Volatility-based position sizing, stop placement, and breakout confirmation
| Strategy Type | Average True Range (ATR) Volatility Trading |
| Market Outlook | Volatility-based position sizing, stop placement, and breakout confirmation |
| Risk Profile | Moderate - volatility-normalized risk management |
| Reward Profile | Consistent risk-adjusted returns through volatility adaptation |
| Time Horizon | Intraday to positional (hours to weeks) |
| Capital Requirement | Moderate (£3,000 - £10,000 for CFDs/spread bets; the full FTSE 100 future requires ~£5,000+ initial margin per contract) |
| Margin Type | FCA-regulated CFD/spread-bet leverage for intraday and positional trades; exchange initial margin for the FTSE 100 future. Overnight CFD positions incur financing costs |
| Best Used When | ATR expansion signals volatility breakouts; ATR contraction precedes major moves |
| Lse Applicability | All liquid FTSE 100 and FTSE 350 index exposure and large-cap UK shares. Retail access is predominantly via FCA-regulated CFDs and spread bets, or the exchange-traded FTSE 100 future on ICE Futures Europe |
| Fca Compliance | Fully FCA-regulated. Exchange-traded FTSE 100 futures clear through ICE Clear Europe; CFDs and spread bets are offered by FCA-authorised firms subject to retail leverage caps and negative balance protection |
| Lot Sizes | 1 ICE future = £10 per index point (notional ≈ £10 × index level, e.g. ~£104,000 at 10,400). Spread bets/CFDs are sized at a trader-chosen £/point (commonly £1-£5) • No liquid standalone retail future; exposure via FCA-regulated CFD/spread bet on the sector or via constituent banks (Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds, NatWest, Standard Chartered) • Sector exposure via CFD/spread bet or constituent shares; no liquid standalone retail future • Exchange-traded single-stock futures are effectively defunct for UK retail; single-name leverage is via FCA CFDs/spread bets. Buying the underlying shares attracts 0.5% SDRT; derivatives do not |
| Trading Hours | 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM London time (GMT/BST) for LSE cash equities. The FTSE 100 future trades extended hours on ICE (~01:00-21:00 London); FCA spread-bet/CFD index prices are quoted nearly 24 hours on weekdays |
| Atr Settings | 14-period ATR • 7-period ATR for intraday • 21-period ATR for positional |
| Expiry Considerations | FTSE 100 futures expire quarterly (third Friday of March, June, September, December); ATR typically expands around expiry due to increased volatility and rollover. Cash CFD/spread-bet index products have no expiry but incur daily financing on positions held overnight |
| Tax Implications | Gains on exchange-traded futures and CFDs fall under Capital Gains Tax (18% within the basic-rate band, 24% higher/additional rate; £3,000 annual exempt amount). Spread-bet gains are exempt from CGT and stamp duty for individuals, unless HMRC deems trading your profession. SDRT (0.5%) applies to physical UK share purchases, not to derivatives |
Fixed point stops don't adapt to market conditions. In volatile markets, fixed stops get hit by normal fluctuations. In quiet markets, fixed stops may be too wide, risking more than necessary. ATR stops automatically adjust: wider when volatile (avoiding normal noise), tighter when quiet (protecting capital). This keeps your risk consistent relative to how the market is actually behaving. Professional traders almost universally use volatility-based stops like ATR rather than fixed points.
Common multipliers: 1.5 ATR: tight stop, higher probability of being hit, smaller losses. Good for scalping or when very confident. 2.0 ATR: standard, balanced approach. Recommended starting point. Allows normal fluctuation while protecting against reversals. 2.5-3.0 ATR: wide stop, fewer stops hit but larger losses when hit. Good for position trading. Start with 2.0 ATR and adjust based on your backtesting and comfort level. Tighter stops have higher hit rate but smaller losses; wider stops have lower hit rate but larger losses.
For active trades: recalculate ATR daily (or per bar on your timeframe). For position sizing: calculate before entry, then hold that size. For trailing stops: update with each new bar. For regime analysis: weekly review of ATR percentile is sufficient. Don't over-adjust - ATR is meant to be stable over short periods. The 14-period default smooths out daily fluctuations. Recalculate when needed but don't obsess over small changes.
Yes, ATR works on all timeframes. The calculation is the same. Adjustments: 5-minute charts: ATR will be smaller (fewer points). 14-period = 70 minutes of data. Daily charts: ATR larger (more points). 14-period = 14 days. Weekly: largest ATR. 14-period = 14 weeks. The period should match your timeframe. Some traders use 7-period for intraday (more responsive) and 21-period for positional (smoother). The key is consistency - use the same settings for your analysis.
Expanding ATR means volatility is increasing - price is making larger moves than recently. This often indicates: 1) A trend is developing or strengthening. 2) Important news or event is moving the market. 3) Breakout from consolidation is occurring. Trading implications: wider stops needed (ATR is higher). Potential for larger profits (trends are expanding). Trend-following strategies tend to work well. Be aware that high volatility also means larger potential losses. Expanding ATR is often a good time to trade with the trend.
ATR squeeze identification: 1) Calculate ATR percentile (current vs last 100 periods). 2) ATR below 20-25th percentile indicates squeeze. 3) Look for price consolidation (narrowing range). 4) Bollinger Bands inside Keltner Channels confirms (TTM method). 5) Multiple timeframes showing low ATR strengthens signal. Trading the squeeze: don't trade during squeeze (low volatility = choppy). Wait for ATR expansion (crosses above 50th percentile). Trade in direction of price breakout. First move after squeeze often powerful (200-400 points in the FTSE 100).
Chandelier Exit implementation: 1) Calculate from trade entry point. 2) For longs: Highest High since entry - (3 × ATR). 3) For shorts: Lowest Low since entry + (3 × ATR). 4) Update each bar: recalculate from new highest high (or lowest low). 5) Only move stop forward, NEVER backward. 6) Exit when price hits the Chandelier level. Example: Long entry at 10,400, ATR 120. Initial: 10,400 - 360 = 10,040. Day 2: high 10,550. New stop: 10,550 - 360 = 10,190. Day 3: high 10,500 (lower than day 2). Stop stays at 10,190. Chandelier trails favorably and locks in profits.
ATR scaling approach: Set multiple targets using ATR: T1 = Entry + 1.5 ATR (take 40% profit). T2 = Entry + 2.5 ATR (take 30% profit). T3 = Trail with Chandelier (remaining 30%). Example: Entry 10,500, ATR 140. T1 = 10,710 (exit 40%). T2 = 10,850 (exit 30%). Trail 30% with 3 ATR Chandelier. Benefits: secures profits progressively. Allows participation in extended moves. Reduces stress of all-or-nothing exits. Improves overall win rate (T1 hit more often).
ATR and trend strength relationship: Expanding ATR in trend direction = strong trend. Price making higher highs/lower lows with growing ATR. Contracting ATR during trend = weakening trend. Price still trending but ATR falling = momentum fading. ATR + ADX combination: rising ATR + rising ADX = strong trend. Rising ATR + falling ADX = volatility without clear direction (choppy). Falling ATR + falling ADX = consolidation. Use both together: ADX for trend existence, ATR for trend strength/health.
Instrument-specific ATR adjustments: Period adjustment: more volatile instruments may benefit from longer ATR (smoothing). Less volatile instruments may need shorter ATR (responsiveness). Multiplier adjustment: highly volatile (FTSE 350 Banks): may need 2.5-3 ATR stops. Less volatile (FTSE 100): standard 2 ATR usually works. Low volatility stocks: 1.5 ATR may be sufficient. Use NATR for comparison: calculate NATR for each instrument. Compare relative volatility. Adjust multipliers to achieve similar percentage risk. Test and adjust: backtest different settings on each instrument to find optimal.
System building steps: 1) Entry logic: define when to enter (breakout, pullback, etc.). Add ATR filter: ATR > X-day SMA of ATR (confirm expansion). 2) Position sizing: Risk / (ATR × Multiplier × Point Value). Constant risk regardless of volatility. 3) Stop loss: Entry ± (2 × ATR). Volatility-adjusted protection. 4) Target: Entry ± (2.5-3 × ATR) or Chandelier trail. 5) Exit: stop hit, target reached, or ATR contracts below threshold. 6) Backtest: test across 3+ years. Walk-forward validation. Track: win rate, profit factor, max DD, Sharpe. 7) Optimize: test ATR periods, multipliers. Avoid over-optimization. 8) Live test: paper trade before real capital. Execution and final trade decisions remain manual and discretionary.
ATR-options strategies: 1) ATR expansion expected (low ATR squeeze): buy straddles/strangles (profit from volatility increase). Buy options cheap before IV expansion. 2) ATR at extremes (high ATR): sell premium (IV likely elevated). Iron condors with ATR-based wing placement. 3) ATR bands for strikes: upper band = potential call selling level. Lower band = potential put selling level. 4) ATR-IV correlation: compare ATR percentile to IV percentile. Divergence = mispricing opportunity. ATR rising + IV falling = buy options. ATR falling + IV rising = sell options.
ATR limitations: 1) Lagging: ATR uses historical data, doesn't predict. Solution: use shorter period (7 vs 14) or combine with leading indicators. 2) No direction: ATR doesn't indicate up or down. Solution: combine with directional indicators (trend, momentum). 3) Can expand in both directions: high ATR doesn't mean profitable trend. Solution: use ATR for sizing/stops, other tools for direction. 4) Gap sensitivity: gaps inflate True Range. Solution: use Average ATR (smoothed) or recognize gap-driven ATR. 5) Different instruments: ATR not comparable across prices. Solution: use NATR (normalized). 6) Regime changes: ATR adapts slowly to regime shifts. Solution: monitor percentile and rate of change.
Institutional ATR applications: 1) Risk budgeting: allocate capital based on ATR across strategies. Higher ATR strategies get less capital. 2) Portfolio construction: use ATR/NATR to balance volatility exposure across positions. 3) Execution approach: ATR informs order urgency and slice size; high ATR = can be more aggressive. 4) Correlation-adjusted sizing: reduce positions when ATR correlation high (concentrated risk). 5) Regime detection: systematic regime identification using ATR percentiles. Different models for different regimes. 6) Cross-asset comparison: NATR enables comparison across bonds, equities, commodities. 7) Risk monitoring: ATR-based VaR calculations. Retail adaptation: apply risk budgeting and regime awareness principles at smaller scale.
Portfolio ATR management: 1) Individual position ATR: calculate ATR-based risk for each position. Position risk = £/point × ATR × multiplier (spread bet/CFD), or contracts × ATR × multiplier × point value for the future. 2) Aggregate portfolio ATR: sum all position risks. This is 'portfolio heat' - max loss if all stops hit. 3) Limit aggregate: set max portfolio heat (e.g., 6-10% of capital). Reduce positions if approaching limit. 4) Correlation adjustment: if positions correlated, aggregate risk is higher. Reduce sizing for correlated positions. 5) Rebalancing: as ATRs change, position relative risk changes. Rebalance periodically to maintain target allocation. 6) New position check: before adding, verify aggregate stays within limit. Implementation: spreadsheet or code tracking all position ATRs and aggregate exposure on an ongoing basis.
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