Intraday Stop Loss Calculator[fitfatq]Indicator Overview
Intraday Stop Loss Calculator is a practical tool designed for day traders. This indicator helps traders instantly calculate the loss percentage based on the high or low of the current K-bar relative to the entry price. It also displays the stop-loss risk based on the day's high or low. You can select either long or short mode, allowing the indicator to calculate the appropriate data according to your trading strategy.
Features
Current K-bar Stop Loss: Calculates and displays the loss percentage based on the high or low of the current K-bar, making it ideal for short-term trading decisions. Day Stop Loss: Calculates and displays the loss percentage based on the day's high (for short positions) or low (for long positions), helping you better manage risk by understanding the distance between the current price and key levels.
Adjustable Options
Minute Period: Users can select the minute period for the indicator, with a default of 5 minutes. Position Type: Choose between "Long" or "Short," and the indicator will automatically calculate the relevant stop-loss data based on your selection. Show Day Stop Loss: Users can choose whether to display the stop-loss percentage based on the day's high or low. The default is enabled.
Usage Instructions
Load the indicator, set the minute period, and choose the long or short mode. Depending on your trading strategy, decide whether to display the day's stop-loss percentage. When switching symbols, if the current K-bar has no movement, the indicator may temporarily not display information. This is normal behavior. Please wait for the next K-bar or manually refresh.
Basic Logic
The indicator calculates and displays the loss percentage based on the high or low of the current K-bar and the day's high or low, helping traders understand potential stop-loss risks in real-time. Users can adjust parameters such as color and transparency to ensure the indicator displays clearly and meets their expectations.
Notes
When switching symbols, if the K-bar has no movement, the indicator may not immediately update. This is due to Pine Script requiring data changes to trigger calculations. This indicator is ideal for users who frequently engage in day trading, helping you better manage risk and make timely decisions.
Additionally, please note that in the Chinese version of TradingView, the long/short options might be translated as "Short-term" and "Long-term," but this does not affect the functionality of the indicator.
חפש סקריפטים עבור "stop loss"
Tiger's Stop - Objective Stoploss SettingTrading is a lot about risk management too. I created this script to help with setting and moving a proper stop-loss. It plots an area that is a result of adding and subtracting both average true range and something I call "false range".
►The Average True Range is calculated as the candle's high-low. If there is a gap, it is added to complete the result.
►My own False Range just candle bodies. It is calculated as an absolute value of (close-open).
Then, Rolling Moving Average is applied on both ATR and False Range to get an idea of how far the price tends to extend out of pure randomness. The resulting value is multiplied by a Multiplier.
The next step is an addition of the values to the higher part of the candle for short or a lower part of the candle for long. I prefer a special calculation instead of using Highs and Lows because it allows for more precise observation and stop-loss set up for less wicky symbols.
►►►Additional Functions
• Smoothing - applies moving average to candles from which range distance is calculated. This can achieve good smoothness but higher values will lead to using outdated price in the SL area calculation.
• Enable/Disable - if you know the direction you are going to trade in, it is good to disable either Long Stop-Loss Area or Short Stop-Loss Area. Just untick it in the settings.
►►►Actual Using
Before using the script to set your stop-loss, check the historical data and find a similar set-up. Is it engulfing you use as a trigger? Find a different one and see how effective the stop-loss based on the ATR*multiplier was. This will help you to optimize Multiplier value. A picture shows such research for a double top. You should find more similar situations to find an optimal value.
Ultimately, the indicator still gives you relatively a lot of freedom with your stop-loss settings (at least, that is with the default settings). You need to decide how loose stop-loss you want to set. Average True Range is the furthermost part which will make for a very large stop-loss, on the other hand, False Range might be triggered by a villainous wick unnecessarily. The choice should depend on the specific symbol you trade and perhaps, you will learn to set stops regardless of the indicator.
A little trick : 1. You can set the loosest stop-loss and set a TradingView alert for where the tightest stop-loss would be. When alerted, you will get the opportunity to reconsider the trade and take a loss if needs be or exit if a candle closes there. 2. Mostly for cryptocurrencies, you can set the tightest stop-loss to protect yourself from sudden spikes. If the price approaches it slowly enough, you can move the stop-loss to the further part of the channel. This is not the same as moving stop-loss indefinitely with hopes of reversal if you plan it from the beginning and a smaller stop is meant to protect you from spikes that are not always predictable and drive to both directions.
►►►Advantages of trailing stop-loss
I usually stick with my original stop-loss instead of moving to break even. If my entry area was functional support once, it may work again and is, therefore, still a good entry zone. But an alternative used to preserve as much of the profit as possible is trailing.
Trailing is setting a specific value in ticks or a calculation of how to move the stop-loss whenever the price moves in your favor. Tiger's Stop can be used this way. Whenever there is a new value as the candle closes and that value is closer to price than your current stop-loss, you can update it. However, if it moves further from your price, don't change the stop-loss. This can be a little tiresome if you do it manually but should be worth the effort.
I usually start trailing only after the price moves significantly in my favor that allowing it to return to the entry price would not make any sense.
►►►Feedback and optimization
The preview chart is chosen entirely at random and the values are not optimized for any specific symbol. If you opt to use it, let me know which values work for you the best, I'll add it to the description when I update it.
Furthermore, let me know if you think any sort of alerts would be useful with my script.
Good luck!
Precise ATR Stop Loss - Daily Pullbacks [ST]Precise ATR Stop Loss - Daily Pullbacks
This indicator uses ATR (Average True Range) combined with the identification of pullback lows and highs on daily charts to calculate more precise stop loss levels.
How it works:
Identification of Pullbacks:
Pullback Lows: Identifies significant low points on daily charts that can serve as support.
Pullback Highs: Identifies significant high points on daily charts that can serve as resistance.
ATR (Average True Range):
Measures market volatility and is used to adjust stop loss levels according to market conditions.
Dynamic Stop Loss:
Stop Loss for Uptrend:
When a pullback low is identified on a daily chart, the stop loss is set slightly below this point, adjusted by the ATR.
This level is shown by a green line on the chart.
Stop Loss for Downtrend:
When a pullback high is identified on a daily chart, the stop loss is set slightly above this point, adjusted by the ATR.
This level is shown by a red line on the chart.
Indicator Benefits:
Improved Precision: Uses significant pullback points on daily charts to set stops more accurately.
Dynamic Stop Loss:
Automatically adjusts stop loss levels according to market volatility, providing more effective risk management.
Título: Precise ATR Stop Loss - Daily Pullbacks
Descrição em Português:
Este indicador utiliza o ATR (Average True Range) combinado com a identificação de fundos e topos de pullback em gráficos diários para calcular níveis de stop loss mais precisos.
Como funciona:
Identificação de Pullbacks:
Fundos de Pullback: Identifica pontos de mínima significativos em gráficos diários que podem servir como suporte.
Topos de Pullback: Identifica pontos de máxima significativos em gráficos diários que podem servir como resistência.
ATR (Average True Range):
Mede a volatilidade do mercado e é utilizado para ajustar os níveis de stop loss de acordo com as condições do mercado.
Stop Loss Dinâmico:
Stop Loss para Tendência de Alta: Quando um fundo de pullback é identificado em um gráfico diário, o stop loss é colocado um pouco abaixo desse ponto, ajustado pelo ATR. Este nível é mostrado por uma linha verde no gráfico.
Stop Loss para Tendência de Baixa: Quando um topo de pullback é identificado em um gráfico diário, o stop loss é colocado um pouco acima desse ponto, ajustado pelo ATR. Este nível é mostrado por uma linha vermelha no gráfico.
Benefícios do Indicador:
Precisão Melhorada: Utiliza pontos de pullback significativos em gráficos diários para posicionar stops de forma mais precisa.
Stop Loss Dinâmico: Ajusta automaticamente os níveis de stop loss de acordo com a volatilidade do mercado, proporcionando uma gestão de risco mais eficaz.
Interactive SAR Stop-Loss [TANHEF]This indicator is "Interactive" which means some inputs can are manually added through the first click after adding the indicator to the chart (SAR Trailing Stop-loss start point).
Unlike the normal Parabolic SAR, this indicator allows for the modification of the start point of the Parabolic SAR’s first bar calculation. Normally, the Parabolic SAR automatically has a start point after the first bar of an asset’s historical price that will then switch between trailing above and below price respectively. It must be noted that due to how the first position of the Parabolic SAR is calculated, on occasion the Parabolic SAR will immediately flip on the next bar to the opposite side relative to price that it was just located. Modifying the setting “⭐Initial Interactive SAR Position Source”, then selecting either 'Clicked' or 'ATR' level as the vertical start position will prevent this. See images below for more explanation.
Why use a trailing stop-loss?
A trailing stop-loss provides an exit when price moves against you but also enables you to move the exit point further into profit when price is moving in the desired direction of a trade. The Parabolic SAR ( stop and reverse ) which is used to determine price direction as well as when price direction is changing, is very effective at functioning as a trailing stop loss.
Indicator Explanation
Initially when this indicator is added to the chart, you will be prompted to select where to begin the SAR Trailing Stop-loss.
For a long stop-loss, select below price.
For a short stop-loss, select above price.
After this indicator is placed, it can be modified via dragging or from within the settings by modifying the time and the price input. Or simply re-add the indicator to the chart. Another option is to have this Parabolic SAR begin directly on the price that was initially ‘Clicked’ or the ‘ATR’ level, which requires selecting the option in settings labeled “⭐Initial Interactive SAR Position Source”
The SAR Stop Loss plotted. Note that the calculation that occurs on this first bar of the ‘Interactive SAR’ is as if the prior bar was the oldest historical bar of the asset. Due to the SAR’s calculations, if the ‘Normal SAR’ were to also flip sides over to the position that has been manually set for the ‘Interactive SAR’, they won’t necessarily have the same result.
An optional fixed profit target can be added within the settings. This profit target will only actively be plotted when the SAR Trailing Stop-loss has not be hit yet or until the profit target has been hit.
Here shows that the profit target was hit, then later on the SAR Trailing Stop-loss was hit.
Note, trailing stop-loss will continue to be plotted until it has been hit regardless of the profit target being hit or not.
Here is an example of when the Parabolic SAR will immediately flip on the next bar to the opposite side relative to price that it was just first located. This is due to how the Parabolic SAR is calculated and will also occur with the traditional Parabolic SAR that is not interactively (manually) given a start location. To prevent this, either relocate this time in which this SAR beings or consider modifying the SAR’s (start, increment, max) settings specifically.
Here instead of using the SAR’s calculation for an initial bar, the ‘ATR’ was selected as the start point within the setting “⭐Initial Interactive SAR Position Source”.
Alerts
1. 'Check' alerts to use within indicator settings (trailing stop hit and/or profit target hit).
2. Select 'Create Alert'
3. Set the condition to 'Interactive SAR''
4. Select create.
Interactive ATR Stop-Loss [TANHEF]This indicator is "Interactive" which means some inputs can are manually added through the first click after adding the indicator to the chart (ATR Trailing Stop-loss start point). See images below for more explanation.
Why use a trailing stop-loss?
A trailing stop-loss provides an exit when price moves against you but also enables you to move the exit point further into profit when price is moving in the desired direction of a trade. The ATR (Average True Range) which is used to measure volatility, is very effective at functioning as a trailing stop loss.
Indicator Explanation
Initially when this indicator is added to the chart, you will be prompted to select where to begin the ATR Trailing Stop-loss.
For a long stop-loss, select below price.
For a short stop-loss, select above price.
After this indicator is placed, it can be modified via dragging or from within the settings by modifying the time and the price input. Or simply re-add the indicator to the chart.
The ATR Stop Loss plotted. Note that the trailing value that is considered as the stop loss value is the value of the ATR from the prior candle. The settings for the ATR calculation can be modified within the settings.
An optional fixed profit target can be added within the settings. This profit target will only actively be plotted when the ATR Trailing Stop-loss has not be hit hit yet or until the profit target has been hit.
Here shows that the profit target was hit, then later on the ATR Trailing Stop-loss was hit.
Note, trailing stop-loss will continue to be plotted until it has been hit regardless of the profit target being hit or not.
Alerts
1. 'Check' alerts to use within indicator settings (trailing stop hit and/or profit target hit).
2. Select 'Create Alert'
3. Set the condition to 'Interactive ATR''
4. Select create.
Trend Score with Dynamic Stop Loss RTH
📘 Trend Score with Dynamic Stop Loss (RTH) — Guide
🔎 Overview
This indicator tracks intraday momentum during Regular Trading Hours and flags trend flips using a cumulative TrendScore. It also draws dynamic stop-loss levels and shows a live stats table for quick decision-making and journaling.
⸻
⚙️ Core Concepts
1) TrendScore (per bar)
• +1 if the current bar makes a higher high than the previous bar (counted once per bar).
• –1 if the current bar makes a lower low than the previous bar (counted once per bar).
• If a bar takes both the prior high and low, the net contribution can cancel out within that bar.
2) Cumulative TrendScore (running total)
• The per-bar TrendScore accumulates across the session to form the cumulative TrendScore (TS).
• TS resets to 0 at session open and is cleared at session close.
• Rising TS = persistent upside pressure; falling TS = persistent downside pressure.
⸻
🔄 Flip Rules (3-point reversal of the cumulative TrendScore)
A flip occurs when the cumulative TrendScore reverses by 3 points in the opposite direction of the current trend.
• Bullish Flip
• Trigger: After a decline, the cumulative TrendScore rises by +3 from its down-leg.
• Interpretation: Bulls have taken control.
• Stop-loss: the lowest price of the prior (down) leg.
• Bearish Flip
• Trigger: After a rise, the cumulative TrendScore falls by –3 from its up-leg.
• Interpretation: Bears have taken control.
• Stop-loss: the highest price of the prior (up) leg.
Flip bars are marked with ▲ (lime) for bullish and ▼ (red) for bearish.
Note: If you prefer a different reversal distance, adjust the flip distance setting in the script’s inputs (default is 3).
⸻
📏 Stop-Loss Lines
• A dotted line is drawn at the prior leg’s extreme:
Green (below price) after a bullish flip.
Red (above price) after a bearish flip.
• Options:
Remove on touch for a clean chart.
Freeze on touch to keep a visual record for journaling.
• All stop lines are cleared at session end.
⸻
🧮 Stats Table (what you see)
• Trend: Bull / Bear / Neutral
• Bars in Trend: Count since the flip bar
• Since Flip: Current close minus flip bar close
• Since SL: Current close minus active stop level
• MFE-Maximum Favorable Excursion: Highest favorable move since flip
• MAE-Maximum Adverse Excursion: Largest adverse move since flip
Table colors reflect the current trend (green for bull, red for bear).
⸻
📊 Trading Playbook
Entries
• Aggressive: Enter immediately on a flip marker.
• Conservative: Wait for a small pullback that doesn’t violate the stop.
Stops
• Place the stop at the script’s flip stop-loss line (the prior leg extreme).
Exits
Choose one style and stick with it:
• Stop-only: Exit when the stop is hit.
• Time-based: Flatten at session close.
• Targets: Scale/close at 1R, 2R.
• Trailing: Trail behind minor swings once MFE > 1R.
Ultimately Exit choice is your own edge, so you must decide for yourself.
💡 Best Practices
• Skip the first few bars after the open (gap noise).
• Use regular candles (Heikin-Ashi will distort highs/lows).
• If you want fewer flips, increase the flip distance (e.g., 4 or 5). For more
responsiveness, use 2. Otherwise, increase your time frame to 5m, 10m, 15m.
• Keep SL lines frozen (not auto-removed) if you’re journaling.
Trailing Stop Loss Smart [TradingFinder] Market Trend + CVD/EMA🔵 Introduction
Trailing Stop Loss (TSL) is one of the most powerful tools available. A Trailing Stop Loss is a modification of a typical stop order that adjusts dynamically based on market price movement. It can be set at a defined percentage or dollar amount away from the security's current market price, making it a flexible tool for locking in profits while minimizing risk. Unlike standard stop-loss orders, a Trailing Stop follows the market in the direction of the trade, protecting gains without requiring constant manual adjustments.
The Trailing Stop Loss Smart (TFlab Trailing Stop) indicator takes this concept even further by incorporating advanced metrics like Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD), volume dynamics, and Average True Range (ATR). This combination not only enhances risk management but also acts as a trend identifier, providing traders with a powerful tool to capitalize on both short-term and long-term price movements.
This indicator also supports various Order Types, allowing for flexible strategies that include a trailing stop/stop-loss combo to maximize winning trades while minimizing losses. The trailing stop limit is particularly useful for traders who want to set their stop at a precise level relative to the current market price, either by a percentage or a dollar amount. The Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator can help ensure that traders do not exit too early during trends, while the stop-loss feature kicks in during reversals.
The advantages of using a Trailing Stop Loss are its ability to protect profits and reduce the emotional decision-making process in volatile markets. However, like all trading strategies, it has disadvantages, such as the risk of triggering too early during normal market fluctuations. By understanding how the Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator integrates features like CVD, ATR, and volume analysis, traders can leverage its full potential while navigating these pros and cons.
With its unique ability to track market movements and trends using Cumulative Volume Delta, volume dynamics, and ATR-based trailing stops, this indicator offers a complete solution for traders looking to secure profits while minimizing downside risk. Whether you're employing a simple trailing stop or a trailing stop/stop-loss combo, this tool provides all the flexibility and precision needed to execute winning trades in various markets, including Forex, Crypto, and Stock.
🔵 How to Use
The Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator integrates multiple advanced components to provide traders with superior risk management and trend identification.
Here’s how each part of the logic works :
🟣 Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) Logic
The CVD tracks buying and selling pressure by calculating the difference between upward and downward price movements. When there’s more buying pressure, the CVD is positive, indicating a potential bullish trend. Conversely, more selling pressure results in a negative CVD, pointing to a bearish trend.
CVD Trend Detection : The indicator determines whether the market is in a bullish or bearish phase by comparing the CVD to its moving average. A bullish trend is confirmed when the CVD is above its moving average and the price is closing higher.
A bearish trend occurs when the CVD is below its moving average and the price is closing lower. This trend detection is critical for determining whether the trailing stop should be placed below the price (bullish) or above it (bearish).
🟣 Volume Dynamics
Volume is a key factor in identifying market strength. The Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator pulls volume data based on the market selected (Forex, Crypto, or Stock) and adjusts the trailing stop based on whether the market is experiencing high volume or low volume.
High Volume : When the current volume exceeds the average volume, the market is in a high-volume state. During these conditions, the trailing stop is placed closer to the price, as high volume often indicates strong trends with less chance of reversals.
Low Volume : In low-volume conditions, the trailing stop gives the market more room to breathe by placing the stop further away from the price. This prevents premature stop-outs in periods of reduced market activity.
🟣 ATR-Based Trailing Stop
The Average True Range (ATR) is used to measure market volatility. The Trailing Stop Loss Smart uses the ATR to dynamically adjust the stop-loss distance.
Bullish Market : When a bullish trend is detected, the trailing stop is placed below the lowest price of the recent bars (determined by the Bar Back parameter), and adjusted by the ATR Multiplier. This allows for tighter protection during strong bullish trends.
Bearish Market : When the market is bearish, the trailing stop is placed above the highest price of recent bars, also adjusted by the ATR Multiplier. This ensures that short positions are safeguarded against sudden reversals.
🟣 Dynamic Stop-Loss Updates
The trailing stop is updated every few bars (according to the Refiner parameter), ensuring it remains relevant to the most recent price action and volume changes. This dynamic feature ensures the stop-loss adapts to both trending and volatile market conditions, without requiring manual intervention.
High Volume with Trends : In periods of high volume and a confirmed trend, the stop-loss is positioned tightly to lock in profits while minimizing the risk of reversal.
Low Volume with Trends : In low-volume conditions, the stop-loss is placed further from the price, allowing the market to move freely without triggering premature exits.
🟣 Visual Representation
The indicator visually represents the trailing stop on the chart, with green lines indicating bullish trends and red lines for bearish trends. This visual aid helps traders quickly assess the state of the market and the position of their trailing stop in real-time.
🔵 Settings
The Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator offers several customizable settings to suit various trading strategies. Understanding these inputs is key to optimizing the tool for your specific trading style.
🟣 General Settings
Cumulative Mode : This controls how the CVD is calculated.
You can choose between :
EMA : Exponential Moving Average smoothing.
Periodic : Sums the delta over a fixed period.
CVD Period : Defines the look-back period for CVD calculation. A longer period smooths the data, making it less sensitive to short-term fluctuations.
Ultra Data : This Boolean input aggregates volume across multiple exchanges for a more comprehensive view of market activity.
Market Ultra Data : Select between Forex, Crypto, and Stock to ensure the indicator pulls accurate volume data for your market.
🟣 Logical Settings
Moving Average CVD Period : Defines the period for the moving average of the CVD. A longer period smooths the trend, reducing noise.
Moving Average Volume Period : Sets the period for the moving average used to distinguish between high and low volume conditions.
Level Finder Bar Back : Determines how many bars to look back when identifying the highest or lowest price for trailing stop placement.
Levels update per candles : Sets how often (in bars) the trailing stop should be updated to remain in sync with market movements.
ATR On : Toggles the use of ATR to adjust the trailing stop based on volatility.
ATR Multiplie r: Defines how far the stop is placed from the price based on the ATR. A larger multiplier increases the stop distance, reducing the likelihood of getting stopped out during market fluctuations.
ATR Multiplier Adjusts the distance of the trailing stop based on the ATR. A higher multiplier places the stop further from the price, providing more breathing room in volatile markets.
🔵 Conclusion
The Trailing Stop Loss Smart indicator is a comprehensive tool for traders looking to manage risk while identifying market trends. By incorporating Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD) to detect buying and selling pressure, volume dynamics to gauge market activity, and ATR to adjust for volatility, this indicator ensures that stop-loss levels are both adaptive and protective.
Whether you’re trading in Forex, Crypto, or Stock markets, the Trailing Stop Loss Smart allows you to capitalize on trends while dynamically adjusting to changing market conditions. Its ability to distinguish between high-volume and low-volume periods ensures that you’re not stopped out prematurely during periods of consolidation or market hesitation.
By providing real-time visual feedback, dynamic adjustments, and trend identification, this indicator serves as a vital tool for traders aiming to maximize profits while minimizing risk. Its versatility and adaptability make it an essential part of any trader’s toolkit, helping you stay ahead in fast-moving markets while safeguarding your positions.
Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrendThe Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator is a popular technical analysis tool used by traders to identify trends and determine optimal entry and exit points in financial markets. This indicator combines elements of the SuperTrend indicator and trailing stop loss orders to provide valuable insights into market trends and potential reversals. By incorporating Average True Range (ATR) calculations, it adapts to market volatility, making it suitable for various trading strategies. Let's explore the key use cases and benefits of the Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator:
Trend Identification:
The primary purpose of the Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator is to identify market trends. It plots two lines on the chart: an upper band (referred to as the "up" line) and a lower band (referred to as the "dn" line). The direction of these bands helps traders determine the prevailing trend. When the price is above the upper band, it suggests a bullish trend, and when it is below the lower band, it indicates a bearish trend.
Entry and Exit Signals:
The Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator generates entry and exit signals based on trend changes. When the trend changes from bearish to bullish, a buy signal is triggered, indicating a potential entry point. Conversely, when the trend changes from bullish to bearish, a sell signal is generated, suggesting a possible exit or short-selling opportunity. These signals can be used in conjunction with other trading strategies or indicators to enhance trading decisions.
Trailing Stop Loss Orders:
One of the distinguishing features of the Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator is its ability to incorporate trailing stop loss orders. Traders can use the indicator's upper and lower bands as trailing stop levels to protect profits and manage risk. For example, in a bullish trend, the stop loss level can be set at the lower band, and as the price rises, the stop loss level trails along with it, locking in profits and reducing potential losses.
Volatility Adaptation:
By incorporating the ATR (Average True Range) calculation, the Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator adjusts its sensitivity to market volatility. A higher ATR multiplier widens the distance between the price and the bands, accommodating higher volatility, while a lower multiplier tightens the bands during periods of lower volatility. This adaptability makes the indicator versatile and suitable for various market conditions.
Alerts and Notifications:
The Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator provides the ability to set alerts for specific events, such as trend changes, buy signals, and sell signals. Traders can receive real-time notifications via email, SMS, or on-platform alerts, ensuring they stay informed about potential trading opportunities and important market developments.
Conclusion:
The Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator is a valuable tool for traders seeking to identify trends, generate entry and exit signals, and effectively manage risk. Its ability to adapt to market volatility and incorporate trailing stop loss orders enhances trading strategies and decision-making. By combining the SuperTrend concept with trailing stop loss functionality, this indicator provides traders with a comprehensive approach to trend analysis and risk management. Whether used in isolation or in conjunction with other indicators, the Trailing Stop Loss SuperTrend indicator offers a powerful tool for navigating the dynamic world of financial markets.
Fixed price Stop Loss [Takazudo]This strategy is a demo for fixed price stop loss.
This strategy enables you to specify fixed price stop loss. Let's say your deposit is USD. When you trade EURCAD, you need to specify the quantity for trade. Here comes three chances for trade.
A: SL pips: 500
B: SL pips: 200
C: SL pips: 100
In these trade, the risk is different for each. ABC risk ratio is 5:2:1. And, you cannot know how much to lose if the price hits the stop loss. This is a huge problem.
With this strategy, You can specify the fixed risk price for each trade. If you specify 100 USD for the risk, this strategy calculates how much quantity to buy or sell for each entry. In the case above, this strategy guides you how much quantity to buy or sell like below.
A: 2,000 qty (SL: 500pips)
B: 5,000 qty (SL: 200pips)
C: 10,000 qty (SL: 100pips)
If you make entries with those quantity and the price hits the stop loss, You will lose the money like below.
A: 100 USD
B: 100 USD
C: 100 USD
This is what this script does. Fixed price SL.
I tested this caliculation for OANDA's main 28 currency pairs forex listed below.
AUDUSD, EURUSD, GBPUSD, NZDUSD, USDCAD, USDCHF, USDJPY, AUDCAD, AUDCHF, AUDJPY, AUDNZD, CADCHF, CADJPY, CHFJPY, EURAUD, EURCAD, EURCHF, EURGBP, EURJPY, EURNZD, GBPAUD, GBPCAD, GBPCHF, GBPJPY, GBPNZD, NZDCAD, NZDCHF, NZDJPY
I may add more pairs later.
Note: The entry strategy in this script is not intented to win. Check the result. Be careful.
CUT MY LOSSESS - Levereged Stop loss + R / R ratio checker Hello traders!
We have heard many times that keep your losses small and allow your profits to grow. But what happens is that we often make the mistake of doing high-margin trades that we cannot afford to lose. The main reason for this problem, in my opinion, is the rush to open a position and not paying attention to how much acceptable loss in each trade is for us? Is our stop loss point compatible with the loss we are willing to accept?
Many of the losses we incur are not due to our erroneous analysis but to the wrong trading strategy, miscalculation of Stop Loss and failure to calculate the Risk/Reward for each trade. At least for most novice traders, these mistakes happen .
This script does not have complicated logic and is designed only as a help for those who are not interested in working with calculators !! I hope that sometimes that we are very excited to buy, looking at this script can give us a serious flip to avoid risk .
This is a basic script that helps us to intuitively check our stop loss in according to our leverage and to guess the approximate risk/reward of our trade. This script assumes that you always trade with half of your total capital. It is also assumed that you routinely use up to ten percent of your capital for each trade. Therefore, the first variable in this script is the amount of tolerable loss in each trade for you, which is set to 25% by default. So if you follow the previous assumptions, each trade will endanger 2.5% of your capital.
Since not all analyzes are ever accurate, we need to enter into positions that have good Risk/Reward ratio, so that even if half of our analysis fails, we will profitable. Therefore, the second variable in this script is the acceptable Risk/Reward ratio for us, which is set to 1:4 by default.
Also, to check the efficiency of the stop-loss with different trading leverage, I add five leverage by default from 1 to 5 as lines on the side of your stop-loss point.
LeV A (Lowest Leverage-WHITE): 1 by default
LeV B (AQUA): 2 by default
LeV C (YELLOW): 3 by default
LeV D (ORANGE): 4 by default
LeV E (Highest Leverage-RED):5 by default
You can change all these leverages and Acceptable margin loss and R/R ratio according to your needs.
You can also hide the leverage lines you are not dealing with through the script settings .
You will also see lines on the side of your target point to check your risk/reward ,so you can approximate your target according to your trading leverage and the risk/reward you accept. you can also hide these R/R lines from the setting.
Important Note: This script is not designed to give you a stop loss point or take profit point.
To find these points, you must use technical analysis methods , and then use this script to check the coordination of these points with your trading strategy.
Using the script is simple, but I will try to explain it with a few examples.
Position Size & Stop Loss | QuantEdgeBPosition Size & Stop Loss | QuantEdgeB
QuantEdgeB indicator for calculating risk-based position sizing, leverage, and dynamic stop-loss levels—all in one on-chart dashboard.
🔍 What It Does
1. Position Sizing
o Takes your Portfolio Value and Risk Percentage to compute how much dollar risk you’re willing to take.
o Given an Entry Price and Stop-Loss Price, it derives the per-trade risk and thus the optimal Position Size (number of contracts/shares).
o Based on your available Margin, it calculates the implied Leverage.
2. Stop-Loss Levels
o Offers two modes:
High-Low SL — plots the highest high and lowest low over user-defined lookback windows.
Market-Structure SL — dynamically tracks the current up/down “wick” extremes using an HMA-driven regime filter and places your stop just inside the recent high/low wicks.
o Always overlays both a “Highest Band” and “Lowest Band” as steplines, plus a simple moving average for trend context.
3. Dashboard Table
o Presents all core inputs and outputs in a neat on-chart table:
Portfolio Value, Margin, Risk %, Entry, Stop Loss
Computed Position Size and Leverage
Final Long SL and Short SL levels (depending on your chosen SL type)
o Fully customizable: choose table position, text size, color theme, and transparency.
⚙️ Inputs & Settings
Portfolio Value ($) -> Total account equity.
Margin on Exchange ($) -> Available margin for this trade.
Risk Percentage (%) -> Percent of portfolio to risk per trade.
Entry Price -> Your intended entry level.
Stop Loss Price -> Your intended stop level.
Decimal Places -> Rounding precision for “Position Size.”
Below the hood, “Position Size” is simply the number of units you should buy (or sell) so that, if your stop-loss is hit, you lose exactly your pre-defined risk amount. Here’s how to translate it into a real trade—and a quick example using the script’s default settings:
🔢 What “Position Size” Means - Deep Dive
• Units: the raw number of shares, contracts, or cryptocurrency coins.
• Risk per unit = |Entry Price – Stop-Loss Price|
• Total Risk = Portfolio Value × (Risk %)
• Position Size = Total Risk ÷ Risk per unit
If you trade instruments that are fractional (e.g. BTC) you’ll buy that many coins; if it’s a futures contract, you buy that many contracts; if it’s stock, that many shares.
🧮 Hypothetical Example
1. Inputs
o Portfolio Value = $100 000
o Risk % = 1%
o Entry Price = 105 000
o Stop-Loss Price = 104 000
o Margin Available = $10 000
2. Compute Your Risk Budget
3. Total Risk = 100 000 × (1 / 100) = $1 000
4. Compute Risk Per Unit
5. Risk per Unit = |105 000 – 104 000| = $1 000 per unit
6. Compute Position Size
7. Position Size = 1 000 ÷ 1 000 = 1 unit
o If you’re trading 1 BTC contract, you buy 1 contract.
o If it were stock, you’d buy 1 share.
o If it were spot BTC, you’d buy 1 BTC.
8. Compute Implied Leverage
9. Notional Exposure = Position Size × Entry Price = 1 × 105 000 = $105 000
10. Leverage = 105 000 ÷ 10 000 ≈ 10.5×
11. Place the Trade
o Buy 1 unit at 105 000.
o Place your stop-loss at 104 000.
o If price drifts down to 104 000, you lose exactly $1 000 (1% of your $100 000 account).
📋 Putting It All Together on the Chart
When the indicator’s table shows:
1. Portfolio Value = 100'000
2. Margin = 10'000
3. Risk% = 1%
4. Entry = 105'000
5. Stop Loss = 104'000
6. Size = 1
7. Leverage = 10.5x
…that tells you in plain terms:
“With $100 000 behind me and a 1% risk threshold, buying 1 unit here—with my stop at 104 000—means I stand to lose $1 000 if I’m wrong. I’m using $10 000 of margin, so I’m at roughly 10.5× leverage.”
No more guesswork around lot sizes or margin calls—this table gives you the exact numbers you need to place that order.
🎨 Visual Output
1. Stepline Plots
o Highest Band (short-side stop) in your down-color.
o Lowest Band (long-side stop) in your up-color.
o EMA Trend Line for context.
2. Dashboard Table
o Header with the indicator name.
o First section: all your Position Size inputs & results.
o Separator line + SL-Type label.
o Final section: Long SL and Short SL values under the chosen mode.
o Color and transparency reflect your selected theme.
🧑💼 Why It’s Useful
• Risk-First Sizing: Never guess your position again—risk is dollar-accurately defined.
• Flexible Stop-Loss: Choose the simple bar-high/low bands or an adaptive “wick-insider” based on market structure.
• On-Chart Clarity: Everything you need to size, stop-loss, and monitor your trade sits in one unified panel.
• Customizable: Color themes, font sizes, SL methods, and more—tailor it to your workflow.
Use this indicator to keep your risk parameters crystal-clear, automate your position sizing, and visualize both static and dynamic stop-loss levels—all without leaving your TradingView chart.
[blackcat] L3 Mean Reversion ATR Stop Loss OVERVIEW
The L3 Mean Reversion ATR Stop Loss indicator is meticulously crafted to empower traders by offering statistically-driven stop-loss levels that adapt seamlessly to evolving market dynamics. By harmoniously blending mean reversion concepts with Advanced True Range (ATR) metrics, it delivers a robust framework for managing risks more effectively. 🌐 The primary objective is to furnish traders with intelligent exit points grounded in both short-term volatility assessments and long-term trend evaluations.
Key highlights encompass:
• Dynamic calculation of Z-scores to evaluate deviations from established means
• Adaptive stop-loss pricing leveraging real-time ATR measurements
• Clear visual cues enabling swift decision-making processes
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS COMPONENTS
📉 Z-SCORE CALCULATION
Measures how many standard deviations an asset's current price lies away from its average
Facilitates identification of extreme conditions indicative of impending reversals
Utilizes simple moving averages and standard deviation computations
📊 STANDARD DEVIATION MEASUREMENT
Quantifies dispersion of closing prices around the mean
Provides insights into underlying price distribution characteristics
Crucial for assessing potential volatility levels accurately
🕵️♂️ ADAPTIVE STOP-LOSS DETECTION
Employs ATR as a proxy for prevailing market volatility
Modulates stop-loss placements dynamically responding to shifting trends
Ensures consistent adherence to predetermined risk management protocols
INDICATOR FUNCTIONALITY
🔢 Core Algorithms
Integrate Smooth Moving Averages (SMAs) alongside standardized deviation formulas
Generate precise Z-scores reflecting true price deviations
Leverage ATR-derived multipliers for fine-grained stop-loss adjustments
🖱️ User Interface Elements
Interactive plots displaying real-time stop-loss markers
Context-sensitive color coding enhancing readability
Background shading indicating proximity to stop-level activations
STRATEGY IMPLEMENTATION
✅ Entry Conditions
Confirm bullish/bearish setups validated through multiple confirmatory signals
Ensure alignment between Z-score readings and broader trend directions
Validate entry decisions considering concurrent market sentiment factors
🚫 Exit Mechanisms
Trigger exits upon hitting predefined ATR-based stop-loss thresholds
Monitor continuous breaches signifying potential trend reversals
Execute partial/total closes contingent upon cumulative loss limits
PARAMETER CONFIGURATIONS
🎯 Optimization Guidelines
Period Length: Governs responsiveness versus smoothing trade-offs
ATR Length: Dictates the temporal scope for volatility analysis
Stop Loss ATR Multiplier: Tunes sensitivity towards stop-trigger activations
💬 Customization Recommendations
Commence with baseline defaults; iteratively refine parameters
Evaluate impacts independently prior to combined adjustments
Prioritize minimizing erroneous trigger occurrences first
Sustain balanced risk-reward profiles irrespective of chosen settings
ADVANCED RISK MANAGEMENT
🛡️ Proactive Risk Mitigation Techniques
Enforce strict compliance with pre-defined maximum leverage constraints
Mandatorily apply trailing stop-loss orders conforming to script outputs
Allocate positions proportionately relative to available capital reserves
Conduct periodic reviews gauging strategy effectiveness rigorously
⚠️ Potential Pitfalls & Solutions
Address frequent violations arising during heightened volatility phases
Manage false alerts warranting manual interventions judiciously
Prepare contingency plans mitigating margin call possibilities
Continuously assess automated system reliability amidst fluctuating conditions
PERFORMANCE AUDITS & REFINEMENTS
🔍 Critical Evaluation Metrics
Assess win percentages consistently across diverse trading instruments
Calculate average profit ratios per successful execution
Measure peak drawdown durations alongside associated magnitudes
Analyze signal generation frequencies revealing hidden patterns
📈 Historical Data Analysis Tools
Maintain comprehensive records capturing every triggered event
Compare realized profits/losses against backtested simulations
Identify recurrent systematic errors demanding corrective actions
Implement iterative refinements bolstering overall efficacy steadily
PROBLEM SOLVING ADVICE
🔧 Frequent Encountered Challenges
Unpredictable behaviors emerging within thinly traded markets
Latency issues manifesting during abrupt price fluctuations
Overfitted models yielding suboptimal results post-extensive tuning
Inaccuracies stemming from incomplete or delayed data inputs
💡 Effective Resolution Pathways
Exclude low-liquidity assets prone to erratic movements
Introduce buffer intervals safeguarding major news/event impacts
Limit ongoing optimization attempts preventing model degradation
Verify seamless connectivity ensuring uninterrupted data flows
USER ENGAGEMENT SEGMENT
🤝 Community Contributions Welcome
Highly encourage active participation sharing experiences & recommendations!
THANKS
A heartfelt acknowledgment extends to all developers contributing invaluable insights about adaptive stop-loss strategies using statistical measures! ✨
Smart Stop-Loss (SSL)Smart Stop-Loss (SSL) Indicator
Overview
The Smart Stop-Loss (SSL) indicator is an advanced risk management tool designed to help traders set dynamic stop-loss levels based on market structure, volatility, and momentum. Unlike traditional fixed stop-loss methods, SSL adapts to changing market conditions, helping to avoid premature exits while protecting capital during true reversals.
Key Features
1. Volatility-Based Adjustments
- Uses Average True Range (ATR) to measure market volatility
- Automatically widens stop-loss during volatile periods and tightens during calm markets
- Customizable ATR multiplier (default: 1.5x) to adjust sensitivity
2. Market Structure Integration
- Identifies significant swing highs and lows to establish support/resistance levels
- Places stop-loss levels beyond these structural points to avoid common stop hunts
3. Fair Value Gap (FVG) Detection
- Identifies imbalances in order flow that often lead to strong directional moves
- Bullish FVG: A gap up where the current high is below previous low
- Bearish FVG: A gap down where the current low is above previous high
4. Smart Stop-Loss Tightening
- Automatically tightens stop-loss when FVGs are mitigated (filled)
- Uses RSI as a momentum filter to prevent premature adjustments
- Creates a trailing effect that locks in profits as trades move favorably
How to Use
For Long Positions:
1. **Entry**: Look for bullish FVG formations (green step line appears)
2. **Stop-Loss Placement**: Set your stop at or slightly below the green step line
3. **Stop Adjustment**: When price closes above the FVG zone and RSI > 50, the stop will automatically tighten
4. **Exit**: Exit the position when price closes below the green line or when your profit target is reached
For Short Positions:
1. **Entry**: Look for bearish FVG formations (red step line appears)
2. **Stop-Loss Placement**: Set your stop at or slightly above the red step line
3. **Stop Adjustment**: When price closes below the FVG zone and RSI < 50, the stop will automatically tighten
4. **Exit**: Exit the position when price closes above the red line or when your profit target is reached
Real-World Examples
Example 1: Trend Continuation
In an uptrend, when a bullish FVG appears, it often indicates institutional buying pressure. The SSL will place a stop below the swing low with an ATR buffer. As price continues upward and mitigates the FVG, the SSL tightens to protect profits while allowing the trend to continue.
Example 2: Avoiding Premature Exits
During normal market fluctuations, traditional fixed stops might get triggered too early. The SSL's adaptive nature accounts for volatility, keeping you in profitable trades longer by positioning stops beyond noise levels.
Example 3: Protecting Against Reversals
When a true reversal occurs, the momentum filter (RSI) will confirm the change in direction, allowing the SSL to maintain wider protection rather than prematurely tightening in a false move.
Tips for Best Results
1. **Timeframe Selection**: Works best on 1H, 4H and daily charts where market structure is more reliable
2. **Combine with Trend Analysis**: Use in conjunction with trend identification tools
3. **ATR Adjustment**: Increase the ATR multiplier for more volatile instruments
4. **Alert Setup**: Configure the built-in alerts to notify you when stop levels are breached
5. **Visual Confirmation**: The labels show exact stop values to help with order placement
Disclaimer
This indicator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. While it uses advanced techniques to determine potential stop-loss levels, no indicator can predict market movements with certainty. Always manage your risk appropriately and never risk more than you can afford to lose. Past performance is not indicative of future results. The developer of this indicator accepts no liability for trading losses incurred from its use. Always test thoroughly on demo accounts before using in live trading.
Position Size Using Manual Stop Loss [odnac]
This indicator calculates the risk per position based on user-defined settings.
Two Calculation Methods
1. Manual Stop Loss (%) & Manual Leverage
2. Manual Stop Loss (%) & Optimized Leverage
Settings
1. init_capital
Enter your current total capital.
2. Maximum Risk (%) per Position of Total Capital
Specify the percentage of your total funds to be risked for a single position.
3. manual_SL(%)
Enter the stop-loss percentage.
Range: 0.01 ~ 100
4. manual_leverage
Enter the leverage you wish to use.
Range: 1 ~ 100
Used in the first method (Manual Stop Loss (%) & Manual Leverage).
5. Safety Margin
Specify the safety margin for optimized leverage.
Range: 0.01 ~ 1
Used in the second method (Manual Stop Loss (%) & Optimized Leverage). Details are explained below.
Indicator Colors
Black: Indicates which method is being used.
White: Leverage.
First Green: Funds to be invested.
Second Green: Funds to be invested * Leverage.
First Red: Stop-loss (%).
Second Red: Stop-loss (%) * Leverage.
Details for Each Method:
1. Manual Stop Loss (%) & Manual Leverage
This method calculates the size of the funds based on user-defined stop-loss (%) and leverage settings.
White: manual_leverage.
First Green: Investment = Maximum Risk / (manual_SL / 100) / manual_leverage
Second Green: Maximum Risk * (manual_SL / 100)
First Red: manual_SL.
Second Red: manual_SL * manual_leverage
Ensure that the product of manual_SL and manual_leverage does not exceed 100.
If it does, there is a risk of liquidation.
2. Manual Stop Loss (%) & Optimized Leverage
This method calculates optimized leverage based on the user-defined stop-loss (%) and determines the size of the funds.
Optimization_LEVER = auto_leverage * safety_margin
auto_leverage = 100 / stop-loss (%), rounded down to the nearest whole number.
(Exception: If the stop-loss (%) is in the range of 0 ~ 1%, auto_leverage is always 100.)
Example:
If the stop-loss is 4%, auto_leverage = 25 (100 / 4 = 25).
However, 4% × 25 leverage equals 100%, meaning liquidation occurs even with a stop-loss.
To reduce this risk, the safety_margin value is applied.
White: auto_leverage * safety_margin
First Green: Investment = Maximum Risk / (manual_SL / 100) / optimization_LEVER
Second Green: Maximum Risk * (manual_SL / 100)
First Red: manual_SL.
Second Red: manual_SL * optimization_LEVER
ATR, Chop, Profit Target and Stop Loss TableThe ATR Table indicator is a versatile tool that helps traders visually and quantitatively manage risk, identify market conditions, and set profit targets and stop-loss levels. It is designed to enhance decision-making by incorporating key volatility and chop (market consolidation) signals into a comprehensive table format.
Key Features:
Average True Range (ATR) Calculation : The indicator computes the ATR over a user-defined period (default 14). ATR helps to measure market volatility, providing insights into how much an asset's price typically moves within a given period.
Stop Loss and Profit Target Calculation : You can configure stop-loss and profit target levels using multipliers based on the ATR. This allows dynamic risk management that adjusts to market volatility:
Stop Loss : Defined as a multiple of the ATR to help control losses.
Profit Target : Also based on a multiple of the ATR to lock in gains. The user can specify whether they are trading long or short, and the indicator adjusts the levels accordingly.
Customizable Plot Lines : The indicator can display the Stop Loss and Profit Target levels directly on the chart. Users can toggle these lines on or off and customize their colors.
Chop Signa l: The indicator highlights potential consolidation periods (chop) using a wick-based analysis. It calculates the highest upper or lower wick values and compares them to the ATR to detect periods of indecision or consolidation.
Table Display : When these wick values exceed the ATR by a user-defined multiplier, the corresponding table rows are highlighted.
Background Alerts : Optionally, users can activate background color changes on the chart to visually alert them when chop conditions are detected.
Customizable Table Layout : A table displaying the key values (ATR, Stop Loss, Profit Target, Upper/Lower Wickiness) is placed on the chart. You can choose the table's position, adjust its color scheme, and decide which rows to display.
Chop Background Customization : For users who prefer more visual cues, the indicator allows you to enable or disable background shading when chop conditions are met. You can also choose the color of this background for better customization.
User-Defined RSI-Adaptive Dynamic Stop Loss User-Defined RSI-Adaptive Dynamic Stop Loss
(Long name is: User-Defined RSI-Adaptive Smart Dynamic Stop Loss (SDSL) Indicator)
The User-Defined RSI-Adaptive SDSL Indicator is an enhanced version of the Smart Dynamic Stop Loss (SDSL) indicator. It provides a more adaptive risk management strategy by adjusting the stop loss level dynamically based on the Relative Strength Index (RSI). The script allows users to define the stop loss parameters, offering a flexible approach that can be tailored to different market conditions.
How It Works / Calculation:
RSI Calculation: The indicator calculates the RSI (Relative Strength Index) over a user-defined period (default 14). The RSI is used to determine market overbought and oversold levels, which are set by default at 70 and 30, respectively, but these levels can be adjusted by the user.
Adaptive Stop Loss Percentage: The stop loss percentage is dynamically adjusted between user-defined maximum (default 10%) and minimum (default 1%) values. This percentage adapts based on the current RSI value:
When RSI is in the oversold zone, the stop loss percentage is at its maximum (providing a wider margin).
When RSI is in the overbought zone, the stop loss percentage is at its minimum (tightening the stop to secure gains).
Dynamic Stop Loss Calculation:
Initialization: If no existing stop loss level is set, it initializes at a user-defined percentage below the current closing price.
Upward Movement: If the price rises above the current stop loss level, the stop loss is recalculated to stay within the adaptive range.
Price Crosses Below Stop Loss: If the price falls below the current stop loss level, the indicator resets, establishing a new stop loss level at the user-defined percentage below the low of the candle where the crossover occurred.
Visual and Data Display:
The stop loss line is plotted on the chart for easy visualization.
A data box on the chart provides real-time updates on the current dynamic stop loss level, stop loss percentage, and RSI value.
Key Features:
User-Configurable Parameters: Users can adjust the RSI period, overbought/oversold levels, and the maximum and minimum stop loss percentages to suit their trading style and risk tolerance.
Dynamic Adaptation to Market Conditions: The stop loss level automatically adjusts according to RSI, allowing for more flexible risk management.
Visual Alerts and Signals : Optional visual signals indicate when the stop loss is triggered.
Informational Display: A table on the chart displays current indicator data for quick reference.
Note:
This script builds upon the previously developed "Smart Dynamic Stop Loss (SDSL) Indicator" and enhances its functionality by incorporating RSI-based adaptive stop loss settings that users can customize.
Trailing Stop-Loss Indicator (FinnoVent)The Dynamic 9 EMA Trailing Stop-Loss Indicator is a specialized tool designed for the TradingView community to enhance risk management in trading. This script dynamically adjusts a trailing stop-loss level based on the position of the price relative to a 9-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA), offering traders a systematic approach to protect potential profits and limit downside risk.
Functionality:
Adaptive Trailing Stop: The indicator calculates a trailing stop-loss that adjusts with the 9 EMA, providing a responsive method to secure gains or prevent extensive losses.
EMA Trend Indicator: The 9-period EMA serves as a momentum indicator, with the script adjusting the trailing stop-loss accordingly — above the EMA for short positions and below for long positions.
Entry Signal Visualization: Entry signals are visualized on the chart, indicating potential long and short positions based on price crossovers with the EMA.
Application:
This indicator is ideal for traders who utilize technical analysis to make informed decisions. By automatically adjusting the stop-loss level to the evolving market conditions, it is particularly useful for:
Day traders looking to capitalize on short-term price movements.
Swing traders aiming to secure positions during more extended market waves.
Any trading strategy that benefits from dynamic stop-loss management.
Usage:
To use the indicator, simply add it to your TradingView chart, and it will automatically plot the trailing stop levels. The green and red lines represent the trailing stops for long and short positions, respectively, providing clear visual cues for potential exit points.
Compliance with TradingView House Rules:
This script is provided for educational purposes and does not constitute investment advice. It is a unique creation that has been developed to contribute to the TradingView community by offering a tool that helps traders manage their trades more effectively.
Limit Order + ATR Stop-Loss [TANHEF]This indicator enables interactive placement of limit or stop-limit orders with a trailing ATR stop-loss and optional profit target (with alerts). Refer to the images below for further clarification.
Why use a trailing stop-loss?
A trailing stop-loss serves as an exit strategy when price moves against you, while also allowing you to adjust the exit point further into profit when price moves favorably. The ATR (Average True Range), a reliable measure of volatility, acts as an effective risk management tool, functioning as a trailing stop-loss.
Indicator Explanation
Initial indicator placement: Select Long Limit or Long-Stop Limit order.
Change Entry Type: Switch between Long and Short within settings.
Modify entry price: Drag circle, adjust in settings, or re-add indicator to chart.
Optional Profit Target: Use Risk/Reward ratio or specify price.
Entry anticipation: Estimated ATR stop-loss and profit target as blue circles (fluctuates with volatility changes).
Entry triggered: Actual ATR stop-loss and profit target plotted.
Exit conditions: Stop-loss or profit target hit, exit entry.
Update Frequency: Continuously, Bar Open, or Bar Open on entry then continuously.
ATR Overlap: no entry occurs if the ATR overlaps with price (stop-loss 'hit' already on entry bar)
Table: Displays input settings selected.
Show Only On Ticker: Ability to hide indicator on other tickers.
Long Limit
Long Stop-Limit
Short Limit
Short Stop-Limit
Alerts
1. 'Check' alerts to use within indicator settings (entry, trailing stop hit, profit target hit, and failed entry).
2. Select 'Create Alert'
3. Set the condition to 'Limit Order + ATR Stop-Loss''
4. Select create.
Additional details can be added to the alert message using these words in between Curly (Brace) Brackets:
{{trail}} = ATR trailing stop-loss (price)
{{target}} = Price target (price)
{{type}} = Long or Short stop-loss (word)
{{traildistance}} = Trailing Distance (%)
{{targetdistance}} = Target Distance (%)
{{starttime}} = Start time of position (day:hr:min)
{{maxdrawdown}} = max loss
{{maxprofit}} = max profit
{{update}} = stoploss update frequency
{{entrysource}} = entry as 1st bar source (yes/no)
{{triggerentry}} = Wick/Close Trigger entry input
{{triggerexit}} = Wick/Close Trigger exit input
{{triggertarget}} = Wick/Close Trigger target input
{{atrlength}} = ATR length input
{{atrmultiplier}} = ATR multiplier input
{{atrtype}} = ATR type input
{{ticker}} = Ticker of chart (word)
{{exchange}} = Exchange of chart (word)
{{description}} = Description of ticker (words)
{{close}} = Bar close (price)
{{open}} = Bar open (price)
{{high}} = Bar high (price)
{{low}} = Bar low (price)
{{hl2}} = Bar HL2 (price)
{{volume}} = Bar volume (value)
{{time}} = Current time (day:hr:min)
{{interval}} = Chart timeframe
{{newline}} = New line for text
Parabolic SAR + Take Profit and Stop Loss By Nussara (strategy)Back test strategy for "Parabolic SAR + Take Profit and Stop Loss By Nussara" make it easy setting a strategy to estimate profits and losses.
This strategy uses Parabolic SAR . The Parabolic SAR is a technical indicator developed by J. Welles Wilder to determine the direction that an asset is moving. The indicator is also referred to as a stop and reverse system, which is abbreviated as SAR . It aims to identify potential reversals in the price movement of traded assets.
This indicator has a function to take profit and stop loss level.
Stop loss level = First reverse point of uptrend
Take profit level = Entry price + (Entry price-Stop loss level)
User can set a parabolic SARS and a profit point but I fixed stop loss level at first reversals point of uptrend. I also put alert for Buy, Sell, Stop Loss in this indicator.
This indicator is just a tool for technical analysis . It shouldn't be used as the only indication of trade because it causes you to lose your money. You should use other indicators to analyze together.
ATR SL (Average True Range) Stop LossATR (Average True Range) Stop Loss Version 1.0
A trailing stop loss is a way to exit a trade if the asset price moves against you but also enables you to move the exit point if the price is moving in your favor. Many day traders use the ATR to figure out where to put their trailing stop loss.
At the time of a trade, look at the current ATR reading. A rule of thumb is to multiply the ATR by two to determine a reasonable stop loss point. So if you're buying a stock, you might place a stop loss at a level twice the ATR below the entry price. If you're shorting a stock, you would place a stop loss at a level twice the ATR above the entry price.
If you're long and the price moves favorably, continue to move the stop loss to twice the ATR below the price. In this scenario, the stop loss only ever moves up, not down. Once it is moved up, it stays there until it can be moved up again or the trade is closed as a result of the price dropping to hit the trailing stop loss level. The same process works for short trades, only in that case, the stop loss only moves down.
Bullish 1st Breakaway FVG Stop Loss
This indicator provides a defined 3-tier stop loss placement when you want to trade the 1st Bullish Breakaway FVG strategy. The Bullish Breakaway Dual Session FVG indicator is an independent indicator that track all bullish breakaway candles, however this one only tracks the very 1st breakaway candle with a stop loss visual cue.
Introduction of Bullish Breakaway Consolidated FVG:
Inspired by the FVG Concept:
This indicator is built on the Fair Value Gap (FVG) concept, with a focus on Consolidated FVG. Unlike traditional FVGs, this version only works within a defined session (e.g., ETH 18:00–17:00 or RTH 09:30–16:00).
Bullish consolidated FVG & Bullish breakaway candle
Begins when a new intraday low is printed. After that, the indicator searches for the 1st bullish breakaway candle, which must have its low above the high of the intraday low candle. Any candles in between are part of the consolidated FVG zone. Once the 1st breakaway forms, the indicator will shades the candle’s range (high to low).
Session Reset: Occurs at session close.
Choose your own session: use 930 to 1615 for RTH, 1800 to 1615 for ETH. (New York Time Zone)
Repaint Behavior:
If a new intraday (or intra-session) low forms, earlier breakaway patterns are wiped, and the system restarts from the new low.
Product Optimization:
This indicator is designed for CME future product with New York time zone. If you want to trade other products, please adjust your own time session.
Entry:
Long after the 1st Bullish Breakaway Candle in your active session.
However, best position of long is executed by your own trading skill and edge.
Stop Loss: ξ
ξ: This is the 1st stop loss, it is 1 equal size of the breakaway candle below the low.
ξξ: This is the 2nd stop loss, it is 2 equal sizes of the breakaway candle below the low.
L: This is the 3rd stop loss, it is the intraday session low.
Stop loss calculation:
Assuming you enter at the high of the breakaway candle, the SL number is shown as the high minus the stop loss placement.
Last Mention:
If you don't see anything in the indicator, adjust your session to an active session only, and use Tradingview replay function. This indicator is a live indicator with repainting mechanism.
ATR Stop-Loss with Fibonacci Take-Profit [jpkxyz]ATR Stop-Loss with Fibonacci Take-Profit Indicator
This comprehensive indicator combines Average True Range (ATR) volatility analysis with Fibonacci extensions to create dynamic stop-loss and take-profit levels. It's designed to help traders set precise risk management levels and profit targets based on market volatility and mathematical ratios.
Two Operating Modes
Default Mode (Rolling Levels)
In default mode, the indicator continuously plots evolving stop-loss and take-profit levels based on real-time price action. These levels update dynamically as new bars form, creating rolling horizontal lines across the chart. I use this mode primarily to plot the rolling ATR-Level which I use to trail my Stop-Loss into profit.
Characteristics:
Levels recalculate with each new bar
All selected Fibonacci levels display simultaneously
Uses plot() functions with trackprice=true for price tracking
Custom Anchor Mode (Fixed Levels)
This is the primary mode for precision trading. You select a specific timestamp (typically your entry bar), and the indicator locks all calculations to that exact moment, creating fixed horizontal lines that represent your actual trade levels.
Characteristics:
Entry line (blue) marks your anchor point
Stop-loss calculated using ATR from the anchor bar
Fibonacci levels projected from entry-to-stop distance
Lines terminate when price breaks through them
Includes comprehensive alert system
Core Calculation Logic
ATR Stop-Loss Calculation:
Stop Loss = Entry Price ± (ATR × Multiplier)
Long positions: SL = Entry - (ATR × Multiplier)
Short positions: SL = Entry + (ATR × Multiplier)
ATR uses your chosen smoothing method (RMA, SMA, EMA, or WMA)
Default multiplier is 1.5, adjustable to your risk tolerance
Fibonacci Take-Profit Projection:
The distance from entry to stop-loss becomes the base unit (1.0) for Fibonacci extensions:
TP Level = Entry + (Entry-to-SL Distance × Fibonacci Ratio)
Available Fibonacci Levels:
Conservative: 0.618, 1.0, 1.618
Extended: 2.618, 3.618, 4.618
Complete range: 0.0 to 4.764 (23 levels total)
Multi-Timeframe Functionality
One of the indicator's most powerful features is timeframe flexibility. You can analyze on one timeframe while using stop-loss and take-profit calculations from another.
Best Practices:
Identify your entry point on execution timeframe
Enable "Custom Anchor" mode
Set anchor timestamp to your entry bar
Select appropriate analysis timeframe
Choose relevant Fibonacci levels
Enable alerts for automated notifications
Example Scenario:
Analyse trend on 4-hour chart
Execute entry on 5-minute chart for precision
Set custom anchor to your 5-minute entry bar
Configure timeframe setting to "4h" for swing-level targets
Select appropriate Fibonacci Extension levels
Result: Precise entry with larger timeframe risk management
Visual Intelligence System
Line Behaviour in Custom Anchor Mode:
Active levels: Lines extend to the right edge
Hit levels: Lines terminate at the breaking bar
Entry line: Always visible in blue
Stop-loss: Red line, terminates when hit
Take-profits: Green lines (1.618 level in gold for emphasis)
Customisation Options:
Line width (1-4 pixels)
Show/hide individual Fibonacci levels
ATR length and smoothing method
ATR multiplier for stop-loss distance
ATR Stop LossThe ATR Stop Loss indicator is designed to assist traders in managing risk by calculating dynamic stop loss levels based on the Average True Range (ATR). By considering market volatility, this tool helps identify optimal stop loss placements for both long and short positions, making it easier for traders to protect their investments and avoid premature exits.
Features:
Customizable ATR period and multiplier to adapt to different trading strategies and market conditions.
Displays stop loss levels directly on the chart for quick decision-making.
Works across various timeframes and assets, offering flexible application in diverse trading scenarios.
How It Works: The indicator calculates the ATR over a specified period and multiplies it by a user-defined value to plot stop loss levels above or below the current closing price. For long positions, the stop loss level is set below the price, while for short positions, it is set above. These levels help traders set stops that account for current market volatility, reducing the likelihood of getting stopped out by minor fluctuations.
Usage: Add the ATR Stop Loss indicator to your chart, customize the ATR period and multiplier as needed, and use the visualized stop loss levels to manage your trades with greater precision and confidence.
Disclaimer: The ATR Stop Loss indicator is provided for educational and informational purposes only and should not be construed as financial or investment advice. Trading involves substantial risk and is not suitable for every investor. Users are solely responsible for any trading decisions they make based on the use of this indicator. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own analysis and consult with a qualified financial professional before making any trading decisions. EdgeLab and its creator bear no liability for any financial losses or other damages resulting from the use of this indicator.