Triple Volatility Indicator Check On The S&P 500 Index (INDEXS)

Post on: 24 Сентябрь, 2015 No Comment

Triple Volatility Indicator Check On The S&P 500 Index (INDEXS)

Have you ever wondered how billionaires continue to get RICHER, while the rest of the world is struggling?

I study billionaires for a living. To be more specific, I study how these investors generate such huge and consistent profits in the stock markets — year-in and year-out.

CLICK HERE to get your Free E-Book, “The Little Black Book Of Billionaires Secrets”

The chart above shows the Daily S&P 500 with the following price-based volatility indicators:

ATR (Average True Range)  which measures the daily high-low range,

Bollinger Band Width  which measures the distance between the top and bottom standard Bollinger Band,

Sigma Bands  which graphically show four standard deviations above and beneath the 20 period average (‘extra’ Bollinger Bands).

For reference, the current Daily ATR value is 14.41 which is on an up-swing from the 9.46 level last seen on August 23.

I highlighted prior periods of low ATR values, ALL of which had one more burst of upside action before a short-term reversal (lower) occurred.

That’s likely what we’re seeing currently – another upswing in price ahead of a potential sell-off phase (deeper retracement).

The Bollinger Band Width indicator  registers at 49.08 which also is up from the August 23 low of 21.64.

Keep in mind this simply shows the distance between the upper and lower Bollinger Band indicator (two standard deviations above the 20 day average).

The BB-Width Indicator tends to be a little more stable than the more popular ATR indicator as seen from the historical range.

Finally, the Sigma Band indicator simply plots more Bollinger Bands; it adds all four standard deviation bands above and beneath the average (not just two standard deviations above and beneath).

Triple Volatility Indicator Check On The S&P 500 Index (INDEXS)

According to the Volatility Principle. price tends to alternate between periods of high and low volatility – compressions or low-volatile periods tend to give way to future price expansions/breakouts.

You can see the historical development and the outcome of each of prior low and high volatility periods in the chart above.

The pattern seems to be that periods of low volatility (price compression/consolidation) tend to lead to one final ‘burst’ higher (January 2010; January 2011; March 2012; and now September 2012) ahead of a marginal retracement or decline in prices (the red periods on the chart).

If history does repeat, then we may see at least a marginal price weakness/decline in the near future.

S&P 500 Index. SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:SPY),

Written By Corey Rosenbloom, CMT From Afraid To Trade

My name is Corey Rosenbloom, CMT (Chartered Market Technician)  trader, educator, analyst, and I am excited to share with you my  experiences studying and trading the markets and to hear from you  regarding your experiences, challenges, and frustrations, and successes.  My goal is to create a community dedicated to reaching out to those who  have been burned by the market or are anxious about risking their money to make money in the stock, options, or futures markets. Together, we can share strategies and learn how to overcome crippling fears that keep  us from achieving our highest potential.


Categories
Futures  
Tags
Here your chance to leave a comment!