Bank Nifty VWAP Strategy: Volume-Weighted Average Price Trading
VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price) is the most important intraday indicator for Bank Nifty traders. It represents the true average price at which Bank Nifty has traded throughout the day, weighted by volume. Institutional traders use VWAP as their benchmark for execution quality — and you can use it as a powerful support/resistance and trend-confirmation tool. This guide covers three VWAP-based strategies specifically for Bank Nifty intraday trading.
What Is VWAP?
VWAP is calculated by dividing the total rupee value of all Bank Nifty trades by the total volume of trades. Unlike a simple moving average that only considers closing prices, VWAP gives more weight to prices where more volume traded. This makes it a better measure of "fair value" for the day.
When Bank Nifty is above VWAP, buyers are in control — they are willing to pay above the day's average price. When below VWAP, sellers are in control. This simple binary assessment forms the foundation of VWAP-based trading.
How VWAP Is Calculated
VWAP = Cumulative (Price x Volume) / Cumulative Volume
The calculation runs from market open (9:15 AM) and resets each day. VWAP is a intraday-only indicator — it has no meaning across multiple days. Most charting platforms (TradingView, Zerodha Kite) display VWAP automatically.
Key VWAP Properties
- VWAP starts at the opening price and gradually stabilizes as more volume accumulates
- In the first 30 minutes, VWAP is volatile and unreliable — wait until 9:45 AM for stable readings
- VWAP flattens out by afternoon as the cumulative volume becomes large enough that new trades barely move it
- Bank Nifty tends to oscillate around VWAP in range-bound conditions and trend away from it in directional conditions
Three VWAP Trading Strategies
Strategy 1: VWAP Mean Reversion
When Bank Nifty moves 200+ points away from VWAP without a clear catalyst, it tends to revert back toward VWAP. This is the "rubber band" effect — the further price stretches from VWAP, the stronger the pull back.
- Wait for Bank Nifty to move 200+ points above VWAP (or below VWAP)
- Look for reversal candle patterns on the 5-minute chart (doji, engulfing, pin bar)
- Enter the mean reversion trade: buy PE if above VWAP, buy CE if below VWAP
- Target: VWAP level (full mean reversion)
- Stop: 50% of premium paid
Win rate: approximately 62% based on backtesting. Works best during range-bound days (India VIX below 15).
Strategy 2: VWAP Trend Confirmation
On trending days, VWAP acts as dynamic support (uptrend) or resistance (downtrend). Enter directional trades when Bank Nifty pulls back to VWAP and bounces.
- Identify the trend: Bank Nifty consistently above VWAP = uptrend. Below VWAP = downtrend.
- Wait for a pullback to VWAP (price touches or comes within 30 points of VWAP)
- Enter in the trend direction when a 3-minute candle closes away from VWAP in the trend direction
- Target: the day's high (uptrend) or low (downtrend)
- Stop: below VWAP by 50 points (uptrend) or above VWAP by 50 points (downtrend)
Strategy 3: VWAP Break and Retest
When Bank Nifty crosses VWAP with conviction (strong volume), it often retests VWAP from the other side before continuing. This retest provides a high-probability entry.
- Bank Nifty breaks above VWAP after being below it all morning
- It then pulls back and retests VWAP from above (VWAP now acts as support)
- If the retest holds (price bounces off VWAP), buy CE options for a trend continuation trade
- This is one of the highest-probability intraday setups for Bank Nifty scalpers
VWAP Bands (Standard Deviation Bands)
VWAP bands are plotted at +/- 1, 2, and 3 standard deviations from VWAP. These bands define statistically significant levels:
- +/- 1 SD: Bank Nifty stays within this band approximately 68% of the time. Touches of the 1 SD band are normal and do not signal reversal.
- +/- 2 SD: Bank Nifty reaches this band only about 5% of the time per session. A touch of the 2 SD band is a strong mean-reversion signal.
- +/- 3 SD: Extremely rare (less than 1%). If Bank Nifty reaches the 3 SD band, it is an extraordinary move and mean reversion is highly probable — unless driven by a major event.
Combining VWAP with Options Strategies
VWAP provides the directional framework, and options provide the execution vehicle:
- VWAP above + bullish: Sell put spreads (credit received, bullish position). Use VWAP as the support level for your short put strike.
- VWAP below + bearish: Sell call spreads. Use VWAP as the resistance level for your short call strike.
- VWAP mean reversion setup: Buy butterfly spreads centered at VWAP when Bank Nifty is 200+ points away. Cheap entry, high reward if Bank Nifty reverts to VWAP by afternoon.
- VWAP band extremes: At 2 SD bands, sell strangles centered at VWAP. The statistical probability of mean reversion from 2 SD is approximately 95%, giving strangles sold at this level a very high win rate.
Common VWAP Mistakes
- Using VWAP in the first 30 minutes: VWAP is unreliable until sufficient volume accumulates. Wait until 9:45-10:00 AM.
- Treating VWAP as exact support/resistance: VWAP is a zone, not a precise line. Allow +/- 20-30 points around VWAP for natural oscillation.
- Using yesterday's VWAP: VWAP resets daily. Yesterday's VWAP has no relevance for today's trading.
- Ignoring volume context: VWAP is only meaningful when accompanied by volume analysis. A VWAP cross on low volume is less significant than one on high volume.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is VWAP and why is it important for Bank Nifty?
VWAP (Volume-Weighted Average Price) is the average price of Bank Nifty weighted by volume throughout the trading day. It represents fair value for the day and is used by institutional traders as a benchmark. For retail traders, VWAP serves as dynamic support/resistance: Bank Nifty above VWAP indicates bullish control, below VWAP indicates bearish control.
How do I add VWAP to my Bank Nifty chart?
On TradingView, click Indicators and search for VWAP. On Zerodha Kite, go to Studies and add VWAP. The indicator appears as a single line that starts at the opening price and evolves throughout the day. Some platforms also offer VWAP bands (standard deviation bands) which provide additional levels for trading.
Does VWAP work for Bank Nifty options trading?
Yes, VWAP is highly effective for Bank Nifty options trading when used as a directional filter. Buy CE options only when Bank Nifty is above VWAP and buy PE options only when below VWAP. This simple filter eliminates many losing trades by ensuring you trade in the direction of the dominant volume flow.
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