The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD), introduced by Gerald Appel in the 1970s, plots the difference between a fast and a slow EMA, then overlays an EMA of that difference as the signal line. The bar histogram shows the gap between MACD and signal.
The canonical parameters are 12 / 26 / 9: a 12-period fast EMA, a 26-period slow EMA, and a 9-period signal EMA on the difference. Trading reads: MACD crossing above signal = bullish, MACD crossing below signal = bearish, histogram expansion = strengthening trend.
MACD has no upper or lower bound, so it cannot be used for overbought/oversold reads the way RSI can. It is a trend-confirmation tool first, and a divergence tool second.
Fórmula
MACD = EMA(12) − EMA(26) Signal = EMA(9, MACD) Histogram = MACD − Signal
Ejemplo
EMA(12) = 105, EMA(26) = 103. MACD = 2. Signal = 1.5. Histogram = 0.5 — bullish, momentum expanding.
Cómo Noon Barbari usa MACD
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See the indicators reference →Términos relacionados
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