.10%. Interest rate spread between the two countries now exceeds 3%. With more rate hikes expected from the Fed while Japan is determined to stay accommodative, the rate spread could be over 400 basis points by year end. This is show time for carry trade, a popular and time-honored forex strategy. What is Carry Trade ? A currency carry trade is a strategy that involves borrowing from a low yielding currency to fund the purchase of a currency that provides higher interest income. This strategy attempts to capture the rate spread, which can be substantial with the use of leverage. Carry trade is one of the most popular trading strategies in the forex market. In essence, it is as simple as "buy low, sell high”. Popular carry trades involve buying currency pairs such as AUD/JPY and NZD/JPY, since they have decent rate spreads over time. Profit of carry trade largely comes from its ability to earn interest. Income is accrued every day for holding long carry positions. Below is a typical daily interest accrual formula: Daily Interest = * NV / 365 where: IR = interest rate NV= notional value Another source of profit results from the exchange rate changes from the time a trade is initiated to the time it is closed, which could be illustrated by the following example: DIY Guide for A Synthetic Carry Trade Assumptions: 1. You have built up $100,000 in home equity from your $500,000 house 2. Foreign currencies can be bought and sold with your bank, without restrictions 3. Home equity loan costs 7.2% annually 4. Borrowing rate for Japanese Yen is 2.2% Home equity loan rate rose sharply due to the Fed rate hikes. However, since your bank acquires cheap Yen from Japan, they could charge 2.2% and still make money. When you pledge your home as collateral, your yen loan is low risk from the bank’s perspective. Trade Initiation: • At USD/JPY rate of 115 (using rate at the end of last year), you borrow 11,500,000 yen from the bank for 1 year, and immediately exchange it into USD 100,000. • You buy a 1-year Jumbo CD (certificate of deposit) from the bank, which yields 4.2% with a minimum purchase of $100,000. Trade Closing: • One year later, unwind the trade. • Turn your CD in and get $104,200 from the bank. • You exchange Dollar back to Yen at 150 (recent rate) and get 15,630,000. After paying back 11,500,000 in principal and 253,000 in interest, you net 3,877,000 yen. • One-year return is 33.7%. Just 2% comes from rate spread (4.2%-2.2%). The rest derives from yen depreciation, which allows you to pay back the loan with fewer dollars. In this example, we do not use leverage as home equity is in place to fully guarantee the loan. By borrowing with yen, we effectively lower the home equity loan rate from 7.2% to 2.2%. Instead of putting it in CD, you could find more productive use of this low-cost capital, such as paying down a 20% credit card debt. Usually, interest rate spread is the main income source for carry trades with exchange rate gain as a bonus. With yen dropping to 32-year low, the latter becomes very prominent this year. Borrowing yen from the bank is equivalent to shorting the yen futures. Hedging the Carry Trade Most traders work with a forex broker to take on carry trades. Their trades are usually unhedged. Large leverage is used to amplify the returns from small interest rate spreads. In today’s volatile markets, naked carry trades could be very risky. Trades using 50- and 100-time leverage could easily blow up if exchange rate moves against you. In my opinion, sizable USD/JPY interest rate spread could stay for a considerable period of time, at least throughout 2023. However, Yen may have already bottomed at 150. Bank of Japan has intervened the market by emergency bond buying. The Fed could pause or slow future rate hikes and examine the impacts from previous ones. It is a good time to do USD/JPY carry trades. However, it would be wise to protect your positions in the event of a yen rally. Yen lost some 25% against the dollar so far this year. If it rebounds just 5%, it could wipe out all the returns from interest rate spread. CME Micro USD/JPY futures contract (M6J) has a notional value of $10,000. At settlement price of 144.71 last Friday, each December contract is worth 1,447,100 yen. Initial margin is 45,000 yen per lot, or approximately $311. If you expect yen to appreciate, consider shorting the futures. As it is quoted yen per dollar, rising yen will result in each dollar exchanging for fewer of it. Happy trading. *Trade ideas cited above are for illustration only, as an integral part of a case study to demonstrate the fundamental concepts in risk management under the market scenarios being discussed. They shall not be construed as investment recommendations or advice. Nor are they used to promote any specific products, or services. CME Real-time Market Data help identify trade set-ups and express my market views. If you have futures in your trading portfolio, check out on CME Group data plans in TradingView that suit your trading needs www.tradingview.com
  83. Editors' picks
  84. M
  85. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/M6J1!/3b8lCM14-Land-of-Rising-Sun-and-Falling-Yen/
  86. by JimHuangChicago
  87. 6
  88. Bitcoin: Trendlines to find structure in the chaos
  89. First off, I'll always look at horizontal levels over trendlines. Trendlines can be subjective, have a high failure rate when used in real-time trading tactics, and easily adjusted based on markets morphing over time. Another issue is the overhead supply not being visible using trendlines, a big reason why steep trendlines are prone to failures/false breakouts even when price clears those trendlines (you want a low degree slope in consolidation periods - this means volatility is compressed). Where I do like using them is when I see many touchpoints that help visualize structure on a longer term chaotic consolidation - exactly what we're seeing with Bitcoin from Jan 2021 - present. The chart above shows the closest trendlines to price where we're seeing resistance and support. Price is now at the upper trendline and having difficulty getting above it. The more that wedge compresses, the closer we are to a big move in either direction. Falling wedges indicate a loss of downside momentum, which could be a short term bullish reversal development. In this case, BTC may need more time as it's grinding against the upper boundary with plenty of downside room to make another test of the lower trendline. Just to add a few more trendlines for structure... Large descending wedge: Inside Channel: Outside channel: The bottom horizontal support has been a key demand level which hasn't let price breakdown. That often means price needs to rally into a higher level (a potential false breakout zone) to get the energy to break below that key level. No idea if we'll see that here as the market looks heavy at the time of writing, but that could change in one session. Horizontal levels: As shown in my last post on BTC, from a cycle and timing perspective, Bitcoin is at or near a zone where you *could* expect a significant low to form. 4 year cycle low Some thoughts I have about whether or not this cycle low will work this time: Bitcoin has never traded in the liquidity dry-up we're seeing today/nor a recession, inflation, etc... same thoughts as everyone else. What if major indices go nowhere for the next 5+ years? Like everyone else I don't have a clue. Fundamentally, I think the long term secular uptrend remains intact. Technically, a lot of chop likely to continue even if there's a bottom in the next 1 - 6 months.
  90. Editors' picks
  91. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSDTPERP/
  92. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSDTPERP/q3zgLjQc-Bitcoin-Trendlines-to-find-structure-in-the-chaos/
  93. by Lanmar
  94. 42
  95. NVDA: Placing the Rally in Context
  96. Primary Chart: NVDA's Primary Trend Since Its All-Time High November 22, 2021, with Anchored VWAPs SUMMARY: NVDA appears to have begun a countertrend rally within the context of a sharp downtrend. Other countertrend rallies have ranged from 28.9% to 40.17%. Don't be fooled by a show of strength that does not change the overall structure. Countertrend trading is lower probability, but can be lucrative if risk is managed with great discipline. The most conservative upside target (resistance) range for this rally is $128-$130. This would be reached, if at all, in the next week or two. If the $128-$130 level is reclaimed successfully, then the next higher target to consider is the $145-$150 range discussed below. Watch the green uptrend line off the YTD low on October 13, 2022 and the red VWAP anchored to the YTD low. If either is broken, all bets are off. NVDA has rallied about 15.58% off its YTD lows on October 13, 2022. The lows have not been undercut now for a little over a week. Broader equity indices have rallied as well, with the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 both gaining about 2.3% on Friday. NVDA rallied along side both these indices. 1. NVDA's rally could continue into the FOMC meeting on November 1-2, 2022. The FOMC is likely to increase interest rates by .75 percentage points at the November 2022 meeting. The CME's Fed watch tool, tracking federal-funds-rate futures products, shows the probability of a 75 bps hike at 88% for November. Have markets already discounted this? Probably. What is unknown is whether any change in the Fed's messaging will occur or will the Fed maintain its higher-for-longer hawkish stance to deal with sticky inflation. Fed officials have spoken in recent weeks expressing dissatisfaction with the current inflationary environment and its ramifications for price stability. 2. Pullbacks may likely respect the very short-term VWAP anchored to the YTD low (red VWAP anchored to October 13, 2022). Watch this VWAP for support. If the VWAP is violated, it will be important to determine if the violation is decisive (slicing through and showing no sign of reverting back to the level) or if the violation is minor and brief. 3. NVDA just closed above its 21-day EMA, which lies at 124.16. Today's close was 124.66. 4. Before any higher price targets can be taken seriously, NVDA must reclaim its 34-day EMA (currently just below $130) as well as a key Fibonacci level (teal .236 level at $128.10) (shown just below this paragraph). This is the most conservative target zone for a countertrend rally. Supplementary Chart: Fibonacci Levels 5. A more ambitious zone for a price target may be considered only if the 34-day EMA is recovered first. This secondary target zone comprises two technical levels: (a) the VWAP anchored to the August 4, 2022, high currently located at 143.08, and (b) the gap fill area (teal-blue rectangle) at $145 to $150. 6. It remains crucial to place any rally into context, even if the rally seems like a powerful rally that is unstoppable for a while, like some of the other bear rallies in this market. Massive bear rallies can trick market participants into thinking the lows may be in, and lure them with fear of missing out. Other countertrend rallies have ranged from 28.9% to 40.17%. Don't be fooled by a show of strength that does not change the overall structure. Countertrend trading is lower probability, but can be lucrative if risk is managed with great discipline. 7. The larger context is a downtrend at the degree of the primary trend. All major swing highs and lows over the past year have been lower highs and lower lows. The anchored VWAP at the all-time high (dark purple) remains well overhead. Price would have to rally and hold the $190-$200 level to show material structural change. All other rallies will constitute noise at the larger degree of trend. In other words, the downtrend channel should contain any rallies for the time being. If not, then it becomes appropriate to consider whether a larger-degree structural change is occurring that may lead to a major trend reversal. Please note that SquishTrade is "cautiously bullish" only for the next week. In the larger scheme, the outlook remains bearish until substantial evidence appears that structural trend change is occurring at the larger degrees of trend. This remains unlikely with interest rates breaking above a 40-year trendline as discussed in this post:
  97. Editors' picks
  98. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/NASDAQ-NVDA/
  99. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/NVDA/pparDtoI-NVDA-Placing-the-Rally-in-Context/
  100. by SquishTrade
  101. 24
  102. Finding the flow
  103. Nothing fancy to see here. Just finding the flow in NY and executing the trade without hesitation. It is tempting to trade all day, but I've found out that just trading NY will give me all the pips I need for the day with a lot less frustration. As you can see, the trade went a lot further than my 30 pip target and I am okay with that. Too many times I've let things run only to get nothing or stopped out for a loss when I've been up 30 pips. Some pairs I trade for 20 pips with this moving average setup, but overall 30 pips is my standard. My recommendation is for everyone reading this to learn about correlation. Since this is my first post (I think) I will talk more about correlation later with a charting example. A big reason I was able to sell GBPNZD so easily is, because I detected strength in the NZD group. I am also focusing on one primary setup no matter the pair I trade. I've done all the ICT stuff (for you ICT fans out there), but his stuff fails just as much as anything else I've tried. The best advice he gave was to trade early NY from say 8am-12pm NY time. The pairs that do the best have the best flow which means that Fibonacci 62.8% retracement yadda yadda yadda is unlikely to happen within the 8-12 window when there is high order flow. On a side note, this is more like an open journal for me. If anyone comes along and finds this useful then great. I've spent thousands of dollars on training programs from the likes of ICT and Urban Forex as well as thousands of man hours; however, none of them have the golden goose that lays the golden trades. I came to the realization that nothing is going to work until I find my own style. I've taken what I've learned, the useful stuff from, the trainings, discarded the rest and added my own understanding. I think each trader needs to define certain parameters that they can understand. What good is a concept if one doesn't fully understand how to use it? The central bank dealers range ICT teaches may work, but it seems overly complicated and hard to implement with my trading style as I look at and trade all the major pairs. As a disclaimer, I am still struggling to be consistency profitable. Well, this week I have made over 550 pips as I prepare to take on my next MFF challenge. I traded a small private account as I kept having 1 bad day on my MFF account and blowing up. All that was telling me is that I wasn't yet ready and further refinement needed to happen in order for my dreams of becoming wealthy can become reality. Anyway, I feel like I am getting a bit long winded here and if you have read this far I hope you are having a good day.
  104. Editors' picks
  105. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/GBPNZD/
  106. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/GBPNZD/nVc41dgy-Finding-the-flow/
  107. by Cryptocappster
  108. 21
  109. Is it the end of a 40-year equities market rally?
  110. This chart illustrates the ratio between equities markets by using SP:SPX and fixed-income markets by using TVC:US10Y . With the beginning of 2020, the equities markets lost the uptrend against the fixed-income markets. There can be period(s) of upward corrections but this trend change raises the question of a long term cyclical change. This means that the markets have entered into fixed-income positive return phase. This may also be the end of a 40-year cycle.
  111. Editors' picks
  112. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/SPX/
  113. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/SPX/axkGVKpw-Is-it-the-end-of-a-40-year-equities-market-rally/
  114. by leopisbig
  115. 48
  116. See all editors' picks ideas 
  117. Snaps
  118. The digital ad disease spreads
  119. A matter of principal vs profit
  120. The slowest growth in 5 years
  121. Taking back $20k
  122. Hoot if you like an earnings beat
  123. Axie unlocked
  124. Chinese stocks Xi new lows
  125. Every Doge has its day
  126. Dishi Rishi to the rescue?
  127. NEAR has Terra PTSD
  128. Picking up the pitchforks
  129. A hacker’s QuickSteal
  130. See all snaps 
  131. News flow
  132. Keep reading
  133. Keep reading
  134. Sparks
  135. NFT exposure stocks: Fungible gains
  136. Trucking stocks: Keep on truckin'
  137. Real estate stocks: The biggest REITs on the market
  138. MLB stocks: Moneyball
  139. Software stocks: US companies at our finger tips
  140. Japanese banking stocks
  141. Legacy stocks: Keeping it in the family
  142. Bermuda stocks: Can anyone say "tax haven"?
  143. World's oldest companies: Old-age performers
  144. German Stocks: Continental champs
  145. US truck stocks: State to state supply
  146. Lumber stocks: Wood and forestry companies
  147. See all sparks 
  148. Meta Platforms, Inc
  149. Twitter Inc
  150. Boeing Company (The)
  151. FORD MTR CO DEL
  152. MOBILEYE GLOBAL INC
  153. Amazon Com Inc
  154. Shopify Inc
  155. GeoVax Labs, Inc
  156. Airbnb, Inc
  157. Netflix, Inc
  158. Highest volume
  159. Unusual volume
  160. Gainers
  161. Losers
  162. Crypto
  163. Market cap ranking
  164. DeFi by market cap
  165. Pine scripts
  166. Extreme Trend Reversal Points [HeWhoMustNotBeNamed]
  167. Using moving average crossover for identifying the change in trend is very common. However, this method can give lots of false signals during the ranging markets. In this algorithm, we try to find the extreme trend by looking at fully aligned multi-level moving averages and only look at moving average crossover when market is in the extreme trend - either bullish or bearish. These points can mean long term downtrend or can also cause a small pullback before trend continuation. In this discussion, we will also check how to handle different scenarios. 🎲 Components 🎯 Recursive Multi Level Moving Averages Multi level moving average here refers to applying moving average on top of base moving average on multiple levels. For example, Level 1 SMA = SMA(source, length) Level 2 SMA = SMA(Level 1 SMA, length) Level 3 SMA = SMA(Level 2 SMA, length) .. .. .. Level n SMA = SMA(Level (n-1) SMA, length) In this script, user can select how many levels of moving averages need to be calculated. This is achieved through " recursive moving average " algorithm. Requirement for building such algorithm was initially raised by @loxx While I was able to develop them in minimal code with the help of some of the existing libraries built on arrays and matrix , I also thought why not extend this to find something interesting. Note that since we are using variable levels - we will not be able to plot all the levels of moving average. (This is because plotting cannot be done in the loop). Hence, we are using lines to display the latest moving average levels in front of the last candle. Lines are color coded in such a way that least numbered levels are greener and higher levels are redder. 🎯 Finding the trend and range Strength of fully aligned moving average is calculated based on position of each level with respect to other levels. For example, in a complete uptrend, we can find source > L(1)MA > L(2)MA > L(3)MA ...... > L(n-1)MA > L(n)MA Similarly in a complete downtrend, we can find source < L(1)MA < L(2)MA < L(3)MA ...... < L(n-1)MA < L(n)MA Hence, the strength of trend here is calculated based on relative positions of each levels. Due to this, value of strength can range from 0 to Level*(Level-1)/2 0 represents the complete downtrend Level*(Level-1)/2 represents the complete uptrend. Range and Extreme Range are calculated based on the percentile from median. The brackets are defined as per input parameters - Range Percentile and Extreme Range Percentile by using Percentile History as reference length. Moving average plot is color coded to display the trend strength. Green - Extreme Bullish Lime - Bullish Silver - range Orange - Bearish Red - Extreme Bearish 🎯 Finding the trend reversal Possible trend reversals are when price crosses the moving average while in complete trend with all the moving averages fully aligned. Triangle marks are placed in such locations which can help observe the probable trend reversal points. But, there are possibilities of trend overriding these levels. An example of such thing, we can see here: In order to overcome this problem, we can employ few techniques. 1. After the signal, wait for trend reversal (moving average plot color to turn silver) before placing your order. 2. Place stop orders on immediate pivot levels or support resistance points instead of opening market order. This way, we can also place an order in the direction of trend. Whichever side the price breaks out, will be the direction to trade. 3. Look for other confirmations such as extremely bullish and bearish candles before placing the orders. 🎯 An example of using stop orders Let us take this scenario where there is a signal on possible reversal from complete uptrend. Create a box joining high and low pivots at reasonable distance. You can also chose to add 1 ATR additional distance from pivots. Use the top of the box as stop-entry for long and bottom as stop-entry for short. The other ends of the box can become stop-losses for each side. After few bars, we can see that few more signals are plotted but, the price is still within the box. There are some candles which touched the top of the box. But, the candlestick patterns did not represent bullishness on those instances. If you have placed stop orders, these orders would have already filled in. In that case, just wait for position to hit either stop or target. For bullish side, targets can be placed at certain risk reward levels. In this case, we just use 1:1 for bullish (trend side) and 1:1.5 for bearish side (reversal side) In this case, price hit the target without any issue: Wait for next reversal signal to appear before placing another order :)
  168. Editors' picks
  169. https://www.tradingview.com/script/eBB5mW6b-Extreme-Trend-Reversal-Points-HeWhoMustNotBeNamed/
  170. by HeWhoMustNotBeNamed
  171. 23
  172. Oscillator Workbench — Chart [LucF]
  173. █  OVERVIEW This indicator uses an on-chart visual framework to help traders with the interpretation of any oscillator's behavior. The advantage of using this tool is that you do not need to know all the ins and outs of a particular oscillator such as RSI, CCI, Stochastic, etc. Your choice of oscillator and settings in this indicator will change its visuals, which allows you to evaluate different configurations in the context of how the workbench models oscillator behavior. My hope is that by using the workbench, you may come up with an oscillator selection and settings that produce visual cues you find useful in your trading. The workbench works on any symbol and timeframe. It uses the same presentation engine as my Delta ​Volume Channels indicator; those already familiar with it will feel right at home here. █  CONCEPTS Oscillators An oscillator is any signal that moves up and down a centerline. The centerline value is often zero or 50. Because the range of oscillator values is different than that of the symbol prices we look at on our charts, it is usually impossible to display an oscillator on the chart, so we typically put oscillators in a separate pane where they live in their own space. Each oscillator has its own profile and properties that dictate its behavior and interpretation. Oscillators can be bounded , meaning their values oscillate between fixed values such as 0 to 100 or +1 to -1, or unbounded when their maximum and minimum values are undefined. Oscillator weight How do you display an oscillator's value on a chart showing prices when both values are not on the same scale? The method I use here converts the oscillator's value into a percentage that is used to weigh a reference line. The weight of the oscillator is calculated by maintaining its highest and lowest value above and below its centerline since the beginning of the chart's history. The oscillator's relative position in either of those spaces is then converted to a percentage, yielding a positive or negative value depending on whether the oscillator is above or below its centerline. This method works equally well with bounded and unbounded oscillators. Oscillator Channel The ​​oscillator channel is the space between two moving averages: the reference line and a weighted version of that line. The reference line is a moving average of a type, source and length which you select. The weighted line uses the same settings, but it averages the oscillator-weighted price source. The weight applied to the source of the reference line can also include the relative size of the bar's ​volume in relation to previous bars. The effect of this is that the oscillator's weight on bars with higher total ​volume will carry greater weight than those with lesser ​volume. The ​oscillator channel can be in one of four states, each having its corresponding color:  • Bull (teal): The weighted line is above the reference line.  • Strong bull (lime): The bull condition is fulfilled and the bar's close is above the reference line and both the reference and the weighted lines are rising.  • Bear (maroon): The weighted line is below the reference line.  • Strong bear (pink): The bear condition is fulfilled and the bar's close is below the reference line and both the reference and the weighted lines are falling. Divergences In the context of this indicator, a divergence is any bar where the slope of the reference line does not match that of the weighted line. No directional bias is assigned to divergences when they occur. You can also choose to define divergences as differences in polarity between the oscillator's slope and the polarity of close-to-close values. This indicator's divergences are designed to identify transition levels. They have no polarity; their ​bullish/​bearish bias is determined by the behavior of price relative to the divergence channel after the divergence channel is built. Divergence Channel The divergence channel is the space between two levels (by default, the bar's low and high ) saved when divergences occur. When price has breached a channel and a new divergence occurs, a new channel is created. Until that new channel is breached, bars where additional divergences occur will expand the channel's levels if the bar's price points are outside the channel. Price breaches of the divergence channel will change its state. Divergence channels can be in one of five different states:  • Bull (teal): Price has breached the channel to the upside.  • Strong bull (lime): The bull condition is fulfilled and the ​oscillator channel is in the strong bull state.  • Bear (maroon): Price has breached the channel to the downside.  • Strong bear (pink): The bear condition is fulfilled and the ​oscillator channel is in the strong bear state.  • Neutral (gray): The channel has not been breached. █  HOW TO USE THE INDICATOR Load the indicator on an active chart (see here if you don't know how). The default configuration displays:  • The Divergence channel's levels.  • Bar colors using the state of the ​oscillator channel. The default settings use:  • RSI as the oscillator, using the close source and a length of 20 bars.  • An Arnaud-Legoux moving average on the close and a length of 20 bars as the reference line.  • The weighted version of the reference line uses only the oscillator's weight, i.e., without the relative ​volume's weight.   The weighted line is capped to three standard deviations of the reference.  • The divergence channel's levels are determined using the high and low of the bars where divergences occur.   Breaches of the channel require a bar's low to move above the top of the channel, and the bar's high to move below the channel's bottom. No markers appear on the chart; if you want to create alerts from this script, you will need first to define the conditions that will trigger the markers, then create the alert, which will trigger on those same conditions. To learn more about how to use this indicator, you must understand the concepts it uses and the information it displays, which requires reading this description. There are no videos to explain it. █  FEATURES The script's inputs are divided in five sections: "Oscillator", "Oscillator channel", "Divergence channel", "Bar Coloring" and "Marker/Alert Conditions". Oscillator This is where you configure the oscillator you want to study. Thirty oscillators are available to choose from, but you can also use an oscillator from another indicator that is on your chart, if you want. When you select an external indicator's plot as the oscillator, you must also specify the value of its centerline. Oscillator Channel Here, you control the visibility and colors of the reference line, its weighted version, and the oscillator channel between them. You also specify what type of moving average you want to use as a reference line, its source and its length. This acts as the ​oscillator channel's baseline. The weighted line is also a moving average of the same type and length as the reference line, except that it will be calculated from the weighted version of the source used in the reference line. By default, the weighted line is capped to three standard deviations of the reference line. You can change that value, and also elect to cap using a multiple of ATR instead. The cap provides a mechanism to control how far the weighted line swings from the reference line. This section is also where you can enable the relative ​volume component of the weight. Divergence Channel This is where you control the appearance of the divergence channel and the key price values used in determining the channel's levels and breaching conditions. These choices have an impact on the behavior of the channel. More generous level prices like the default low and high selection will produce more conservative channels, as will the default choice for breach prices. In this section, you can also enable a mode where an attempt is made to estimate the channel's bias before price breaches the channel. When it is enabled, successive increases/decreases of the channel's top and bottom levels are counted as new divergences occur. When one count is greater than the other, a bull/bear bias is inferred from it. You can also change the detection mode of divergences, and choose to display a mark above or below bars where divergences occur. Bar Coloring You specify here:  • The method used to color chart bars, if you choose to do so.  • If you want to hollow out the bodies of bars where ​volume has not increased since the last bar. Marker/Alert Conditions Here, you specify the conditions that will trigger up or down markers. The trigger conditions can include a combination of state transitions of the ​oscillator and the divergence channels. The triggering conditions can be filtered using a variety of conditions. Configuring the marker conditions is necessary before creating an alert from this script, as the alert will use the marker conditions to trigger. Realtime values will repaint, as is usually the case with oscillators, but markers only appear on bar closes, so they will not repaint. Keep in mind, when looking at markers on historical bars, that they are positioned on the bar when it closes — NOT when it opens. Raw values The raw values calculated by this script can be inspected using the Data Window, including the oscillator's value and the weights. █  INTERPRETATION Except when mentioned otherwise, this section's charts use the indicator's default settings, with different visual components turned on or off. The aim of the ​ oscillator channel is to provide a visual representation of an oscillator's general behavior. The simplest characteristic of the channel is its bull/bear state, determined by whether the weighted line is above or below the reference line. One can then distinguish between its bull and strong bull states, as transitions from strong bull to bull states will generally happen when trends are losing steam. While one should not infer a reversal from such transitions, they can be a good place to tighten stops. Only time will tell if a reversal will occur. One or more divergences will often occur before reversals. This shows the oscillator channel, with the reference line and the thicker, weighted line: The nature of the divergence channel 's design makes it particularly adept at identifying consolidation areas if its settings are kept on the conservative side. The divergence channel will also reveal transition areas. A gray divergence channel should usually be considered a no-trade zone. More adventurous traders can use the oscillator ​ channel to orient their trade entries if they accept the risk of trading in a neutral divergence channel, which by definition will not have been breached by price. This show only the divergence channels: This chart shows divergence channels and their levels, and colors bars on divergences and on the state of the oscillator channel, which is not visible on the chart: If your charts are already busy with other stuff you want to hold on to, you could consider using only the chart bar coloring component of this indicator. Here we only color bars using the combined state of the oscillator and divergence channel, and we do not color the bodies of bars where volume has not increased. Note that my chart's settings do not color the candle bodies: At its simplest, one way to use this indicator would be to look for overlaps of the strong bull/bear colors in both the ​oscillator channel and a divergence channel, as these identify points where price is breaching the divergence channel when the oscillator's state is consistent with the direction of the breach. █  LIMITATIONS  • For some of the oscillators, assumptions are made concerning their different parameters when they are more complex than just a source and length.   See the `oscCalc()` function in this indicator's code for all the details, and ask me in a comment if you can't find the information you need.  • When an oscillator using ​volume is selected and no ​volume information is available for the chart's symbol, an error will occur. █  NOTES Working with this workbench This indicator is called a workbench for a reason; it is designed for traders interested in exploring its behavior with different oscillators and settings, in the hope they can come up with a setup that suits their trading methodology. I cannot tell you which setup is the best because its setup should be compatible with your trading methodology, which may require faster or slower transitions, thus different configurations of the settings affecting the calculations of the divergence channels. For Pine Script™ Coders  • This script uses the new overload of the fill() function which now makes it possible to do vertical gradients in Pine. I use it for both channels displayed by this script.  • I use the new arguments for plot() 's `display` parameter to control where the script plots some of its values,   namely those I only want to appear in the script's status line and in the Data Window.  • I used my ta library for some of the oscillator calculations and helper functions.  • I also used TradingView's ta library for other oscillator calculations.  • I wrote my script using the revised recommendations in the Style Guide from the Pine v5 User Manual.
  174. Editors' picks
  175. https://www.tradingview.com/script/BY9mAioc-Oscillator-Workbench-Chart-LucF/
  176. by LucF
  177. 26
  178. Average Volume Profile
  179. Average Volume Profile is an abstract based on a user suggestion. The information displayed could be summed up as a volume profile divided by a market profile. This indicator is a profile which displays the average volume of an area (of price). It also calculates and displays the highest average volume point (HAV) and the relating value zones (calculated in the similar fashion to a volume profile). Most of the code is directly from my "Volume/Market Profile" Indicator I am not entirely sure of how to make use of the information displayed in this indicator or how useful it is. However, I have added some things I figured would be useful to comprehend this information, such as: - Read-out for highest average volume - Read-out for current price average volume - Read-out for current candle distributed volume (labeled as: "Vol") - Floating line to visualize the current distributed volume in relation to the rest of the profile. - Color changing labels for when the current distributed volume is higher than the current price avg volume. Enjoy!
  180. Editors' picks
  181. https://www.tradingview.com/script/dQ9Wjj11-Average-Volume-Profile/
  182. by SamRecio
  183. 21
  184. Sector Rotation
  185. This script is attempt to create and observe the real-time and historical performance of the all major sectors of Indian Market in one screen. for Data Presentation I used Short sector names so that I can manage to get space and efficient presentable data. Short Names and Actual Sector Names BNF : CNX-BANKNIFTY IT : CNX-IT PRMA : CNX - PHARMA FMCG : CNX-FMCG AUTO : CNX-AUTO MTAL : CNX-METAL MDIA : CNX-MEDIA RLTY : CNX-REALTY IFRA : CNX-INFRA ENGY : CNX-ENERGY PSU-B : CNX-PSU-BANK PVT-B : NIFTY-PVT-BANK F-SRV : CNX-FINANCE CONSM : CNX-CONSUMPTION C-DUBL : NIFTY_CONSR_DURBL You can use this script in 30-min, Daily, Weekly and Monthly Time Frames. The green Square denotes the current Symbol Performance. The Blue Border boxes are created when one sector intersects other sector. In this Update following features are added Now users have control over sectors, what are all the sectors you wanted to plot you can select from the input menu. Currently user can highlight any one sector in different border color so that user can easily spot and track particular sector. This thicker blue line denotes lowest and highest point of the current timeframe.
  186. Editors' picks
  187. https://www.tradingview.com/script/8sz9Dow4-Sector-Rotation/
  188. by Vignesh_vish
  189. 13
  190. HH-LL ZZ
  191. Another ZigZag, yes... I believe though this concerns another angle/principle, therefore I wanted to share How does it work? Given: source for level breach -> close X breaches -> 3 Let's say this is the latest found 'lower low' (LL - blue dot under bar): This bar has been triggered because 3 bars closed under low of previous 'trigger bar' (TB ) The high and low of this new TB  will act as triggers (aqua blue lines, seen in image above) Then there are 2 options: - again 3 bars closes under the latest TB , in that case the TB  moves to that new LL. - 3 bars closes higher than the high of previous TB  The high and low of this new TB  act again as trigger If a new TB  LL/HH is found, the script checks previous LL/HH and searches the highest/lowest point in between. If necessary, the temporary highest/lowest will be adjusted: Another example: The last 2 points can change (repaint). Yellow coloured lines/labels are set and won't change anymore. Concluded: In case of these settings: source for level breach -> close X breaches -> 3 once a new TB  is found, the high and low act as trigger lines - when 3 bars closes under that low , a new LL is found, this will be the new TB  - when 3 bars closes above that high , a new HH is found, this will be the new TB  and so on... Settings: source for level breach -> close or high/low - H/L X breaches -> 1 -> 10 line style -> solid, dotted, dashed show level breaches -> new found TB (blue/lime coloured) show Support/Resistance (lines at the right) repaint warning can be removed show labels / lines This ZZ can be used for Harmonic patterns, Trend evaluation, support/resistance,... In this script, I also used new features - text_font_family = font.family_monospace -> link - display=display.pane -> link Cheers!
  192. Editors' picks
  193. https://www.tradingview.com/script/nlZhcXgF-HH-LL-ZZ/
  194. by fikira
  195. 30
  196. Black Scholes Option Pricing Model w/ Greeks [Loxx]
  197. The Black Scholes Merton model If you are new to options I strongly advise you to profit from Robert Shiller's lecture on same . It combines practical market insights with a strong authoritative grasp of key models in option theory. He explains many of the areas covered below and in the following pages with a lot intuition and relatable anecdotage. We start here with Black Scholes Merton which is probably the most popular option pricing framework, due largely to its simplicity and ease in terms of implementation. The closed-form solution is efficient in terms of speed and always compares favorably relative to any numerical technique. The Black–Scholes–Merton model is a mathematical go-to model for estimating the value of European calls and puts. In the early 1970’s, Myron Scholes, and Fisher Black made an important breakthrough in the pricing of complex financial instruments. Robert Merton simultaneously was working on the same problem and applied the term Black-Scholes model to describe new generation of pricing. The Black Scholes (1973) contribution developed insights originally proposed by Bachelier 70 years before. In 1997, Myron Scholes and Robert Merton received the Nobel Prize for Economics. Tragically, Fisher Black died in 1995. The Black–Scholes formula presents a theoretical estimate (or model estimate) of the price of European-style options independently of the risk of the underlying security. Future payoffs from options can be discounted using the risk-neutral rate. Earlier academic work on options (e.g., Malkiel and Quandt 1968, 1969) had contemplated using either empirical, econometric analyses or elaborate theoretical models that possessed parameters whose values could not be calibrated directly. In contrast, Black, Scholes, and Merton’s parameters were at their core simple and did not involve references to utility or to the shifting risk appetite of investors. Below, we present a standard type formula, where: c = Call option value, p = Put option value, S=Current stock (or other underlying) price, K or X=Strike price, r=Risk-free interest rate, q = dividend yield, T=Time to maturity and N denotes taking the normal cumulative probability. b = (r - q) = cost of carry. (via VinegarHill-Financelab ) Things to know This can only be used on the daily timeframe You must select the option type and the greeks you wish to show This indicator is a work in process, functions may be updated in the future. I will also be adding additional greeks as I code them or they become available in finance literature. This indictor contains 18 greeks. Many more will be added later. Inputs Spot price: select from 33 different types of price inputs Calculation Steps: how many iterations to be used in the BS model. In practice, this number would be anywhere from 5000 to 15000, for our purposes here, this is limited to 300 Strike Price: the strike price of the option you're wishing to model % Implied Volatility: here you can manually enter implied volatility Historical Volatility Period: the input period for historical volatility ; historical volatility isn't used in the BS process, this is to serve as a sort of benchmark for the implied volatility , Historical Volatility Type: choose from various types of implied volatility , search my indicators for details on each of these Option Base Currency: this is to calculate the risk-free rate, this is used if you wish to automatically calculate the risk-free rate instead of using the manual input. this uses the 10 year bold yield of the corresponding country % Manual Risk-free Rate: here you can manually enter the risk-free rate Use manual input for Risk-free Rate? : choose manual or automatic for risk-free rate % Manual Yearly Dividend Yield: here you can manually enter the yearly dividend yield Adjust for Dividends?: choose if you even want to use use dividends Automatically Calculate Yearly Dividend Yield? choose if you want to use automatic vs manual dividend yield calculation Time Now Type: choose how you want to calculate time right now, see the tool tip Days in Year: choose how many days in the year, 365 for all days, 252 for trading days, etc Hours Per Day: how many hours per day? 24, 8 working hours, or 6.5 trading hours Expiry date settings: here you can specify the exact time the option expires The Black Scholes Greeks The Option Greek formulae express the change in the option price with respect to a parameter change taking as fixed all the other inputs. ( Haug explores multiple parameter changes at once .) One significant use of Greek measures is to calibrate risk exposure. A market-making financial institution with a portfolio of options, for instance, would want a snap shot of its exposure to asset price, interest rates, dividend fluctuations. It would try to establish impacts of volatility and time decay. In the formulae below, the Greeks merely evaluate change to only one input at a time. In reality, we might expect a conflagration of changes in interest rates and stock prices etc. (via VigengarHill-Financelab ) First-order Greeks Delta: Delta measures the rate of change of the theoretical option value with respect to changes in the underlying asset's price. Delta is the first derivative of the value Vega: Vegameasures sensitivity to volatility. Vega is the derivative of the option value with respect to the volatility of the underlying asset. Theta: Theta measures the sensitivity of the value of the derivative to the passage of time (see Option time value): the "time decay." Rho: Rho measures sensitivity to the interest rate: it is the derivative of the option value with respect to the risk free interest rate (for the relevant outstanding term). Lambda: Lambda, Omega, or elasticity is the percentage change in option value per percentage change in the underlying price, a measure of leverage, sometimes called gearing. Epsilon: Epsilon, also known as psi, is the percentage change in option value per percentage change in the underlying dividend yield, a measure of the dividend risk. The dividend yield impact is in practice determined using a 10% increase in those yields. Obviously, this sensitivity can only be applied to derivative instruments of equity products. Second-order Greeks Gamma: Measures the rate of change in the delta with respect to changes in the underlying price. Gamma is the second derivative of the value function with respect to the underlying price. Vanna: Vanna, also referred to as DvegaDspot and DdeltaDvol, is a second order derivative of the option value, once to the underlying spot price and once to volatility. It is mathematically equivalent to DdeltaDvol, the sensitivity of the option delta with respect to change in volatility; or alternatively, the partial of vega with respect to the underlying instrument's price. Vanna can be a useful sensitivity to monitor when maintaining a delta- or vega-hedged portfolio as vanna will help the trader to anticipate changes to the effectiveness of a delta-hedge as volatility changes or the effectiveness of a vega-hedge against change in the underlying spot price. Charm: Charm or delta decay measures the instantaneous rate of change of delta over the passage of time. Vomma: Vomma, volga, vega convexity, or DvegaDvol measures second order sensitivity to volatility. Vomma is the second derivative of the option value with respect to the volatility, or, stated another way, vomma measures the rate of change to vega as volatility changes. Veta: Veta or DvegaDtime measures the rate of change in the vega with respect to the passage of time. Veta is the second derivative of the value function; once to volatility and once to time. Vera: Vera (sometimes rhova) measures the rate of change in rho with respect to volatility. Vera is the second derivative of the value function; once to volatility and once to interest rate. Third-order Greeks Speed: Speed measures the rate of change in Gamma with respect to changes in the underlying price. Zomma: Zomma measures the rate of change of gamma with respect to changes in volatility. Color: Color, gamma decay or DgammaDtime measures the rate of change of gamma over the passage of time. Ultima: Ultima measures the sensitivity of the option vomma with respect to change in volatility. Dual Delta: Dual Delta determines how the option price changes in relation to the change in the option strike price; it is the first derivative of the option price relative to the option strike price Dual Gamma: Dual Gamma determines by how much the coefficient will changedual delta when the option strike price changes; it is the second derivative of the option price relative to the option strike price. Related Indicators Cox-Ross-Rubinstein Binomial Tree Options Pricing Model Implied Volatility Estimator using Black Scholes Boyle Trinomial Options Pricing Model
  198. Editors' picks
  199. https://www.tradingview.com/script/WobQqSxF-Black-Scholes-Option-Pricing-Model-w-Greeks-Loxx/
  200. by loxx
  201. 7
  202. TPO Market Profile [Kioseff Trading]
  203. REPOST; SCRIPT WORKS!! Due to technical error, this script was republished! Thank you for your support (: Hello! This indicator comprises a real time TPO Market Profile! The script works on any timeframe 1 second or greater - the script calculates relative to the timeframe selected for your chart. The image above shows the 1-minute BTCUSD chart; 650 +/- tick levels are set. To see the script in full functionality - try using bar replay on a cryptocurrency 1-minute chart (start at the beginning of a regular hours session). Be sure to adjust the tick spread if necessary (: So far, the script's held up in real time - I've not had any array loop errors or timeouts. The TPO profile updates accordingly with changes in time / high and low prices. Letters are appended to the profile in real time. The image above shows configurations for the indicator. I plan to update the indicator quite a bit over the coming days - more to come. You can select the timeframe change the indicator accounts for. For instance, you can have set the indicator to reset every day, every 30 minutes, every 5 minutes, every week, month, etc. In the image above, I configured the indicator to recalculate every 3 months. Consequently, the indicator will record a TPO profile for three consecutive, reset, then record a TPO profile for the next 3 months. This setting makes the indicator compatible with any timeframe greater than 1 minute. You can also use a drag & drop time-start bar to modify the starting point for the market profile TPO calculation. The indicator hosts an option to auto calculate the tick spread between levels. However, as you switch timeframes and assets, sometimes, you'll have to manually set the tick range (: Thanks for checking it out; more to come! Sep 4 Release Notes: UPDATE: The indicator can work on seconds-based charts. The image above shows the indicator working on the 1-second chart. (Screenshot is old; characters are now numbered instead of strange unicode) Release Notes: Added value area + vah + val. Font update. Changed characters to numbered once the alphabet is exhausted. POC, VAH, and VAL label located left of the first bar of the interval. Initial balance range can be toggled. Spaced the characters (more legible). Quite a bit of aesthetic changes so check it out! Soon, I'll release a version of the script that shows VAH, POC, VAL, and TPO letters from previous sessions. I coded this feature into this indicator; however, it was removed due to load time complications. This feature will be its own script (: If the script has trouble loading please let me know (:
  204. Editors' picks
  205. https://www.tradingview.com/script/P9aVc7vy-TPO-Market-Profile-Kioseff-Trading/
  206. by KioseffTrading
  207. 35
  208. Tick Statistics
  209. Tick Statistics: I have seen many questions/queries related to tick data in TV telegram channels. This script will help pine scripts to understand how ticks work, how to capture and process tick data. This is an educational indicator script for pine scripters. The indicator shall work only on real time candles. Tick data capture is initiated as soon as indicator is loaded on the chart. You might not get correct statistics on 1st candle in case indicator is loaded when real time candle is in progress, in such case you can monitor the statistics generated for subsequent candles. Generated statistics is shown on the chart by placing 2 diamond shapes above and below the candle. Diamond shape below the candle will have candles ‘tick data’ listed in a table. This can be view by placing mouse pointer on the diamond shape. Refer to point 1 below for more details. Diamond shape above the candle will have statistics as mentioned in point no 2 onwards. To view the statistics place the mouse point on the diamond shape. The shape will appear in green color when both tick price and tick volume are both moving in the same direction. The diamond shape in red color means tick price and tick volume are moving in opposite direction. The script captures tick by tick data and generate statistics below: 1. List of tick data with details below: (this is stored in the diamond shape placed below the candle) a. Tick no b. Tick type – Up tick (Up), Down tick (Dn), No change (--) c. Tick price d. Volume e. Price difference (as compared to previous tick price) f. Volume difference (as compared to previous tick volume) 2. Tick statistics a. Total ticks b. Number of up ticks c. Number of down ticks d. Number of No change ticks 3. Volume Statistics a. Total volume b. Up tick volume c. Down tick volume d. Volume associated with ticks where there is no change e. Candle volume (just for reconciliation purpose) 4. Max-min statistics a. Max volume = <> at price = <> at tick no = <> b. Min volume = <> at price = <> at tick no = <> c. Max price = <> at volume = <> at tick no = <> d. Min price = <> at volume = <> at tick no = <> 5. Candle summary a. Price << Up >> (if price is up as compared to 1st tick <> otherwise b. Volume <> (if up tick volume is more than down tick volume <> otherwise
  210. Editors' picks
  211. https://www.tradingview.com/script/K9n3ueax-Tick-Statistics/
  212. by Sharad_Gaikwad
  213. 23
  214. Strength of Divergence Across Multiple Indicators
  215. Overview: One-stop shop for all your divergence needs, including: (1) A single metric for divergence strength across multiple indicators. (2) Labels that make it easy to spot where the truly strong divergence is by showing the overall divergence strength value along with the number of divergent indicators. Hovering over the label shows a breakdown of each divergent indicator and its individual divergence strength value. (3) Fully customizable, including inputs for pivot lengths, divergence types, and weights for every component of the divergence strength calculation. This allows you to quickly and easily optimize the output for any chart. Don't worry, the default settings will have you covered if you're not interested in what's going on under the hood. The Divergence Strength Calculation: The total divergence strength value is the sum of the divergence strengths of all indicators for which divergence was detected at a given bar. Each indicator's individual divergence strength is comprised of two basic components: (1) |ΔPrice| - the magnitude of the change in price over the divergence period (pivot-to-pivot), and (2) |ΔIndicator| - the magnitude of the change in indicator value over the divergence period. Because different indicators' scales and volatility can vary greatly, the Δ values are expressed in terms of standard deviation to ensure that the values are meaningful and equitable across all indicators and assets/instruments/currency pairs, etc: |ΔIndicator| = |indicator_value_1 - indicator_value_2| / 2 * StDev(indicator_series,100) Calculation Weights: All components of the calculation are weighted and can be modified on the Inputs page in settings (weights are simply multipliers). For example, if you think hidden divergence should carry less weight than regular divergence, you can assign it a lesser weight. Or if you think RSI divergence is worth more than OBV divergence, you can adjust their weights accordingly. List of weights: Regular divergence weight - default = 1 Hidden divergence weight - default = 1 ΔPrice weight - default = 0.5 (multiplied by the ΔPrice component) ΔIndicator weight - default = 1.5 (multiplied by the ΔIndicator component) RSI weight - default = 1.1 OBV weight - default = 0.8 MACD weight - default = 0.9 STOCH weight - default = 0.9 Development for additional indicators is ongoing, as is research into the optimal weight configuration(s). Other Inputs: Pivot lengths - specify the number of bars before and after each pivot high/low to consider it a valid candidate for divergence. Lookback bars and Lookback pivots - specify the number of bars or the number of pivots to look back across. Price sources - specify separate price sources for bullish and bearish divergence Display settings - specify how lines and labels should display, including which divergence strength values should show the largest labels. Include/exclude specific divergence types and indicators. Please report any bugs, or let me know if you have any enhancement suggestions or requests for additional indicators. @reees
  216. Editors' picks
  217. https://www.tradingview.com/script/680R1I3Z-Strength-of-Divergence-Across-Multiple-Indicators/
  218. by reees
  219. 66
  220. RSI Past Can Turn RSI Into a Directional Tool
  221. The Relative Strength Index was created by J. Welles Wilder to measure overbought and oversold conditions. It’s also found popularity as an overall measure of direction because upward-trending stocks often hit overbought conditions. The opposite can be true with underperformers. Today’s custom script, RSI Past, attempts to capture this secondary use of RSI as a directional indicator. RSI Past achieves this by comparing how many bars have passed since RSI's most recent overbought and oversold readings. It then plots a simple difference between those two numbers. Stocks with “bullish” signals will have positive readings that will increase each time RSI hits an overbought condition. “Bearish” readings are just the opposite, growing more negative as oversold conditions occur. An examination of some individual stocks may show the usefulness of this approach. Meta Platforms , for example, hit an oversold condition almost exactly one year ago, and has remained under heavy selling pressure since: Exxon Mobil , on the other hand, flipped to a bullish reading last October and has trended higher since: This raises some interesting questions for Apple, shown on the main chart above. AAPL’s RSI Past has maintained a bullish reading for over a year -- unlike most other big technology stocks and the broader Nasdaq-100. Could this reflect bigger directional strength, especially with prices holding the $150 level that’s had relevance several times mid-2021? TradeStation has, for decades, advanced the trading industry, providing access to stocks, options, futures and cryptocurrencies. See our Overview for more. Important Information TradeStation Securities, Inc., TradeStation Crypto, Inc., and TradeStation Technologies, Inc. are each wholly owned subsidiaries of TradeStation Group, Inc., all operating, and providing products and services, under the TradeStation brand and trademark. You Can Trade, Inc. is also a wholly owned subsidiary of TradeStation Group, Inc., operating under its own brand and trademarks. TradeStation Crypto, Inc. offers to self-directed investors and traders cryptocurrency brokerage services. It is neither licensed with the SEC or the CFTC nor is it a Member of NFA. When applying for, or purchasing, accounts, subscriptions, products, and services, it is important that you know which company you will be dealing with. Please click here for further important information explaining what this means. This content is for informational and educational purposes only. This is not a recommendation regarding any investment or investment strategy. Any opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not represent the views or opinions of TradeStation or any of its affiliates. Investing involves risks. Past performance, whether actual or indicated by historical tests of strategies, is no guarantee of future performance or success. There is a possibility that you may sustain a loss equal to or greater than your entire investment regardless of which asset class you trade (equities, options, futures, or digital assets); therefore, you should not invest or risk money that you cannot afford to lose. Before trading any asset class, first read the relevant risk disclosure statements on the Important Documents page, found here: www.tradestation.com .
  222. Editors' picks
  223. https://www.tradingview.com/script/2tennpoc-RSI-Past-Can-Turn-RSI-Into-a-Directional-Tool/
  224. by TradeStation
  225. 8
  226. See all editors' picks scripts 
  227. Educational ideas
  228. Trading RSI Divergences LIKE A BOSS (I may have failed you)
  229. Get your copy of the Free Heiken Ashi Algo Oscillator I'm not going to lie. There is WAYYY too much technical stuff to type up in this for you guys. its best if you watch the video. Always Always Always ask questions below. I am always more than happy to show you what's what. This is some UPPER LEVEL STUFF in this video and i know a lot of you won't fully understand it but i want you to understand what it is that you DON'T KNOW about. Unless you know these things, you won't know what questions to ask about. So here we go. Let's get into it. Trading the RSI Divergence like a BOSS After the RSI Divergence is found: On the chart: (KEYS) 1 = last HH 2 = current HH 3 = 1st HH Closing Price 4 = Confirmation of candle closing BELOW 1HH close price 5 = Find your targets 6 = Pinpoint any target with multiple confirmations Steps to take: 1. See last Highest High 2. Draw a line across the last Highest High close price. 3. Confirm second HH is higher price but lower RSI value. Now wait.... 4. Wait for candle to close below price of step (2) 5. Enter SHORT if (Heiken Ashi Candle is closing RED) 6. Your 50ema is Take Profile #1 (Set it up) 7. Your swing high is your stop loss 8. What does the RSI Formula tell you? Is it in the positive? So what! Use the same numbers but trade SHORT. Yep, that what i said, TRADE IT IN REVERSE! This is Take Profit #2 9. Do the Fibonacci trick to confirm which is closer (tp 1 or tp2) 10. Look left for the most recent area of Liquidity. It's a candle with a long wick up or down where price reverses sharply. 11. Scan the Algo for a price level WITH volume. You have found your target. Adjust your take profit and walk away.
  230. Editors' picks
  231. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/ADAUSDT/
  232. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/ADAUSDT/9vkAkTAa-Trading-RSI-Divergences-LIKE-A-BOSS-I-may-have-failed-you/
  233. by CoffeeshopCrypto
  234. 12
  235. How to stop overtrading and get rid of your trading addiction
  236. Hello traders, All the below are based on my preferences, I don't give any financial recommendations and I have nothing to sell you with this article. I'm sharing content because I see a lot of traders being/becoming broke and I don't want you to be one of them. Here's how to stop overtrading and get rid of your trading addiction:🧵 I - Define a set of rules The first key to stop overtrading is establishing a set of rules Create a set of rules so you know when you SHOULD stop over-trading. It can be based on $ gain/loss or just the amount of trades taken. Either way, there needs to be a written list you can follow. For example, let's say I want to make X dollars per month with equates to X/20 (give or take) dollars to make in average per trading day. Once for a given day I've reached that goal, I'm stopping myself from trading more. Why? Who here kept trading after making a decent amount of money and ended up losing all the gains? The reason being, we're humans and not naturally wired to trade. After making some money, we all tend to become greedy, taking more risks, also not seeing obvious signs we usually see when we're focused. II - Find a hobby The second key is having a hobby. Something you can do once you've stopped trading It could be... - Working out (I'm working out twice a day for health benefits but also to meditate and to stop thinking about my trades) Of course, as an intraday trader, I'm going to workout whenever with 0 opened intraday trade When I'm invested in SWING trading, I'm taking trades with big enough timeframes so that it's totally fine if I'm not checking the charts for multiple hours in a row - Doing chores Could also be cooking for yourself or your family - Talking to a friend Trading is a passion and if you're passionate about it, your friends will likely want to hear your thoughts about the markets, the trades Of course, don't give them any financial advice :) You don't want to be in a position of recommending or not recommending an action as they may blame you for their losses. Stay neutral, only share what you're doing and why you love doing it - Writing Writing or Journaling helps me clearing As long as you have SOMETHING you can do everyday after trading It should help you out Mine is after 3 consecutive intraday losses, I stop for the session (morning or afternoon) and head to working out, walking, doing anything else other than trading III - Find a buddy I would also suggest getting a trading buddy A trading buddy is simply another trader (or non-trader) that you can talk to throughout the trading day I'm trading with my father and a community of traders, we're talking often, exchanging ideas on whether a setup looks great or not. Not to talk about trades, but more as a mental coach Someone who you can text when you're feeling emotional. And they will tell you to get off the computer. Sometimes we just need to hear it from someone else to actually execute IV - Turn off your computer Lastly, I would recommend turning off the screens. Like literally shutting your computer/monitor off and walking away. You need to PHYSICALLY set yourself apart from the trading scene. Doing this will allow your brain to think about doing something else, rather than trading. Conclusion To summarise: - Have a set of trading rules - Have a hobby - Find a trading buddy - Physically constrain yourself to stop trading after your daily gains or losses have been reached
  237. Editors' picks
  238. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSDT/
  239. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSDT/zizjPhCX-How-to-stop-overtrading-and-get-rid-of-your-trading-addiction/
  240. by Daveatt
  241. 98
  242. Trendline and Channel Tutorial: Part 4
  243. All traders are different but I personally find it difficult to use standalone channels to consistently initiate profitable trades against. Not the least of the problem is that the channel continues to either rise or fall, making a secure place to hide a stop above/below more difficult. But I find them particularly useful in three aspects. The first, and by far the most important, is that a channel allows one to quickly visualize the ebb and flow of supply and demand. As described earlier in this series, the relationship of price to the channel boundaries and the median line offer insight to the strength of the underlying trend (increasing or decreasing). The second is in the use of channels to rebalance existing positions against. I find tremendous value in trading around conjunctions with other support/resistance techniques. In other words, zones of support or resistance provided by the confluence of channels, horizonal patterns, fibonocci, momentum, and chart patterns result in more reliable entries than simply trading the width of the channels. In this piece we concentrate on finding suitable trading confluences. Finding a confluence: After the late March 2022 pivot (point A), the initial supply line A-C could be drawn along with a parallel initial projected oversold line from point B. By early August the channel top (supply line) intersected price in the area around 4330. In the Wyckoff perspective, the downtrend represented the stride of supply and represented a significant chart reference. In late May, price exceeded the initial projected oversold line, requiring a redraw from point D. Between early Jan and mid July 2022 SPX declined from 4797 (A) to 3640 (D). The .618% retracement of the entire decline bisects around 4313. From the low (1) on July 14, SPX rallied for 22 trading days. From July 26th an initial demand (uptrend line) could be projected. By the 29th an initial supply line (channel top) could be drawn. These two lines defined the minor channel. By the middle of August, the minor channel intersected with the major channel in the area around 4332. Price was also scraping across the top of the rising Bollinger band and the daily stochastic oscillator had been pinned in overbought since early August. Levels: 4330 - Major channel top 4313 - .618% Fibonacci retracement 4336 - Upper channel (supply) line in the shorter perspective channel. 4332 - Bollinger Band top Stochastic and other momentum indicators pinned in overbought. As price moves into a confluence zone, I typically move to the chart of one lower degree and begin monitoring for a potential trade entry setup. SPX Hourly: In this perspective the channel becomes clearer. It is important to note that after August 8th, price never again approached the supply line and instead hugged the median line (inside the oval). This offered a clear indication of waning demand. On August 11, I moved the supply line (red dashed channel top) lower, providing yet another layer of resistance. Once price moves into a resistance confluence you may use your preferred method of trade entry and stop placement to initiate a trade. Finally, most price action is only noise and there are only a few points on any chart where behavior becomes meaningful. Confluences, channel tops and trend lines represent one of instances. If no confluence exists, move your attention to a different chart. There is always a tradable confluence somewhere. And finally, many of the topics and techniques discussed in this post are part of the CMT Associations Chartered Market Technician’s curriculum. Good Trading: Stewart Taylor, CMT Chartered Market Technician Taylor Financial Communications Shared content and posted charts are intended to be used for informational and educational purposes only. The CMT Association does not offer, and this information shall not be understood or construed as, financial advice or investment recommendations. The information provided is not a substitute for advice from an investment professional. The CMT Association does not accept liability for any financial loss or damage our audience may incur.
  244. Editors' picks
  245. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/SPX/
  246. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/SPX/QIGbbi2b-Trendline-and-Channel-Tutorial-Part-4/
  247. by CMT_Association
  248. 15
  249. Why is trading so emotional?
  250. In August last year, I published an educational post around Fibonacci. There's also thousands of articles and books available on the topic. But how does it fit with being emotional? Often people talk about Algos, smart money concepts and a load of other terms. All trying to make sense of the market, Fibonacci isn't magical or mystical. It's a set of simple numbers that work - due to humans wanting to see patterns in everything they look at. Here's the article from last year - feel free to click it and go through that one as well. The issue I have when educating people - is there is always a desire to find an automated solution. I keep saying, if algos are that good - we wouldn't have school, doctors or firemen; they would all be sipping cocktails on a beach far away! If you want to learn technical analysis, you really need to dig deep into the emotional analysis. People like Dow, Elliott and Wyckoff (for me, are not technical gurus) they merely understood - human psychology made waves, changed sentiment - the bigger players in the markets know this. It's why most news outlets and websites around TA push writers who only talk MA's and RSI's. It keeps fresh sheep on track. The market is all about liquidity - these levels are created at psychological levels & from there, it's copy, paste, repeat. Take a look at this on the current Bitcoin move down from the All Time High. Swing 1 = 618 of A-B Swing 2 = 100% of the A-B Swing 3 = 100% of the A-B Swing 4 = 618 of the A-B Swing 5 = 1.23 range and 1.27 range of the A-B Then even when you step down a level you can see the move inside the moves looking similar. Local support is 618... When I started posting on @TradingView publicly - I explained why we where seeing value areas and re-accumulation for the first times. These levels were starting to show signs of the crypto space being institutionalised. This is important to understand, as much like Fibonacci levels, the price would now act in a different way to psychological levels. In stepped Wyckoff and you could see from before and after - where and why the price would go. Before Here's the AFTER shot. Lucky Guess? Well - maybe on the way back from the 28k levels highlighted in March, the very same fibs became obvious. If we where seeing Elliott waves form you could therefor measure the fib extensions. This was August the 24th - read the comments as to why the drop was coming (4 move) and why we would likely see the drop just above the old all time high. By October we had seen the forecasted extension levels getting hit - a retest followed this and we dropped. So, like I said - there's nothing magical, it's all about sentiment and psychology. Learn this and you will progress as a trader. Disclaimer This idea does not constitute as financial advice. It is for educational purposes only, our principle trader has over 20 years’ experience in stocks, ETF’s, and Forex. Hence each trade setup might have different hold times, entry or exit conditions, and will vary from the post/idea shared here. You can use the information from this post to make your own trading plan for the instrument discussed. Trading carries a risk; a high percentage of retail traders lose money. Please keep this in mind when entering any trade. Stay safe.
  251. Editors' picks
  252. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSD/
  253. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSD/d4XKTbJk-Why-is-trading-so-emotional/
  254. by Mayfair_Ventures
  255. 23
  256. 30 Quotes From Philosopher That Will Make You Think
  257. Quotes, man. I love them. Excerpts, proverbs, quips, riddles, koans, aphorisms, limericks, snippets, and lyrics— I’m not the type to discriminate. I love them all. Since In Latest TradingView Post About "Traders Gaining Momentum : Fall Edition" to Compile Great Authors To Read And I Will Try To Compile Great Quotes From Philosopher For Traders And Investors. TradingView Listing Great Users To Read On. Okay In this week’s post , I’d like to share with you a few quotes that I think will benefit you. They deliver potent, pithy shots of clarity, insight, and/or motivation that can help you gain perspective, especially if times are tough. Read, contemplate, and maybe note these, as if they were personal notes left to you by some of the greatest minds –past and present. 1.– “ Man only likes to count his troubles; he doesn’t calculate his happiness .” ― Fyodor Dostoyevsky In trading: Basing your happiness on trade outcomes —events that are in themselves ever-changing— is self-imposed suffering. Let go. Trust the process, and let yourself enjoy unconditional happiness. 2. — “ If you look for perfection, you’ll never be content .” ― Leo Tolstoy In trading: Trade entries or exits are rarely going to be perfect. Make peace with that. 3.– “ I want to sing like the birds sing, not worrying about who hears or what they think .” ― Rumi In trading: Don’t let other’s opinions shake you out of your trades. Learn to trust your system/ your process/ your opinion. 4.– “ Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seared with scars .” ― Kahlil Gibran In trading: Beginner’s luck often stifles growth. Losses and failure are good for you. 5.– “ You could not step twice into the same river .” ― Heraclitus In trading: Change is everywhere. Even in the market it is a constant. The market generates patterns and even though those patterns seem to repeat themselves with a certain degree of consistency, they’re never completely the same – they don’t share the same intensity, momentum, and duration. 6.– “ Let everything happen to you; beauty and terror, just keep going. No feeling is final .” ― Rainer Maria Rilke In trading: Following your plan should be viewed as an essential act, even though it’s a struggle most of the time. It’s so important to believe that it will be worth it in the end —rather than doubting and judging how it feels in each moment. 7.– “ The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance .” ― Alan W. Watts In trading: Never be afraid of change or uncertainty. Embrace them by being as open/flexible/adaptable as possible. 8.– “ A good traveler has no fixed plans and is not intent on arriving .” ― Lao Tzu In trading: Trading can be a ‘one-hit wonder’ thing, where you eventually land one trade that changes everything for you. But instead, I urge you to think of it as a lifelong journey. The psychological implications are very different. 9.– “ Life’s under no obligation to give us what we expect .” ― Margaret Mitchell In trading: There are no guarantees in trading. The sooner you accept that, you sooner you can release your expectations and focus unconditionally on a proven process that’ll raise your probability of success. 10.– “ Flow with whatever may happen, and let your mind be free: Stay centered by accepting whatever you are doing. This is the ultimate .” ― Chuang Tzu In trading: Do not bring emotional struggle into trading. Everything changes -outcomes, markets, circumstances, states of mind… There is nothing to cling to. Go with the flow. Trade in the moment. 11.– “ You can feel an emotion; just don’t think that it’s so important .” — John Cage In trading: When you let your emotions come to the surface; when you embrace them, no matter their content or intensity, you transcend them. When you deny them and try to push them down, they afflict you even more. 12.– “ The instant you speak about a thing, you miss the mark .” ― Zen Proverb In trading: Don’t bother showing to the world that you’re a good trader. Just act like one. 13.– “ You must let what happens happen. Everything must be equal in your eyes, good and evil, beautiful and ugly, foolish and wise .” ― Michael Ende In trading: In trading, whatever is going to happen will happen, whether you want it or not. Your job is not to react blindly… This game is all about strategic maneuvering. 14.– “ Worry is preposterous; we don’t know enough to worry .” — Wei Boyang In trading: A simple way to prevent thoughts from turning into worrying (overthinking) is to trade while remaining open to all possibilities. 15.– “ The longer I live, the more uninformed I feel. Only the young have an explanation for everything .” ― Isabel Allende In trading: The more you stay in the game, the more you’ll realize that there are no real ‘pros’ in trading. We’re all just perpetual students of the market. But some losing traders think they have all the answers. They can’t learn because they’re busy telling everyone what they know and what to do. 16.– “ Nothing is more wonderful than the art of being free, but nothing is harder to learn how to use than freedom .” — Alexis de Tocqueville In trading: Some people get into trading to escape the rat race, but then they feel the need to sit in front of their screen all day to watch the market. They think they have to trade all the time. It’s a big mistake. 17.– “ It’s more difficult to rule yourself than to rule an entire city. ” ― Jordan B Peterson In trading: Trading can be easy. The real problem is the worrying, the expectations, delusions, the inability to let go… For those reasons, it’s not. That’s why working on your mindset day in and day out is the most important thing you can ever do if you want to stay in the game long enough to experience success. 18.– “ Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are the dead .” ― Aldous Huxley In trading: Humans are fallible and perfect consistency is virtually impossible. Even expert traders make mistakes from time to time. The only difference between them and the amateurs is that their mistakes aren’t deadly because money management is their number one priority. Expert traders also recognize early on that they’ve made a mistake and they are quick to correct their course of action without hesitation. 19.– “ In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule .” ― Friedrich Nietzsche In trading: The herd mentality is a contagious phenomenon. To prevent it from sneaking up on you, it can be useful to train yourself to read, feel, and understand your emotions and urges. 20.– “ That which does not kill us makes us stronger. ” ― Friedrich Nietzsche In trading: Everything that happens is an opportunity for growth. Nothing is placed before you that you can’t handle. So spend no time on blame, bitterness, or feeling sorry for yourself, and you put everything towards learning and growth. 21.– “ Your mind will answer most questions if you learn to relax and wait for the answer .” ― William S. Burroughs In trading: You missed a trade? Frustration comes when we want things to be different from how they are. Why waste time in fantasies and what could have been? Why not just relax and wait for the next trade opportunity? There’ll always be one… 22.– “ Anything which is troubling you, anything which is irritating you, that is your teacher. ” ― Ajahn Chah In trading: You must expect failure as part of your trading journey. Failure and success go hand in hand — you cannot have one without the other. 23.– “ If you don’t have a strategy, you’re part of someone else’s strategy . ” ― Alvin Toffler In trading: In this field, lots of fake traders are after your money. Make sure you learn from the right people. This is critical. 24.– “ Disillusionment in living is finding that no one can really ever be agreeing with you completely in anything. ” ― Gertrude Stein In trading: You are only trading your opinion, which is a relative truth. Price is the absolute truth. 25.– “I know there is no straight road; no straight road in this world, only a giant labyrinth of intersecting crossroads.” ― Federico Garcia Lorca In trading: The path to market success is not a straight one. You will fall along the way. But losses and failures eventually get you wisdom. Without wisdom, durable market success is simply not possible. So learn to enjoy the journey. 26.– “ All of humanity’s problems stem from man’s inability to sit quietly in a room alone .” ― Blaise Pascal In trading: Meditation helps you know yourself. You can’t trade well if you don’t know yourself. 27.– “ We are our choices .” ― Jean-Paul Sartre In trading: Take responsibility for your losses and work on bettering the quality of your decisions. 28.– “ Man can will nothing unless he has first understood that he must count on no one but himself .” ― Jean-Paul Sartre In trading: Don’t wait for trade ideas from others. Work on being completely self-reliant. 29.– “ Maybe it’s not about happy ending. Maybe it’s about the story.” ― Albert Camus In trading: See trading as a kind of journey in which you will transform yourself, rather than a mere money-making endeavor. 30.– “ Ask yourself at every moment, “Is this necessary? ” ― Marcus Aurelius In trading: In some sense, trading mastery is simply noticing your patterns of thought, emotions and behavior that are not skillful, and having the strength of mind to say “no… I’m not gonna do that.” -END- I Hope You Have Nice Days And Wishyou Profitable Weeks!! Hot Baked Pumpkin Is Really Nice In This Time. 🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁 Source : Yvan
  258. Editors' picks
  259. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/NYSE-TWTR/
  260. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/TWTR/z2I04csY-30-Quotes-From-Philosopher-That-Will-Make-You-Think/
  261. by Valerus_Forex
  262. 21
  263. The easiest way to spot divergences and how to trade them
  264. Welcome to the coffee shop everybody. This is your host and baristo Eric, and in today's video I am giving you a video Lesson based off of my preferences on how you should look for and use RSI Divergences. THe Oscillator used in this video is The Heiken Ashi Algo Oscillator Get it free here and always BOOOOOOOOOOST IT!! There are three problems that people have whether they are experts or when they are novices in spotting Divergence between the RSI and price. First problem is they don't know where to look because the RS I can have hundreds of high values and hundreds of low values but you need to know which ones are the relevant ones to look at. The second problem is a common question where people ask "which way will the price go?" The answer to that is basically the slope of the RSI is the new slope of your price so, if the RSI is angled up your price will angle up. If the RSI is angled down your price will angle down. Now hold on a minute don't run off and start acting like you know how to trade divergences yet because there's still question number 3. When will it go in that direction? Just because you see a Divergence doesn't mean it's going to immediately happen so you need to know what to look for to let you know that it is actually going to go in that direction and when will that Trend begin. So in today's video I do a nice lengthy coverage on how to spot those answers and you can use the oscillator in the video by going to this link.
  265. Editors' picks
  266. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/ADAUSDT/
  267. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/ADAUSDT/xFnSZhAx-The-easiest-way-to-spot-divergences-and-how-to-trade-them/
  268. by CoffeeshopCrypto
  269. 61
  270. Scaling-in and Scaling-out
  271. Hello traders, All the below are based on my preferences, I don't give any financial recommendations and I have nothing to sell you with this article. I'm sharing content because I see a lot of traders being/becoming broke and I don't want you to be one of them. Scaling-in There are times when I will scale into a position. When the price dips into the my Moving Average pullback zone, I'll typically get 25% of my position there. I'll then add a full position if the price dips past that MA Don't add to winners I wouldn't advise adding to winners I would advise adding to losers IF it's part of your plan. Though, most traders adding to losers end up losing more statistically.... then even I don't do it. You should always have a stop in place and get out at your stop (or preferably use our hard exit system) NEVER add to your position after your stop has been hit That's not what I'm advising I always make sure to get in a very small position early in case I miss the real entry. It allows me to still have a decent entry if the price drops lower AND allows me to catch the move if the price decides to rip Alright, let's talk about exits👇 Scaling-out Your exit strategy will ultimately depend on your overall strategy However, for ALL small accounts, I'd recommend NOT to scale. Scaling exits should really only be for accounts that can afford to take multiple contracts (5-10+) Otherwise, it's better off just take 100% off at your first target And I really mean it Remember, when your Stop-Loss hit you take 100% of a loss. This should be obvious.... though I see plenty having multiple Take Profit levels and 1 Stop Loss level And they wonder why they're losing.... mostly because of basic mathematics (literally additions and subtractions). A big loss is very hard to offset with multiple partial profits across multiple trades. If you do have a larger account, here's how I'd recommend setting up your exit strategy IMO, it's best to only have 3 targets/exits MAX. After 3, there's really no need to complicate your trading anymore I'm taking the MAJORITY of my profits out at first target... 80+% of your position Otherwise, I very often end up taking the trades, having a lot of unrealised gains but bringing back home nothing.... which is NOT ACCEPTABLE for me. It's UNFORGIVABLE to earn a decent amount of $$ and letting everything go because I thought the trade should have gone further. I like moving my stop to breakeven after I've taken my first partial After you've taken your first partial, that's when you can leave 20% for runners. You can either take the remaining runners out at your second target or Take half out at your second target and leave 10-15% for your last target The larger your account size, the more targets I recommend you have I also like moving my stops up after each target to make sure the trade doesn't go red Why do I use this scaling strategy? By taking the majority of my size off at my first target, it allows my strategy to keep a decent R/R rate, assuming I move stops to breakeven It also leaves my trading more stress-free since I have less of a position on. Allows for the trade to come back breakeven and I've already taken most off On top of that, I have 20-30% of my position as runners in case this stock starts to explode Doesn't happen often, but sometimes the remaining 20% ends up netting me more profit than the original 80% did. At the end of the day, it's up to you how you want to scale These are the methods I found most effective, depending on your account size and your strategy. Conclusion - As a beginner, I used to stick with 1 TP/1 SL only and that's how I brought home gains - Once my trading account reached the 6 figures threshold, I allowed myself to have 2-3 TPs but I was taking most off the table at the first TP level and automatically moved my SL to Breakeven - Adding to losers (aka the Dollar Cost Average method) also called martingale is a solid way for most beginners to depart from their money quickly - I'll make another article on martingale and why I think it's not for everyone
  272. Editors' picks
  273. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSDT/
  274. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSDT/SEkKhWdT-Scaling-in-and-Scaling-out/
  275. by Daveatt
  276. 29
  277. Terminal rates - How FX traders can benefit on TradingView
  278. One of the more watched interest rate settings in markets is the so-called ‘terminal’ interest rate – the point in the interest rate futures curve that reflects the highest point of future rate expectations – said differently, where the market feels a central bank could take its key policy rate by a specific date. For those who really want to understand fed funds futures far better, this research piece from the St. Louis Fed is good - files.stlouisfed.org As an FX trader, I am not too concerned as to the exact pricing in the rates market, a basis point here or there is no great issue - I loosely want to know what is priced by way of future expectations. This lends itself to more fundamental, tactical or thematic trading strategies and obviously day traders won’t pay too close attention, although, it’s worth considering that when rates are on the move you do see higher intraday volatility and that is a factor they have to operate in – where one of the core considerations for any day trader is ‘environment recognition’ and the assessment of whether we’re seeing in a trending or mean reversion (convergence) day. We also see terminal pricing correlated with FX and equity markets – certain if we look at the relationship between fed funds futures April contract and USDJPY we can see the correlation. Some will just use the US 2-year Treasury, as this is the point on the US Treasury curve that is most sensitive to rate pricing. The good thing about the fed fund's future though is we can see quantitatively the degree of rate hikes being priced for a set date. Using the logic expressed in the St Louis Fed research piece we can see that the market sees the highest level where the Fed hike rates is March – subsequently, this is priced off the April contract, and currently, this sits at 4.90%. Using 4.9% as our yardstick, interest rate traders would make a call if the expected fed funds effective rate was either priced too high, or indeed too low and could push above 5% - if new economic data emerged that suggested the Fed needed to go even harder on hiking than what is priced, and the terminal rate moves above 5% then the USD will find a new leg higher. Conversely, if the market started to trade this down to say 4.70% to 4.5% then the USD will find sellers – and notably USDJPY is the cleanest expression of interest rate differentials. For TradingView users we can use this code in the finder box - (100-ZQJ2023). I put these codes into a watchlist and add a section' for heightened display. Again, this tells me where the peak pricing/expectations are in the interest rate curve. You can see the corresponding codes needed for each contract. Terminal rates matter – if we're to see this trending lower, most likely in 2023, then it may be one of the clear release valves the equity market needs – for those looking for the Fed to pivot – the terminal rate will be one way to visualise it
  279. Editors' picks
  280. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/CBOT-ZQJ2023/
  281. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/ZQJ2023/Z40BDnzm-Terminal-rates-How-FX-traders-can-benefit-on-TradingView/
  282. by Pepperstone
  283. 7
  284. My layout of correlations
  285. I always monitor correlations before doing day trading or swing trading on more assets, at the same time. Correlation is a measure that defines how different assets move in relation to one another. The more the correlation coefficient is, the more they are aligned closely. My layout of correlations here. US Dollar and SP500 as references at first row of each table. My list of tickets consists of several subsets: Indices, Commodities , Financials and Currencies. My Layout is 1x5 Correlation Frame 1x1 --> Daily perspective (timeframe 4h, lenght for calculation of correlation = 6) Correlation Frame 1x2 --> Weekly perspective (timeframe 4h, lenght for calculation of correlation = 30) Correlation Frame 1x3 --> Monthly perspective (timeframe 1D, lenght for calculation of correlation = 20) Correlation Frame 1x4 --> 2-Monthly perspective (timeframe 1D, lenght for calculation of correlation =40) Correlation Frame 1x5 --> 3-Monthly perspective (timeframe 1D, lenght for calculation of correlation = 60) You can find this indicator in Tradingview, Tab indicator & strategies , by typing gCorrelations
  286. Editors' picks
  287. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/FX-USDOLLAR/
  288. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/USDOLLAR/pztxU0yl-My-layout-of-correlations/
  289. by giancarlopagliaroli
  290. 41
  291. Trendlines and Channels Tutorial: Part 3
  292. Before we get started on trendlines and channels I want to share a quick thought on the current market environment and how, at least in my opinion, the technical environment has changed. I believe that the weight of the evidence suggests that we are in the early to mid-stage of a primary bear market. If that is the case, momentum and sentiment extremes, breadth thrusts, and other conditions that have reliably produced tradable lows over the course of the recently completed primary bull market are far less likely to create meaningful/investable lows. For a low to be trusted for more than a quick trading turn will require multiple techniques and confirmations, while shorts into rallies and interim highs can be sold much more safely than at any time since the 2008 lows. If global central banks, and in particular the Federal Reserve, continue to tighten policy, markets are at significant risk. In particular I believe that QT is the more important driver of asset prices. I don't foresee a pivot anytime soon unless there is a financial accident. Even then, it’s not likely that the pivot will include a long term reversal of policy. If inflation remains high, pivots are likely to pauses in the tightening cycle and not a lasting reversal. Ten Year Yields: For clarity and simplicity I will treat this uptrend in yield as a bull market (although it is actually a bear market as higher yield = lower price). To keep it simple I will label the uptrend in yields as if it were a bull market and use that terminology. The hourly chart of US Ten Year Treasury Yield offers another example of a consistent demand line coupled with a clear supply line. As discussed in parts 1 & 2, trendlines and channel tops evolve over time and are typically messy. Construction: Yields began inflecting higher in very early August (A) and over the next few weeks began making higher highs and higher lows. The first significant low occurred August 10, and soon after, the initial demand line (A-B) could be drawn. This demand line did an excellent job of defining the stride of the trend for the next two months. At that point there was a solid intervening high pivot between the two low pivots that could be used to draw the initial supply line. After the late August pivot, I moved my initial supply line lower. From September 13- 22 the market traded in the upper portion of the channel for an extended period (period in the oval). Downside reactions began consistently holding in the area around the channel median/central line. This is typically a sign of strength. Note that this was the third time during the sequence that price had held in the upper portion of the band for an extended period. Granted, there were two periods where price was below median, but both periods were relatively short and the totality of time spent above median was far greater. This was clearly a market where demand is outstripping supply by quite a lot (remember that since this is yield, we are treating the uptrend as if it were price, so in actuality, holding in the top portion of the channel represented superior supply). Soon after this show of strength, the market pushed above the top of the supply line. Overthrows of this nature are often terminal, ending the trend. Often, breakouts find fresh supply at roughly 1 channel width above the breakout. This one exceeded that modestly. Often (as is the case here) once the original channel is reentered, it will again begin to act as support and resistance. In the next installment we will talk about combining channels with other chart and oscillators and some notes about using channels to trade against. And finally, many of the topics and techniques discussed in this post are part of the CMT Associations Chartered Market Technician’s curriculum. Good Trading: Stewart Taylor, CMT Chartered Market Technician Taylor Financial Communications Shared content and posted charts are intended to be used for informational and educational purposes only. The CMT Association does not offer, and this information shall not be understood or construed as, financial advice or investment recommendations. The information provided is not a substitute for advice from an investment professional. The CMT Association does not accept liability for any financial loss or damage our audience may incur.
  293. Editors' picks
  294. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/TVC-US10Y/
  295. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/US10Y/copVG3BR-Trendlines-and-Channels-Tutorial-Part-3/
  296. by CMT_Association
  297. 18
  298. See all educational ideas 
  299. Video ideas
  300. BTC Detailed Top-Down Analysis - Day 91
  301. Hello TradingView Family / Fellow Traders. This is Richard Nasr, as known as theSignalyst. 91 out of 500 days done. I truly appreciate your continuous support everyone! Let me know if you like the series, and if you would like me to change or add anything. Always follow your trading plan regarding entry, risk management, and trade management. Good Luck!. All Strategies Are Good; If Managed Properly! ~Rich
  302. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSD/
  303. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSD/bUXIgjgK-BTC-Detailed-Top-Down-Analysis-Day-91/
  304. by TheSignalyst
  305. 17
  306. Bitcoin pumped from big volume area. Wait for break before 2nd
  307. Bitcoin is pumped from a big volume area. Wait for a break before 2nd wave up
  308. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/BTCUSDTPERP/
  309. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/BTCUSDTPERP/cO8a0YrO-Bitcoin-pumped-from-big-volume-area-Wait-for-break-before-2nd/
  310. by Yuriy_Bishko
  311. 2
  312. Trading RSI Divergences LIKE A BOSS (I may have failed you)
  313. Get your copy of the Free Heiken Ashi Algo Oscillator I'm not going to lie. There is WAYYY too much technical stuff to type up in this for you guys. its best if you watch the video. Always Always Always ask questions below. I am always more than happy to show you what's what. This is some UPPER LEVEL STUFF in this video and i know a lot of you won't fully understand it but i want you to understand what it is that you DON'T KNOW about. Unless you know these things, you won't know what questions to ask about. So here we go. Let's get into it. Trading the RSI Divergence like a BOSS After the RSI Divergence is found: On the chart: (KEYS) 1 = last HH 2 = current HH 3 = 1st HH Closing Price 4 = Confirmation of candle closing BELOW 1HH close price 5 = Find your targets 6 = Pinpoint any target with multiple confirmations Steps to take: 1. See last Highest High 2. Draw a line across the last Highest High close price. 3. Confirm second HH is higher price but lower RSI value. Now wait.... 4. Wait for candle to close below price of step (2) 5. Enter SHORT if (Heiken Ashi Candle is closing RED) 6. Your 50ema is Take Profile #1 (Set it up) 7. Your swing high is your stop loss 8. What does the RSI Formula tell you? Is it in the positive? So what! Use the same numbers but trade SHORT. Yep, that what i said, TRADE IT IN REVERSE! This is Take Profit #2 9. Do the Fibonacci trick to confirm which is closer (tp 1 or tp2) 10. Look left for the most recent area of Liquidity. It's a candle with a long wick up or down where price reverses sharply. 11. Scan the Algo for a price level WITH volume. You have found your target. Adjust your take profit and walk away.
  314. Editors' picks
  315. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/ADAUSDT/
  316. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/ADAUSDT/9vkAkTAa-Trading-RSI-Divergences-LIKE-A-BOSS-I-may-have-failed-you/
  317. by CoffeeshopCrypto
  318. 12
  319. AUDUSD looking for continuation UPDATE!
  320. So price making some nice moves giving us a nice direction for now... ill be waiting for a retracement to catch the next leg up!
  321. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/AUDUSD/
  322. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/AUDUSD/b7KI2MNr-AUDUSD-looking-for-continuation-UPDATE/
  323. by jamison_fx
  324. 1
  325. XAUUSD - H4 ( video analyzing )
  326. In the 4-hour time frame, gold is in a descending channel and is moving towards the ceiling of the channel at 1692. In case of a valid break of the channel, it can go up to the level of 1784, but in case of rejection, it will go from the ceiling of the channel to 1580.
  327. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/XAUUSD/
  328. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/XAUUSD/DDxevPCC-XAUUSD-H4-video-analyzing/
  329. by arongroups
  330. 2
  331. EURCHF Swing short from weekly zone
  332. Welcome back! Let me know your thoughts in the comments! **EURCHF - Listen to video! We recommend that you keep this pair on your watchlist and enter when the entry criteria of your strategy is met. Please support this idea with a LIKE and COMMENT if you find it useful and Click "Follow" on our profile if you'd like these trade ideas delivered straight to your email in the future. Thanks for your continued support! Brian & Kenya Horton, BK Forex Academy
  333. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/EURCHF/
  334. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/EURCHF/MymCvKGB-EURCHF-Swing-short-from-weekly-zone/
  335. by BKTradingAcademy
  336. 7
  337. Xauusd trade Idea
  338. If you're looking for a set up or possible opportunity to get into gold I would enter off of the retest that I just spoke about and explained in the video. Another clean rr set up before looking for the main move to happen.
  339. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/XAUUSD/
  340. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/XAUUSD/xP5CTZsH-Xauusd-trade-Idea/
  341. by OfficialJ23
  342. 9
  343. XRP - Our TOP 3 Altcoins, +80% TP 💎
  344. Hi Traders, Investors and Speculators 📈📉 Ev here. Been trading crypto since 2017 and later got into stocks. I have 3 board exams on financial markets and studied economics from a top tier university for a year. Daytime job - Math Teacher. 👩🏫 As you guys know, I am notoriously bullish on XRP, even during a bearish market! Watch this quick 3min video to get a refreshing take on an undervalued altcoin with so much potential it might just go parabolic in the future. The SEC case is definitely a dark cloud that hands over Ripple but once it it settled I expect some major price action for XRPUSDT . In this chart I take a look at the first stops and TP points I expect during the next bull cycles. I also look at the immediate support zone and resistance zone as well as Fibonacci retracement . Reference to the earlier XRPUSDT post : _______________________ 📢Follow us here on TradingView for daily updates and trade ideas on crypto , stocks and commodities 💎Hit like & Follow 👍 We thank you for your support ! CryptoCheck
  345. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/XRPUSDT/
  346. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/XRPUSDT/nrhNaqL6-XRP-Our-TOP-3-Altcoins-80-TP/
  347. by CryptoCheck-
  348. 26
  349. GBP/USD Multi-Timeframe & Order Flow Analysis
  350. Hello Traders, here is the full analysis for this pair, let me know in the comment section below if you have any questions, the entry will be taken only if all rules of the strategies will be satisfied. I suggest you keep this pair on your watchlist and see if the rules of your strategy are satisfied. Please also refer to the Important Risk Notice linked below.
  351. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/GBPUSD/
  352. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/GBPUSD/JqfLjPes-GBP-USD-Multi-Timeframe-Order-Flow-Analysis/
  353. by transparent-fx
  354. 3
  355. Buy Gold
  356. Check confluence of SND & SNR. best enter durinng NY session.
  357. https://www.tradingview.com/symbols/XAUUSD/
  358. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/XAUUSD/LwYAUt5q-Buy-Gold/
  359. by eugenekoomew
  360. https://www.tradingview.com/chart/XAUUSD/LwYAUt5q-Buy-Gold/
  361. See all video ideas 
  362. Streams
  363. TRADEWITHTRAVIS 10/26 NIGHT SESSION
  364. #NAS100, #US30, #DAX, #SPX500, FOREX PAIRS, #XAU/USD, #BTC & MORE Scheduled Streams: Monday - Friday 6:30 UTC and we go for about 45 min to a 1hr+ depending on the markets. Stream Content: Economic Calendar , Big 3, Indices, and VRTX Trades
  365. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/MTOspRUAPJ/
  366. by CarterKyleCapital
  367. How To Make 1 Million Dollars
  368. This is how 99% of people make a million or more trading crypto
  369. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/BrApQzwDmW/
  370. by NewtonsWave
  371. Trade of the week - EURUSD
  372. A multi timeframe break down of EURUSD.
  373. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/PuaIp0BgYc/
  374. by VantageMarkets
  375. 🚀 Crypto Live TA ~ Are Bull Rips Bear Gifts?!
  376. Welcome to our Strength Trading Community! STS stream intro pinned in first comment. Scouting long & short entries in APE, AVAX, AXS, BTC, DOGE, ENS, ETH, GMT, LTC, SOL. Please comment about how you like or dislike our new condensed stream format.
  377. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/cmi5uHTEqt/
  378. by enTHUZed
  379. The Truth, Economy wasn't that Great!
  380. There are obvious signs that the economy isn't doing that great! We have a couple of observations, and we will discuss some of them tonight.
  381. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/UtkUiugKXQ/
  382. by RaynLim
  383. TA Session #133 - Wednesday Market Open, Crypto Pump Analysis, Dollar Punished
  384. 👉Scheduled Streams: Monday - Friday 9:15 am EST / 15.15 CET (15 minutes before NYSE Open) 👉Content: Price Action Based Technical Analysis that is Crypto focused but the whole market is covered. Chart Requests and TA Questions are Encouraged!
  385. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/7M1uvBm_gs/
  386. by TrendmasterOfficial
  387. What you will need to know to Trade Wednesday
  388. Come along and lets Learn how to trade ALL Markets..
  389. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/lhExW49Y5y/
  390. by WillSebastian
  391. TRADE OF THE DAY - Live Walkthrough & Analysis
  392. Live trading walkthrough & analysis of the top trading idea on my radar for the day.
  393. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/IrWcBVWmHh/
  394. by Akil_Stokes
  395. Learn To Trade FOREX Using Supply & Demand & Smart Money Concepts
  396. We will be applying this strategy to all markets. Early start today... watch me markup the EURUSD chart in preparation for the NY Session! Also: - Analyzing FX pairs, CFDs, futures, Indices, and more - Current setups - Q&A
  397. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/T35q2I12-U/
  398. by RT_Money
  399. TRADEWITHTRAVIS 10/26
  400. #NAS100, #US30, #DAX, #SPX500, FOREX PAIRS, #XAU/USD, #BTC & MORE Scheduled Streams: Monday - Friday 6:30 UTC and we go for about 45 min to a 1hr+ depending on the markets. Stream Content: Economic Calendar , Big 3, Indices, and VRTX Trades
  401. https://www.tradingview.com/streams/ni4c8tPtuV/
  402. by CarterKyleCapital
  403. See all streams 
  404. Brokers
  405. TradeStation
  406. https://www.tradingview.com/broker-awards/
  407. Learn more
  408. FOREX.com
  409. Learn more
  410. See all brokers 
  411. @Cenobar
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  416. @half_bake_chef
  417. @bradfairbridge
  418. @shabs.fazl
  419. @mytradingsetup
  420. @french_trader
  421. @falcon_invest1
  422. @dehandreh
  423. @mr_sf09
  424. @cryptoplayhouse
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  428. @jasmineeevn
  429. Explore the world
  430. Top website
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  432. Get started
  433. https://www.tradingview.com/
  434. Chart
  435. Pine Script™
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The webpage contains plaintext emails.
  1. leo-look-480@2x.09262cdcda4a629e7c97.webp
  2. leo-look-320@2x.a00580c75136b73332b8.webp
Miscellaneous
Structured data
The webpage has structured data.
        Meta viewport
        The webpage has a meta viewport tag set.
        width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, maximum-scale=1.0, minimum-scale=1.0, user-scalable=no
        Character set
        The webpage has a charset value set.
        utf-8
        Sitemap
        The website has sitemaps.
        1. https://www.tradingview.com/sitemap.xml
        Content length
        The webpage has 97,825 words.
        Text to HTML ratio
        The text to HTML ratio is 52%.
        Inline CSS
        The webpage contains inline CSS code.
        1. width:5px
        2. width:5px
        3. --ui-lib-control-group-cols:2;--ui-lib-control-group-rows:1
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        5. --ui-lib-light-button-content-max-lines:1
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        124. width:5px
        125. --filmstrip-right-button-order:11
        126. width:5px
        127. order:1
        128. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        129. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
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        131. order:2
        132. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        133. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
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        135. order:3
        136. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        137. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
        138. --ui-lib-image-card-preview-background:#ffffff
        139. order:4
        140. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        141. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
        142. --ui-lib-image-card-preview-background:#000000
        143. order:5
        144. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        145. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
        146. --ui-lib-image-card-preview-background:#ffffff
        147. order:6
        148. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        149. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
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        151. order:7
        152. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
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        155. order:8
        156. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
        157. --ui-lib-image-card-paragraph-clamp-line:0
        158. --ui-lib-image-card-preview-background:#ffffff
        159. order:9
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        199. --ui-lib-image-card-preview-background:#787b86
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        201. width:5px
        202. --ui-lib-image-card-title-clamp-line:2
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        222. width:5px
        223. --count-brokers-list:3
        224. width:5px
        225. width:5px
        226. width:5px
        227. width:5px
        Deprecated HTML
        There are no deprecated HTML tags on the webpage.