US Market CrashesThis script allows you to manually highlight specific periods on a chart, making it easy to visualize significant market events such as recessions, market crashes, or other key timeframes. Unlike traditional indicators that are based on price movements, this script provides a flexible way to mark any custom date range directly on your Trading View charts.
Features:
Custom Date Ranges: Easily specify start and end dates for periods you want to highlight on the chart.
Custom Colors: Choose different colors for each highlighted period for clear visual distinction.
Predefined Market Crashes: By default, the script highlights 18 historical market crashes where the market declined by over 20%.
Use Cases:
Historical Analysis: Highlight and study the impact of past recessions or market crashes.
Event Marking: Mark specific economic events, earnings seasons, or other relevant periods.
Presentation: Use the highlighted periods to enhance presentations or reports on market behavior.
How to Use:
Input the start and end dates for the periods you want to highlight.
Adjust the colors and transparency as needed.
Apply the script to your chart to see the highlighted periods.
This tool is perfect for traders, analysts, and investors who want a clean and straightforward way to visualize important historical periods on their charts.
The default setup includes 18 significant market crashes with declines of over 20%.
Marketcrash
75: Notable Financial CrisesThe TradingView script named "75: Notable Financial Crises" visualizes and marks significant financial crises on a financial chart.
This script plots vertical lines on the a chart corresponding to specific dates associated with notable financial crises in history. These crises could include events like the Great Depression (1929), Black Monday (1987), the Dot-com Bubble (2000), the Global Financial Crisis (2008), and others. By marking these dates on a chart, traders and analysts can easily observe the impact of these events on market behavior.
BUFFET INDICATORDISCRIPTION
The stock market cap to GDP ratio has become known as the Buffett Indicator in recent years, as Warren Buffett commented that he believes it is “probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment.”
CALCULATION
100*VALUE OF ALL STOCKS IN COUNTRY/GDP OF COUNTRY
100*wilshire5000/gdp
Hindenburg Omen [QuantNomad]New record highs is good time to look at a market crash indicators )
This is a Hindenburg Omen indicator.
The Hindenburg Omen looks for a statistical deviation from the premise that under normal conditions, securities are either making new 52-week highs or 52-week lows. The abnormality would be if both were occurring at the same time. According to the Hindenburg Omen, an occurrence such as this is considered to be a harbinger of impending danger for a stock market. The signal typically occurs during an uptrend, where new highs are expected and new lows are rare, suggesting that the market is becoming nervous and indecisive, traits that often lead to a bear market.
For it to be on 4 conditions should be satisfied:
1. Number of new 52-week highs and 52-week lows in a stock market are greater than a threshold (2.2% for example).
2. Positive recent trend. Index > index
3. The McClellan Oscillator (MCO) is negative.
4. 52-week highs cannot be more than two times the 52-week lows.
You can read more about the indicator on Investopedia:
www.investopedia.com
Based on indicator created by @Boombotcom: