Envelope

Envelopes represent bands that are plotted in a certain, identical relationship above and below the Moving Average. Envelopes are a very complex theme with many interpretation and trading rules. Basically, envelopes capture a significant part of price movements. Concrete trading signals are released if prices approach or move away form their envelope.

 

Envelopes are plotted around a Moving Average in a constant percentage distance. Hence they are added to or subtracted from this average. Both envelope lines thus define the prevailing trading range.

 

Pane: Overlay

 

Formula

 

ENV1 = MOV_St + MOV_St * Shift1 / 100

ENV2 = MOV_St + MOV_St * Shift2 / 100

 

ENV1 = Upper band

ENV2 = Lower band

MOV_S = Moving Average – Simple

 

Properties

 

Input Field: The Symbol field on which the study will be calculated. Input Field is set to "Default", which, when viewing a chart for a specific symbol, is the same as "Close".

 

Period: The number of bars in a chart. If the chart displays daily data, then period denotes days; in weekly charts, the period will stand for weeks, and so on. The application uses a default of 10.

 

Percent: A factor, expressed in percentage points, that is added to and subtracted from the Moving Average. For example, a value of "2.0" represents a 2.0% shift that will be added to the Moving Average, and a -2.0% shift that will be added to the Moving Average. The application uses a default of 1.0.

 

Interpretation

 

The Envelope study is a derivative of the Moving Average study. The price band has two lines that are equal percentage distance from the Simple Moving Average. The Moving Average line is not visible.

 

While several different trading rules are available, the most simple approach uses the price band as an entry and exit point. When price penetrates the upper price band, you initiate a long position or buy. If you have an existing short position, you close out shorts and go long. Conversely, when prices penetrate the lower price band, you close out long positions and go short.

 

In Kaufman’s book, Commodity Trading Systems and Methods, he suggests several other approaches. They are as follows:

 

 

In the case of using the Moving Average envelope on intraday prices, Kaufman suggested the following rule: "Only one order can be executed in one day, either the liquidation of a current position or an entry into a new position."

 

Literature