On-balance volume (OBV) is a technical analysis indicator intended to relate price and volume in the stock market. OBV is based on a cumulative total volume.[1]
The formula
Because OBV is a cumulative result, the value of OBV depends upon the starting point of the calculation.
Application
Total volume for each day is assigned a positive or negative value depending on prices being higher or lower that day. A higher close results in the volume for that day to get a positive value, while a lower close results in negative value.[2] So, when prices are going up, OBV should be going up too, and when prices make a new rally high, then OBV should too. If OBV fails to go past its previous rally high, then this is a negative divergence, suggesting a weak move.[3]
The technique, originally called "continuous volume" by Woods and Vignola, was later named "on-balance volume" by Joseph Granville who popularized the technique in his 1963 book Granville's New Key to Stock Market Profits.[1] The index can be applied to stocks individually based upon their daily up or down close, or to the market as a whole, using breadth of market data, i.e. the advance/decline ratio.[1]
OBV is generally used to confirm price moves.[4] The idea is that volume is higher on days where the price move is in the dominant direction, for example in a strong uptrend there is more volume on up days than down days.[5]
Similar indicators
Other price × volume indicators:
See also
- Dimensional analysis — explains why volume and price are multiplied (not divided) in such indicators
References
- 1 2 3 Joseph E. Granville, Granville's New Strategy of Daily Stock Market Timing for Maximum Profit, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1976. ISBN 0-13-363432-9
- ↑ On Balance Volume ( OBV ). 22 September 2007.
- ↑ OBV Behavioral Limitations and Formulas at Financial-edu.com.
- ↑ What Does On-Balance Volume Mean
- ↑ StockCharts.com article on On Balance Volume