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I've been analyzing for a while how many traders obsess over a single indicator without truly understanding how it works. The RSI indicator is one of those that everyone mentions but few truly master. Let me share my experience with it.
Basically, the RSI is a momentum gauge that shows whether a crypto has been overbought or oversold. It ranges from 0 to 100, and that's the fundamental thing you need to know. Most people only look at two numbers: 70 and 30. When you see the RSI above 70, we're talking about overbought conditions, which means the price could be looking for a pullback. Conversely, if it drops below 30, oversold conditions suggest a rebound might be near.
Now, there's something many forget: the 50 line. That middle zone is more important than it seems. If the RSI moves above 50, you see bullish strength. If it drops below, bearish pressure takes control. It's like the market's equilibrium point.
Here's what really matters: the RSI is not your crystal ball. I've seen people lose money relying solely on this indicator. What works is combining it with other tools—trend lines, moving averages, all together. Technical analysis requires confirmation from multiple angles, not dependence on a single indicator.
Personally, I use RSI as part of my toolkit, but I always validate it with market context and other signals. How do you apply it in your analyses? Do you trust RSI as the main indicator, or do you see it only as confirmation?