
Hindenburg Omen
The Hindenburg Omen is a technical indicator that was designed to signal the increased probability of a stock market crash. Four criteria must be met to signal a Hindenburg Omen: The daily number of new 52-week highs and 52-week lows in a stock market index are greater than a threshold amount (typically 2.2%). It compares the percentage of new 52-week highs and new 52-week lows in stock prices to a predetermined reference percentage that is supposed to predict the increasing likelihood of a market crash. The Hindenburg Omen looks for a statistical deviation from the premise that under normal conditions, some stocks are either making new 52-week highs or new 52-week lows. The signal typically occurs during an uptrend, where new highs are expected and new lows are rare, suggesting that the market is becoming nervous and indecisive, traits that often lead to a bear market.

What Is the Hindenburg Omen?
The Hindenburg Omen is a technical indicator that was designed to signal the increased probability of a stock market crash. It compares the percentage of new 52-week highs and new 52-week lows in stock prices to a predetermined reference percentage that is supposed to predict the increasing likelihood of a market crash.
Named after Germany's Hindenburg airship that crashed on May 6, 1937, it was conceived and promoted by James R. Miekka in 2010. It was reported that it had correctly predicted a significant stock market decline only 25% of the time.



Understanding the Hindenburg Omen
Given the inherent upward bias that is built into most stock markets, any occurrence that is abnormal usually leads to a flight-to-safety response from investors. This facet of investor psychology is, arguably, the single most relevant factor that leads to precipitous market declines, or market crashes.
The Hindenburg Omen looks for a statistical deviation from the premise that under normal conditions, some stocks are either making new 52-week highs or new 52-week lows. It would be abnormal if both were occurring at the same time.
According to the Hindenburg Omen, an occurrence such as this is a harbinger of impending danger for a stock market. The signal typically occurs during an uptrend, where new highs are expected and new lows are rare, suggesting that the market is becoming nervous and indecisive, traits that often lead to a bear market.
Main Criteria for a Hindenburg Omen Signal
Four criteria must be met to signal a Hindenburg Omen:
Once these conditions are met, the Hindenburg Omen is considered active for 30 trading days and any additional signals during that period should be ignored. The Hindenburg Omen is confirmed if the MCO is negative during the 30-day period and rejected if the MCO turns positive.
Traders using the indicator will go short or exit long positions when the MCO turns negative during the 30 days following a Hindenburg Omen confirmation.
By doing so in the past, traders could have escaped the 1987 market crash and the 2008 financial crisis.
Of course, since the omen's rate of success is estimated at only 25%, they also would have jumped unnecessarily a number of times. Traders might use the indicator in conjunction with other forms of technical analysis to provide further confirmation of a sell or take-profit signal. For example, traders might look for a breakdown from key support levels before going short or taking profit on a long position.
Example of the Hindenburg Omen
The following chart shows an example of the Hindenburg Omen in an S&P 500 SPDR (SPY) chart.
Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021
In this example, the shaded area represents where Hindenburg Omen conditions were met. The S&P 500 moved sharply lower on high volume just one month after the indicator suggested that traders should brace for a bear market. Traders could have exited their long positions following the Hindenburg Omen and avoided the market decline.
Related terms:
52-Week High/Low
The 52-week high/low is the highest and lowest price at which a security, such as a stock, has traded during the time period that equates to one year. read more
Bear
A bear is one who thinks that market prices will soon decline, or has general market pessimism. read more
Bear Market : Phases & Examples
A bear market occurs when prices in the market fall by 20% or more. read more
Flight to Quality
Flight to quality is the action of investors moving their capital away from riskier investments to safer ones. read more
Market Breadth
Market breadth is a technical analysis technique that gauges the strength or weakness of moves in a major index. read more
Market Index
A market index is a hypothetical portfolio representing a segment of the financial market. Popular indexes include the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq. read more
McClellan Oscillator and Uses
The McClellan Oscillator is a market breadth indicator that is based on the difference between the number of advancing and declining issues on a stock exchange. The indicator is used to analyze the overall stock market and indexes. read more
Moving Average (MA)
A moving average (MA) is a technical analysis indicator that helps smooth out price action by filtering out the “noise” from random price fluctuations. read more
Rate of Change (ROC)
The rate of change (ROC) is the speed at which a variable changes over a specific period of time. read more
Rickshaw Man
The rickshaw man is a long candlestick with a doji body, centered between the high and low, that indicates indecision in the market. read more