The Rainbow Dragon Indicator
- Indicateurs
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Sofien Kaabar
Quant Atlas 📈 builds quantitative market intelligence tools for traders and market researchers.
🔹Our work focuses on algorithmic support and resistance levels, market structure analytics, conviction frameworks, path probability, and decision support indicators for MetaTrader 5. - Version: 2.10
- Activations: 5
The Rainbow Dragon Indicator by Quant Atlas
Creator: https://www.quant-atlas.com/
The Rainbow Dragon is a composite signal engine that aggregates the seven Rainbow indicators — Blue, Green, Indigo, Red, Violet, Yellow, and Orange — into a single confluence-based reading. Rather than relying on any one model, it treats each Rainbow component as an independent voter and fires only when enough of them agree, giving you a diversified, multi-method read on the market instead of a single point of view.
The diversification is the point. Each underlying indicator detects reversals through a different lens: momentum exhaustion (the RSI-based components), volatility extremes and band re-entry (the Bollinger-based component), trend displacement against a Hull moving average, and structural price sequences. Because these methods are largely uncorrelated in how they trigger, a simultaneous agreement among several of them is a far stronger signal than any one firing alone — it means independent approaches are pointing to the same turning point at the same time.
When the aggregate score crosses the chosen conviction threshold, the indicator plots a rainbow circle cluster on the chart, with the threshold tunable so you can demand as much or as little confluence as you want. This makes it well suited to detecting local tops and bottoms: the constituent signals are reversal-oriented by design, so a confluence reading tends to mark points where momentum, volatility, and structure are jointly stretched and prone to mean-revert.
A couple of things to keep in mind if you want this to be accurate rather than oversold: it's a confluence-of-reversal-signals tool, so it's built for catching turns, not riding trends, and like any reversal method it will produce signals that don't resolve into clean tops or bottoms — confluence raises the odds, it doesn't guarantee them. I'd frame it as a high-conviction "second opinion" on potential exhaustion points rather than a standalone entry trigger.
