Identifying Budding Trends with Bollinger Bands
Wed, Jun 14 2006, 10:28 GMT
by John Forman
Anduril, Inc.
Bollinger Bands are among the most commonly found technical indicators
these days. Even the most basic of charting applications include them
among the available offerings. There are many ways the Bands can be
incorporated in to one’s market analysis and trading methods (see
Bollinger Bands – The Basic Rules for a discussion. This article
focuses on how they can be used to find markets in the early stages of
significant directional moves.
The process of trend identification using
Bollinger Bands starts
with evaluating the width of the Bands. This is done using the Band
Width Indicator (BWI), which is calculated as follows:
BWI = ( UB – LB ) / MB
Where
UB is the Upper Band, LB is the Lower Band, and MB is the
Middle Band. Using the common default setting of 20-periods, that means
the MB is the 20-period moving average. That default will be the one
used in the examples provided herein, though it is by no means
necessarily the best option.
The formula above will express the width
between the Bands as a
percentage of the moving average being used. It could be multiplied
through by 100 to provide an integer value (as done on the sample
charts). The average (MB) is used rather than current price because it
is the central point in the Bands, whereas price could be anywhere
within (or even outside) them.
The reason for
calculating BWI is that it gives us a normalized
reading of how wide the Bands are for comparative purposes. A 100 point
band width on the S&P 500, for example, is relatively different
when the index is at 900 than when it’s at 1500. The chart below
provides an example of BWI. It is a daily chart of S&P 500
e-mini
futures (continuous contract) with the Bollinger Bands plotted along
with price in the upper portion and BWI as the secondary plot below.

As you can see, BWI ranged between a bit below 2% and
about 7%
over the course of 2005. It is the lower extremes in the indicator
readings which are the focus when one uses Bollinger Bands to help
identify pending trends.
Continuing with USD/JPY, we can see a fairly
recent example of what
we are looking for here. Notice in the chart which follows, how narrow
the Bollinger Bands became in September. According to BWI, they got to
a width of less than 2%. Shortly thereafter, the market took off on a
three month rally.

You can see from the following chart that the low BWI reading in
September matched one from earlier in the year before a nice upswing in
USD/JPY. It was also close to where the indicator got prior to the fall
in the market late in 2004.

In the examples above, the bottom end of the BWI range was 1%-2%.
For USD/JPY and some other markets such as the S&P, on a daily
basis, readings that low are significant. In other markets, however,
the scale is different. Look at Crude Oil, for example.

During the 12 months between August 2004 and August
2005, the
lower bound was closer to 10%. That is reflective of how much more
volatile Crude Oil prices were in that span than was true for other
markets.
There are also differences in timeframe. Take a
look at the monthly USD/JPY chart below to see how this can be the
case.

Notice that BWI bottomed out around 10%, significantly above the
2% area seen on the daily chart. This, of course, is to be expected
given the larger price moves which take place in that timeframe. The
point, though, is that the process remains the same – look for a market
situation in which BWI has reached a relatively low level in historic
comparison, regardless of the timeframe in question.
What you are identifying when finding low BWI
readings is markets
which have been relatively range-bound for a period of time. The
tendency is that the longer a market remains narrowly traded (low BWI),
the more significant and explosive the move which follows. Some markets
make these moves in fairly orderly fashions, as the USD/JPY example
earlier. That was a fairly gradual, though quite sustained trend which
began from a low BWI reading.
Other situations
are more explosive. Take a look at the circled
area on the S&P chart below. The BWI reading reached about 2%,
which is pretty low for the index on the daily timeframe. The move
which followed dropped the market 40-50 points in less than two weeks.

When reviewing BWI, it is generally not enough to
just look for
low readings, though. In most cases, you need to find a situation where
the indicator has gotten to a relative extreme, then has begun turning
higher. The reason for this is that BWI can stay low for long periods
of time in some cases. The trader trying to exploit a low reading in
such a circumstance, would find her/himself attempting to play a flat
market, which obviously is a different type of trading than
trend-hunting.
It should also be noted at this point that
using BWI to indicate
the end of a trend could find one leaving a considerable amount of
money on the table. The example of the USD/JPY trend from September
through December 2005 is a perfect example. Had one exited a long
position when BWI rolled over at the start of October, about 600 pips
more upside would have been missed. While a declining BWI can sometimes
indicate a trend at or near its conclusion, what it is really saying is
that price volatility has dropped off. In smooth, persistent trends,
this happens quite often as the market just continues to grind in one
direction.
Naturally, after one finds a market with a low
BWI reading, there
remains the task of attempting to ascertain which direction the pending
move is going to take. That is an entirely different discussion,
though. The Bollinger Bands themselves may not provide much help there.
One is left to use other directional indications for that task. One
thing to keep in mind, however, is that the initial move which gets BWI
rising from a low reading may not be the one which eventually turns in
to the big move. Be prepared for the fake-out maneuver. It may not
always happen, but it does enough to keep traders on their toes.
There could be dozens and dozens of chart
examples provide to point
out how low BWI readings can indicate “trend-ready” markets. The
suggestion at this point, however, is that you take a look at your
favorite market in terms of BWI, and with the tools you use to
determine market direction. If you are a trend trader, BWI may help you
be a more successful and profitable one.
Published on
Wed, Jun 14 2006, 10:28 GMT
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