BOLLINGER BANDS
Almost all of the sample trading ideas I generate for
my weekly newsletter involve the use of Bollinger bands. For me, they
are an essential tool of swing trading analysis and decision making.
Bollinger bands are named after the well-known
commentator John Bollinger -- technical analyst for FNN, the T.V.
station acquired by CNBC.
Bollinger built his work on a foundation laid by an
influential researcher named Hurst, who talked about "trading
envelopes." Hurst put so-called "envelopes" around a
stock or index, surrounding it with a fixed percentage amount such as 3
or 4%. He then noted that trading opportunities often occurred when the
stock reached one or the other end of the envelope and then began to
reverse.
Bollinger improved on this envelope theory by making
it dynamic rather than fixed. He used a 20-period moving
average and then created bands that were two standard deviations wide.
If you think back to statistics, remember that two standard deviations
encompass 95% of the instances in any normal distribution.
When a stock is outside the upper end of a Bollinger
band it is considered "overbought." I define overbought as a
stock that has gone up too far, too fast. It is vulnerable to profit
taking. A stock outside the lower band is "oversold." An
oversold stock has gone down too far too fast. It is susceptible to
bargain hunting. Eventually an oversold or overbought stock is apt to
reverse course.
To ensure a stock is truly overbought or oversold, I
like to filter the Bollinger band with a momentum indicator such as CCI,
stochastics or RSI. In my experience the bands always give meaningful
information no matter what time frame the chart is that they are placed
on: weekly, daily, hourly, or even five-minute.
There are several major trading principles of the
Bollinger bands for use in swing trading:
- The bottom or upper end of the band is likely to
provide support or resistance just like a "horizontal"
support or resistance level. Support and resistance in many cases
can also be found at the 20-period moving average, which marks the
center of the band.
- If a stock continues to close outside
the band, this is a continuation signal. The shares are likely to
continue trading in that very same direction.
When a particular stock reverses after close outside the band, it
often retreats to the opposite band before finding support.
- A narrowing of the bands suggests that the next
move will be a volatile one. Swing traders should watch a stock with
narrow bands carefully and identify the breakout from resistance or
breakdown from support. This breakout or breakdown can often be
bought for a profitable trade.
- Prices can often "ride" the band. Riding
an upper band indicates strength; riding the lower band shows
weakness.
Now let's analyze the Bollinger bands on the Robert
Half International (RHI) chart to see how they could have helped in
swing trading decision-making. Bollinger bands combine very well with
many technical analysis tools such as candlesticks, price pattern
analysis, moving averages and indicators to allow precise swing trading
analysis. They are an essential part of my
"multiple-indicator" approach to trading. I've labeled nine
different points on the chart. Note how RHI moved from one end of the
band at point #1 to the other end at point #5. I have labeled points #1
and #5 on the indicators as well.

Below you will find a brief analysis of each of the
aforementioned nine points:
- RHI is deeply oversold. It's outside the lower band
and stochastics and CCI are giving oversold readings. Shortly after,
numerous indicators, including moving average crossovers, begin to
give buy signals.
- The price has hit resistance at the upper end of
the band. The shares sell off a bit and then consolidate.
- The bands have narrowed dramatically compared to
where they were before. A breakout should be expected.
- RHI breaks out of the consolidation on relatively
high volume. It spurts from $18 to well over $20 in just two days.
- RHI now closes outside the band. RSI,
CCI and stochastics are all very overbought. The stock has gone from
one extreme of the band to the other.
- After several negative candles, the trend-following
MACD gives a sell signal.
- Note how the 20-day moving average "rides
herd," as I call it, on the price, providing resistance to
rallies in the downtrend.
- Here we have another close outside
the Bollinger band. It is made on a doji candle, suggesting
supply/demand equilibrium. Stochastics, CCI, RSI and MACD all give
buy signals. Shorts should cover. The stock is not, however, strong
enough to go long on.
- Several days later, RHI hits resistance at the
declining 20-day moving average. The recovery trendline is broken.
Stochastics rolls over. RSI peaks and begins to trend down. A new
short position may be initiated.
Income Security
of the Month
If you're looking for
high yields, monthly payments and unprecedented safety from your
investments, then you need to learn more about our "Income
Security of the Month" for November 2008. This stable
preferred stock has a long
track record of paying some of the most solid dividends in Wall
Street history. In fact, the preferred issue pays a monthly dividend
totaling 10.3% annually
and has
outperformed the S&P 500 by more than +44 percentage points over the last
year!
|
Top
10 Stocks for 2008!
Since we began publishing this report back in 2003, the picks we've
featured have consistently beaten the broader market -- delivering average
gains of +21.3% per year and outperforming the S&P by a nearly
2-to-1 margin. Act now to reserve your copy of our newest report -- Top
Ten Stocks for 2008. |