OPEN-SOURCE SCRIPT
Indicator: Profitability by Day & Hour (stacked, non-overlay)

What it does
This tool performs a simple seasonality study on the selected symbol. It measures historical returns and summarizes them in two horizontal heatmaps:
Hours table (top) — Columns 00–23 show the average return of each clock hour, plus sample size, win rate, volatility (SD), and a t-score.
Days table (middle) — Columns 1–7 correspond to Mon–Sun with the same metrics.
Summary (bottom) — Shows the most profitable day and hour in the history loaded on your chart.
Green cells indicate higher average returns; red cells indicate lower/negative averages. The layout is centered on the screen, with the hours table above the days table for quick scanning.
How it works (methodology)
Returns: by default the indicator uses log returns ln(Ct/Ct-1) (you can switch to simple % if you prefer).
Daily aggregation (no look-ahead): day statistics are computed from completed daily closes via a higher timeframe request. Yesterday’s daily close vs. the prior day is added to the appropriate weekday bucket, preventing repaint/forward bias.
Hourly aggregation (intraday only): hour statistics are computed bar-to-bar on the current intraday timeframe and accumulated by clock hour (00–23) of the symbol’s exchange timezone.
Metrics per bucket:
Mean: average return in that bucket.
n: number of observations.
Win%: share of positive returns.
SD: standard deviation of returns (volatility proxy).
t-score: mean / SD * sqrt(n) — a quick stability signal (not a hypothesis test).
The indicator does not rely on future data and does not repaint past values.
Reading the tables
Start with the Mean row in each table: it’s color-mapped (red → yellow → green).
Check n (sample size). A bright green cell with very low n is less meaningful than a mild green cell with large n.
Use Win% and SD to judge consistency and noise.
t-score is a compact “signal-to-noise × sample size” measure; higher absolute values suggest more stable effects.
Typical observations traders look for (purely illustrative): for some equity indices, the first hour after the cash open can dominate; for FX/crypto, certain late-US or early-Asia hours sometimes stand out. Always verify on your symbol and timeframe.
This tool performs a simple seasonality study on the selected symbol. It measures historical returns and summarizes them in two horizontal heatmaps:
Hours table (top) — Columns 00–23 show the average return of each clock hour, plus sample size, win rate, volatility (SD), and a t-score.
Days table (middle) — Columns 1–7 correspond to Mon–Sun with the same metrics.
Summary (bottom) — Shows the most profitable day and hour in the history loaded on your chart.
Green cells indicate higher average returns; red cells indicate lower/negative averages. The layout is centered on the screen, with the hours table above the days table for quick scanning.
How it works (methodology)
Returns: by default the indicator uses log returns ln(Ct/Ct-1) (you can switch to simple % if you prefer).
Daily aggregation (no look-ahead): day statistics are computed from completed daily closes via a higher timeframe request. Yesterday’s daily close vs. the prior day is added to the appropriate weekday bucket, preventing repaint/forward bias.
Hourly aggregation (intraday only): hour statistics are computed bar-to-bar on the current intraday timeframe and accumulated by clock hour (00–23) of the symbol’s exchange timezone.
Metrics per bucket:
Mean: average return in that bucket.
n: number of observations.
Win%: share of positive returns.
SD: standard deviation of returns (volatility proxy).
t-score: mean / SD * sqrt(n) — a quick stability signal (not a hypothesis test).
The indicator does not rely on future data and does not repaint past values.
Reading the tables
Start with the Mean row in each table: it’s color-mapped (red → yellow → green).
Check n (sample size). A bright green cell with very low n is less meaningful than a mild green cell with large n.
Use Win% and SD to judge consistency and noise.
t-score is a compact “signal-to-noise × sample size” measure; higher absolute values suggest more stable effects.
Typical observations traders look for (purely illustrative): for some equity indices, the first hour after the cash open can dominate; for FX/crypto, certain late-US or early-Asia hours sometimes stand out. Always verify on your symbol and timeframe.
오픈 소스 스크립트
진정한 트레이딩뷰 정신에 따라 이 스크립트 작성자는 트레이더가 기능을 검토하고 검증할 수 있도록 오픈소스로 공개했습니다. 작성자에게 찬사를 보냅니다! 무료로 사용할 수 있지만 코드를 다시 게시할 경우 하우스 룰이 적용된다는 점을 기억하세요.
면책사항
이 정보와 게시물은 TradingView에서 제공하거나 보증하는 금융, 투자, 거래 또는 기타 유형의 조언이나 권고 사항을 의미하거나 구성하지 않습니다. 자세한 내용은 이용 약관을 참고하세요.
오픈 소스 스크립트
진정한 트레이딩뷰 정신에 따라 이 스크립트 작성자는 트레이더가 기능을 검토하고 검증할 수 있도록 오픈소스로 공개했습니다. 작성자에게 찬사를 보냅니다! 무료로 사용할 수 있지만 코드를 다시 게시할 경우 하우스 룰이 적용된다는 점을 기억하세요.
면책사항
이 정보와 게시물은 TradingView에서 제공하거나 보증하는 금융, 투자, 거래 또는 기타 유형의 조언이나 권고 사항을 의미하거나 구성하지 않습니다. 자세한 내용은 이용 약관을 참고하세요.