VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price) is the average price weighted by volume — it shows the “true average” price at which an asset has traded during a session. Institutional traders use VWAP extensively because it tells them whether they’re buying at a good price relative to the day’s activity.
How VWAP Works
VWAP = Cumulative (Price × Volume) ÷ Cumulative Volume. It creates a single line on the chart that rises or falls based on where most volume has traded. Unlike a simple moving average, VWAP gives more weight to prices where heavy trading occurred.
How to Use VWAP
- Price above VWAP: Bullish — buyers are in control. Most volume traded at lower prices, so current buyers are “winning.”
- Price below VWAP: Bearish — sellers are in control. Most volume traded at higher prices, so current holders are underwater.
- VWAP as support: In uptrends, price often bounces off VWAP on pullbacks.
- VWAP as resistance: In downtrends, rallies often fail at VWAP.
VWAP Trading Strategies
VWAP Bounce
In an uptrend, wait for price to pull back to VWAP. If it bounces with a bullish candle, buy with stop below VWAP. This is one of the most common day trading strategies used by professionals.
VWAP Cross
Price crossing above VWAP from below = potential buy signal. Crossing below from above = potential sell signal. More reliable when confirmed by volume.
VWAP Limitations
- VWAP resets each session — it’s primarily a day trading tool
- Less useful on higher timeframes (weekly, monthly) — use anchored VWAP instead
- In ranging markets, price will cross VWAP repeatedly without giving reliable signals
- Works best in trending markets with clear direction
Anchored VWAP
A powerful variation where you anchor VWAP to a specific event (a swing low, an earnings date, a halving). This gives you the average price since that event, which acts as a strong support/resistance level. Available on TradingView — experiment with anchoring to significant Bitcoin dates.
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