MACD Bullish Crossover
IndicatorMACD line crosses above signal line, indicating bullish momentum shift and potential uptrend continuation or reversal.
Pattern Visualization
How to Identify
- MACD line crosses above signal line
- Histogram turns positive
- Preferably occurs below zero line
- Confirm with price action
Trading Tips
Enter when crossover confirmed with volume increase. Strongest signals occur below zero line. Wait for price confirmation before entry.
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) bullish crossover occurs when the MACD line crosses above the signal line, indicating a shift to bullish momentum. This is one of the most reliable momentum indicators used by professional traders.
When to Trade
The strongest bullish crossovers occur when:
- The crossover happens below the zero line (indicates trend reversal)
- Volume increases on the crossover
- Price is near support or breaking resistance
- Multiple timeframes show alignment
Key Characteristics
- Signal: MACD line crosses above signal line
- Histogram: Turns from negative to positive
- Best Location: Below zero line for reversals
- Confirmation: Price breaks above resistance or forms bullish pattern
Success Rate
With a 72% probability, MACD bullish crossovers are highly reliable momentum signals. Success rate increases significantly when combined with volume confirmation and support/resistance levels.
Common Mistakes
- False Signals: Trading crossovers during choppy, sideways markets
- Late Entry: Entering after strong move already occurred
- Ignoring Divergence: Missing hidden bearish divergence
- Wrong Timeframe: Using very short timeframes (more noise)
Best Practices
Enhance MACD crossover signals with:
- Volume Confirmation: Look for volume spike on crossover
- Price Action: Wait for bullish candlestick confirmation
- Trend Context: Best in established uptrends or at major support
- Multiple Timeframes: Confirm with higher timeframe trend
- Zero Line: Crossovers below zero are stronger reversal signals
MACD Settings
Standard settings: 12, 26, 9 (fast EMA, slow EMA, signal line). Some traders use 5, 35, 5 for faster signals or 19, 39, 9 for slower, more reliable signals.