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I used to fall for every RSI divergence I spotted until I realized most of them are just noise. The real cheat sheet for RSI divergence trading isn't about catching every signal—it's about filtering out the ones that don't matter.
Here's the thing: a divergence forming in the middle of nowhere is worthless. I've watched price grind higher through three, sometimes four consecutive RSI divergences while traders kept fading momentum and blowing their accounts. The divergence itself isn't the setup. Context is.
Structure is everything. A bearish divergence at some random price level means nothing if there's no resistance, supply zone, or liquidity pool backing it up. Price doesn't reverse because the indicator flashed a signal. It reverses because there's a structural reason for it to. Without that anchor, momentum just keeps pushing through and takes out your stop loss.
Liquidity hunts are what actually fuel reversals. I've noticed the best divergence setups form after price sweeps equal highs, grabs the stops sitting there, and then a divergence appears at that exact level. Now you have confluence. But if your divergence is forming 5% below any major liquidity pool? The market doesn't have the fuel to turn around. It's just noise.
Support and resistance levels matter because price has memory. Divergences at respected macro levels where price struggled before—those are worth watching. Divergences forming in no man's land? Skip them. Your macro support/resistance is where the auction actually matters.
The biggest trap is taking divergences too early without a proper invalidation level tied to structure. That's how blowups happen. You need to wait for the right context—the divergence at the 0.75 Fibonacci level plus a supply zone plus a liquidity sweep plus macro resistance converging at the same level. That's a trade. The RSI divergence cheat sheet isn't about spotting signals; it's about waiting for ones where everything aligns.
Don't take every divergence you see. The difference between a real setup and a guess is confluence. When you have multiple confluences, that's when you actually have an edge. That's when the RSI divergence becomes confirmation instead of just another indicator flashing at you.