| Strategy Type | Volatility / Mean Reversion / Breakout |
| Market Bias | Adaptive - Mean reversion in ranges, breakout in trends |
| Timeframe | 15-minute to 1-hour charts |
| Holding Period | 30 minutes to 1 day (intraday to short swing) |
| Risk Reward Ratio | 1:1.5 to 1:2.5 |
| Capital Required | $1,200-$10,000 depending on contract (5 MT zinc mini to 25 MT COMEX ZNC) and margin type |
| Best Market Conditions | Works in both ranging and trending markets with proper adaptation |
| Key Concept | Use Bollinger Bands to identify volatility, overbought/oversold zones, and potential breakouts |
| Exchange | COMEX (CME Group) for ZNC; LME for the cash-settled zinc mini and global benchmark pricing |
| Trading Hours | COMEX ZNC trades on CME Globex (Sunday 6:00 PM - Friday 5:00 PM ET, with a daily 60-minute halt 5:00-6:00 PM ET), though COMEX zinc liquidity is limited. The deepest global zinc price discovery is on the LME during London hours (LME Select roughly 1:00 AM - 7:00 PM London; official prices set ~12:20-13:25 London, i.e. ~7:20-8:25 AM ET). Most U.S.-relevant zinc activity tracks the London session. |
| Zinc Bb Characteristics | Zinc has moderate volatility making BB effective for both mean reversion and breakout strategies |
| Tax Implications | COMEX ZNC is a Section 1256 contract: 60/40 tax treatment (60% long-term, 40% short-term regardless of holding period), marked-to-market at year-end, reported on IRS Form 6781; net Section 1256 losses may be carried back up to 3 years. No CTT-style transaction tax, though exchange, clearing, NFA, and regulatory fees apply per contract. Note: contracts traded on a non-U.S. exchange such as the LME zinc mini may not qualify for Section 1256 and could be taxed as ordinary capital gains/losses - consult a tax professional. |
Start with standard settings: 20-period SMA with 2 standard deviations. This works well for zinc's moderate volatility. As you gain experience, you can adjust to 2.5 SD for high volatility periods or 1.5 SD for identifying inner zones.
No. Check that bands are relatively flat (ranging market), confirm with RSI (should be oversold < 30), and wait for a bullish reversal candle. Never buy at lower band in a strong downtrend where price is 'walking' the band.
The middle band (20 SMA) serves as fair value and is the target for mean reversion trades. It also acts as support in uptrends and resistance in downtrends. In trends, pullbacks to middle band are potential entry points.
A squeeze occurs when bandwidth (distance between upper and lower bands) is at its lowest in 20+ bars. This indicates low volatility and often precedes a significant price move. Trade the breakout when price closes beyond a band with volume.
Mean reversion: Stop beyond the entry band plus an ATR buffer (e.g., buy at lower band $2,300, stop at $2,270). Breakout: Stop back inside the bands (failed breakout). Trend pullback: Stop beyond the middle band.
%B shows price position within bands: 0 = lower band, 0.5 = middle, 1 = upper band. Values > 1 or < 0 indicate price outside bands. Use %B < 0.1 for long signals, %B > 0.9 for short signals. Track %B divergence for reversal warnings.
Double BB (inner +/-1 SD, outer +/-2 SD) creates clear zones. Buy zone: Between outer and inner lower bands. Sell zone: Between inner and outer upper bands. Signals in these zones are stronger than single band touches.
When Bollinger Bands contract inside Keltner Channels (BB narrower than KC), it signals extreme low volatility. When BB expands outside KC (squeeze release), enter in the direction of the breakout. Use momentum indicator for direction confirmation.
Best signals require both indicators agreeing. Long: %B < 0.1 AND RSI < 30. Short: %B > 0.9 AND RSI > 70. If only one is extreme, the signal is weaker - require more confirmation or skip the trade.
Higher TF (4H/Daily) provides context - if price in upper half, favor longs. Lower TF (15min) provides entry timing. Best trades: Higher TF shows bias + Lower TF shows signal at appropriate band. Avoid conflicting timeframes.
Score components: %B extreme (+2), RSI extreme (+2), reversal candle (+1), volume confirmation (+1). Maximum 6 points. Trade with score 4+ for quality signals. Adjust for regime - squeeze breakout scoring adds momentum and volume surge points.
Calculate volatility ratio: Current ATR / 50-bar average ATR. High ratio (>1.2): Use 2.5 SD. Low ratio (<0.8): Use 1.5 SD. This keeps signals meaningful across volatility regimes. Also consider longer periods (25) in extreme volatility.
Mean reversion: Sell credit spreads (bull put at lower band, bear call at upper). Squeeze: Long straddle/strangle to profit from volatility expansion. Trend: Directional spreads. Options provide defined risk for BB signals.
Use bandwidth percentile: <10th = Squeeze, 10-75th = Normal, 75-90th = Expanded, >90th = Extreme. Also check band slope for Trend regime. Each regime requires different parameters and strategy selection.
System layers: (1) Data calculation (BB, %B, bandwidth), (2) Regime classification, (3) Signal generation with scoring, (4) Position sizing based on bandwidth, (5) Execution with proper stops/targets, (6) Management with regime monitoring, (7) Performance tracking by regime and signal type.
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