RSI and MACD: Momentum Oscillators Explained
Decode market momentum using the Relative Strength Index (RSI) and the Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicators to identify overbought and oversold extremes.
Measuring the Speed of Price
While moving averages identify the direction of a trend, Momentum Oscillators measure the speed and strength of that trend. These tools help traders identify when a directional move has exhausted itself and is due for a mean-reverting pullback.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI)
The RSI is a bounded oscillator running from 0 to 100. It measures the magnitude of recent price changes.
- Overbought (RSI > 70): Indicates the asset has rallied too far, too fast, and is primed for a local correction.
- Oversold (RSI < 30): Indicates the asset has been aggressively aggressively sold off and is due for a relief bounce.
The MACD
The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) visualizes the relationship between two moving averages, producing a histogram that expands and contracts as momentum accelerates or decays. A MACD bullish centerline crossover is heavily utilized to confirm upward momentum.
Hunting Divergences
The most powerful signal these oscillators provide is Divergence. When the price of Bitcoin makes a higher high, but the RSI simultaneously prints a lower high, it indicates that the upward momentum is structurally decaying. This bearish divergence is a high-confidence early warning system utilized by the AlphaSignal AI Engine to trigger trailing stop losses.
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