Death Cross

A death cross is a bearish technical trading indicator that occurs when the 50-day moving average falls below the 200-day moving average, indicating a big sell-off.

A death cross is formed when a slower moving average crosses the faster moving average in the upward direction. The most popular moving average used by day traders is the 50-day moving average and the 200-day moving average. The slower-moving average has to cross the faster-moving average from below for a death cross to be formed on the trading charts. Other examples of death crosses can be seen in 5-day and 15-day averages, however, longer periods are more reliable and provide stronger signals of an asset/stock/cryptocurrency.

It is important to identify the key stages of a death cross to lock the perfect time of getting out of the market before the bearish trend begins. There are three main stages of a death cross:
Notice how the graph was moving in a horizontal direction when the yellow line (signifying the 50-day moving average) was above the purple line (the 200-day moving average). When the 200-day moving average crosses the 50-day moving average from below, a death cross is formed and the price falls from that point, and later, recovers slightly when a golden cross is formed.

The death cross is usually formed when the price is falling, however, it is not a definitive indicator that the bull market has ended. There have been many instances when a death cross appeared, but the price only fell slightly, recovered, and then broke the previous all-time highs! This is also why financial analysts are divided when it comes to setting moving averages to identify a death cross. Some use the classic 200-day average and 50-day average, while others consider the crossover of the 100-day moving average over the 30-day moving average as a reliable indicator of a death cross and the start of a potential bearish trend.

Like every technical indicator, using the death cross alone is not a good strategy. Financial analysts advise using a variety of technical indicators to understand the price and volume activity from different angles before making a concrete decision to buy or sell an asset/stock/cryptocurrency. These technical indicators include, but are not limited to accumulation/distribution indicator, on-balance volume (OBV), relative strength index (RSI), moving average convergence divergence (MACD), and the stochastic oscillator.

Related News

Discussion about this glossary

Latest News

ADVERTISEMENT

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.