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What is a Bullish Divergence? Why is it important to traders?
Do You Know Divergence?
If you notice the price keeps dropping but the indicator isn’t following suit, that’s Divergence. This signal indicates that the current trend may reverse soon.
Simply put, Divergence is a contradiction between the price movement and a technical indicator. These two are not moving in the same direction, which serves as a warning that the current trend is weakening.
What is Bullish Divergence and When to See It
Bullish divergence is a signal that appears when the price has made at least two lower lows (Lower Low), but the indicator shows a bullish or non-declining trend. It suggests that selling pressure is waning and the price is likely to bounce back up.
When does Bullish Divergence occur?
Imagine:
This signal can occur during the day or over several hours, making it useful for all types of traders.
Regular Divergence vs Hidden Divergence - Two Different Signals
Traders often confuse Regular divergence with Hidden divergence, which differ as follows:
Regular Divergence - Reversal Signal
Regular divergence indicates that the current trend is losing strength and may change direction, such as:
Regular divergence is a key signal traders look for to predict trend reversals.
Hidden Divergence - Trend Continues
Hidden divergence means the current trend is not over yet, and the price will continue in the same direction, for example:
Hidden divergence is useful for confirming trend continuation and entering positions in the same direction as the existing trend.
Which Indicators Are Used to Detect Divergence
1. MACD - Most Popular
MACD compares the 12- and 26-day moving averages. If MACD is positive and rising, it indicates a strong uptrend. If the price makes a new high but MACD stops rising = bullish divergence occurs.
2. RSI - Overbought/Oversold Conditions
RSI measures from 0-100. RSI above 70 indicates overbought, below 30 indicates oversold. When the price makes a new low but RSI does not = bullish divergence = price is likely to bounce.
3. Williams %R - Scaled 0-100
Williams %R works similarly to RSI for overbought and oversold signals. If Williams %R is above -20 = overbought, below -80 = oversold.
How to Properly Trade Bullish Divergence Signals
Step 1: Find Price Patterns for Bullish Divergence
Look for:
Step 2: Observe Indicators
If the price hits a new low but:
Step 3: Wait for Price Confirmation
Don’t rush into a trade. Divergence can occur multiple times before the price reverses. Wait until:
Step 4: Set Stop Loss and Take Profit
Real Examples of Bullish Divergence on Charts
Case 1: ETH last month
Ethereum price dropped from $2500 to $2000 (first low) → continued down to $1800 (second low) → another new low at $1600
Meanwhile, RSI at 15 dropped to extreme lows but did not make a new low and started to rise.
👉 Bullish divergence occurred → Traders who bought at $1650-$1700 made over $400 profit when the price rebounded to $2100.
Case 2: XRP
Ripple price continued to decline, and MACD reached its lowest point, but MACD did not make a new low compared to the previous one.
👉 Bullish divergence on MACD → Entered a buy and gained 15-20% profit in the following week.
Common Mistakes Traders Make When Using Bullish Divergence
❌ Mistake 1: Entering immediately upon seeing the signal
Don’t rush in without confirmation from the price breaking out. Divergence can be false. Wait for a strong candle close.
❌ Mistake 2: Using Divergence alone
Don’t rely solely on divergence. Check other signals like support/resistance levels or Fibonacci levels. Combining with support/resistance yields the best results.
❌ Mistake 3: Setting too wide a Stop Loss
Place stop loss too far from the current price, making it unprofitable. Keep it close enough to protect against normal fluctuations.
❌ Mistake 4: Ignoring the bigger trend
Bullish divergence on a 4-hour chart in a larger downtrend may fail. Always check higher timeframes first.
Be Smarter by Combining Multiple Indicators
Try combining 2-3 indicators:
If all three show bullish divergence simultaneously → reliability increases to nearly 80%.
Bullish Divergence Works on All Timeframes
Whether 15 minutes, 1 hour, 4 hours, or daily, bullish divergence can be used. But:
For beginners, start from 4-hour charts or higher for better accuracy.
Trade Smartly: Incorporate Bullish Divergence into Your System
Bullish divergence is a powerful tool but does not guarantee 100%. Always combine with:
Successful traders are not those who find perfect signals but those who stick to their plan and cut losses consistently.
Start practicing with a demo account, learn to identify Bullish divergence, and then move to real trading. Patience = Wealth.