Friday, June 4, 2010

The Indicator Series : Understanding Bollinger Bands

If you have been involved with almost any form of technical trading you may have heard and probably used Bollinger Bands. This technical indicator named after its creator - John Bollinger- became one of the most popular tools used by traders during the 20th century. Today I am going to dedicate this post to a description and analysis of this indicator and how it can be used to create successful mechanical trading strategies. I am going to talk about the calculation of the indicator, what it tells us about price action and how we can analyze it to find different types of market inefficiencies. As always the objective of this post will be to teach you how to understand this indicator better and how to design effective systems that tie its logical relationship with price in a rational manner.

So how is the Bollinger Bands indicator calculated ? This is one of the simplest technical indicators available to modern traders. It is formed by two parallel lines plotted around an X period moving average. These lines are distanced from the MA by a certain number of standard deviations. The value of the standard deviation is calculated at the same number of periods as the X period MA. To sum it up the indicator is formed by the following line :

upper band = X period MA + Y times the standard deviation
lower band = X period MA - Y times the standard deviation
central line = X period MA

But what does it tell us ? The standard deviation is simply a measure of how much price moved away from its average. A high standard deviation implies that price moved further away from the central average while a low standard deviation implies that price remained more rangebound and close to its average. When this value is low, volatility is low, when it is high, volatility is high. The plotting of the traditional Bollinger Band indicator with the moving average and standard deviation calculated on close prices over 20 periods is shown below. The upper and lower bands are placed 2 standard deviation measures away from the central line.
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The problem now seems to be to find an exploitable ineffiency using the above indicator. We must therefore find a behavior related to the standard deviation that will produce a forecast of future market movements with a positive mathematical expectancy over a long period of time. However when you attempt to do this you will find that most of your attempts will be frustrated by the fact that volatility related behavior - which is what the standard deviation of price tells us - does not appear to have a relationship with any particular inefficiency. In particular, attempting to capture volatility breakouts using Bollinger Bands is very difficult in forex trading and such a strategy does not hold a positive mathematical expectancy on most currency pairs.

Contrary to popular belief, there is also no clear statistical tendency when evaluating price "touching" the Bollinger Bands. If you attempt to create a strategy to profit from bounces from one side of the band to another you will find that profitable periods will exist but unprofitable periods in which the market will not bounce, but follow a particular band will happen. The same happens if you attempt to do the opposite. None of these approaches seems to give you a positive mathematical expectancy and in the end they do not lend themselves to the creation of mechanical strategies.

Is it not possible then to create a profitable system using this indicator ? Of course not ! Certainly there are ways in which this indicator might be exploited to give entries with positive mathematical expectancies. For example, statistically we might expect price levels outside the bollinger bands to be quite rare and in fact, significant price moves outside the bands might prove to be signals that price is moving decisively in that given direction. We could therefore use these signals to exploit both a short term retracement and a longer term trending movement, expecting price to return within the bands but to continue to move in that direction. Overall entry rules based on this approach have a positive mathematical expectancy meaning that they do provide us with a way to create Bollinger Band-based long term profitable systems.
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As you see it comes down to understanding the meaning of the standard deviation and how price movements that are statistically rare can be exploited to signal - with positive accuracy over the long term - price movements in a given direction. Bollinger Bands are therefore a simple indicator that may not prove to be as useful as traditional technical analysis wants it to be, but it does lend itself to the creation of profitable strategies both on its own and as a compliment to others indicators as shown by the God's Gift ATR trading system. I am currently developing a few strategies based solely on Bollinger Bands. Will I succeed to make a long term profitable system out of this ? Stay tuned to check it out :o)

If you would like to learn more about automated trading and how you too can create your own systems to achieve success using expert advisors please consider buying my ebook on automated trading or joining Asirikuy to receive all ebook purchase benefits, weekly updates, check the live accounts I am running with several expert advisors and get in the road towards long term success in the forex market using automated trading systems. I hope you enjoyed the article !

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Hello Daniel,

I don't believe to what I read: you and Bollinger bands! After all what you"ve told me about basing strategy on it? I wish you all the success in your mission!

Maxim

Daniel said...

Hello Maxim,

Thank you for your comment :o) I know ! Definitely not by favorite indicator but well, it is all about diversification and the learning of new trading techniques. Since I had never been able to develop a long term profitable strategy based solely on Bollinger Bands I decided to put my mind to it and got some interesting results. Certainly you can expect an Asirikuy video about this soon :o) Thank you very much again for your comment,

Best regards,

Daniel

Unknown said...

My understanding of Bollinger Bands is that they provide an indication of whether prices are high or low on a relative basis--so prices are high at the upper bands and low at the lower band. As you note, sometimes from the upper band price reverts to the mean (middle band) but sometimes not. BBForex is a website that provides Bollinger Band analytics for the forex market and there are a good set of simple guidelines for using Bollinger Bands at http://www.bbforex.com/tutorial/?p=6. The site also has excellent charts even if you do not care about bbands.

Daniel said...

Hello Dee Dee,

Thank you very much for your comment :o) The tutorial and website you mention are useful indeed but the problem is that usually the usage of Bollinger Bands is explained but no accurate analysis of the performance of any of the mentioned "ways of usage" over the long term is given. Of course, I understand that the general description of indicators is usually only provided as guidance and the complete creation of a system is up to each traded. It is however my objective to show how this real "tactics" are or not applicable to the mechanical exploitation of trading inefficiencies. Thanks again for your comment and tutorial link :o)

Best Regards,

Daniel Fernandez

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