If you're new to trading, sooner or later you'll face the question of technical indicators. Honestly, I thought for a long time whether they are even necessary until I understood one simple thing: indicators in trading are not a magic wand, but a tool that helps read the market. Most traders only trade based on candles and support-resistance levels, but that's like driving blind. I started studying indicators in trading more seriously and noticed that my entries became more accurate. There are two main categories: leading indicators, which try to predict movements, and lagging indicators, which confirm the trend. Among the popular ones are moving averages (MA and EMA), MACD, Bollinger Bands, RSI, Fibonacci levels, and the Ichimoku cloud. Each works in its own way, and there is no single perfect indicator for everyone. I use a combination of indicators in trading depending on the timeframe and asset. On hourly charts, Bollinger Bands show me overbought or oversold conditions; on daily charts, MACD helps catch reversals. The main thing is not to overload the chart with a dozen indicators, or you'll get a mess of signals. I used to look for some super indicator that would solve everything. Then I realized that the market is 60% controlled by algorithms, and a retail trader just needs to trade smarter. Indicators in trading help do that, but only if you understand what they show and why. Start with simple ones—moving average and RSI—and then add the rest. The main thing is practice and understanding, not the number of tools.

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