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How to Calculate Moving Average

What is Moving Average?

A moving average smooths out short-term fluctuations in data by averaging values over a sliding window. Simple moving averages (SMA) and exponential moving averages (EMA) are core tools in financial analysis and signal processing.

Formula

Simple MA_n = (x₁ + x₂ + ... + xₙ) / n; Exponential: EMA = α × xₜ + (1−α) × EMAₜ₋₁
x₁, x₂, ..., xₙ
data points
n
window size (period)
α
smoothing factor — for exponential moving average
MA_n
moving average

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1SMA(n) = average of last n values
  2. 2EMA uses a weighting factor k = 2/(n+1)
  3. 3EMA(t) = value×k + EMA(t−1)×(1−k)
  4. 4EMA reacts faster to recent changes than SMA

Worked Examples

Input
Data: 10,12,14,13,15, window=3
Result
SMA: —,—,12,13,14
Input
EMA-3 same data
Result
Puts more weight on recent values

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between simple and exponential moving average?

SMA: all n values weighted equally. EMA: recent values weighted more heavily, responsive to changes.

How do I choose the window size n?

Larger n smooths more (less noise, less responsive). Smaller n is more responsive but noisier. Use domain knowledge.

Is moving average used for forecasting?

MA smooths historical data and can suggest trends, but it's backward-looking. ARIMA and other methods forecast better.

Ready to calculate? Try the free Moving Average Calculator

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