MACD
Using MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence)
What MACD is, how it’s built, and practical ways to trade it: crossovers, divergences, intraday setups, scalping, breakouts, and pattern reads—with default settings and a tested day-trade workflow.
Momentum
Entry & Exit
Department
OTM Academy
Category
Technical analysis
What Is MACD?
Where MACD Helps
Common applications: Divergence trading, intraday trading, crossover signals, scalping, breakout confirmation, and pattern reads on the histogram/signal relationship.
MACD Components & Formula
• Fast EMA: 12-period
• Slow EMA: 26-period
• Signal Line: 9-period EMA of MACD value
• Histogram: MACD − Signal
Formulas:
MACD = EMA(12) − EMA(26)
Signal = EMA(9) of MACD
Histogram = MACD − Signal
Default settings: 12, 26, 9.
How MACD Works (Reading the Signals)
• Zero Line: Above zero = bullish bias; below zero = bearish bias.
• Crossovers: MACD crossing above the signal = potential buy; below = potential sell.
• Expansion/Contraction: A widening histogram shows accelerating momentum; shrinking bars warn of slowing momentum.
• Context: Strongest signals align with the higher-timeframe trend and key levels.
Intraday & Scalping with MACD
Default day-trade setup (12,26,9) works on M5–H1. A slower variant for M30: MACD(24,52,9). Typical stack:
• Trend filter: Smoothed MA(365, close)
• Momentum: MACD(24,52,9)
• Timing: Williams %R(28)
• Levels: Daily Pivot Points
Buy rules: Price above SMMA(365); MACD below zero (pullback) then turns up; Williams %R crosses up through −80; trigger on candle break.
Sell rules: Price below SMMA(365); MACD above zero (pullback) then turns down; Williams %R crosses down through −20; trigger on breakdown.
Tips, Settings & Execution
• Keep defaults (12,26,9) unless slowing for higher noise (e.g., 24,52,9 on M30).
• Trade in the direction of the higher-timeframe bias; use MACD for timing.
• Add risk rules: Stop below/above trigger candle or 1–1.5× ATR; target 1.5–2.5× ATR or next structure.
• Journal the combo you use (e.g., MACD + RSI or Stochastic) and stick to one workflow to avoid over-fitting.

