The Basics Of Bollinger Bands®
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In the 1980s, John Bollinger, a long-time technician of the markets, developed the technique of using a moving average with two trading bands above and below it. Unlike a percentage calculation from a normal moving average, Bollinger Bands® simply add and subtract a standard deviation calculation.
Standard deviation is a mathematical formula that measures volatility, showing how the stock price can vary from its true value. By measuring price volatility, Bollinger Bands® adjust themselves to market conditions. This is what makes them so handy for traders: they can find almost all of the price data needed between the two bands. Read on to find out how this indicator works, and how you can apply it to your trading.(For more on volatility, see Tips For Investors In Volatile Markets.)
What's a Bollinger Band®?
Bollinger Bands® consist of a center line and two price channels (bands) above and below it. The center line is an exponential moving average; the price channels are the standard deviations of the stock being studied. The bands will expand and contract as the price action of an issue becomes volatile (expansion) or becomes bound into a tight trading pattern (contraction). (Learn about the difference between simple and exponential moving averages by checking out Moving Averages: What Are They?)
A stock may trade for long periods in a trend, albeit with some volatility from time to time. To better see the trend, traders use the moving average to filter the price action. This way, traders can gather important information about how the market is trading. For example, after a sharp rise or fall in the trend, the market may consolidate, trading in a narrow fashion and criss-crossing above and below the moving average. To better monitor this behavior, traders use the price channels, which encompass the trading activity around the trend.
We know that markets trade erratically on a daily basis even though they are still trading in an uptrend or downtrend. Technicians use moving averages with support and resistance lines to anticipate the price action of a stock. Upper resistance and lower support lines are first drawn and then extrapolated to form channels within which the trader expects prices to be contained. Some traders draw straight lines connecting either tops or bottoms of prices to identify the upper or lower price extremes, respectively, and then add parallel lines to define the channel within which the prices should move. As long as prices do not move out of this channel, the trader can be reasonably confident that prices are moving as expected.
When stock prices continually touch the upper Bollinger Band®, the prices are thought to be overbought; conversely, when they continually touch the lower band, prices are thought to be oversold, triggering a buy signal.
When using Bollinger Bands®, designate the upper and lower bands as price targets. If the price deflects off the lower band and crosses above the 20-day average (the middle line), the upper band comes to represent the upper price target. In a strong uptrend, prices usually fluctuate between the upper band and the 20-day moving average. When that happens, a crossing below the 20-day moving average warns of a trend reversal to the downside. (For more about gauging an asset's direction and profiting from it, see Track Stock Prices With Trendlines.)
Figure 1
Source: MetaStock
You can see in this chart of American Express (NYSE:AXP) from the start of 2008 that for the most part, the price action was touching the lower band and the stock price fell from the $60 level in the dead of winter to its March position of around $10. In a couple of instances, the price action cut through the center line (March to May and again in July and August), but for many traders, this was certainly not a buy signal as the trend had not been broken.
Figure 2
Source: MetaStock
In the 2001 chart of Microsoft Corporation (Nasdaq:MSFT) (above), you can see the trend reversed to an uptrend in the early part of January, but look how slow it was in showing the trend change. Before the price action crossed over the center line, the stock price had moved from $20 to $24 and then on to between $24 and $25 before some traders would have confirmation of this trend reversal.
This is not to say that Bollinger Bands® aren't a well-regarded indicator of overbought or oversold issues, but charts like the 2001 Microsoft layout are a good reminder that we should start out by recognizing trends and then simple moving averages before moving on to more exotic indicators.
The Bottom Line
While every strategy has its drawbacks, Bollinger Bands® have become one of the most useful and commonly used tools in spotlighting extreme short-term prices in a security. Buying when stock prices cross below the lower Bollinger Band® often helps traders take advantage of oversold conditions and profit when the stock price moves back up toward the center moving-average line.
(For more on gauging trends with this technique, see Using Bollinger Band® "Bands" To Gauge Trends.)
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That is the explanation. I find Bollinger Bands fairly good for predicting how much to offer for an Exchange Traded Fund, and when to buy it or sell it using a limit order, and when to buy or sell a mutual fund.
When the price it toward the upper band, it is a better time to sell and I set an ETF limit order within a 5% of the last bid. When the price is toward the lower band, it is a better time to buy and I will offer a price 7-10% lower than the last bid.
The goal is to buy low and sell high. I never buy or sell an ETF at market price, because all I normally have to do is name my price and someone willing to sell at the market price will always come along. within between an hour and a week. Mutual funds buy and sell for only one price, which is set at the end of each day.
Bollinger bands generally result in me buying at a lower price and selling at a higher one. There may be better ways of doing this, but this works for me.
ETF's always involve paying a small commission ($7.00 to $12.95). I rarely pay any commission to buy or sell mutual funds UNLESS I think I can make iit up within a week.
If I hold a mutual fund for at least 90 days, the broker eats the commission.
Bollinger Bands are tied to the standard deviation of a stock or mutual fund.
Another important figure is the beta. If a stock is equal in volatility to its corresponding index, the beta is 1.0. 1.10 means it is 10% more volatile, 90 means 10 less volatile. Investing is all about the risk vs reward
What oft-quoted figure is mostly worthless to an investor? The Dow Jones Average. It is a weighted average of thirt stocks that change from time totime,