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Why Not to Rely on RSI and Stochastic Indicators

RSI and Stochastic indicators seem really appealing for determining market movements, and many young and new traders tend to use them, but both are not 100% reliable when it comes to predicting FX market tops and bottoms.

Oversold and Overbought

When RSI is below 30, the market is said to be oversold, and when it is above 70, the market is considered overbought. In case of stochastic indicators, a currency pair will be oversold when it is below 20 and when it is above 80, a currency pair will be overbought.

Why Are They Considered Helpful?

People consider these indicators helpful because they often tell you the right time to enter good quality trades and are hence said to bring good luck. But when we scrutinize them through Forex perspective, many experts think that RSI and stochastic indicators are pretty much ineffective.

Experts suggest a minimum use of these indicators; some suggest a combination of these along with some other technical indicators for better strategies, but many of them do not even include these indicators in their trading charts because of their limited use.

However, their behavior is not consistent. They can sometimes very accurately indicate the end and the beginning of a trend, but at other times they render completely worthless.

Rising and Falling Market Trends

As an example, let us assume that the market trend is strongly moving downwards. The RSI can fall below 30, and the stochastic indicator can also reach below 30 levels. The RSI could rise back again and then go back to the same position but your trading positions will hold no value in such a case. You can get into a lot of trouble since these indicators will be useless in this falling market.

Similarly, if the market trend appears to be in strong upward direction and it continues making new highs. So the RSI can reach above 70 and stay there for some very long time. It can also fall below 70 in case the trend slightly reconstructs and then go back to the same position when the trend rises again. This obviously means that if you take short positions when RSI is above 70, those positions will be stopped at every new rise or retracement.

EUR/USD Chart

As an example, take a look at the EUR/USD chart. The chart is the proof that these indicators cannot be trusted. They were indicating oversold condition for many weeks but the price was only moving downwards. Hence, had you used RSI and stochastic indicators for calling trades, you would have called a bottom. And every time, your position would be stopped out.

EUR/USD - October 2014

Not only this applies to the long-term charts but the same is also correct for the short-term charts. This tells us that one cannot rely on these two indicators for predicting market tops and bottom.

Alternate Options

There are many other more useful and easy-to-use indicators which you can use alternatively. You can use candlestick patterns such as pin bars and spinning tops. If you are serious into trading price reversals, there are other far more effective methods. For example, you can look for divergence patterns on indicators such as MACD.

by Adil Adeel

Adil Adeel, is a Senior Analyst at www.intellitraders.com.

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