RSI Just Jumped. Now What?
The RSI Daily Momentum tool looks at the one-day change in RSI: how many points it moved from yesterday, and shows what price did the last times RSI moved like this.
RSI is almost always read as a level: above 70 is overbought, below 30 is oversold. But the level is only half the story. A stock whose RSI grinds from 55 to 58 is doing something very different from one that rockets from 45 to 62 in a single session. The speed of the move, the one-day change in RSI, is its own signal, and it is the one most traders never look at.
A sharp RSI jump can mean momentum is igniting or that the move is already spent. Which one it is depends on how big the jump was, which way it went, and where RSI sits in its range. The only honest way to settle it for a given ticker is to see what price did the last times RSI moved like today's.
A live RSI move read, a 45-day forward price cone, a Chance of Move bar graph, a full sortable event log, and a watchlist scan of today's sharpest RSI jumps.
One glance tells you how far RSI jumped today and where it now sits.
Projects the next 45 days by applying forward returns from past similar RSI jumps.
How often price rose or fell by a set percentage after similar RSI jumps.
Today's 14-day RSI minus yesterday's, measured in points. A +8 reading means RSI jumped eight points in one session.
The tool scans the market and auto-highlights stocks with the sharpest RSI moves today.
The Historical Log displays every past instance when RSI moved like today's.
Check if any stocks on your watchlist or in the market had a sharp RSI move today.
Open the 45-day price cone. It shows how price behaved after similar RSI jumps in the past. This gives you a realistic view of what typically happens next instead of guessing.
Switch to Bar Graph view and set your target price level. The bars show how often similar RSI jumps reached that distance by upcoming expirations. Toggle between "By Touch" and "By Close" depending on your strategy.
Before acting on the signal, open the events log. Check how many historical matches exist and whether they cluster in one period. A small sample or regime-specific cluster tells you the signal may be less reliable than the percentages suggest.
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