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One Signal Can Tell When The Trend Is About To Stop Being Your Friend

Published 05/27/2019, 08:20 AM
Updated 09/02/2020, 02:05 AM

U.S. equity markets have hit another rough patch. The S&P 500 and NASDAQ Composite each finished the past week down for a third consecutive week while the Dow was off for a fifth straight week.

Most market watchers are pointing to continuing U.S.-China trade tensions as the primary culprit. But a popular market technical gauge has been telling a different story.

A key market indicator, the relative strength index (RSI), signaled in late April that the big, post-Christmas rally had become overbought and was vulnerable to a sell-off. And indeed, just as the RSI—which signals both the strength and potential direction of market or individual asset momentum—indicated, stocks have been struggling since. As well, Friday's close suggested a big rebound is not yet at hand.

The uptrend after Christmas was terrifically friendly, but investors should always keep a close watch on whether the trend might be about to turn. Truly savvy investors know a friendly trend will bite you sooner or later. Which is why familiarity with the RSI might just be a trend watcher's best friend.

SPX Daily TTM with RSI

The RSI for the S&P 500 hit 73.5 on April 30.

NASDAQ Composite Weekly TTM with RSI

The NASDAQ's RSI had topped 76 the day before.

For those unfamiliar with RSI specifics, a reading above 70 is a warning. A reading above 75 suggests a top is at hand. Above 80 is a serious sell signal.

Likewise, when an RSI drops below 30, it's a sign a bottom is near. It also indicates a rally is forming.

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In fact, the RSI values for the S&P 500 and NASDAQ (and the Dow) approached 30 by May 13, as heavy selling hit U.S. stocks. However, they did not move decisively lower.

As of Friday's close, the RSIs for all three indices were stuck in the 40s. Each has been unable to move higher, stuck approximately 40% or more below their highs at the end of April. Additionally each may drift until there's a real catalyst such as a genuine U.S.-China trade deal.

RSI and other, similar, technical indicators are crucial components of today's computerized trading strategies. There are so many inputs into the algorithms that control automated buying and selling that people's minds simply can't process all that information quickly enough. Using RSI values for automated trading thus triggers buy and sell decisions. That's why an index can rise or fall multiple percentage points seemingly instantaneously.

What's occurred since the end of April has happened repeatedly in the past few years as computers run more and more trading. In December, The Wall Street Journal suggested that 85% of trading at the end of last year was done via computerized algorithms and passive investing strategies that just followed the market.

It's also made markets mirror each other more closely. After President Donald Trump's 2016 election, stocks in the United States, Japan, Brazil and India all rose 40% into last week.

Still, though RSI is a good indicator, it's not perfect. It will tell you that a top or a bottom is coming, but it won't say when.

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The ugly selloff in the fall of 2018 was a dramatic demonstration of this reality. It started innocuously enough. The market had rallied through the summer, despite President Trump's criticisms of the Federal Reserve, inflation jitters and other fundamental headwinds.

But in late August and September, the NASDAQ, S&P 500 and Dow all started to flash overbought signals through their RSIs. Stocks started to drift. In mid-October, the drift became a slump which morphed into a global near-panic right before Christmas.

The Dow dropped nearly 12% in the fourth quarter. The S&P 500 fell 14%, as did Germany's DAX. The NASDAQ plunged 17%; so did Japan's Nikkei Index.

The Christmas Eve sell-off was the worst U.S. stock market performance ever on a Christmas Eve. But by then, the RSIs for the Dow, S&P 500 and the NASDAQ were already flashing buy signals. The S&P 500's RSI hit 19 on Dec. 24, a level not seen even during the 2008 financial crisis.

You can't ask for a more serious buy signal. And sure enough, the rally took off on Dec. 26.

Latest comments

Author has no clue what he is talking about. Cofused trader I guess!
Agreed. This is very bad information. The biggest moves happen when RSI is "overbought" or "oversold." That is not the proper way to use RSI.
Even your examples are telling a different story. You literally dont understand the rsi. The rsi is a flattened chart. It tells you the curre t strength relative to the previous movement. If you had a consolidation for a long period and then a bigger move in any direction, the rsi would move straight into extreme territory but it would not be able to tell you the reason of this move or if it is sustainable i.e. Just a correction or a retrace or a continuation or reversal, nothing.
Confirmation bias; you're seeing what you want to see and ignoring when it doesn't work that way. RSI on the SPY was also over 70 in late February. You remember late February right? Right before the market shot up for next several months. Or how about Feb of 2017? Shot up over 80 and after a very small correction, the market continued to grind higher the entire year. Anyone following RSI in Feb would have been watching from the sidelines since RSI was largely in high ranges most of the year.  And during last fall's sell-off, RSI dropped to the teens in early October. Then barely got up above 50 then dropped down again. Anyone buying that RSI dip in October would have not felt so smart by December.. . Certainly there is some validity to what you are saying, though. Clearly, when the RSI hits extreme numbers then we're probably going to have some degree of a short-term change but the extent of it is impossible to predict.  y
it will give a lot of false signals if follow the way author described, which makes it useless. LOL
Thats why you use stop loss. What he is talking about isn’t for day trader . Is for swing or investor and on a long rum rsi and macd work perfect.
 There is no "perfect" in trading. And I might agree about long term to some extent, except the examples he gave weren't really long term. He talked about using RSI to avoid the October meltdown, then using it to buy in by late December. And he conveniently overlooked the signal RSI gave after the first sell-off, right before the market continued to melt down. . . Don't get me wrong; nothing wrong with using indicators. But it's intellectually dishonest to suggest that any indicator works in isolation most of the time while overlooking all the times it doesn't work. It's the myth that inexperienced traders keep searching for, and click-bait titles like the author uses are exactly what these people are looking for. Unfortunately for them, they will find out the hard way that nothing is easy, and there is no perfect system.
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