Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP)
The Volume-Weighted Average Price (VWAP) reflects the average price of an asset, weighted by the volume traded at each price level over a defined period.
Rather than treating all price observations equally, VWAP emphasizes where trading activity was concentrated. This makes it a practical reference for understanding how prices formed under real market participation.
What VWAP captures
VWAP summarizes the price level around which most trading volume occurred. It is commonly used to contextualize execution quality and pricing decisions, especially when transactions are spread over time.
In practice, VWAP helps to:
- anchor prices to actual market activity
- reduce the influence of short-lived price spikes
- provide a volume-sensitive benchmark
VWAP in application
VWAP is typically used as a reference point rather than a rule. Comparing executions to VWAP allows teams to assess whether prices were achieved in line with broader market flow rather than isolated moments.
VWAP in commodity markets
In commodity markets, VWAP is relevant for futures trading, spot-linked pricing, and procurement windows where prices are fixed gradually. It helps capture the impact of liquidity and timing without focusing on a single execution point.