The Stochastic Oscillator is often paired with RSI โ and for good reason. Both measure momentum. Both oscillate between 0 and 100. But they measure different things โ making them powerful when used together.
Developed by George Lane in the 1950s โ the Stochastic Oscillator compares the closing price to the price range over a given period.
The core idea:
In an uptrend โ price tends to close near the HIGH of its recent range.
In a downtrend โ price tends to close near the LOW of its recent range.
When price starts closing away from the extreme โ momentum is shifting.
Formula simplified:
%K = (Current Close – Lowest Low) รท (Highest High – Lowest Low) ร 100
This gives a reading of where the current close sits within the recent price range.
%K line โ fast line
The main stochastic line.
Shows current position within recent range.
Reacts quickly to price changes.
%D line โ slow line
A 3-period moving average of %K.
Smoother and slower.
Used to generate crossover signals.
Both lines oscillate between 0 and 100.
Above 80 โ Overbought:
Price closing near top of recent range consistently.
Bullish momentum strong โ but may be exhausting.
Potential reversal or pullback signal.
Below 20 โ Oversold:
Price closing near bottom of recent range consistently.
Bearish momentum strong โ but may be exhausting.
Potential reversal or bounce signal.
Between 20 and 80 โ Neutral:
Normal momentum conditions.
Same rule as RSI โ overbought and oversold are warnings, not automatic signals. Price can remain in extreme zones during strong trends.
Bullish crossover:
%K crosses ABOVE %D while both are below 20.
Momentum turning upward from oversold territory.
Strong buy signal.
Bearish crossover:
%K crosses BELOW %D while both are above 80.
Momentum turning downward from overbought territory.
Strong sell signal.
Key rule:
Crossovers are most reliable when they occur in extreme zones โ below 20 or above 80.
Crossovers in the middle zone โ between 20 and 80 โ are much less reliable.
Like RSI and MACD โ divergence between price and stochastic is a powerful signal.
Bullish Divergence:
Price makes lower low.
Stochastic makes higher low.
Momentum improving despite falling price. Reversal likely.
Bearish Divergence:
Price makes higher high.
Stochastic makes lower high.
Momentum fading despite rising price. Reversal likely.
Default: 14, 3, 3
14 period lookback. %K smoothed 3 periods. %D is 3 period MA.
Standard settings โ start here.
Fast Stochastic: 5, 3, 3
More responsive. More signals. More noise.
Used by very short term traders.
Slow Stochastic: 21, 7, 7
Less responsive. Fewer signals. More reliable.
Better for daily and weekly charts.
Both measure momentum โ but differently:
| Feature | RSI | Stochastic |
|---|---|---|
| Measures | Speed of price change | Close vs recent range |
| Sensitivity | Less sensitive | More sensitive |
| False signals | Fewer | More |
| Best in | Trending markets | Ranging markets |
| Overbought | Above 70 | Above 80 |
| Oversold | Below 30 | Below 20 |
Using both together:
When RSI AND Stochastic are both oversold โ much stronger signal than either alone.
When both show bullish crossover simultaneously โ high conviction buy signal.
High probability buy setup:
High probability sell setup:
This four-factor confluence setup is one of the highest probability trading setups available to retail traders.
In the next topic we will study RSI divergence in detail โ expanding on the most powerful use of momentum indicators.