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Rsi

Rsi, short for Relative Strength Index, is a momentum oscillator used in technical analysis to assess the speed and change of price movements. It aims to identify overbought and oversold conditions in an asset by comparing the magnitude of recent gains to recent losses. The index oscillates between 0 and 100.

Calculating RSI typically uses a look-back period of 14 periods, though other periods are common. For each

Interpretation varies, but values above 70 are commonly viewed as overbought and values below 30 as oversold,

Introduced by J. Welles Wilder Jr. in 1978, RSI has become a standard tool in many trading

period,
gains
and
losses
are
computed,
and
an
average
gain
is
divided
by
an
average
loss
to
form
a
relative
strength
(RS).
RSI
is
then
100
minus
100
divided
by
(1
+
RS).
The
average
gains
and
losses
are
often
smoothed
with
exponential
moving
averages.
suggesting
potential
reversals
or
pullbacks.
Middle-range
readings
around
50
indicate
weaker
momentum.
Traders
often
watch
for
divergences
between
price
action
and
RSI,
or
when
the
RSI
crosses
above
or
below
critical
levels
or
the
50
line.
systems.
Variants
include
Stochastic
RSI,
which
applies
stochastic
calculations
to
RSI
values,
and
RSI
with
different
look-back
periods.
Limitations
include
lag,
false
signals
in
strong
trends,
and
context
dependency,
so
RSI
is
typically
used
with
trend
analysis
and
price
patterns.