What is RSI in stocks? A retail trader's plain-English guide (with examples).
RSI stands for Relative Strength Index — a 0–100 momentum oscillator that signals overbought vs oversold conditions. Here's how it actually works, what the 70/30 thresholds mean, and the three mistakes retail traders make using it.
RSI is one of those acronyms every trading YouTube channel mentions and almost no one explains properly. Here's the plain-English version: what it is, how it's computed, what the 70/30 thresholds mean, and the three mistakes retail traders make using it.
What RSI actually measures
RSI = Relative Strength Index. It's a momentum oscillator that compares the magnitude of recent gains to the magnitude of recent losses over a lookback period (default: 14 trading days). The output is a 0–100 number, where:
- RSI > 70 — traditionally read as "overbought". The stock has rallied hard and may be due for a pause or pullback.
- RSI < 30 — traditionally read as "oversold". The stock has dropped hard and may be due for a bounce.
- RSI 30–70 — neutral zone. Most of the time RSI sits here and isn't telling you much on its own.
How RSI is computed
The formula is straightforward. Over the lookback window (14 days standard):
RS = average gain / average loss RSI = 100 - (100 / (1 + RS))
Average gain = sum of positive daily changes / 14. Average loss = sum of absolute negative daily changes / 14. The 100 / (1 + RS) part bounds the output to 0–100. The exact arithmetic doesn't matter for trading; the intuition does: RSI rises when up-days outweigh down-days, and falls when down-days outweigh up-days.
The three mistakes retail traders make with RSI
1. Trading the 70/30 cross mechanically
"RSI hit 70, time to short" is the most common — and the most reliably wrong — RSI rule. Strong uptrends ride RSI in the 70–90 range for weeks. Selling every time RSI crosses 70 means selling every strong rally early. Strong downtrends similarly camp out at RSI 20–30. Mechanical 70/30 trades work in choppy range-bound markets and lose in trending ones.
2. Ignoring the timeframe
RSI on a 1-minute chart is noise. RSI on a daily chart is signal. RSI on a weekly chart is a long-term sentiment gauge. Same number, wildly different meanings. Most retail traders look at RSI on whatever timeframe their chart happens to be open to, then trade as if the signal is universal. It isn't. Pick your timeframe deliberately.
3. Treating RSI as a standalone signal
RSI is most useful in confluence with other indicators — trend, relative strength vs the market, volume, fundamentals. Pure-RSI trading is gambling on mean reversion in a market that mostly trends. RSI as part of a broader composite (like Tapeline's 6-factor score) is a far more reliable filter.
How Tapeline uses RSI
RSI feeds into the Momentum factor (10% weight in the composite). Specifically, the Momentum factor looks at RSI position (where in the 0–100 range), the rate of change of RSI (is momentum accelerating or decelerating), and divergences between RSI and price (rare, but high-signal when they appear).
The reason Momentum is only 10% of the composite — and not, say, 30% — is exactly because pure-momentum signals like RSI mean-revert so reliably. The composite balances RSI against Trend, Relative Strength, Fundamentals, Smart Money, and Macro so you're not betting your account on a single overbought reading.
Practical use cases
- Pullback entries — in a confirmed uptrend (price above 200DMA, rising RS line), an RSI dip into 35–45 is a higher-probability pullback entry than a random pullback to a chart level. Confluence with the bigger trend.
- Exhaustion warning — RSI above 80 on the daily, sustained for multiple sessions, is a yellow flag that the rally is running on fumes. Doesn't mean short; means don't add.
- Divergence — when price makes a new high but RSI makes a lower high (or vice versa), the underlying momentum isn't confirming the price action. Rare but high-quality when you spot it.
The bottom line
RSI is a useful tool — not a crystal ball. Treat the 70/30 thresholds as warnings, not triggers. Pair RSI with trend and relative-strength context. Don't fight strong trends because RSI is "overbought" — that's how retail traders blow up.
Want to see RSI in context for every US ticker? The Tapeline composite blends RSI into a single 0–100 score along with five other factors. Try the 14-day Premium trial — no credit card.
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