LEARN BALANCED MOMENTUM IN 3 MINUTES
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In the previous lesson, we explained in detail how to use the RWI indicator to determine whether a price increase is a real trend or just random fluctuation. Today, we’ll go one step deeper into that topic: Price is rising—but is this rally actually “stable”?
- Sometimes prices rise very fast, but quickly fall back.
- Sometimes prices rise slowly, but continue climbing steadily.
Both scenarios look like uptrends, but their nature is completely different.
So here’s the question: How do we determine whether the “momentum” of a move is balanced?
That’s exactly what today’s topic—Balanced Momentum—is designed to answer.
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A Simple Definition
Balanced Momentum is a way to determine whether a price move—up or down—is stable and healthy.
Note: this is not just about direction, but about whether the momentum is balanced and sustainable.
You can think of it like this:
- Some price moves are “spikes”
- Some moves are “step-by-step climbs”
Balanced Momentum refers to the second type.
At its core, it comes down to one idea: A good trend is continuous and even.
What Does a Healthy Trend Look Like?
A healthy trend usually has these characteristics:
- Rallies and pullbacks alternate
- Each new rally makes a higher high
- Pullbacks do not break the overall structure
What Does Imbalanced Momentum Look Like?
In contrast, imbalanced momentum often looks like:
- A sharp spike upward
- Followed by continuous pullbacks or high volatility
These types of moves are much more likely to fail.
How to Identify Balanced Momentum
No complex formulas—just practical methods.
1. Observe the Rhythm of Moves
A healthy trend typically looks like this: Rise → small pullback → rise again
If this rhythm is stable, it’s likely balanced momentum.
But if you see: A sudden surge with almost no pullback
That’s imbalanced momentum, and it carries higher risk.
2. Watch the Highs
A simple way to judge trend health:
- If each new high is higher than the previous → momentum is stable
- If highs start decreasing → momentum is weakening
3. Evaluate Pullback Depth
One key feature of Balanced Momentum: Pullbacks should not be too deep
For example:
- Price rises 10%, pulls back 3% → healthy
- Price rises 10%, pulls back 9% → unstable
4. Look at Price Smoothness
Healthy trends tend to be smooth and orderly.
If you see:
- Large swings up and down
- Violent volatility
That usually means unstable sentiment—not Balanced Momentum.
Balanced Momentum vs Traditional Indicators
You might ask: how is this different from RSI or MACD?
Here’s the difference:
- RSI → measures overbought/oversold (has price gone too far?)
- MACD → identifies trend direction and turning points
- Balanced Momentum → evaluates whether a trend is healthy and sustainable
So instead of giving signals, it acts more like a filter.
Practical Uses of Balanced Momentum
- Filtering trades: When you see multiple opportunities, choose the ones with smooth, stable trends—and avoid overly volatile moves
- Position management: If you’re already in a trade:
-
Stable rhythm + shallow pullbacks → continue holding
-
Increasing volatility + deeper pullbacks → start being cautious
Advantages of Balanced Momentum
- Simple and intuitive: can be judged visually
- Improves win rate: filters out unstable setups
- Ideal for trend trading: especially swing and trend-following strategies
Limitations of Balanced Momentum
- Subjective: different traders may interpret differently
- Not suitable for short-term trading: short-term moves are naturally unstable
- Not standalone: works best with trend indicators, support/resistance, and volume
Conclusion
Many traders chase the fastest moves, but in reality, consistent profits often come from trends that are steady and sustainable, not explosive.
That’s the value of Balanced Momentum.
It won’t tell you when to enter—but it helps you answer one critical question: Is this trend worth participating in?
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