| Bollinger Bands were invented by John Bollinger. Used to confirm trading signals, normally from a Momentum Indicator, the bands indicate overbought and oversold levels relative to a moving average. |
| Bollinger Bands are calculated at a specified number of standard deviations above and below the moving average, causing them to widen when prices are volatile and contract when prices are stable. |
| Bollinger originally used a 20 day simple moving average and set the bands at 2 standard deviations, suited to intermediate cycles. |
Microsoft is charted with 20 day Bollinger bands at 2 standard deviations. |
| Contracting bands warn that the market is about to trend: the bands first converge into a narrow neck, followed by a sharp price movement. The first breakout is often a false move, preceding a strong trend in the opposite direction. A contracting range [C] is evident in June 1998: the bands converge to a width of $2, followed by a breakout in July to a new high. |
| A move that starts at one band normally carries through to the other, in a ranging market. |
| A move outside the band indicates that the trend is strong and likely to continue - unless price quickly reverses. Note the quick reversal [QR] in early August. |
| A trend that hugs one band signals that the trend is strong and likely to continue. Wait for divergence on a Momentum Indicator to signal the end of a trend. |
20 day Bollinger bands at 2 standard deviations and 10 day Rate of Change. |
- Go short [S] - bearish divergence on ROC.
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Contracting Bollinger Bands [C] warn of increased volatility. This begins with a false rally (note the ROC triple divergence) followed by a sharp fall.
- Go long [L] - price hugs the lower band, followed by a bullish divergence on ROC.
- Go short [S] - price hugs the upper band, followed by a bearish divergence on ROC.
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| The default settings for Bollinger bands are 2.0 standard deviations around a 20 day exponential moving average. Edit Indicator Settings to change the standard settings. |
| See Indicator Panel for directions on how to set up an indicator. |
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The Moving Average is a powerful measure of trend direction, achieved by smoothing price data. Moving Averages can also be used on median,typical and weighted closing prices as well as other indicators. |
| Sometimes referred to as Percentage Bands, they are plotted at a set percentage above and below a moving average... |