Relative Strength Index
The
Relative Strength Index (RSI) can provide an early
warning of an opportunity to buy or sell.
Overview
- The RSI is a momentum
indicator, or oscillator, that measures the
relative internal strength of a market
(not against another market or index).
- As with all oscillators,
RSI can provide early warning signals but should
be used in conjunction with other indicators.
- Divergences are
the most important signal provided by RSI.
The Relative
Strength Index (RSI) is a popular oscillator developed
by Welles Wilder, Jr (see his book, New Concepts
in Technical Trading Systems). RSI measures
the relative changes between higher and lower closing
prices, and provides an indication of overbought
and oversold conditions.
The term "Relative
Strength" is slightly misleading and often
causes some confusion. Relative strength generally
means a comparison between two different markets
or indices. RSI, on the other hand, looks at the
internal strength of a single market.

Interpretation
RSI is plotted
on a vertical scale of 0 to 100. The 70% and 30%
levels are used as warning signals. An RSI above
70% is considered overbought and below 30% is considered
oversold. The 80% and 20% levels are preferred by
some traders. The significance depends upon the
time frame being considered. An overbought reading
in a 9-day RSI is not nearly as significant as an
RSI for a 12-month period.
An overbought
or oversold condition merely indicates that there
is a high probability of a counter reaction.
It is an indication that there may be an opportunity
to buy or sell, but does not provide the
final signal. RSI signals should always be used
in conjunction with trend-reversal signals offered
by the price itself.
RSI can be
plotted for any time span. Wilder originally recommended
using a 14-day RSI. Since then, the 9, 10 and 25-day
RSIs have also become popular. The shorter the time
period, the more sensitive the oscillator becomes.
If the user is trading short-term moves, the time
period can be shortened. Lengthening the time period
makes the oscillator smoother and narrower in amplitude.
In using RSI,
a crossover above the 70% level is a warning signal
to prepare to sell and, conversely, when the RSI
falls below 30% you have a notice to prepare to
buy. The actual buy and sell signals are given when
the RSI reverses (see below). RSI crossings through
the 50% level are also used as buy and sell signals
by some traders.
Signals
Tops
& Bottoms, Failure Swings, Divergence
Traders watch
for double tops or what Wilder referred to as "failure
swings." If the RSI makes a double top formation,
with the first top above 70% and the second top
below the first, you get a sell signal when
the RSI falls below the level of the dip. Conversely,
a double bottom at or below 30% (with the first
low below 30% and the second at or above the same
level) gives you a buy signal when the RSI
breaks above the previous peak.
These failure
swings can lead to divergences between the price
action and the RSI. For example, a divergence occurs
when a market makes a new high or low, but the RSI
fails to set a matching new high or low. A divergence
can be an indication of an impending reversal. In
Wilder's opinion, divergences are the most important
signal provided by RSI.

Trendlines
RSI trendlines
can provide good signals, particularly when used
in conjunction with price patterns. When both price
and RSI trendlines are violated within a short period
you could have an important buy or sell signal.