Bollinger
Bands – Clearly a Strong Choice for the Advanced
Trader!
Understanding
the Bands
Bollinger Bands are the brainchild of
Bollinger Capital Management’s founder and former CNBC
analyst John Bollinger.
They provide insight into an issue that is
clearly critical to traders – is the price of a stock (or
other financial instrument) relatively high or relatively
low?
The bands also reveal how the volatility
of stock has changed over time, which can also be an
indicator of future price behavior.
The bands themselves are simply three lines
overlaid on a share price chart. The middle band is a
twenty day moving average of the stock price.
The upper band is the twenty day moving average
plus two standard deviations, while the lower band is the
twenty day moving average minus two standard
deviations.
The price of a stock generally stays within the
channel formed by the upper and lower bands.
If the price is close to the upper band, the
stock is considered to be expensive relative to its
recent past, while a price near the lower band is
considered relatively cheap.
This relative expense can also be stated using a
measure called %b.
%b = (Last - Lower Bollinger Band) /
(Upper Bollinger Band - Lower Bollinger Band)

The vertical distance between the upper and
lower bands conveys information about the relative
volatility of the stock.
A narrowing gap between the bands indicates
decreasing volatility or less variation in the price of
the stock. An increasing gap implies the
opposite.
This information is of particular importance to
options traders as the value of options is dependent on
implied volatility (expectations about future
volatility). There is a specific measure of relative
volatility called the Bollinger Bandwidth.
BandWidth = (Upper Bollinger Band - Lower
Bollinger Band) / Middle Bollinger Band
It is important to note that despite the use of
standard deviations to create Bollinger Bands, it is not
possible to draw valid statistical conclusions from
them.
There is a common misconception that some fixed
proportion of prices will fall between the
bands. In
fact, there is no genuine statistical basis for this
idea.
It is better is to think of the upper and lower
bands simply as rough, though widely acknowledged,
guidelines of what constitutes relatively cheap or
expensive.
Trading
the Bands
Traders utilize Bollinger Bands in wildly
varying ways. A
simple strategy is to buy when the price touches the lower
band, and sell when it hits the moving average or upper
band. This
approach is not without difficulties.
Bollinger himself has pointed out that,
“Price can, and does, walk up the upper Bollinger Band and
down the lower Bollinger Band,” which can be distressing for
any trader who buys when the price first touched the lower
band.
However, the simple buy low, sell high approach
is not without followers. Channel traders seek
out stocks that exhibit reasonably low bandwidth and
relatively horizontal bands.
These reasonably stable stocks are said to trade
within a ‘channel’ and can thus be bought and sold
repeatedly for modest profits, but at relatively low
risk, as the price oscillates within the
channel.
A more sophisticated strategy often utilized by
options traders is to buy options when the Bollinger
Bandwidth is low, which implies unusually low volatility,
in the expectation that the options will increase in
value as volatility reverts to its mean level.
Bollinger bands are somewhat unusual in the
world of technical analysis in that their creator does
not tend to make outsized claims about their predictive
power.
In his commentary on the utilization of
Bollinger Bands, Bollinger has stated that the bands are
most useful when used in conjunction with other forms of
technical analysis.
Reference to Bollinger Bands can help an
experienced trader determine whether a trading signal
generated by another technical trading system is real or
just an anomaly.
A good example would be using Bollinger Bands to
cross check trading signals from Japanese Candlestick
analysis.
If a candlestick pattern that usually indicates
a market reversal appears when the stock price has been
skirting the upper band, while the bandwidth has been
narrowing, the chances of a sharp drop are pretty
high.
However, if the same candlestick pattern appears
after a period when prices bounced around the middle band
and the bandwidth is quite high, it is probably a false
signal. Used
in this manner, Bollinger Bands can be a significant
enhancer of trading profits.
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