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Page 144
of the prior rally from May to June. However, the RSI retraced almost the entire prior rally in the RSI. We see this behavior once again at points g and h, where the price that coincides with point h is above the price that coincides with point g, yet the RSI value is lower. When we see this behavior we call it a divergence. A divergence occurs when the momentum oscillator is not reflecting price action. In other words, price will make a higher high, yet the momentum oscillator will not exceed its previous high. This is called a bearish divergence. Inversely, whenever the price makes a new low yet the momentum oscillator fails to exceed its previous low, we are seeing a bullish divergence. In Figure 16-2, we see a bullish divergence, and in Figure 16-6, we see a bearish divergence.
The reason it is called either bearish or bullish is because the price will typically sell off after a bearish divergence is formed and rally after a bullish divergence is made. Unfortunately, the majority of traders unconsciously associate a bearish divergence with a bear market and a bullish divergence with a bull market. This association is totally false. An important clue about the market direction is to constantly be looking for a divergence.
Now what I am about to say next will cause traders with any rudimentary knowledge of divergences to fry a few brain cells and have smoke come out of their ears! Whenever I see a bearish divergence I immediately start thinking that we are in, or about to enter into, a bull market! Whenever I see a bullish divergence I start thinking that we are in, or about to enter into, a bear market! Yes I know that this flies in the face of what all the textbooks say.
The important point is that in the vast majority of cases repeated bearish divergences occur only in an up-trending market, and bullish divergences repeatedly occur in a bearish market. If you find this hard to accept then get a chart of the Japanese yen and start looking at what the RSI did from July 1995 to August 1998. You will be hard-pressed to find a bearish divergence in the daily chart, and there is no bearish divergence in the weekly chart covering a period of 3 years. In Figure 16-5 from the rally commencing in May to October there is no bull divergenceonly bear divergences! Then in late October the RSI did make a bull divergencebut what did the price do? This is the third thing I look at; it is one of my favorite tools. Since the vast majority of traders lose their money, since most traders will sell a bearish divergence, and since most traders are bearish when they are short, I will be waiting to buy!
Divergences are associated with any momentum-based indicator. They typically show up at the momentum high or low. When a bull market is overbought, there is a loss of momentum, then a downward correction in price, but not necessarily a trend change. In other words, when a bearish divergence occurs, the market is telling you that it is currently overbought or overextended

 
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