RSI (Relative Strength Index)

Wilder's RSI compares the average size of gains with the average size of losses over the last 14 periods, on a 0–100 scale. Above 70 the bullish push is unusually strong: in a range it often reverts, in a trend it is the news.

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The RSI, published by J. Welles Wilder in New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems (1978), is the most widely used momentum oscillator in the world. It measures one precise thing: how one-sided the recent push has been — the average size of up-bars against the average size of down-bars, compressed into a 0–100 scale. It does not predict price: it measures what is already happening.

In plain terms — If the moving average tells you where the car's nose is pointing, the RSI tells you how hard the accelerator is pressed. A car can point north while accelerating, coasting, or with a foot already on the brake: on the chart those three situations look alike — on the rev counter they don't.


How it is built

Over the last 14 bars, up-closes and down-closes are separated and their average pushes measured (with Wilder's smoothing, which keeps the line stable):

RS = average gain / average loss → RSI = 100 − 100/(1 + RS)

Reading Meaning
RSI ≈ 50 The two pushes balance out
RSI > 70 Recent gains have dominated — unusually strong push
RSI < 30 Recent losses have dominated

Note what the table does not say: it does not say "sell". Above 70 the push has been unusually intense — what to do with that depends on the market regime.

How to read the chart — Top: price — a flat phase, a correction, then a strong trend. Bottom: RSI 14 (gold) with the 70/30 thresholds and the 50 midline; the highlighted band marks the time spent above 70. Interactive — the points show persistent overbought, the final divergence and the role of the 50 line.

INDICATOR · MOMENTUM RSI — relative strength of the last 14 periods Scale 0–100 · 70/30 as reference, never an automatic signal CYCLEPEDIA DIAGRAM — EMICICLO PRICE — CONTEXT Price 104 111 118 RSI (14) 70 50 30 86 31 bars > 70 divergence CONSECUTIVE BARS ABOVE 70 31 PRICE OVER THE SAME STRETCH +18.2% Before reading RSI ask: is this market ranging or trending?
In the trend the RSI stays "overbought" for dozens of bars while price keeps rising: the threshold describes strength — it does not order a sale.
Hover or tap the highlighted points

Reading it in practice

  1. First question: what market is this? In a range, excess push tends to revert and the touches of 70/30 often coincide with the edges of the oscillation — the RSI's natural habitat. In a strong trend the same threshold changes meaning: the RSI glues itself above 70, and selling the first touch means exiting at the start of the best move on the chart.
  2. Range shift — in bull markets the RSI tends to swing between 40 and 80 (with 40 acting as the floor on corrections); in bear markets between 20 and 60. Simply noticing which band the RSI lives in is a regime clue hidden in plain sight.
  3. Divergences — price at a new high, RSI at a lower high: the record was set with less push. Two adult-grade cautions: in powerful trends divergences pile up for a long time before anything happens; and a divergence is for stopping the chase, not for fading the move — confirmation belongs to price, with the break of a structure.
  4. The 50 line — the watershed between buying and selling dominance; its role as the oscillator's support/resistance is often more informative than the extreme thresholds.

Limits and traps

Warning — "Sell above 70, buy below 30" applied mechanically is one of the fastest ways to lose in a trend. The threshold measures the intensity of the push: in a trend, a strong push is the fuel of the move, not its illness.

  • Period 14 and thresholds 70/30 are Wilder's convention: first learn to read the standard instrument; tune it much, much later.
  • The RSI compresses everything into 0–100: huge moves and modest ones can produce similar readings; true amplitude lives on price (or on the ATR).

  • stochastic — the other oscillator: where price closes within the recent range
  • macd — momentum without a fixed scale, with zero as the boundary
  • cci — deviation from the typical price
  • trend · price-range · indicatori