Range-Bound to Mildly Trending Markets
| Strategy Type | RSI-Based Momentum and Mean Reversion Trading |
| Market Outlook | Range-Bound to Mildly Trending Markets |
| Risk Profile | Low to Moderate Risk with Defined Entry/Exit Levels |
| Reward Profile | 1.5:1 to 2:1 Risk-Reward on RSI Signals |
| Time Horizon | Intraday to Short-term Swing (1-7 days) |
| Capital Requirement | Medium (£2,000 - £20,000 for cash; lower for CFD/spread bet) |
| Margin Type | Full Payment for Cash; 20% margin (5:1 max retail leverage) for CFD/Spread Bet |
| Best Used When | Lloyds Banking Group oscillates between overbought and oversold conditions |
| Lse Applicability | Lloyds Banking Group is the UK's largest domestic retail bank and among the most heavily traded FTSE 100 shares, with excellent RSI trading characteristics |
| Fca Compliance | Standard FCA-regulated equity dealing rules apply; CFD and spread bet trading is subject to FCA retail product-intervention rules (leverage caps, negative balance protection, margin close-out) |
| Lot Sizes | 1,000 shares per contract (standard ICE Futures Europe individual equity option) • Flexible sizing - per-share for CFDs or per-point (pence) for spread bets; no fixed lot • No minimum lot size; whole shares (many brokers also allow fractional shares) |
| Trading Hours | 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM London time (GMT/BST) |
| Expiry Considerations | ICE Futures Europe equity options on Lloyds typically expire the third Friday of the month; there are no weekly single-stock options on UK names. Spread bets and CFDs roll continuously (daily-funded or quarterly contracts) so no hard expiry for short-term RSI trades |
| Tax Implications | Cash shares: 0.5% Stamp Duty/SDRT on purchase, plus Capital Gains Tax at 18% (basic rate) or 24% (higher/additional rate) on gains above the £3,000 annual exempt amount. CFDs: subject to CGT, no stamp duty. Spread bets: free of CGT and stamp duty (treated as gambling for tax). Gains inside a Stocks & Shares ISA are entirely tax-free |
| Liquidity Notes | Lloyds trades roughly 100-300 million shares daily (very high share count reflects its low pence-denominated price); excellent liquidity and tight bid-ask spreads support RSI-based entries and exits |
RSI (Relative Strength Index) measures the speed and magnitude of recent price changes on a scale of 0-100. It shows whether a stock is overbought (>70, risen too fast) or oversold (<30, fallen too fast). It helps identify potential reversal points.
Don't buy just because RSI reaches 30. Wait for RSI to cross ABOVE 30 from below. This confirms the selling is exhausting and buyers are returning. Buying while RSI is still falling is like catching a falling knife.
In strong uptrends, RSI can stay overbought (>70) for extended periods because buying momentum remains strong. This is why adding a trend filter helps - avoid selling overbought RSI in uptrends. RSI works best in range-bound markets.
Start with the standard RSI(14) with 30/70 overbought/oversold levels. This is the most widely used and tested setting. It provides a good balance of signals and reliability. Avoid changing settings until you have experience.
For oversold buy signals, place stop below the recent swing low (the low when RSI was at its minimum). For overbought sell signals, place stop above the recent swing high. Alternatively, use 2x ATR from entry price.
Divergence occurs when price and RSI move in opposite directions. Bullish divergence: price makes lower low but RSI makes higher low (potential bottom). It's important because it signals momentum weakening before price reverses, giving early warning.
Use 50 EMA as trend filter. Only take oversold buy signals when price is above 50 EMA (uptrend). Only take overbought sell signals when price is below 50 EMA (downtrend). This avoids counter-trend trades that often fail.
Use RSI(9) for intraday trading - it's faster with more signals. Use RSI(14) for swing trading (1-10 days) - it's the standard balanced setting. Use RSI(21) for position trading - fewer but more reliable signals.
Check weekly RSI for directional bias (above/below 50). Only take daily signals aligned with weekly direction. Weekly oversold + daily oversold = strongest buy. This multi-timeframe confirmation improves success rate significantly.
For oversold buys: bullish engulfing, hammer, morning star, or higher low. For overbought sells: bearish engulfing, shooting star, evening star, or lower high. Wait for these patterns before entering - improves win rate.
A-grade: 3+ divergence points, RSI in extreme zone, trendline break, volume confirmation. B-grade: 2 points with some confirmation. C-grade: 2 points, RSI not extreme, minimal confirmation. Trade A and B grades; be cautious with C grade.
When IV is low at oversold: Buy calls (benefit from IV expansion + directional move). When IV is high at oversold: Bull put spread (collect elevated premium with defined risk). Match option strategy to IV environment for best results.
Define precise rules: Entry (RSI cross + filters), exit (RSI target + stop + time), position sizing (risk-based). Backtest 5+ years, use 70% in-sample, 30% out-of-sample. Target: >55% win rate, >1.5 profit factor, <15% drawdown.
Allocate 20-30% of portfolio to RSI mean reversion. Within that, limit single stocks to 35% and banking sector to 50%. RSI complements trend following - they work in different conditions. Adjust allocation based on market regime.
Reduce when: ADX rises above 25 (trending market), multiple RSI signals failing, drawdown exceeds 10%, or market volatility spikes (ATR > 1.5x normal). Shift capital to trend following strategies in these conditions.
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