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Trading With Shifted Moving Averages and Bollinger Band1

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Sunil Jadhav
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views2 pages

Trading With Shifted Moving Averages and Bollinger Band1

Uploaded by

Sunil Jadhav
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Trading with Shifted Moving Averages and Bollinger Bands

(Page 1 of 2)

The following is a chapter from Michael Jardine’s book, New Frontiers in Fibonacci Trading:

The moving averages—which include both stochastics and the moving average convergence
divergence indicator (MACD)—are lagging indicators and, as such, are open to whipsaws.
Whipsaws occur when prices jump back and forth across the moving average, and trigger false
trade entry signals before the moving average can catch up with the price action. However the
moving average may also function as a leading indicator when used together with the Bollinger
Band. Both are lagging indicators, but by combining them together, they become leading
indicators.

This application was introduced to me by Russell A. Lockhart, PhD., though I have adapted it to
my own trading style. I would encourage you to do exactly the same—take a look, see how it
works, and then adapt it for your own use.

Bollinger Bands, developed by John Bollinger, are moving averages of the standard deviation of
prices, over a given period of time. Standard deviation (SDV) is the square root of the variance,
and variance is a measure of how spread out a distribution is. These calculations are performed
for you in the majority of charting programs. The Bollinger Bands show you exactly what price
level, based on prices up and down over a given time period, would be considered to be out of
the ordinary if prices were to then reach or exceed that level.

The default setting that John Bollinger uses is a 20-period moving average, set to two standard
deviations. Statisticians recognize that two standard deviations is the normal level of deviation
for the majority of charting applications. So the more volatile the swing in prices, the wider the
bands are likely to be. Likewise, the smaller the swings in prices, the narrower those bands are
likely to be.

One way to use this information is to observe what happens when the bands tighten. That is
usually a sign that prices are consolidating in an increasingly narrow range, thus setting up for a
major breakout from the established trading range. The bands themselves have limitations in that
they are not leading indicators, although there are techniques for using the information they
reveal to help make trading decisions. For instance, the point at which prices touch the band is
often the signal of an impending reversal, which would then be confirmed by subsequent price
action.

The way we combine the moving average and Bollinger Bands is to modify both of them in such
a way that their crossing becomes significant. To do this, we emphasize what the Bollinger
Bands tell us: First we increase the volatility beyond two standard deviations by pumping it up to
2.23, a Fibonacci number. Then we shorten the moving average from 20 down to 13, the sixth
number in the Fibonacci sequence. Why use 13? Because it fits the method much better than
eight or 21. Of course, you can use a non-Fibonacci number such as 12, but be aware that 12 is
the square root of 144, which is also a Fibonacci number!
Now let’s modify the moving average by pulling it back three time periods. Why three? Because
it is a moving average of the immediately preceding three time periods, and we want that average
shifted back to the beginning of the preliminary time period. This is necessary because we are
not interested in where the moving average touches prices, but where it touches the Bollinger
Bands.

This setting aligns the shifted moving average (ShMA) correctly with the Extreme Bollinger
Bands (EBB) so that when the ShMA crosses the EBB, it is a reliable signal for exiting the trade.
Figure 12.1 shows the setup, with the indicated trade entry and exit points.

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