Technical Indicators

Apply SMA, EMA, RSI, and MACD overlays to visualize momentum and trend signals.

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Indicators

SMA

Simple Moving Average — averages the last N closing prices into a smooth line. Lower numbers (like 20) react quickly to price changes. Higher numbers (like 200) show the long-term trend. When price crosses above the SMA, some traders read that as a buy signal.

20

Try changing this to 200 to see the long-term trend. Notice how the line gets much smoother.

EMA

Exponential Moving Average — like SMA but gives more weight to recent prices. An EMA(50) reacts faster than an SMA(50) to sudden moves. Traders often use EMA for shorter timeframes because it catches turns earlier.

50
RSI

Relative Strength Index — measures whether a stock has been bought or sold too aggressively. Above 70 = overbought (might drop), below 30 = oversold (might bounce). It’s not a guarantee — stocks can stay overbought for weeks in strong uptrends.

MACD

Moving Average Convergence Divergence — when the MACD line crosses above the signal line, momentum is shifting bullish. When it crosses below, momentum is shifting bearish. The histogram bars show how far apart the two lines are.

Golden Cross

Turn on SMA(50) and SMA(200). Look for where the shorter line crosses above the longer one. That’s called a ‘golden cross’ — a classic bullish signal. Did the price go up after the cross?

RSI Divergence

Turn on RSI. Find a spot where the stock made a new high but RSI didn’t. That’s called divergence — it can signal the trend is weakening.

MACD Crossover

Turn on MACD. Each time the blue line crosses the orange signal line, that’s a potential trade signal. Count how many signals there were — were they good?