Knowledge Base
Trading education, indicators, strategies, and setups
Getting Started
How to Activate Trading Oracle
After purchasing, your indicators are activated on the TradingView username you provided at checkout.
- Step 1: Ensure you provided the correct TradingView username (not email) during checkout.
- Step 2: Wait for activation — typically under 1 hour, max 24 hours.
- Step 3: Open TradingView, click "Indicators" at the top.
- Step 4: Click "Invite-Only Scripts" at the bottom of the list.
- Step 5: Click Trading Oracle to add it to your chart.
Setting Up Alerts
The Key Levels Suite includes 21 alert conditions. Get notified when price hits any level.
- Click the Alert button (clock icon) in TradingView
- Under "Condition," select Trading Oracle - Key Levels Suite
- Choose your level (PDH Hit, VAL Hit, PP Hit, etc.)
- Set notification method — push, email, SMS, or webhook
- Click Create
Mobile Setup and Compact Mode
All tools work on TradingView mobile. For the best experience:
- Enable Compact / Mobile Mode in Dashboard settings
- Set Label Offset to 10-15
- Change Dashboard Position to Bottom Center
- Turn off levels you don't need to reduce clutter
Key Levels Suite
Previous Day Levels (PDH, PDL, PDC, PDM)
PDH — Yesterday's high. Key resistance. Watch for rejection (short) or breakout (long).
PDL — Yesterday's low. Key support. Watch for bounce (long) or breakdown (short).
PDC — Yesterday's close / settlement. Above PDC = bullish. Below = bearish.
PDM — Midpoint of yesterday's range. Equilibrium level where price gravitates.
Value Area
The zone where ~70% of yesterday's volume traded. Inside = fair value. Outside = premium or discount.
VAH — Upper boundary. Acts as resistance. Break above with conviction = bullish.
VAL — Lower boundary. Acts as support. Break below = bearish.
Pivot Points (PP, R1, S1, R2, S2)
PP = (High + Low + Close) / 3. Above PP = bullish bias. Below = bearish.
R1/S1 — First resistance/support. Price bounces between these on range days.
R2/S2 — Near daily range extremes. Reaching these = strong trend day.
Overnight Levels (ONH, ONL)
ONH — Overnight high. First resistance at cash open. Break above = bullish.
ONL — Overnight low. First support at cash open. Watch for liquidity sweeps — institutions often push below ONL to trap sellers, then reverse hard.
Opening Range (ORH, ORL)
High and low of the first 30 minutes (9:30-10:00 ET). The most aggressive positioning period of the day.
Breakout above ORH with volume = long. Breakdown below ORL = short.
Session VWAP and Bands
VWAP = Volume Weighted Average Price. The most important intraday level for institutions.
Above VWAP = bullish. Below = bearish. Pullbacks to VWAP in trending markets are high-probability entries. Outer bands = overextended, mean-reversion opportunity.
Central Pivot Range
NARROW CPR = trending/breakout day. Trade the direction, let winners run.
WIDE CPR = range-bound day. Fade the edges, take profits quickly.
The Dashboard
- Bias: BULLISH or BEARISH based on price vs pivot
- VA Position: ABOVE VA, INSIDE VA, or BELOW VA
- Level Prices: Every level with its current price, color-coded
- Tests: How many times each level tested today (0 = fresh, strong reaction likely)
- CPR: NARROW (trend) or WIDE (range)
Platinum Plus Suite
Buy and Sell Signals
Clear entry signals analyzing trend, momentum, and structure. Each includes TP/SL levels on your chart.
Golden Signals
High-conviction entries that fire when multiple conditions align simultaneously. Less frequent than standard signals but carry significantly more weight. A Golden Signal near a key level is the highest-probability setup you'll find.
Slingshot Signals
Momentum entries that trigger when price breaks out of consolidation with force — like a slingshot releasing. Designed for catching strong directional moves early. TP/SL levels included.
Dynamic Order Blocks
Zones where large institutional orders were placed. Bullish OBs (green) = look for longs on pullbacks. Bearish OBs (red) = look for shorts on rallies. Price frequently reacts when returning to these zones.
Take Profit and Stop Loss
Every signal includes pre-calculated TP and SL displayed on your chart. Dynamically calculated based on volatility. Use the SL distance to calculate your position size — never risk more than 1-2% of your account per trade.
Reversal Bands
Highlight overextension zones where price moved too far, too fast. When price tags the outer band and shows rejection, it's a fade opportunity back toward center. Works especially well in range-bound markets.
RSI Live Divergence
RSI Divergence
Bullish Divergence: Price makes a lower low, but RSI makes a higher low. Momentum is secretly strengthening. Potential reversal up.
Bearish Divergence: Price makes a higher high, but RSI makes a lower high. Momentum is fading. Potential reversal down.
The indicator auto-detects these in real time with clear labels and draws the divergence lines on your chart.
Trading Bullish Divergence
- Wait for the "Bullish" label to appear
- Look for a confirmation candle (engulfing, hammer)
- Check for confluence — is it near a key support level?
- Enter long, stop below recent low, target next resistance
Trading Bearish Divergence
- Wait for the "Bearish" label
- Look for rejection candle (engulfing, shooting star)
- Check for confluence at resistance (PDH, VAH, R1)
- Enter short, stop above recent high, target next support
Swing Failure Pattern
Swing Failure Pattern
An SFP occurs when price briefly breaks a previous high/low then quickly reverses. The breakout was a trap.
Bearish SFP: Price spikes above a high, triggers buy stops, reverses down. Sellers used the liquidity to enter.
Bullish SFP: Price dips below a low, triggers sell stops, reverses up. Buyers accumulated at the sweep.
Trading the SFP
- Bearish SFP: Wait for close back below the high. Short. Stop above the wick. Target next support.
- Bullish SFP: Wait for close back above the low. Long. Stop below the wick. Target next resistance.
Understanding Liquidity Sweeps
Stop-loss orders pool above highs and below lows. Institutions push price into these zones to trigger stops and fill their own orders at better prices, then reverse. The SFP indicator is built to catch these moments automatically.
Trading Education
Risk Management 101
The 1-2% Rule: Never risk more than 1-2% of your total account on a single trade. $10K account = $100-200 max risk per trade.
Position Sizing: Risk amount divided by stop distance = your position size. If risking $100 with a 10-point stop, that's 10 shares.
Always use a stop loss. Every single trade. No exceptions. The TP/SL levels in Trading Oracle make this automatic.
Confluence
Confluence = multiple independent factors aligning at the same price. More factors = higher probability.
- Golden Signal at PDL + bullish divergence = triple confluence long
- SFP at VAH + bearish divergence = triple confluence short
- Price at PP + order block at same level = double confluence
Trading Psychology
FOMO: There's always another setup. If you missed it, let it go and wait.
Revenge Trading: After a loss, step away for 15-30 minutes. Never increase size to "make it back."
Overtrading: Set a maximum daily trade count. Quality over quantity, always.
