Moving averages, SMA & EMA
Moving Averages, SMA & EMA
Moving averages is a line that smooths out the price and can help
gaguegauge the general market direction
Moving averages are best used as a point of
confluenceconfluency and not as a single decision point (does the MA hit a zag zone or point of heavy resistance?)
The 50, 100 & 200 SMA can act as a support and resistance
SMA vs EMA
| SMA (Simple Moving Average) | EMA (Exponential Moving Average) |
|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| Best for |
Best for short-term trends |
| Slower, smoother — eliminates most fake-outs | Faster, more reactive — more prone to fake-outs |
| More lagging | Less lagging |
| Less volatile markets, stocks, swing/position trading | Volatile markets, crypto, day trading/scalping |
Why SMA for long-term? Dow Theory says ignore the noise of smaller timeframes — the primary trend is what matters. SMA's slower response suits that. EMA's faster reaction is better for volatile shorter timeframes where you need quicker signals.
Common lengths: 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 — can be applied to any timeframe.
How to Add in TradingView
Indicators → search "Moving Average Simple" or "Moving Average Exponential" → add. Double-click the line to change length and colour. Pro tip: In settings → Calculation → change timeframe from "Chart" to a fixed timeframe (e.g. "1 Month") so the MA stays consistent when you switch chart timeframes.
MA Strategies
Price Crossovers
When price crosses ABOVE the MA = bullish (like breaking through resistance). When it crosses BELOW = bearish (like breaking support). While above = uptrend. While below = downtrend.
Golden crossCross / Death cross
Cross
Not a great single strategy as moving averages are a lagging indicator
- Golden Cross: Buy when the 50 SMA crosses above the 200 SMA — indicates trend shifting up
- Death Cross: Sell when the 50 SMA crosses below the 200 SMA — indicates trend shifting down
Works well in trending markets, terrible in sideways markets. S&P 500 historical data: golden crosses at trend starts (1980, 2013) gave decade-long bull runs. But a golden cross in 2007 bought the top of the GFC. Death crosses on the S&P 500 have actually marked BOTTOMS more often than tops (because by the time the lagging indicator signals, the bear market is already over).
Combine with market structure — a golden cross during a confirmed HH/HL uptrend = confluency. A golden cross during EH/EL sideways = unreliable.
Buying on hitsHits / Trend Identifier
- In a trending market,
usingthe200d200 SMA can be used as abuy thebuy-the-dip /sell thesell-the-hit opportunity - When all MAs (20, 50, 100, 200) are pointing in the same direction = strong healthy trend. When they're crossing over each other and going "all over the shop" = correction or sideways market
General MA information
Information
- Divergence between MA lines can help
gaguegauge the strength of a trend and how far "extended" it is — if the 20 is far from the 50, price has probably run too far too fast - The angle of
theascent or descentofhelpsthe lines can help gaguegauge howfar over extendedoverextended a moveisis. Ideally 45° or less for a sustainable trend. Steep angles tend to correct back (mean reversion) - Big money believe anything below the 200d is bad news and not worth touching, anything above is safe
- Mean reversion: When price gets too far from the MA, it tends to pull back toward it. This is especially visible on monthly charts where the 50 or 100 month MA has acted as a floor for decades on the S&P 500
How ASX Trader Uses Moving Averages
MAs are purely a confluency tool — just another data point, another river meeting the zone where buyers/sellers should step in. Not a standalone strategy.
Example process: Looking at a potential buy zone → check Fib retracement (Fib 500?) → check RSI divergence (bullish?) → check if a key MA is also at that same zone (100 SMA?) → if all three align at the same price area, that's three independent reasons to expect support. Add it to your trade plan checklist as another tick.
On the trade plan: "Also had the 100 SMA at the buy zone" — it's just one more piece of evidence for the judge.