Overview
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is a momentum oscillator that measures the speed and size of recent price changes on a bounded 0–100 scale. It answers one question: how strong has the recent buying been versus the recent selling?
Don't confuse it with relative strength. RSI compares a stock to its own recent history; relative strength compares a stock to the market. Same two words, completely different tools.
Origins & history
- 1978J. Welles Wilder introduced the RSI in his book New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems (and in Commodities magazine, June 1978).1
- AlsoThe same book gave technical analysis the ATR, ADX, and Parabolic SAR — Wilder is one of the most influential indicator designers in history.1
How it works
Wilder's default is N = 14, using his own smoothing of the average gains and losses. The result is bounded 0–100, with conventional lines at 70 (overbought), 30 (oversold), and a 50 midline that acts as a bull/bear bias divider.1
Market psychology & mechanics
RSI is a snapshot of momentum exhaustion. A very high reading means buyers have dominated recent bars so completely that the move may be getting stretched; a very low reading means the reverse. It is the crowd's recent urgency, compressed into one number. But "stretched" is not the same as "about to reverse" — which is where most people misuse it.
Honest assessment
Strengths
Bounded and intuitive, RSI is genuinely useful in range-bound markets for spotting exhaustion, for reading divergence (price makes a new high, RSI doesn't), and for using the 50-line as a quick trend bias.
The professional refinement most beginners miss
The classic rule "sell above 70, buy below 30" is the single most common RSI mistake. Andrew Cardwell and Constance Brown documented the range shift: in an uptrend RSI typically oscillates between about 40 and 80 (so 70 is normal strength, not a sell), and in a downtrend between about 20 and 60. In a strong trend RSI can sit "overbought" or "oversold" for weeks. Reading RSI without the trend context inverts its meaning.2
The evidence
As a naive overbought/oversold reversal signal, RSI has weak standalone evidence. As a short-term mean-reversion tool it does better: short-period variants — notably Larry Connors' RSI(2) research — have shown backtested edges buying brief oversold dips within an uptrend, i.e., with the larger trend rather than against it.
Evidence rating: weak as a standalone reversal trigger; useful as a context-aware momentum and mean-reversion tool. Never a system by itself.
Professional uses vs. retail misuses
How professionals use it
- With the trend: buy oversold dips in uptrends, not "overbought" tops.
- For divergence and Wilder's "failure swings," as a heads-up — not a trigger.
- With adjusted bull/bear ranges, not a fixed 70/30.
Common retail misuses
- Shorting every "70" and buying every "30" in a trend.
- Trading divergence alone — it can persist for a long time.
- Confusing RSI with relative strength.
Going deeper
Variations: Cutler's RSI (simple averages), Stochastic RSI (an oscillator of the RSI, more sensitive), and Connors RSI. Techniques: regular vs. hidden divergence, Wilder's failure swings, and using the 50-line for trend bias. Multi-timeframe: a higher-timeframe RSI sets the regime (which RSI band applies), the lower-timeframe RSI times the entry.
Practice
Quiz 1 — RSI hits 75 in a strong uptrend. Is that a sell signal?
No. In an uptrend RSI commonly rides the 40–80 band, so 75 is normal strength, not exhaustion. Selling "overbought" in a trend fights the trend — the classic RSI trap.
Quiz 2 — How is RSI different from "relative strength"?
RSI measures a stock against its own recent history (internal momentum, 0–100). Relative strength measures a stock against the market (leadership). Different tools, similar names.
Quiz 3 — What is the limitation of RSI divergence?
It can persist — RSI can diverge from price for a long time in a strong trend before anything happens (or nothing does). Divergence is a heads-up to watch, not a trigger to act.
This concept in the knowledge graph
Resources
- CONCEPTOscillators & Relative strength (the one it's confused with).
- GLOSSARYRSI, overbought/oversold, divergence.
References (primary where possible)
- J. Welles Wilder, New Concepts in Technical Trading Systems (1978); RSI formula & defaults — overview at Wikipedia.
- Range shift / bull-bear ranges — Andrew Cardwell & Constance Brown, Technical Analysis for the Trading Professional; summarized at StockCharts.
Connors' RSI(2) mean-reversion work is attributed to Larry Connors & Cesar Alvarez, Short Term Trading Strategies That Work.