Indicators explained
Indicators are where beginners go to drown. There are hundreds, and the temptation is to stack them until the chart looks like a science experiment. Here’s the truth that saves you years: indicators are tools, not oracles — and you need maybe two.
They really only do three jobs
Strip the hundreds down and almost every indicator answers one of three questions: which way is price trending, how much momentum is behind it, and how volatile it is. Pick one tool per job you actually need — not five that all do the same thing.
Trend
Moving averages. Smooth out price to show direction — above the MA is bullish, below is bearish.
Momentum
RSI. Measures how stretched a move is — flags when price may be overbought or oversold.
Volatility
Bollinger Bands. Show how wide price is swinging — bands squeeze in calm, expand in storms.
The catch: they lag
Every indicator is built from past prices, which means it can only ever confirm what price is doing — it can’t predict. By the time a moving average “turns,” price already moved. That’s not a flaw, it’s the nature of the tool. Read price first; use the indicator to back up what you already see.
Avoid indicator soup
Three momentum indicators all flashing “overbought” is not three reasons — it’s the same reason three times, dressed up as confidence. It is one of the great beginner traps. A clean chart with price, a level, and one confirming indicator beats a rainbow of contradicting signals every time.
Indicators do three jobs — trend, momentum, volatility — and they all lag because they’re built from past price. Use one or two to confirm what price and levels already tell you, and never mistake indicator soup for an edge.
Because indicators are built from past prices, they mainly…
You add three momentum indicators that all say “overbought.” That’s…
Educational content only — nothing here is financial advice. Trading carries risk; never risk money you cannot afford to lose.
