Heavy Delta - AVG Indicator
The AVG line is an adaptive reference calculated with a K-Nearest Neighbors approach. It moves with the market and helps show whether price is trading above, below, or far away from its recent adaptive value.
The AVG line is an adaptive reference calculated with a K-Nearest Neighbors approach. It moves with the market and helps show whether price is trading above, below, or far away from its recent adaptive value.
The blue and white diamonds combine an opposing-delta condition with an extreme WaveTrend reading. They highlight moments where participation and momentum make a possible reversal worth inspecting.
The Daily Open marks the first price of the new day. It provides a simple baseline for judging whether the current session is trading above or below where it began.
Delta in trading measures the difference between buying volume and selling volume over a specific timeframe, indicating whether buyers or sellers were more aggressive during that period.
Flags (🚩) and Rockets (🚀) mark bearish and bullish reactions around active Order Blocks. They help you find candles where the order-block logic and directional conditions agree.
The Monday Range records Monday's high and low and extends them through the rest of the week. It gives later price action a fixed weekly reference.
Heavy Delta includes four customizable moving averages. Together they show how short-, medium-, and longer-term price direction relate to one another.
In Heavy Delta, an Order Block is a price zone derived from prior price and volume behavior. It marks an area where the market previously moved with enough force to make a later revisit worth watching.
PVSRA Candlestick Coloring compares price movement, candle spread, and volume. Its purpose is to make unusually active candles easy to notice without opening a separate volume panel.
Strong Symbols combine an opposing-delta anomaly, an extreme WaveTrend condition, and a bullish or bearish reaction from an order block. They are visual warnings or confirmations, not guaranteed entries.
Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP) is an average price weighted by traded volume. Unlike a simple moving average, periods with more activity have more influence on the line.
The Divergence feature marks disagreement between price and the Wave or MoneyFlow readings. Divergence does not predict the exact reversal candle; it shows that the internal momentum of a move is no longer matching price in the same way.
Waves includes several supporting components that explain the main oscillator from a different angle. They are most useful as context for the Wave and signal line rather than as separate signals.
Waves uses several markers to make changes in momentum easier to notice. They include crossovers, overbought/oversold conditions, continuation markers, and opposite-direction signals. None of them should be read without the Wave, MoneyFlow, and price context around them.
Waves contains several symbols, but each belongs to one of three ideas: momentum crosses, divergence, or agreement with an additional filter. Use this page as a legend when a marker appears.
This page shows how to turn the Waves components into a repeatable reading process. The examples are scenarios to inspect, not instructions to enter immediately.