MACD explained: Moving Average Convergence Divergence
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By Ken Chigbo, Founder, KenMacro. Published 2026-05-12.
Quick answer
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) is a momentum and trend-following indicator developed by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s. The standard MACD plots the difference between a 12-period and 26-period exponential moving average, with a 9-period signal line. Crossovers above zero and signal-line crosses are conventional trading signals. MACD is built into every charting platform.
Quick answer
MACD (Moving Average Convergence Divergence) is a momentum and trend-following indicator developed by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s. The standard MACD plots the difference between a 12-period and 26-period exponential moving average, with a 9-period signal line. Crossovers above zero and signal-line crosses are conventional trading signals. MACD is built into every charting platform.
What is MACD?
MACD is a momentum and trend indicator that plots the difference between two exponential moving averages of price. The standard settings, developed by Gerald Appel, are 12-26-9: a 12-period EMA minus a 26-period EMA equals the MACD line, with a 9-period EMA of the MACD line as the signal line. A histogram plots the difference between the MACD and signal lines, oscillating around zero. MACD is computed on closing prices and is built into every major charting platform. The indicator works on any timeframe but is most often run on daily and 4-hour charts for swing and position trading.
How traders use MACD
Traders use MACD for three primary signals. First, MACD line crossing above the signal line signals upside momentum; crossing below signals downside momentum. Second, MACD crossing above zero signals the 12-EMA has crossed above the 26-EMA, a medium-term trend indicator. Third, MACD divergence (price making a new high while MACD does not, or vice versa) signals weakening momentum and possible reversal. The desk treats MACD as context, not a primary signal generator. The standard MACD settings (12-26-9) lag price by design; faster settings (5-13-5 or similar) reduce lag but generate more noise. MACD is best used at structural confluence (named level plus MACD signal) rather than mechanical crossover.
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Common misconceptions about MACD
The first misconception is that MACD crossovers are a reliable standalone trading signal. Backtests on standard 12-26-9 MACD crossovers show modest results at best, with high false-signal rates in ranging markets. The second is that MACD divergence always precedes reversal. Divergence can persist for many bars before price actually turns, particularly in strong trends. The third is that MACD works the same on all timeframes. MACD on a 1-minute chart is noise; on the daily and weekly chart it carries more signal. As with most momentum indicators, MACD works best as context within a structural framework.
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Frequently asked
What are the default MACD settings?
The default MACD settings are 12-26-9: a 12-period exponential moving average minus a 26-period exponential moving average equals the MACD line, with a 9-period exponential moving average of the MACD line as the signal line. These settings were specified by Gerald Appel in the late 1970s and remain the standard across every charting platform.
What does MACD divergence mean?
MACD divergence occurs when price makes a new high while MACD does not (bearish divergence) or price makes a new low while MACD does not (bullish divergence). Divergence signals weakening momentum and possible reversal. Divergence can persist for many bars before price actually turns, particularly in strong trends, so it is a context signal not a precise timing signal.
Is MACD better than RSI?
MACD and RSI measure different aspects of price action. MACD is a trend-and-momentum indicator using moving averages. RSI is a pure momentum oscillator using gain-loss ratios. Neither is universally better. Both are most effective as context within a structural framework, with named levels and macro context as the primary signal anchors.
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