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SBV
Indicators |
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SBV (Selling & Buying Volume) Oscillator: Key
Points
- Intraday volume surges
reveal institutional money entering and exiting the market, thus letting
you anticipate trend reversals;
- Volume moving averages and
our patented modulated volume technology reveal buying and selling
surges;
- A volume surge that appears
as the index is rallying (i.e., occurs during a price advance) indicates
that institutions are selling in large quantities. We call such volume
spikes “selling surges”;
- A volume surge that appears
as the index is declining (i.e., when prices are weakening) indicates
that institutions are buying in large quantities. We call such volume
spikes “buying surges”;
- The larger the magnitude of
a volume surge – and the longer its duration – the higher the
probability that a strong trend reversal is imminent;
- As a general rule, in order
to stop and reverse an ongoing trend, a volume surge or accumulated
volume has to be about equal to the volume surge (or accumulated volume)
that initially prompted the current trend. In other words, in order to
reverse a prevailing trend, a volume surge (or previously accumulated
volume) has to “process” the prior volume surge (or previously
accumulated volume).
- Our SBV indicator reveals
buying (green indicator) and selling (red indicator) surges and
discloses their magnitude and duration - thus indicating the potential
strength of an anticipated trend reversal;
- Increasing VMA period allows
you to see the accumulation of buying and selling volume on the same
view and recommended for more conservative trading.
Decreasing the VMA period allows you to highlight particular volume
surges - this is recommended for more aggressive traders.
- The market will not turn
after every volume surge – sometimes not even after the appearance of a
significant surge. Instead, reactions to volume surges may be delayed.
However, the more volume surges occur in one direction, the more
pronounced we can anticipate a coming trend reversal to be:
- For instance, when two
volume surges appear in the same direction and are associated with
an SBV oscillator reading of 30%, this situation could lead to a
trend reversal that is similar in strength as a turnaround generated
by a single volume surge where the SBV oscillator shows a reading of
60%.
- In order to use the SBV
oscillator to signal trade entry and exits, we invite you to experiment
with various chart settings and critical levels for the SBV oscillator.
It all depends on the current market stage, your type of trading, as
well as your personal risk tolerance;
- The SBV oscillator reveals
the magnitude and duration of volume surges in relation to the volume
surges that occurred within a time span three times longer than the
timeframe you are currently charting. For instance, if you are presently
analyzing a one-day chart, a 3-day timeframe is used to define the
magnitude and duration of the volume surges;
- All types of traders - even
intraday scalpers - should be aware of the currently prevailing trend:
Intraday scalpers and swing traders should know about the current
short-term trend; Short-term traders must be informed about the
direction of the mid-term trend; Mid-term traders have to know where the
market might be going over the long run. This knowledge should be used
in harmony with the prevailing trend. As a reference, we recommend the
following chart views:
- Intraday scalpers may
use 1- and 5-day chart views to define the prevailing trend;
- Swing traders may use 5-
to 15-day chart views to define the prevailing trend;
- Mid-term traders may
refer to 3-month to 1-year chart views to define the prevailing
trend;
- Long-term traders may
refer to charts spanning 4 - 7 years to define the prevailing
long-term trend.
- Depending on your
personal trading style, you could use the following timeframes to
analyze SBV charts:
- 2-hour and 1-day views
for intraday scalping and day-trading;
- 5- to 30-day views for
swing and other short-term trading;
- 60-day to 2-year views
for mid-term trades;
- 3- to 10-year views for
long-term trades;
- For each view period, the
chart automatically selects two volume moving averages (VMA1 and VMA2).
You can change the VMA settings to suit your personal risk tolerance.
Increase the settings for a more conservative trading approach; decrease
them if you are willing to take more risk;
- You can evaluate the
performance of any trading system using the SBV oscillator (such as a
system you built in accordance with your personal trading style and risk
tolerance) by scrolling back in history on our charts (use the arrow
buttons found at the bottom left-hand corner of our charts). For
selected e-mini contracts, an intraday 1-minute history is available
dating back to September 1999.
For instance, assume you plan to trade as follows: Expectation of a
3-point profit; application of a 3-point stop-loss; take trades based on
the first appearing volume surge characterized by an SBV oscillator
reading of 40%. Prior to trading this approach, you could scroll back in
history to see the win/loss ratio associated with this particular
trading strategy.
Since volume surges are indicative of a large number of contracts (or
shares) changing hands, the number of lost trades is small and the
probability of winning trades is high.
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