Bollinger Bands Width (BBW) is a technical analysis indicator derived from the standard Bollinger Bands indicator. Bollinger Bands are a volatility indicator which creates a band of three lines which are plotted in relation to a security's price. The Middle Line is typically a 20 Day Simple Moving Average. The Upper and Lower Bands are typically 2 standard deviations above and below the SMA (Middle Line). Bollinger Bands Width serve as a way to quantitatively measure the width between the Upper and Lower Bands. BBW can be used to identify trading signals in some instances.
The creator of Bollinger Bands, John Bollinger, introduced Bollinger Bands Width in 2010 almost 3 decades after the introduction of his Bollinger Bands.
Bollinger Bands Width = (Upper Band - Lower Band) / Middle Band
Bollinger Bands Width (BBW) uses the given calculation and outputs a Percentage Difference between the Upper Band and the Lower Band. This value is used to define the narrowness of the bands. What needs to be understood however is that a trader cannot simply look at the BBW value and determine if the Band is truly narrow or not. The significance of an instruments relative narrowness changes depending on the instrument or security in question. What is considered narrow for one security may not be for another. What is considered narrow for one security may even change within the scope of the same security depending on the timeframe. In order to accurately gauge the significance of a narrowing of the bands, a technical analyst will need to research past BBW fluctuations and price performance to increase trading accuracy.
One of the most well-known theories in regards to Bollinger Bands is that volatility typically fluctuates between periods of expansion (Bands Widening) and contraction (Bands Narrowing). With this in mind, the major trading signal generated by Bollinger Bands Width is known as The Squeeze.
The Squeeze setup is very straightforward and consists of two steps:
In a Bullish BBW Squeeze
In a Bearish BBW Squeeze
Bollinger Bands Width (BBW) be quite a useful technical analysis tool for identifying "The Squeeze" which can result in some nice buying or selling signals. Of course the trader should always use caution. Sometimes the breakout after a Squeeze setup has an immediate pullback and the rally never happens. It takes a trader's better judgment to really determine if the breakout is a strong, legitimate one. That being said, when a strong uptrend or downtrend after a Squeeze does occur it provides a great opportunity for the prepared analyst or trader.
The time period to be used in calculating the SMA which creates the base for the Upper and Lower Bands. 20 days is the default.
Determines what data from each bar will be used in calculations. Close is the default.
The number of Standard Deviations away from the SMA that the Upper and Lower Bands should be. 2 is the default.
Can toggle the visibility of Bollinger Bands Width as well as the visibility of a price line showing the actual current value of the Bollinger Bands Width. Can also select the BBW Line's color, line thickness and visual type (Line is the default).
Sets the number of decimal places to be left on the indicator's value before rounding up. The higher this number, the more decimal points will be on the indicator's value.