3. Bollinger Bands
Bollinger Bands were developed by John Bollinger in the early 1980s. They are used to identify extreme highs or lows in price. Bollinger recognized a need for dynamic adaptive trading bands, whose spacing varies based on the volatility of the prices. During period of high volatility, Bollinger bands widen to become more forgiving. During periods of low volatility, they narrow to contain prices.
Calculation
Bollinger Bands consist of a set of three curves drawn in relation to prices:
The middle band reflects an intermediate-term trend. The 20 day - simple moving average (SMA) usually serves this purpose.
The upper band is the same as the middle band, but it is shifted up by two standard deviations, a formula that measures volatility, showing how the price can vary from its true value
The lower band is the same as the middle band, but it is shifted down by two standard deviations to adjust for market volatility.
Bollinger Bands establish a Bandwidth, a relative measure of the width of the bands, and a measure of where the last price is in relation to the bands.
Lower Bollinger Band = SMA - 2 standard deviations
Upper Bollinger Band = SMA + 2 standard deviations.
Middle Bollinger Band = 20 day - simple moving average (SMA).
Interpretation
The probability of a sharp breakout in prices increases when the bandwidth narrows.
When prices continually touch the upper Bollinger band, the prices are thought to be overbought; triggering a sell signal.
Conversely, when they continually touch the lower band, prices are thought to be oversold, triggering a buy signal.
Example of Bollinger Bands
You can see from the chart below the Bollinger Bands of the S&P 500 Index, represented in green.
4. The Parabolic System, Stop-and-Reverse (SAR)
The parabolic SAR system is an effective investor's tool that was originally devised by J. Welles Wilder to compensate for the failings of other trend-following systems.
Description
The Parabolic SAR is a trading system that calculates trailing "stop-losses" in a trending market. The chart of these points follows the price movements in the form of a dotted line, which tends to follow a parabolic path.
Interpretation
When the parabola follows along below the price, it is providing buy signals.
When the parabola appears above the price, it suggests selling or going short.
The “stop-losses” dots are setting the levels for the trailing stop-loss that is recommended for the position. In a bullish trend, a long position should be established with a trailing stop that will move up every day until activated by the price falling to the stop level. In a bearish trend, a short position can be established with a trailing stop that will move down every day until activated by the price rising to the stop level.
The parabolic system is considered to work best during trending periods. It helps traders catch new trends relatively early. If the new trend fails, the parabola quickly switches from one side of the price to the other, thus generating the stop and reverse signal, indicating when the trader should close his position or open an opposing position when this switch occurs.
Example of an SAR parabolic study
You can see from the chart below in green the Parabolic System applied to the USDJPY pair.

5. Relative Strength Index (RSI)
The RSI was developed by J. Welles Wilder as a system for giving actual buy and sell signals in a changing market.
Definition
RSI is based on the difference between the average of the closing price on up days vs. the average closing price on the down days, observed over a 14-day period. That information is then converted into a value ranging from 0 to 100.
When the average gain is greater than the average loss, the RSI rises, and when the average loss is greater than the average gain, the RSI declines.
Interpretation
The RSI is usually used to confirm an existing trend. An uptrend is confirmed when RSI is above 50 and a downtrend when it's below 50.
It also indicates situations where the market is overbought or oversold by monitoring the specific levels (usually “30” and “70”) that warn of coming reversals.
An overbought condition (RSI above 70) means that there are almost no buyers left in the market, and therefore prices are more likely to decline as those who previously bought will now take their profit by selling.
An oversold condition (RSI below 30) is the exact opposite.
Example of RSI
You can see in red from the chart below the Relative Strength Index of the GBPUSD pair.
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