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מעודכן VMS Multi Index Options Buying Indicator

Detailed User Guide
This system is a multi-faceted toolkit designed for traders who use options. It synthesizes information from the underlying asset, specific call and put options, and market structure to generate a consolidated view.
Core Philosophy:
The tool is built on the principle of "Multi-Timeframe, Multi-Indicator Confirmation." It avoids relying on a single signal. Instead, it seeks confluence between momentum, trend, market structure, and volume data across different components (underlying, call, and put) before suggesting a trade.
1. The Legal Agreement & Setup
Getting Started: The first thing you will see is a mandatory disclaimer. You must type "agree" into the input field to activate the indicator and acknowledge the associated risks.
Defining Your Instruments: The core of the setup is specifying the two options you want to analyze.
Call Option Symbol: Input the specific symbol for the call option you are tracking.
Put Option Symbol: Input the specific symbol for the put option you are tracking (typically, these would be similar strike prices and expiry).
2. Understanding the Primary Signal
The main trading signal is derived from a multi-index analysis applied separately to your chosen call and put options.
The Histogram (Momentum Gauge):
You will see two histograms (bar charts) on the main panel.
The top section (above the zero line) represents the Call Option's momentum.
The bottom section (below the zero line) represents the Put Option's momentum.
Interpretation:
Green Bars (Call) / Red Bars (Put): Indicate a "BUY" signal for that respective option.
Yellow Bars (Call) / Orange Bars (Put): Indicate a "WEAK" or cautionary signal.
Gray Bars: Indicate "NO TRADE" conditions.
The height and position of the bars show the strength and direction of the momentum oscillator.
The Signal Dashboard (Your Command Center):
A table provides a numerical breakdown of the signal strength. This is where you get the "why" behind the colors.
Overall Signal: The final verdict ("BUY CALL", "WEAK PUT", "NO TRADE").
Strength (/7): A score out of 7 for each option. A score of 4 or higher is considered a strong signal. A score of 3 is weak. This score is an aggregate of several factors:
Momentum Oscillator Value & Direction
Momentum above a defined threshold
Short-term vs. Long-term trend alignment
"Squeeze" state (a volatility contraction indicator)
A bonus for fresh momentum crossovers.
Key Takeaway: Look for the option with the higher strength score, and only consider trades when the score is 3 or above, with a preference for scores of 4+.
3. Integrating Market Context
The indicator overlays several other analytical tools to provide context for the primary signal. Confluence with these tools increases the probability of a successful trade.
Support & Resistance (S/R) Lines:
Multiple colored horizontal lines are drawn on the chart, representing key support and resistance levels derived from monthly, weekly, and daily data.
How to Use: Observe the price action relative to these levels. A "BUY CALL" signal that occurs near a major support line (e.g., L0, L1, L2) is significantly more powerful. Conversely, a "BUY PUT" signal near a major resistance line (e.g., L8, L9, L10) carries more weight.
Trend Filter (Intraday Level):
A thick line that acts as a dynamic trend filter.
How to Use: This is a simple but effective filter.
If price is above this line, it suggests a bullish intraday bias. Favor "BUY CALL" signals.
If price is below this line, it suggests a bearish intraday bias. Favor "BUY PUT" signals.
Ignore or be very cautious with signals that go against the Trend Filter.
Volume Analysis Dashboard:
A separate table provides a deep dive into volume data for both the underlying asset and your specified options.
How to Use: This confirms whether money flow agrees with your technical signal.
A "BUY CALL" signal is reinforced if the underlying and the call option are seeing higher buy volume % and more bullish candles.
A "BUY PUT" signal is reinforced if the underlying and the put option are seeing higher buy volume % and more bullish candles.
Call-Put Spread Analysis:
This measures the difference in price between your call and put options.
How to Use:
A rising or positive spread suggests market sentiment is becoming more bullish (calls are gaining value faster than puts).
A falling or negative spread suggests market sentiment is becoming more bearish (puts are gaining value faster than calls).
Use this to confirm the bias of your primary signal.
4. Entry Execution & Risk Management
Entry Timing: The ideal entry occurs when the primary signal triggers ("BUY CALL/PUT") and you have confluence from at least 2 of the 3 contextual factors:
Price is respecting a key S/R level.
The Trend Filter aligns with the signal direction.
Volume and Spread data confirm the momentum.
Built-in Alerts: You can set alerts for the "Buy Call" and "Buy Put" conditions so you are notified when a strong signal triggers.
Risk Management: This is paramount. The indicator does not provide stop-loss or take-profit levels. You must employ your own risk management strategy, such as:
Placing a stop-loss below the recent swing low (for calls) or above the recent swing high (for puts).
Using a fixed percentage or rupee-based risk per trade.
Quick-Reference Cheat Sheet
Step Component What to Look For Action
1 Primary Signal Histogram color & "Overall Signal" in dashboard. Green/Red: Strong signal. Yellow/Orange: Weak signal. Gray: No trade.
2 Signal Strength "Strength (/7)" score in dashboard. ≥4: Strong. =3: Weak/Cautious. <3: Ignore.
3 Market Structure Price relative to S/R lines & Trend Filter. Bullish Confluence: Signal + Price near support + Above Trend Filter.
Bearish Confluence: Signal + Price near resistance + Below Trend Filter.
4 Volume Confirmation Volume Dashboard. Underlying and option should show higher Buy Volume % and more Bullish Candles in the direction of your trade.
5 Sentiment Check Call-Put Spread. Rising/Positive Spread: Confirms bullish bias.
Falling/Negative Spread: Confirms bearish bias.
6 Final Decision Composite of all factors. High-Probability Trade: Strong primary signal (Step 1 & 2) with confluence from Steps 3, 4, and/or 5.
7 Execute & Manage Your Trading Plan. Enter trade. Always use a stop-loss. Take profits based on your predefined plan. The Illusion of the "Perfect Indicator"
The human mind, especially when faced with the complexity and stress of financial markets, seeks certainty. It wants a system that says, "Buy here, sell there, and you will win." This desire creates a dangerous vulnerability: the belief that a tool can replace judgment.
The final note, "This system is designed to inform your decisions, not to make them for you," is a direct antidote to this illusion. Here’s a breakdown of what that truly means:
1. The Tool is a Compass, Not an Autopilot
Think of this indicator as a high-tech compass on a ship. It can tell you:
The direction of the wind (momentum).
The depth of the water (support/resistance).
The set of the currents (trend).
The activity in other nearby vessels (volume).
But it cannot:
Steer the ship for you.
Decide when to reef the sails in a sudden storm (volatility spike).
Choose the final destination (your financial goals).
Abandon ship if it starts to sink (your risk management).
You are the captain. The tool provides superb data, but you must synthesize it with experience, intuition, and an overarching strategy. Blindly following any signal, no matter how strong, is like setting your autopilot in a crowded shipping lane and going to sleep.
2. The Gap Between Signal and Execution
A "BUY CALL" signal is a moment in time. Your execution is another. The market is a dynamic, living entity. What was true at the close of the candle when the signal generated may not be true 30 seconds later when your order is placed.
Slippage: The price you get vs. the price you see.
Gaps: The market can open beyond your risk parameters.
Latency: The signal is historical; you are trading in the present.
Your skill lies in navigating this gap. The indicator highlights a potential opportunity, but your discipline in order placement, patience for the right entry, and ability to abort a setup that "looks wrong" in real-time are what separate professionals from amateurs.
3. The Context is King (And the Indicator Can't See Everything)
No indicator has access to the full context of the market.
Macro-Events: Is there a central bank announcement in 30 minutes? The indicator doesn't know. You should.
Earnings: Did a major sector company just report disastrous earnings, changing the sentiment for the entire index?
Global Cues: Are international markets crashing?
A signal might be technically perfect but fundamentally suicidal given the broader context. You are the one who must bring this macro-awareness to the table. The tool provides a micro-view; you provide the macro-view.
4. The Psychology of the Trader is the Ultimate System
This is the most important element. You can have the best tool in the world, but if your mind is not trained, you will lose.
Confirmation Bias: The tool gives a "WEAK PUT" signal, but you are already bearish. You interpret it as a "STRONG PUT" and over-leverage.
Hope & Fear: A trade goes against you. The indicator might still be holding its signal, but your fear triggers an early exit. Or conversely, a "NO TRADE" signal appears, but your hope for a win makes you enter anyway.
Revenge Trading: After a loss, you ignore the "NO TRADE" signal and jump into the next setup to "win your money back."
The indicator is a logic-based system. Trading is a psychological endeavor. The tool can suggest what to do, but it cannot give you the discipline to follow through or the wisdom to deviate when necessary.
In Essence:
Using this powerful system without the final note in mind is like giving a masterfully crafted, precision sniper rifle to someone who has never been taught to breathe steadily, account for wind, or manage their trigger squeeze. The rifle is capable, but the outcome is entirely dependent on the skill and discipline of the person holding it.
Therefore, use the tool to:
Focus your attention on high-probability setups.
Provide a framework for your analysis.
Save time on manual calculations.
But never abdicate your responsibility to:
Apply sound risk management on every single trade.
Maintain emotional discipline.
Consider the broader market context.
Make the final call.
The ultimate goal is not to find a system you can follow blindly, but to use tools like this to become a more informed, disciplined, and self-aware trader. The indicator is a part of your edge; you are the source of it.
This system is a multi-faceted toolkit designed for traders who use options. It synthesizes information from the underlying asset, specific call and put options, and market structure to generate a consolidated view.
Core Philosophy:
The tool is built on the principle of "Multi-Timeframe, Multi-Indicator Confirmation." It avoids relying on a single signal. Instead, it seeks confluence between momentum, trend, market structure, and volume data across different components (underlying, call, and put) before suggesting a trade.
1. The Legal Agreement & Setup
Getting Started: The first thing you will see is a mandatory disclaimer. You must type "agree" into the input field to activate the indicator and acknowledge the associated risks.
Defining Your Instruments: The core of the setup is specifying the two options you want to analyze.
Call Option Symbol: Input the specific symbol for the call option you are tracking.
Put Option Symbol: Input the specific symbol for the put option you are tracking (typically, these would be similar strike prices and expiry).
2. Understanding the Primary Signal
The main trading signal is derived from a multi-index analysis applied separately to your chosen call and put options.
The Histogram (Momentum Gauge):
You will see two histograms (bar charts) on the main panel.
The top section (above the zero line) represents the Call Option's momentum.
The bottom section (below the zero line) represents the Put Option's momentum.
Interpretation:
Green Bars (Call) / Red Bars (Put): Indicate a "BUY" signal for that respective option.
Yellow Bars (Call) / Orange Bars (Put): Indicate a "WEAK" or cautionary signal.
Gray Bars: Indicate "NO TRADE" conditions.
The height and position of the bars show the strength and direction of the momentum oscillator.
The Signal Dashboard (Your Command Center):
A table provides a numerical breakdown of the signal strength. This is where you get the "why" behind the colors.
Overall Signal: The final verdict ("BUY CALL", "WEAK PUT", "NO TRADE").
Strength (/7): A score out of 7 for each option. A score of 4 or higher is considered a strong signal. A score of 3 is weak. This score is an aggregate of several factors:
Momentum Oscillator Value & Direction
Momentum above a defined threshold
Short-term vs. Long-term trend alignment
"Squeeze" state (a volatility contraction indicator)
A bonus for fresh momentum crossovers.
Key Takeaway: Look for the option with the higher strength score, and only consider trades when the score is 3 or above, with a preference for scores of 4+.
3. Integrating Market Context
The indicator overlays several other analytical tools to provide context for the primary signal. Confluence with these tools increases the probability of a successful trade.
Support & Resistance (S/R) Lines:
Multiple colored horizontal lines are drawn on the chart, representing key support and resistance levels derived from monthly, weekly, and daily data.
How to Use: Observe the price action relative to these levels. A "BUY CALL" signal that occurs near a major support line (e.g., L0, L1, L2) is significantly more powerful. Conversely, a "BUY PUT" signal near a major resistance line (e.g., L8, L9, L10) carries more weight.
Trend Filter (Intraday Level):
A thick line that acts as a dynamic trend filter.
How to Use: This is a simple but effective filter.
If price is above this line, it suggests a bullish intraday bias. Favor "BUY CALL" signals.
If price is below this line, it suggests a bearish intraday bias. Favor "BUY PUT" signals.
Ignore or be very cautious with signals that go against the Trend Filter.
Volume Analysis Dashboard:
A separate table provides a deep dive into volume data for both the underlying asset and your specified options.
How to Use: This confirms whether money flow agrees with your technical signal.
A "BUY CALL" signal is reinforced if the underlying and the call option are seeing higher buy volume % and more bullish candles.
A "BUY PUT" signal is reinforced if the underlying and the put option are seeing higher buy volume % and more bullish candles.
Call-Put Spread Analysis:
This measures the difference in price between your call and put options.
How to Use:
A rising or positive spread suggests market sentiment is becoming more bullish (calls are gaining value faster than puts).
A falling or negative spread suggests market sentiment is becoming more bearish (puts are gaining value faster than calls).
Use this to confirm the bias of your primary signal.
4. Entry Execution & Risk Management
Entry Timing: The ideal entry occurs when the primary signal triggers ("BUY CALL/PUT") and you have confluence from at least 2 of the 3 contextual factors:
Price is respecting a key S/R level.
The Trend Filter aligns with the signal direction.
Volume and Spread data confirm the momentum.
Built-in Alerts: You can set alerts for the "Buy Call" and "Buy Put" conditions so you are notified when a strong signal triggers.
Risk Management: This is paramount. The indicator does not provide stop-loss or take-profit levels. You must employ your own risk management strategy, such as:
Placing a stop-loss below the recent swing low (for calls) or above the recent swing high (for puts).
Using a fixed percentage or rupee-based risk per trade.
Quick-Reference Cheat Sheet
Step Component What to Look For Action
1 Primary Signal Histogram color & "Overall Signal" in dashboard. Green/Red: Strong signal. Yellow/Orange: Weak signal. Gray: No trade.
2 Signal Strength "Strength (/7)" score in dashboard. ≥4: Strong. =3: Weak/Cautious. <3: Ignore.
3 Market Structure Price relative to S/R lines & Trend Filter. Bullish Confluence: Signal + Price near support + Above Trend Filter.
Bearish Confluence: Signal + Price near resistance + Below Trend Filter.
4 Volume Confirmation Volume Dashboard. Underlying and option should show higher Buy Volume % and more Bullish Candles in the direction of your trade.
5 Sentiment Check Call-Put Spread. Rising/Positive Spread: Confirms bullish bias.
Falling/Negative Spread: Confirms bearish bias.
6 Final Decision Composite of all factors. High-Probability Trade: Strong primary signal (Step 1 & 2) with confluence from Steps 3, 4, and/or 5.
7 Execute & Manage Your Trading Plan. Enter trade. Always use a stop-loss. Take profits based on your predefined plan. The Illusion of the "Perfect Indicator"
The human mind, especially when faced with the complexity and stress of financial markets, seeks certainty. It wants a system that says, "Buy here, sell there, and you will win." This desire creates a dangerous vulnerability: the belief that a tool can replace judgment.
The final note, "This system is designed to inform your decisions, not to make them for you," is a direct antidote to this illusion. Here’s a breakdown of what that truly means:
1. The Tool is a Compass, Not an Autopilot
Think of this indicator as a high-tech compass on a ship. It can tell you:
The direction of the wind (momentum).
The depth of the water (support/resistance).
The set of the currents (trend).
The activity in other nearby vessels (volume).
But it cannot:
Steer the ship for you.
Decide when to reef the sails in a sudden storm (volatility spike).
Choose the final destination (your financial goals).
Abandon ship if it starts to sink (your risk management).
You are the captain. The tool provides superb data, but you must synthesize it with experience, intuition, and an overarching strategy. Blindly following any signal, no matter how strong, is like setting your autopilot in a crowded shipping lane and going to sleep.
2. The Gap Between Signal and Execution
A "BUY CALL" signal is a moment in time. Your execution is another. The market is a dynamic, living entity. What was true at the close of the candle when the signal generated may not be true 30 seconds later when your order is placed.
Slippage: The price you get vs. the price you see.
Gaps: The market can open beyond your risk parameters.
Latency: The signal is historical; you are trading in the present.
Your skill lies in navigating this gap. The indicator highlights a potential opportunity, but your discipline in order placement, patience for the right entry, and ability to abort a setup that "looks wrong" in real-time are what separate professionals from amateurs.
3. The Context is King (And the Indicator Can't See Everything)
No indicator has access to the full context of the market.
Macro-Events: Is there a central bank announcement in 30 minutes? The indicator doesn't know. You should.
Earnings: Did a major sector company just report disastrous earnings, changing the sentiment for the entire index?
Global Cues: Are international markets crashing?
A signal might be technically perfect but fundamentally suicidal given the broader context. You are the one who must bring this macro-awareness to the table. The tool provides a micro-view; you provide the macro-view.
4. The Psychology of the Trader is the Ultimate System
This is the most important element. You can have the best tool in the world, but if your mind is not trained, you will lose.
Confirmation Bias: The tool gives a "WEAK PUT" signal, but you are already bearish. You interpret it as a "STRONG PUT" and over-leverage.
Hope & Fear: A trade goes against you. The indicator might still be holding its signal, but your fear triggers an early exit. Or conversely, a "NO TRADE" signal appears, but your hope for a win makes you enter anyway.
Revenge Trading: After a loss, you ignore the "NO TRADE" signal and jump into the next setup to "win your money back."
The indicator is a logic-based system. Trading is a psychological endeavor. The tool can suggest what to do, but it cannot give you the discipline to follow through or the wisdom to deviate when necessary.
In Essence:
Using this powerful system without the final note in mind is like giving a masterfully crafted, precision sniper rifle to someone who has never been taught to breathe steadily, account for wind, or manage their trigger squeeze. The rifle is capable, but the outcome is entirely dependent on the skill and discipline of the person holding it.
Therefore, use the tool to:
Focus your attention on high-probability setups.
Provide a framework for your analysis.
Save time on manual calculations.
But never abdicate your responsibility to:
Apply sound risk management on every single trade.
Maintain emotional discipline.
Consider the broader market context.
Make the final call.
The ultimate goal is not to find a system you can follow blindly, but to use tools like this to become a more informed, disciplined, and self-aware trader. The indicator is a part of your edge; you are the source of it.
הערות שחרור
old labels are not deleting, corrected הערות שחרור
updated options as many are facing difficulty, added telegram id in volume tableהערות שחרור
minor issue solvedהערות שחרור
updated strength calculation parameter, increased from 7 to 8הערות שחרור
updated S/Rהערות שחרור
levels updatedסקריפט מוגן
סקריפט זה פורסם כמקור סגור. עם זאת, תוכל להשתמש בו בחופשיות וללא כל מגבלות – למד עוד כאן
כתב ויתור
המידע והפרסומים אינם מיועדים להיות, ואינם מהווים, ייעוץ או המלצה פיננסית, השקעתית, מסחרית או מכל סוג אחר המסופקת או מאושרת על ידי TradingView. קרא עוד ב־תנאי השימוש.
סקריפט מוגן
סקריפט זה פורסם כמקור סגור. עם זאת, תוכל להשתמש בו בחופשיות וללא כל מגבלות – למד עוד כאן
כתב ויתור
המידע והפרסומים אינם מיועדים להיות, ואינם מהווים, ייעוץ או המלצה פיננסית, השקעתית, מסחרית או מכל סוג אחר המסופקת או מאושרת על ידי TradingView. קרא עוד ב־תנאי השימוש.