How to Use Momentum Indicators Like the RSI in Forex Trading
If you trade the foreign currency market professionally or as a way to earn more money at home, there is a good chance that you have devised a trading system for yourself that creates buy and sell signals. If you do not have a trading system then you should probably consider creating one (or at least keeping a notebook of your trades), but even the best trading systems can sometimes give false signals.
While it is possible to create a technical trading system using anything from moving average crosses to candlestick formations that will run entirely on autopilot, it is also good to throw human supervision into the mix since an autopilot trading system may not be able to take into account things like prevailing market sentiment. Remember that it is *people* and not computers that create market movements, and all these people make trading decisions based upon their emotions and where they think the market will be headed next.
One of the ways to make sure that th
In this instance, the term "momentum" can best be defined as the speed at which prices are moving, and momentum indicators like the RSI will reveal whether the market is considered to be overbought or oversold. The best way to understand what an overbought or oversold market means is that prices have been going up or down too fast relative to recent prior activity.
On the RSI, you will be given a value ranging from 0-100. Any level above 70 will typically mean that the market is considered to be overbought, and a level below 30 will mean that the market is considered to be oversold. For you to understand the way that you can use this data in order to determine how valid your trading signals are, I will give an example of a possible trade.
Let's say that your trading system is based on holding open positions from anywhere from two hours up to two days. This falls a bit in between the categories of day trading and swing trading, but since it still tends towards the shorter side then you would probably want to use the shorter period of 14 on your RSI indicator. You can see on your chart that your system has just created a buy signal, and you are wondering whether it would be a wise decision to enter the market.
On the RSI indicator, you can see that there is a value of 77. This tells you that prices have been moving up faster relative to previous trading activity over the last 14 units of whatever time frame your chart is using (if you had a 15 minute chart open then it would be the past 210 minutes), and that the market is considered to be overbought. This is where you can see why this type of indicator is called a "momentum" indicator, because it is revealing to you that the market has recently been rapidly moving upwards.
When your RSI gives you an overbought value, you can judge this one of two ways: either that the market has been moving upwards recently and that it is going to continue to do so, or that the market is "running out of steam" with this upwards movement and that it is likely to reverse. The longer that your RSI tells you that the market has been overbought, the more likely it becomes that this trend is going to reverse. So in this instance, the value of 77 (especially if the RSI only recently moved into overbought territory) would indicate that there is still a lot o
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3.22 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."
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