Overview of Available Market and Technical Indicators

NOKS offers a range of market and technical indicators that enable you to create precise and informed trading strategies. These indicators are divided into two categories: Market Data Indicators and Technical Indicators. They allow your AI Trading Agent to make data-driven decisions based on current market conditions, trends, and volatility.

1. Market Data Indicators

  • Market Cap: The total market capitalization of a token on the current network.

    • Example: "Buy $1000 worth of [Token] when the market cap exceeds $10M."

  • Price: The current price on the most liquid pool.

    • Example: Buy $1000 worth of [Token] when the price drops by 5% in the last hour."

  • Total Supply: The total supply of the token available on the current network.

    • Example: "Buy $1500 worth of [Token] when total supply is under 1M and price is below $5."

  • Volume: The trading volume across all liquidity pools.

    • Example: "Buy $1000 worth of [Token] when the 24-hour trading volume exceeds 1 million."

  • Liquidity: Total liquidity available across all liquidity pools.

    • Example: "Buy $1000 worth of [Token] when liquidity increases by 50% in the last hour."

  • Transaction Count: The number of transactions that have occurred on all pools for the token.

    • Example: "Buy $1000 worth of [Token] when the transaction count increases by 30% in the last 24 hours."

2. Technical Indicators

  • RSI (Relative Strength Index)

    • How It’s Used: Your agent might buy a token when the RSI drops below 30, indicating the token is oversold, and sell when it rises above 70, indicating it is overbought.

    • Example: "Buy when RSI < 30 and sell when RSI > 70."

  • SMA (Simple Moving Average) and EMA (Exponential Moving Average)

    • How It’s Used: These moving averages help identify trends. Your agent might buy when the price crosses above the SMA or EMA (bullish signal) and sell when it crosses below (bearish signal).

    • Example: "Buy when price crosses above 50-period EMA, sell when it crosses below."

  • MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence)

    • How It’s Used: The MACD is used to identify changes in momentum. Your agent can buy when the MACD line crosses above the signal line (bullish crossover) and sell when it crosses below (bearish crossover).

    • Example: "Buy when MACD crosses above the signal line, sell when it crosses below."

  • Bollinger Bands (BBands)

    • How It’s Used: Bollinger Bands are used to measure volatility. Your agent might buy when the price hits the lower band (indicating it’s undervalued) and sell when it hits the upper band (indicating overvaluation).

    • Example: "Buy when the price touches the lower Bollinger Band, sell when it touches the upper band."

  • ATR (Average True Range)

    • How It’s Used: ATR helps to gauge market volatility. Your agent might adjust its stop-loss orders based on ATR to ensure they are placed appropriately during periods of high volatility.

    • Example: "Set stop-loss at 1.5x the current ATR to account for volatility."