Alerts
The indicator offers up to 39 alert conditions: three per slot across ten slots (30 total), seven blended alerts, and two alignment alerts. That is a lot of alerts. Most of them are not useful all at once. This page d...
Written By Axiom Admin
Last updated About 1 month ago
Alerts
The indicator offers up to 39 alert conditions: three per slot across ten slots (30 total), seven blended alerts, and two alignment alerts. That is a lot of alerts. Most of them are not useful all at once. This page documents every condition, explains what each one actually confirms and what it does not, and helps you choose a manageable subset that fits your workflow.
Every alert in this indicator is bar-close gated. Alerts fire only on confirmed (closed) bars, never during intrabar updates. This means you will not receive phantom alerts from incomplete price action within a still-forming bar. It also means alerts arrive at the end of the bar, not the instant a condition crosses intrabar.
Per-slot alerts (x10 slots)
Each enabled slot offers three alert conditions. Disabled slots never fire alerts.
Stoch NN Is Bullish
Fires when: The slot's K is above its D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: That slot's stochastic regime is currently bullish β momentum for that timeframe/ticker combination is leaning in the buyer's direction relative to its own signal line.
What it does NOT confirm: That the broader setup is bullish, that the blend agrees, that other slots agree, or that the regime will persist. A single slot being bullish is one data point in a multi-slot system. If you are running three slots and only one is bullish, you have a minority reading, not a consensus.
Stoch NN Is Bearish
Fires when: The slot's K is below its D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: That slot's stochastic regime is currently bearish.
What it does NOT confirm: Same caveats as the bullish alert. One bearish slot does not mean the composite or the broader market context is bearish.
Stoch NN Regime Flip
Fires when: The slot's K/D relationship changes direction on a confirmed bar β either from K > D to K < D, or from K < D to K > D.
What it confirms: That the slot's regime just changed. Something shifted in that timeframe's momentum picture.
What it does NOT confirm: Which direction the flip went. The alert fires on any change β it does not distinguish between a bullish-to-bearish flip and a bearish-to-bullish flip. The alert name in TradingView will include context about the slot's state, but the runtime notification says "regime flipped" without specifying direction. If you need direction-specific alerts, use the Is Bullish or Is Bearish conditions instead of the regime flip.
What it also does NOT confirm: Whether the flip is meaningful or noise. A brief K/D touch β where K dips below D for one bar and then crosses back β fires the regime-flip alert twice (once for the dip, once for the recovery). In choppy conditions, this can generate rapid successive alerts. See the alert-overload section below for guidance.
Blended alerts
These alerts operate on the composite (blended) K and D lines.
Blended Stoch Is Bullish
Fires when: Blended K is above blended D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The weighted composite regime is currently bullish.
What it does NOT confirm: That individual slots agree. The blend can be "bullish" while one or more contributing slots are actually bearish. A heavily weighted bullish slot can pull the blend positive even when the majority of slots are bearish. Always check individual slot behavior when this alert fires if you care about genuine agreement versus weighted-average dominance.
Blended Stoch Is Bearish
Fires when: Blended K is below blended D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The composite regime is currently bearish.
What it does NOT confirm: Same caveat β the blend is a weighted average, not a majority vote.
Blended Stoch Regime Flip
Fires when: The blended K/D relationship changes direction on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The composite regime just flipped.
What it does NOT confirm: Direction (same as per-slot regime flip), or that the flip represents a genuine shift in momentum. Near-zero blended K/D values will flip frequently on small oscillations. If the blend has been hovering between -10 and +10, a regime-flip alert in this zone is not telling you something decisive β it is reflecting mathematical jitter around the neutral line.
Blended Stoch Crossed Above Zero
Fires when: Blended K crosses from negative to positive on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The weighted composite has moved from net bearish territory to net bullish territory. Zero is the meaningful center of the bipolar scale, so this crossing has interpretive weight β it means the stochastic evidence across your enabled slots now leans bullish overall.
What it does NOT confirm: That the crossing is decisive or that the blend will stay above zero. A small positive push from +1 to +3 triggers this alert the same way a strong push from -20 to +15 does. The alert tells you the line crossed. It does not tell you how much conviction is behind the move.
Blended Stoch Crossed Below Zero
Fires when: Blended K crosses from positive to negative on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The composite has moved from net bullish to net bearish territory.
What it does NOT confirm: Same caveats as the upward crossing. A weak drift from +2 to -1 fires this alert identically to a strong drop from +30 to -10.
Blended Stoch Overbought
Fires when: Blended K crosses above the overbought level (default +70) on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The composite reading has entered the overbought zone. Momentum is stretched in the bullish direction.
What it does NOT confirm: That a reversal is coming. Overbought means stretched, not exhausted. Markets can stay overbought for extended periods, and crossing the OB level is not a sell trigger. Many strong trends spend long stretches in the overbought zone. The alert is informational β "the composite is at an extreme" β not prescriptive.
Blended Stoch Oversold
Fires when: Blended K crosses below the oversold level (default -70) on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: The composite reading has entered the oversold zone.
What it does NOT confirm: That a bounce is coming. Same logic as overbought β oversold means stretched bearish, not "about to turn." Strong downtrends live in the oversold zone.
Alignment alerts
All Stoch Slots Bullish
Fires when: Every enabled slot (with a non-na K value) has K above D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: Every active timeframe/ticker in your configuration is in a bullish regime at this moment. This is the strongest form of directional agreement the indicator can report.
What it does NOT confirm: That the alignment will persist. Alignment is a snapshot, not a prediction. It does not tell you how close any individual slot is to flipping. A slot at K = +2, D = +1 technically qualifies as bullish, but it is one tick away from flipping. The alert does not distinguish between comfortable alignment (all slots deep in bullish territory) and fragile alignment (all slots barely bullish).
What it does NOT confirm (part 2): That a position taken during alignment is safe. Alignment can precede reversals just as easily as continuations. All timeframes being bullish sometimes means all timeframes are about to roll over together.
All Stoch Slots Bearish
Fires when: Every enabled slot has K below D on a confirmed bar.
What it confirms: Universal bearish regime across your configuration.
What it does NOT confirm: Same caveats as the bullish alignment alert.
Alert overload: choosing a useful subset
With 39 possible conditions, the tool can generate more alerts than any person can process β and that is the danger. Alert overload does not look like an obvious problem. It looks like diligence. You enabled twelve alerts because you wanted to be thorough, and now your phone buzzes every few minutes with regime flips and status confirmations. After a day, you stop reading them carefully. After a week, you start dismissing them reflexively. The alerts have not become less accurate β you have become less attentive, and the one alert that actually mattered gets the same two-second glance as the dozens that did not.
The fix is not "fewer alerts" as a generic principle. It is choosing the right subset for your workflow so that every alert that reaches you is worth the attention it demands. Here is how to think about that.
If you care about composite regime changes, use Blended Stoch Regime Flip and possibly the zero crossing alerts. These fire less frequently than per-slot alerts and summarize the overall state. Pair them with a quick visual check of the individual slots to see whether the composite flip reflects genuine agreement or just one slot pulling the blend.
If you care about timeframe-specific turns, pick the one or two slots that matter most to your decision process and set Stoch NN Regime Flip alerts on those slots specifically. Do not set regime-flip alerts on all ten slots β you will get a stream of alerts that requires more cognitive work to filter than just looking at the chart.
If you care about extreme readings, use the Overbought and Oversold alerts on the blend. These fire infrequently (the blend has to reach +70 or -70, which requires broad momentum stretch) and flag moments worth checking. But remember: reaching an extreme is not a reversal call.
If you want to know when your full timeframe stack agrees, the All Slots Bullish and All Slots Bearish alignment alerts are the cleanest option. They fire only when every enabled slot points the same way. These are the rarest and most informative alerts in the set, but they also carry the snapshot caveat β alignment can be fragile.
What to avoid: Enabling per-slot bullish/bearish state alerts on many slots simultaneously. These are status conditions, not event conditions. If you create them as repeating bar-close alerts in TradingView, they can keep firing on every confirmed bar where the condition remains true, which means they can fire constantly during a sustained regime β potentially dozens of times per session. In almost every workflow, event-based alerts (regime flips, crossings, alignments) are more useful than continuous status alerts. The status alerts exist for specialized use cases where you need a bar-by-bar confirmation feed, but for most traders, they create noise that drowns out the events that actually matter.
A note on alerts and the repainting tradeoff
All alerts are bar-close gated on the chart timeframe. This is true regardless of the "On Bar Close?" setting on individual slots. These are two different layers of timing, and the interaction between them matters.
Here is the scenario to think through: You have a 5-minute chart. Slot 02 is set to the 1-hour timeframe with "On Bar Close?" turned off (live mode). The slot's K line updates as the hourly bar builds. At 10:35, the slot shows K at +45. At 10:40, the 5-minute chart bar closes, and the alert condition evaluates β it sees K at +45 and fires a "Stoch 02 Is Bullish" alert. But the hourly bar does not close until 11:00. By 11:00, the final K value might be +30 or +50 or +12. The alert fired on a reading that was confirmed at the chart-bar level but was still provisional at the higher-timeframe level. You acted on a number that the chart will later revise.
If you are using alerts to trigger decisions or to log conditions for later review, keep "On Bar Close?" enabled (the default) on any slot driving those alerts. That way, the slot value is confirmed at the HTF level, and the alert fires on a reading that will not change retroactively. See MTF & Repainting for the full explanation.