MACD Guide – Satdish Trading
MOMENTUM · TREND

MACD — Moving Average Convergence Divergence

Three components in one indicator. Master all three and you have one of the most complete momentum and trend tools available — free on TradingView.

PRICE Bullish Crossover MACD(12,26,9) 0 Zero Line Cross MACD Signal +Hist -Hist

What is MACD?

MACD is built from two exponential moving averages. It measures the relationship between them — specifically how far apart they are and whether that gap is growing or shrinking. This tells you about the strength and direction of momentum in the current trend.

It was created by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s and remains one of the most widely used indicators in trading because it works on any timeframe and any market.

MACD Line

The difference between the 12 EMA and the 26 EMA. When it’s above zero, the short-term average is above the long-term — bullish. Below zero = bearish.

Signal Line

A 9-period EMA of the MACD line itself. It acts as a trigger — crossovers between MACD and signal are the primary entry signals.

Histogram

The difference between the MACD line and signal line. Growing bars = momentum building. Shrinking bars = momentum fading. Often signals a move before the lines cross.

Ideal MACD Settings

The default 12/26/9 settings are the standard across all professional trading platforms. Don’t change them unless you have a specific reason — they’re the most watched levels in the market.

Inputs — Keep Defaults

Fast length: 12Short EMA period
Slow length: 26Long EMA period
Signal: 9Signal line smoothing
Source: CloseKeep default

Alternative settings: Some scalpers use 3/10/16 for faster signals on lower timeframes. For weekly swing trading try 5/35/5. But start with the defaults.

Style — What to Show

HistogramKeep — most important visual
MACD lineKeep — shows momentum
Signal lineKeep — crossover trigger
Zero lineKeep — key reference
4-colour histUPGRADEShows momentum direction

4-colour histogram: In the Style tab, set the histogram to use 4 colours — bright green (growing positive), dark green (shrinking positive), bright red (growing negative), dark red (shrinking negative). Lets you read momentum at a glance.

The Three Signals

✅ MACD / Signal Crossover

The most common signal. When the MACD line crosses above the signal line, it’s bullish. When it crosses below, it’s bearish.

Bullish: MACD crosses above signal → histogram turns green
Bearish: MACD crosses below signal → histogram turns red
⚠️ Produces false signals in ranging markets

✅ Zero Line Crossover

A stronger, more reliable signal. When the MACD line crosses above zero, the 12 EMA has crossed above the 26 EMA — a confirmed trend change.

Bullish: MACD crosses above zero → uptrend confirmed
Bearish: MACD crosses below zero → downtrend confirmed
✓ More reliable than signal line crossovers

📊 Histogram Momentum

Read the histogram bars as momentum, not direction. Growing bars mean momentum is building. Shrinking bars mean it’s fading — often before the lines even cross.

Early warning: If price makes a new high but histogram bars are shorter than the previous high, momentum is weakening — a divergence warning before the reversal happens.

⚠️ MACD Divergence

Price makes a new high/low but MACD doesn’t confirm it. One of the most powerful early reversal signals in technical analysis.

Bearish div: Price higher high, MACD lower high → momentum failing
Bullish div: Price lower low, MACD higher low → selling exhausted
Same logic as RSI divergence — always confirm with price

MACD is a lagging indicator. It’s built from moving averages of moving averages, so it reacts to price. In slow or ranging markets it produces false crossover signals constantly. It works best on trending markets with clear momentum — like NQ and BTC during trending phases.

Reading It Step by Step

1

Check which side of zero the MACD is on

Above zero = bullish regime. Below zero = bearish regime. Only take long signals when MACD is above zero, only take short signals when below. This single filter cuts out a large number of false signals.

2

Read the histogram first

Before looking at the lines, check the histogram. Are bars growing or shrinking? Shrinking bars while price is still moving in the same direction = momentum divergence — early warning that a reversal or pullback is coming.

3

Wait for MACD/Signal crossover for entry timing

Once you’ve confirmed the regime (step 1) and momentum direction (step 2), the MACD/signal crossover gives you the entry trigger. Don’t use crossovers alone — use them as precision entry timing within the broader context.

4

Use the zero cross as trend confirmation

If you entered on a signal line crossover below zero and MACD then crosses above zero — that’s the trend fully confirmed. You can trail your stop tighter and ride the move with more confidence.

MACD on NQ, ES & Crypto

🎯

Stack MACD + RSI + Fibonacci

MACD bullish crossover while RSI is at 50 midline bounce AND price is at the 61.8% GP zone = one of the highest confluence setups you can find. All three need to agree.

⏱️

Use MACD on 4H for NQ bias

On the 4H NQ chart, MACD above zero = look for longs only. MACD below zero = look for shorts only or stay out. This stops you fighting the prevailing momentum on intraday setups.

📊

Histogram is the tell

On Bitcoin, watch the weekly MACD histogram. When it’s green and growing, BTC is in a bull phase. When it peaks and starts shrinking — still green but smaller — that’s often the best time to tighten stops.

⚠️

Avoid MACD in ranging markets

NQ during low-volatility pre-market or lunch consolidation generates constant false MACD crossovers. Check ATR or Bollinger Band width first — if they’re tight, sit on your hands.

🔄

Zero line rejections

When MACD rallies toward zero from below but fails to cross and rolls back over, that’s a zero line rejection — a bearish signal. Same in reverse for bullish zero rejections from above.

📈

MACD as a trend filter on higher TF

Use daily MACD as a pure trend filter — not for entries. Daily MACD above zero = only long on the 15min. This multi-timeframe alignment dramatically improves win rate on futures.

🧠
Trading Psychology

Getting the setup right is only half the equation

The other half is what’s happening in your head when you’re in the trade. Fear, ego, revenge trading, breaking your own stops — that’s where most accounts actually lose money. Not bad setups.

Read the Trading Psychology Guide →