RSI Signals
During uptrends, the 30-35 RSI range on the
daily chart presents good
risk/reward opportunities for buying the dip. The stop loss is a close under the 30
RSI. Profit target is the 50 RSI.
When the RSI is in the 65-70 range, it is considered overbought and can provide
good risk/reward opportunities for selling short. Buy to cover with a close over
the 70 RSI. Profit target is the 50 RSI.
- A break over the 50 RSI is bullish.
- A break under the 50 RSI is bearish.
- Downtrends tend to trade under the 50 RSI while uptrends tend to trade over
the 50 RSI.
- A close under the 30 RSI opens the possibility of a parabolic downtrend.
- A close over the 70 RSI opens the possibility of a parabolic uptrend.
The RSI is a technical momentum oscillator that compares
the amount of recent
gains to recent losses to try to read the overbought and oversold levels of a
market’s price action. The RSI has a range of 0 to 100. A market is supposed to
be overbought with a reading of 70. For traders, this
is an indication that it may
be time to sell their long positions at this level. The RSI at 30 is supposed to
signal that an asset is starting to be oversold, and may present a good risk/reward
ratio to go long at that level.
Centerline crosses at the 50 can be used as the beginning of a trend in the
direction of the break (+50 bullish / -50 bearish). The
traditional use of the RSI
for swing trading is best used in stock indexes. The 65-70 range indicates
overbought and time to exit longs. The 30-35 range indicates oversold and a
potential buy signal. The RSI oscillator works best for swing trading in range
bound markets. It doesn’t work well for indicating
extremes in trending markets,
as higher highs or lower lows continue for extended periods.
The RSI is best used in combination with other indicators. A confirmation of a
30 RSI near a key support level like the 200-day SMA increases the odds of the
signal working.