
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) is an oscillating indicator that measures the comparison of the strength of price increases and decreases over a period of time, with values ranging from 0 to 100. Traditional textbooks often use a 14-period as the preset parameter, considering values above 70 as potentially “overbought” and below 30 as potentially “oversold.” This approach has been widely adopted for a long time in stock and forex markets. However, the volatility in the cryptocurrency market is more extreme, and trends can extend for longer periods, making it common for fixed-range judgments to deviate. Newcomers who directly apply this method may easily misinterpret a strong trend as a reversal signal.
The RSI is based on historical prices that have already occurred and is essentially a “lagging” tool, with signals often trailing behind actual turning points. In the cryptocurrency market, Bitcoin or mainstream altcoins often experience significant surges or drops within a short period, and the RSI may only enter the overbought or oversold zone after a substantial price movement has already taken place. For short-term traders, this lag can result in sell signals being received only at high levels or buy signals appearing only after a sharp decline, making actual trading prone to chasing gains and selling at losses, rather than buying low and selling high.
In a strong bull market, it is not uncommon for the RSI to maintain above 70 for a long time, with prices repeatedly reaching new highs. Relying solely on overbought signals to frequently short the market often results in consecutive losses. Similarly, in a deep bear market, the RSI may remain below 30 for an extended period, yet prices can continue to decline. New traders mistakenly view “oversold” as a certain rebound signal, which can lead to premature bottom fishing and getting trapped. The encryption market is extremely sensitive to macro liquidity, policy news, and leverage structure, which significantly reduces the reversal reference value of the RSI in a one-sided market; it must be used in conjunction with trend judgment.
Due to the large fluctuations in the prices of encryption assets, the RSI values can quickly swing back and forth between high and low zones in a short period, generating a significant number of seemingly valid buy and sell signals. If traders mechanically enter and exit based on each overbought and oversold signal, it can easily lead to overtrading, resulting in compounded transaction costs and potentially misstepping in a volatile market. This is especially true for small coins or tokens with lower liquidity, where a small amount of capital can drive prices, making the RSI more prone to extreme readings and reducing its real reference value.
To enhance the practicality of RSI in the encryption market, traders can improve from two directions. One is to combine with other technical tools, such as using MACD to determine the direction of the major trend, so that RSI only looks for entry and exit points in the trend direction, or combining Bollinger Bands and trading volume to observe whether the market is approaching extreme phases. The second is to adjust the period and threshold, for example, using a 21-period or 28-period smoothed RSI on highly volatile coins, and raising the overbought threshold to 80 and lowering the oversold threshold to 20 to reduce noise. These adjustments can make the indicator better fit the characteristics of the encryption market, rather than simply copying traditional settings.
RSI, as an introductory technical indicator, still has reference value for understanding price strength and emotional extremes, but relying solely on it in high-volatility markets like encryption often amplifies the risks of lag and false signals. A more reasonable approach is to treat RSI as an auxiliary tool: first determine the overall direction, then use it to fine-tune entry and exit positions, while also incorporating MACD, Bollinger Bands, and price structure analysis. As long as you avoid treating any single indicator as a “holy grail” and adjust parameters according to the characteristics of the cryptocurrency, RSI can still play a useful supportive role in trading decisions.











