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Listen, if you trade, you've probably already heard of the RSI. But I want to share with you something that many beginner traders don't really understand: the RSI indicator is not a trading signal on its own. It's a tool that you need to learn to read correctly, or else you'll lose money.
Here's the real secret of the RSI indicator: most novice traders see the RSI rise above 70 (overbought) and think "okay, sell now." Or it drops below 30 (oversold) and think "okay, buy now." Wrong! This is one of the most common mistakes. Why? Because the price can continue moving in the main trend. I've seen charts where the RSI dropped below 30 and the price kept crashing down to 10. If you had opened a buy position at 30, you would have suffered huge losses.
So what is the real secret? Combining the RSI indicator with other technical tools. Professional traders know this well. When they see the RSI in overbought or oversold zones, they look for confirmation from other signals: Japanese candlestick patterns, support and resistance levels, trend lines. Only when you have multiple confirmations do you enter the trade with a tight stop loss and a good risk/reward ratio.
Another method that pros use is monitoring divergences. When the price makes a lower low but the RSI makes a higher low, that's a bullish divergence. It's one of the strongest signals from the RSI indicator. But again, wait for confirmation from other tools before acting.
There's a detail many ignore: the median line of the RSI at the 50 level. It's more important than you think. When RSI is above 50, the momentum is bullish. When it drops below 50, the momentum turns bearish. The median line often acts as support or resistance for the indicator itself.
Now, let's talk about settings. The default setting is 14 periods, but it's not mandatory. If you do scalping or day trading, try 9 periods: the RSI will be more responsive to quick movements. If you do swing trading or long-term trading, 25 periods might be better: less noise, more reliable signals. It depends on your style.
In practice, the true value of the RSI indicator emerges when you use it as part of a broader strategy. It’s not a stand-alone tool. Combine it with Japanese candlesticks, Fibonacci levels, trend lines, chart patterns. When you have all these technical confirmations, you know exactly where to enter, where to set your stop loss, and where to take profits.
This is the difference between traders who lose and those who profit: it’s not the indicator itself, it’s how you use it. The RSI indicator is a fantastic tool, but only if you respect it and combine it with solid technical analysis. End of story.