Now, the monthly chart Bollinger bandwidth has carved out a pattern that preluded Bitcoin’s near-vertical rallies of 2016 and late 2020.
Created by John Bollinger in the 1980s, Bollinger Bands comprises three bands. The middle one is the 20-period simple moving average of the asset’s price. The upper band is two standard deviations above the middle band and the lower band is two standard deviations below it.
The Bollinger bandwidth refers to the spread between upper and lower bands measured as the percentage of the moving average. A narrow width is akin to a tightly compressed spring about to make a big move in either direction.
Since inception, 1% has been a major low for bitcoin’s monthly chart Bollinger bandwidth, with subsequent upturns coinciding with prolonged price rallies or bouts of upside volatility.
The bandwidth has recently bounced from 1% in a positive development for bitcoin bulls.
Though the latest bandwidth pattern resembles developments before previous bull runs, the indicator, by itself, only signals that a major price move is due but doesn’t tell us anything about the direction.
In other words, past results do not guarantee future performance, and the possibility of a large move to the downside cannot be ruled out.
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