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RSI Explained: The Speedometer Every Indian Investor Needs to Know

RSI Explained: The Speedometer Every Indian Investor Needs to Know

RSIRelative Strength Index, a 0–100 momentum oscillator tells you one thing instantly: is a stock gaining or losing momentum fast enough to worry about? It does not predict the future. It measures the speed of recent price moves — like a speedometer in your car — and flags when a stock is moving so fast in one direction that it might be about to slow down.

That is the entire idea. Everything else below is just the details.


What RSI Actually Is — in Plain English

Imagine a tug-of-war. One team pulls the price up on days the stock closes higher. The other team pulls it down on days it closes lower.

RSI asks: over the last 14 trading days, which team has been pulling harder, and by how much?

If the "up" team has been dominant, RSI is high. If the "down" team has been dominant, RSI is low. The result is always a single number between 0 and 100. Zero means the stock has fallen every single day for 14 days. One hundred means it has risen every single day. In practice, you almost always see numbers between 20 and 80.

The "14 days" is the default — the standard used by nearly every charting platform in India, from Zerodha Kite to TradingView. It captures about three trading weeks, long enough to smooth out random noise, short enough to still be sensitive.


How to Actually Calculate RSI — Step by Step

You do not need to memorise this. Your platform calculates it automatically. But seeing the maths once makes the number feel real instead of magical.

Step 1 — Separate up-days from down-days.

Take the last 14 closes of a stock. For each day, note whether the price went up or down, and by how much.

Say over 14 days you have:

  • 9 up-days, with average gain of ₹4.20 per day
  • 5 down-days, with average loss of ₹2.80 per day

Step 2 — Calculate Relative Strength (RS).

RS = Average Gain ÷ Average Loss = 4.20 ÷ 2.80 = 1.5

RS is just the ratio of "how strongly did it rise" to "how strongly did it fall." A ratio above 1 means buyers were stronger.

Step 3 — Convert RS into the 0–100 scale.

RSI = 100 − (100 ÷ (1 + RS)) RSI = 100 − (100 ÷ (1 + 1.5)) RSI = 100 − (100 ÷ 2.5) RSI = 100 − 40 = 60

An RSI of 60 says buyers have been clearly in control, but the stock is not yet in any danger zone. It is a neutral-to-bullish reading.

If the average gain had been huge — say ₹9 versus ₹1 average loss — RS would be 9.0, and RSI = 100 − (100 ÷ 10) = 90. That is deep into warning territory.


The Two Zones That Everyone Watches

((Overbought||RSI above 70, momentum may be stretched)) — Above 70

When RSI crosses above 70, the up-team has been winning so convincingly, for so long, that buyers may be running out of new recruits. The speedometer is in the red zone. It does not mean the stock will fall — but it means the pace of gains is historically hard to sustain.

Real example — Infosys (INFY), June 2024.

After a sharp rally through early-to-mid 2024, Infosys's 14-period RSI climbed above 70 around June 2024. That single number said: buying pressure has been intense enough, for long enough, to statistically raise caution. Over the weeks that followed, Infosys pulled back in price — the exact moderation that an elevated RSI flags as a rising possibility. Buyers who chased the stock at RSI 75+ paid more, and then waited.

((Oversold||RSI below 30, selling may be exhausted)) — Below 30

When RSI drops below 30, the down-team has been so dominant that sellers may be running low on ammunition. Heavy selling has already happened. Fresh sellers are harder to find. The condition is called oversold — not because the stock is cheap (valuation is a separate question), but because the selling speed has reached a historically punishing level.

Real example — Tata Motors (TATAMOTORS), February 2025.

During a period of sector-wide pressure in early 2025, Tata Motors shares fell hard enough to push the 14-period RSI below 30 around February 2025. The oscillator was signalling: the pace of selling has become extreme. That is exactly where Tata Motors found support and mounted a meaningful bounce — consistent with what oversold readings historically suggest in stocks with solid underlying businesses.


Divergence — When Price and RSI Tell Different Stories

Divergenceprice and indicator moving opposite ways is the most important advanced signal RSI produces — and it is worth learning because it catches trend exhaustion before the price itself cracks.

Here is the core idea: RSI measures the engine under the price, not the price itself. If the car (price) keeps rolling forward but the engine (RSI) is losing power, the car will eventually slow down.

Bullish Divergence — Hidden Strength

Price makes a lower low (falls to a new trough). But RSI makes a higher low (less negative momentum this time). The sellers are pushing price down, but they have less force behind each shove. That discrepancy is a warning to bears — the trend may be about to reverse upward.

Bearish Divergence — Hidden Weakness

Price makes a higher high (rises to a new peak). But RSI makes a lower high (less positive momentum this time). The buyers are still winning, but each win takes more effort. The engine is losing power even as the car still climbs.

Real example — Reliance Industries (RELIANCE), late 2024.

Reliance shares continued printing successively higher prices on the chart through November–December 2024. But the 14-period RSI, tracked over the same period, was forming lower peaks — a textbook bearish divergence. The price said "all good, still rising." The RSI said "the buyers are tiring." This divergence preceded a consolidation and mild correction in Reliance in early 2025. Divergence does not give you a day. It gives you a directional warning while there is still time to prepare.


RSI in Different Market Conditions — This Part Most Beginners Skip

RSI does not behave the same way in every market environment. Ignoring this is the most common way beginners misuse it.

In a strong uptrend: RSI can sit above 70 for weeks, even months. The stock is not "about to crash" — it is simply trending hard. In these conditions, 40–50 on the RSI (which would look like "neutral" in a range-bound market) actually becomes the buy zone, because that is where pullbacks end before the trend resumes.

In a trading range (range-boundstock oscillating between a floor and a ceiling with no clear trend): The classic 70/30 rules work best. The stock oscillates between support and resistance. RSI touching 70 near resistance = likely sell zone. RSI touching 30 near support = likely buy zone.

In a strong downtrend: RSI can stay below 40 for extended periods. An RSI of 30 in a bear market might not mean "bounce imminent" — it might mean "this is just how bad it is."

The lesson: always look at the trend first, then apply RSI through that lens.


Common Mistakes — Read This Before You Trade Off RSI

Mistake 1 — Treating 70 as an automatic sell signal.

RSI above 70 means momentum is stretched. It does not mean the stock is about to fall. Infosys has spent entire quarters above RSI 70 during its strongest runs. Selling Infosys the moment RSI hit 71 would have cost you enormous gains.

Mistake 2 — Using RSI alone.

RSI is a confirming tool, not a standalone signal. A stock at RSI 28 might be oversold — or it might be in a genuine business collapse. Always cross-check with price structure (where is the nearest support?), volume (is selling drying up?), and at least one other indicator or fundamental check.

Mistake 3 — Ignoring the timeframe.

An RSI of 72 on a 5-minute chart means almost nothing for a long-term investor. An RSI of 72 on a weekly chart is a far stronger signal. Match your RSI timeframe to your holding horizon.

Mistake 4 — Confusing "oversold" with "cheap."

Oversold means the pace of selling has been extreme. It says nothing about whether the stock is good value at this price. A stock can be oversold and still be expensive relative to earnings.


The Bottom Line

Three things that actually matter:

  1. RSI measures momentum speed (0–100), not price level. Above 70 = buying has been intense (watch for fatigue). Below 30 = selling has been intense (watch for a bounce). Neither is guaranteed.
  1. Divergence is the most powerful signal. When price and RSI disagree — price rising but RSI falling, or price falling but RSI climbing — the RSI is usually the first one to be right. Watch for it at major highs and lows.
  1. Context changes everything. In a strong trend, ignore the 70/30 zones and watch for RSI to dip to 40–50 instead. In a range, use 70/30 normally. Always confirm with at least one other input.

RSI will not make you rich alone. But it will stop you from chasing exhausted moves — and that alone saves most beginners from their worst trades.


Frequently Asked Questions

What does an RSI of 50 mean?

It means buyers and sellers have been roughly equal over the last 14 periods. The stock is in neutral territory — no strong signal either way. Most technical analysts only get interested when RSI moves meaningfully above 60 or below 40.

Can RSI stay above 70 for a long time?

Yes, absolutely. During the Nifty IT index's strongest rallies, large-cap IT stocks like TCS and Infosys have maintained RSI readings above 70 for weeks at a stretch. Overbought does not mean "imminent crash" — it means "stretched." In a strong uptrend, it can stay stretched for a long time.

Is a 14-period RSI the only option?

No. Day traders often use 7-period RSI for faster signals (more sensitive, more noise). Long-term investors sometimes use 21-period RSI for slower, smoother readings. The default 14 is the most widely followed on NSE stocks, which makes it somewhat self-fulfilling — more traders react to 14-period levels, so those levels tend to matter more.

What is the difference between RSI and MACD?

RSI measures how fast a stock is moving relative to its recent history (speed of momentum). MACDMoving Average Convergence Divergence, tracks the relationship between two moving averages measures the gap between two moving averages and whether that gap is growing or shrinking. They often agree, but when they diverge, it is worth investigating why.

Does RSI work for all Indian stocks?

RSI works best for liquid stocks with consistent daily volume — think Nifty 50 and Nifty Next 50 constituents like Reliance, HDFC Bank, Infosys, TCS, Tata Motors. For illiquid small-caps with low daily volumes, a single large order can push the RSI to extreme levels without any real momentum change — making the signal unreliable.


Analysis context: as of 19 June 2026. This article is for educational purposes only — not investment advice.