The Klinger volume oscillator is a volume-based technical indicator that compares volume to price to forecast price reversals in the financial markets.
What Is a Klinger Oscillator?
The Klinger oscillator is used to forecast long-term money flow trends while simultaneously identifying short-term variations. Created by Stephen Klinger in 1977, this technical indicator also forecasts price reversals in a financial market by comparing volume to price in great detail. The number of units of an asset/stock/cryptocurrency that are traded per unit of time is referred to as volume.
Klinger Oscillator Trading Strategy
Why Is Klinger Oscillator Used?
What Is the Best Setting for Klinger Oscillator?
Unlike most technical indicators, the Klinger oscillator does not have any specific values attached to its lines. Rather, you can choose the indicator time frame and set it for a period in which you want to trade.
Klinger Oscillator Formula
The formula for the Klinger volume indicator is relatively complicated to other technical indicators, however, traders are not required to understand it. Rather, they should focus on understanding its use. The volume oscillator is generated by deducting the 34-period exponential moving average (EMA) of the volume force from the 55-period exponential moving average of the volume force in the first stage.
Here’s how you can calculate Klinger Oscillator:
Where:
- KO= Klinger Oscillator
- VF= Volume Force
- Volume Force =V×[2×((dm/cm)−1)]×T×100
- V= Volume
- T= Trend
- Trend=+1 if (H+L+C)>(H-1 +L-1 +Cv-1)
- Trend= −1 if Above is < or =
- H= High
- L= Low
- C= Close
- dm= H−L
- cm=cm-1 + dm if Trend = Trend-1
- cm=dm-1 + dm if Trend =/= Trend-1
Traders who use the Klinger oscillator can immediately initiate another counter position after closing their initial one in the market, which means that they are always in the market as the open and close signals are identical.
However, the Klinger oscillator is a short-term trading technique that works well mostly on lower time frame charts. This is because when you are in the market for a long period, you collect large volumes, resulting in numerous losses and gains. Here, the end goal is to maintain a better win-to-loss ratio when you close all your positions.