Overview
Keltner Channels and Supertrend are two ATR-based trend tools. A Keltner Channel wraps price in an envelope — an EMA midline with bands a multiple of ATR away — to show whether price is extended or trending. Supertrend turns the same ATR idea into a single line that flips above or below price as the trend changes.
Both answer "which way, and how stretched?" using volatility rather than standard deviation.
Origins & history
- 1960Chester W. Keltner (1909–1998) described the original channel — a 10-day moving-average band — in How To Make Money in Commodities, claiming no originality for it.1
- 1980sLinda Bradford Raschke popularised the modern version: an EMA midline with bands set a multiple of ATR away.1
- 2000Olivier Seban later introduced Supertrend, an ATR-based trend-following overlay that flips with the trend.2
How it works
Because both use ATR, they adapt automatically to each market's volatility — wider in turbulent conditions, tighter in calm ones. Keltner is typically smoother than Bollinger Bands (ATR vs standard deviation), which is why "squeeze" setups watch for Bollinger Bands contracting inside the Keltner Channel.1
Market psychology & mechanics
Trends persist and volatility clusters — the two facts these tools lean on. An EMA tracks where value is migrating; ATR bands say how far "normal" reaches around it. Supertrend's flip is simply the point where price has moved more than recent volatility "allows," signalling the prior trend has likely changed.
Honest assessment
Strengths
Clean, volatility-adaptive trend tools. Keltner gives smooth trend context and breakout framing; Supertrend gives an objective trailing stop and trend filter that's easy to follow.
Evidence rating: sound construction on well-supported ideas (trend persistence, volatility clustering); no standalone predictive edge, and Supertrend whipsaws badly in ranges. Best as a filter/stop, gated by a trend check like ADX.
Weaknesses & failure modes
- LAGBoth lag. EMA and ATR are averages; signals arrive after the turn.
- WHIPSAWSupertrend whipsaws in ranges, flipping repeatedly with no trend.
- PARAMSMultiplier & period matter a lot — different settings give different signals.
- NO DIRECTION EDGENo predictive edge by themselves; they describe trend and volatility, they don't forecast.
Professional uses vs. misuses
How professionals use them
- Keltner to judge whether price is extended vs its volatility, and for breakout context.
- Supertrend as a trailing stop / trend filter, confirmed by structure.
- Keltner-vs-Bollinger "squeeze" setups (bands inside the channel).
Common misuses
- Fading every Keltner band touch like a reversal.
- Trading every Supertrend flip in a chop.
- Treating either as a standalone system.
Going deeper
All three of Keltner, Supertrend and Bollinger Bands answer related questions with different math; comparing them is instructive. Gate either trend tool with ADX (only trust flips when a trend exists) and size stops with ATR directly.
Practice
How does a Keltner Channel differ from Bollinger Bands?
Keltner bands are set a multiple of ATR from an EMA; Bollinger bands use standard deviation from an SMA. Keltner is usually smoother.
What is Supertrend built on?
ATR. It plots a trailing line a multiple of ATR from price that flips above/below as the trend changes — a trend filter and trailing stop.
Why do these tools whipsaw?
Because they're trend tools: in a sideways range there is no trend to follow, so bands get tagged and Supertrend flips repeatedly.
This concept in the knowledge graph
Resources
- CONCEPTATR (their engine) & Bollinger Bands (the standard-deviation cousin).
- TRADERLinda Raschke — the modern ATR-based Keltner.
References (primary where possible)
- Keltner channel — origin (Chester Keltner, 1960) & Raschke ATR modification — Wikipedia; StockCharts.
- Supertrend — ATR-based trend indicator (Olivier Seban, 2000) — overview.