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Average directional index (ADX)

Trend-strength gauge (0–100). High ADX = strong trend; ADX direction is separate.

ADX, also from Wilder (1978), measures the strength of a trend without saying anything about its direction. It is built from two directional indicators: +DI (the positive directional indicator) and −DI (the negative one). ADX itself is a smoothed average of |+DI − −DI| / (+DI + −DI).

Typical reads: ADX below 20 = ranging market, ADX above 25 = trending, ADX above 40 = strong trend. The companion +DI / −DI lines are used to read direction — +DI above −DI means the trend is up.

ADX is widely used as a regime filter: only run a trend-following entry rule when ADX is above some threshold. It is slow by design — the default 14-period smoothing means it confirms trends rather than predicting them.

Fórmula

DX = 100 · |+DI − −DI| / (+DI + −DI)
ADX = Wilder-smoothed(DX, N)

Ejemplo

+DI = 28, −DI = 12. DX = 100 · 16 / 40 = 40. After Wilder smoothing across 14 bars, ADX settles around 35 — a strong trend.

Cómo Noon Barbari usa Average directional index (ADX)

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See the indicators reference

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