TRADING INDICATORS OF BILL WILLIAMS

Bill Williams was born in 1932 and had a successful career for more than half a century.
He became a trading educator and wrote several books on technical analysis. He also created a set of widely used and popular indicators.
These indicators are technical analysis tools used in trading to predict market trends. They measure various market factors such as rate of change, trend presence, momentum, local highs and lows, trend confirmation and decreasing momentum, and market strength or weakness.
- The Awesome Oscillator measures price momentum.
- The Accelerator Oscillator shows the rate of change in price.
- The Alligator indicator identifies the absence or presence of a trend.
- The Gator Oscillator confirms trends and warns of decreasing momentum.
- The Fractals indicator highlights high and low points in price.
- The Market Facilitation Index measures the strength or weakness behind price movement.
Let’s examine each of these Williams technical indicators more in-depth so that you can use them in your trading.
Bill Williams’ Awesome Oscillator
The Awesome Oscillator is similar to other momentum indicators like the RSI, stochastic, and MACD. It’s an oscillator that plots the difference between a 34-period and a 5-period moving average (MA).
That’s basically a fancy way of saying that it shows price momentum and turning points. To see how it works, I added a 34-period and 5-period moving average to a chart of Tesla Inc. (TSLA) stock.
When the Awesome Oscillator moves from below zero to above zero, it means that the 5-period MA has crossed above the 34-period MA. When the Williams Awesome Oscillator drops below zero, however, it means the 5-period crossed below the 34 MA.
When the 5-period is accelerating away from the 34-period, the Oscillator values move away from zero, reflecting the difference in price between the two moving averages.
How to Trade with the Awesome Oscillator
The basic idea is that you want to trade in the trend direction:
- Focus on buying when the oscillator is above zero.
- Focus on selling when the oscillator is below zero.
Also note that the Awesome Oscillator changes color, giving us further information:
- Sell when the indicator is red (and below zero). Don’t sell when the bars are green, and exit any short when they turn green.
- Buy when the indicator is green (and above zero). Don’t buy when the bars are red, and exit long positions when they turn red.
There are potentially many ways you can use this indicator. These are just a couple of examples.
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Bill Williams’ Accelerator Oscillator
The Accelerator Oscillator is a technical indicator based on the Awesome Oscillator, measuring the difference between the Awesome Oscillator and its 5-period simple moving average.
The Accelerator Oscillator is a leading indicator that helps traders avoid poor entries. The indicator is below zero if the Awesome Oscillator is below its 5-period moving average. If the indicator is above zero, then the Awesome Oscillator is above its 5-period moving average.
Whether the numbers are increasing or decreasing is based on the distance between the Awesome Oscillator and its moving average. In the chart below, I have added a moving average to the Awesome Oscillator so that you can see how the Accelerator Oscillator is moving with it.
How to Trade with the Accelerator Oscillator
This is another tool that you can use to fine-tune your entries and exits.
- Buy and hold long positions when there are green bars moving higher on the Accelerator Oscillator.
- Sell or hold short positions when there are red bars moving lower on the Accelerator Oscillator.
Keep in mind the trading guidelines for the Awesome Oscillator as well. The indicators should be used together.
Bill Williams’ Alligator Indicator
The Alligator indicator is composed of three smoothed moving averages, aimed at helping traders determine the best times to trade in a trending market.
The Alligator’s jaw line is a 13-period smoothed moving average projected 8 bars into the future. It is typically shown in blue.
The Alligator’s teeth line is an 8-period smoothed moving average projected 5 bars into the future and is shown in red.
The Alligator’s lips line is a 5-period smoothed moving average projected 3 bars into the future and is shown in green or black. The “alligator” tells you when to “feed” on the market.
“Only 15 to 30 percent of the time does the market trend.”– Bill Williams
How to Trade with the Williams Alligator Indicator
Here’s how the indicator works:
- Alligator sleeping: the moving averages are intertwined or moving sideways with each other. Avoid trading.
- Alligator waking: when the 5, 8, and 13-period MAs start spreading out that shows a trend could be emerging. Start looking for entries in the direction the 5 and 8 moving averages are going.
- Alligator eating: As the 5 is above the 8 is above the 13, and ideally all moving up, that signals an uptrend. When the 5 is below the 8 is below the 13, and moving down, that signals a downtrend. Trade in the direction of the moving averages.
- When the trend ends, the MAs cross and the alligator goes back to sleep. Avoid trading. The alligator may wake up right away or stay asleep. Wait till he wakes up and starts feeding again before trading in the direction of the moving averages.
You can combine the other indicators to tell you when to take trades in the direction of the alligator moving averages.
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Bill Williams’ Gator Oscillator
The Gator Oscillator uses the Alligator indicator to analyze when the trend is strengthening or weakening, visually displayed as a double histogram. The histogram bars (green for strengthening, red for weakening) show the trend’s change compared to previous periods.
The Gator Oscillator has four phases, each indicated by the color of the bars on the histogram:
- Sleeping: Bars are red above and below the zero line. There’s no trend.
- Awaking: Differently colored bars on either side of the zero line. A trend is emerging.
- Feeding: Both sides of the zero line are colored green. There is a trend.
- Satisfied: One of the bars (above or below) turns red. This means the trend is losing momentum.
The indicator is showing the difference between the moving averages. Above the zero line is the difference between the blue and red lines; below the zero line is the difference between the red and green lines.
How to Trade with the Williams Gator Indicator
From the chart above, you can see the indicator says to stay out or be careful when the colors are mixed or red on the indicator. This effectively tells traders to stay out when the price is chopping sideways.
On three occasions, the bars turned green for more than two bars. The first time, the price dropped. The second time, the price moved sideways, which is a false signal because the price didn’t trend. On the third signal for a trend, the price had a significant drop and then Gator warned to exit when the price started moving up.
Williams’ Fractal Indicator
Fractals is a technical analysis indicator that highlights short-term turning points in price.
Fractals are based on 5 candles.
- An up arrow marks a high point with two candles with lower highs on either side.
- A down arrow marks a low point with two candles with higher lows on either side.
A Fractal acts as either resistance (buy fractal) or support (sell fractal). A break above a buy fractal triggers a buy signal, while a break below a sell fractal triggers a sell signal. The appearance of an arrow is NOT a signal to buy or sell on its own. It simply marks a recent high or low point in price.
How to Trade with Williams Fractals
Here is how to use Fractals for trading.
- Short when the price breaks below a sell fractal (the low of the candle on the down arrow).
- Ideally, only sell when the signal occurs below the Alligator’s teeth (red line).
- Buy when the price breaks above a buy fractal (the high of the candle on an up arrow).
- Ideally, only buy when the signal occurs above the Alligator’s teeth (red line).
The chart shows trade examples, with the black arrow marking when the trade is taken and the direction of the trade.
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Williams’ Market Facilitation Index
The MFI is based on price change and volume. It provides an evaluation of market sentiment or the strength of the trend.
The indicator is color-coded with each color signifying a different market condition.
- Green: The MFI and volume are moving in the same direction. Trade in the direction of the price.
- Blue: The MFI is moving up and volume is moving down. Exit current positions and avoid taking new ones.
- Pink: The MFI is moving down but the volume is moving up. Get ready for a trend change.
- Brown: MFI and volume are both indicating that it’s not an ideal time to trade.
How to Trade with the Market Facilitation Index
Colors change frequently on the chart, so this indicator must be used with the other Williams indicators.
The MFI can be used to confirm or reject trade signals from the other Williams indicators. On the chart, a fractal sell signal occurred, but a trader could wait to enter a short trade until a green MFI bar occurs and the price is moving down. On the second trade, the two sell signals occurred together. Proceed with the short trade.