Trading Strategies Series Part 2
Combination of Bollinger Bands & RSI
Today we will take two of the better-known technical
indicators, namely Bollinger bands and Relative Strength Index (RSI), and go
through the steps involved in developing a trading system.
To begin with, let’s first take a closer look at each of the
indicators that we have picked for our system.
Bollinger Bands
John Bollinger, creator of the Bollinger Bands defines
Bollinger bands as ''a technical analysis tool, which is a type of trading band
or envelope''.
Bollinger Bands are volatility bands which are plotted above
and below a central measure of price, using a statistical measure called
standard deviation. They consist of three bands, which revolve around a simple
moving average (SMA), with the default value of 20, of which it has been
observed that 85% of the time, the price is held within the two boundaries:
Lower band – SMA (minus two standard deviations)
Upper band – SMA (plus two standard deviations)
The standard deviation is known to increase as price ranges
widen and decrease in narrow price ranges. Hence, the bands
- widen when volatility increases
- Contract when volatility decreases
Bollinger bands
provide a lot of useful information like:
- Trend continuation or reversal
- Periods of market consolidation
- Periods of upcoming large volatility breakouts
- Possible market tops or bottoms, and potential price targets
When using trading bands, it is the price action as it nears
the edges of the band that should be of particular interest to us. For a
trader, trading near the outer bands provides an element of confidence that
there is resistance or support, however, this alone does not provide relevant
buy or sell signals; all that it determines is whether the prices are high or
low, on a relative basis. Also, care should be taken with stop losses when
price closes outside the Bollinger Bands, they are continuations, not reversal
signals (this has been the basis for many successful volatility breakout
systems).
Given this information, a trader can enter either a buy or
sell trade by using indicators to confirm their price action. Let us now,
understand a little more about the Relative Strength Index (RSI), a momentum
indicator that can be effectively combined with the Bollinger Bands.
The RSI is a leading momentum indicator that compares the number of days a security closes up versus closing down over a period of time.
The formula for the RSI indicator takes two equations that
are involved in solving the formula. The first component equation obtains the
initial Relative Strength (RS) value, which is the ratio of the average 'Up'
closes to the average of 'Down' closes over 'N' periods represented in the
following formula:
RSI = Average of 'N' day's closes up / Average of 'N' day's closes down
The actual RSI value is calculated by indexing the indicator
to 100, through the use of the following formula:
RSI = 100 - (100 /1 + RS)
These values are then plotted on a range from 0 to 100. If the RSI is less than 30, it means that the market is oversold, and that the price might increase. Conversely, if the RSI is more than 70, it means that it's overbought, and that the price is likely to fall. The 50 level is the midline that separates the Bulls and the Bears. In an uptrend, the RSI is usually above 50, while in a downtrend, it is below 50.
The Combination
Trading Strategy
We selected this combination as you can determine when prices
will reverse from a Bollinger Band and are likely to move all the way to the
other band with the RSI moving out in tandem from overbought or oversold
conditions.
This simple strategy only triggers when both the RSI and the
Bollinger Bands indicators are at the same time retrieving from an overbought
or an oversold condition.
Of course, those prices may not move all the way, so you
will need to use stops for protection. Also, always bear in mind, not only with
this strategy, but as a thumb rule, to use a simple money management strategy
of allocating only a portion of your capital to any one position.
1) Long Entry
A long entry should be made when all the conditions are met:
Daily Chart
1. Previous Day closes below lower BB.
2. Current Day closes above lower BB.
3. Previous RSI closes below 30.
4. Current RSI closes above 30.
Stop Loss
The low of previous day or current day, whichever is lower.
Target
Trailing stop losses and riding the trend is an effective
strategy here. One should exit if a sell signal is generated.
2) Short Entry
A short entry should be made when all the conditions are
met:
Daily Chart
1. Previous Day closes above higher BB.
2. Current Day closes below lower BB.
3. Previous RSI closes above 70.
4. Current RSI closes below 70.
Stop Loss
The high of previous day or current day, whichever is
higher.
Target
Trailing stop losses and riding the trend or exit if a buy
signal is generated.
Very good information... thanks
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