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I noticed that many traders miss one of the most powerful signals on crypto charts — hidden divergence. This thing works constantly, especially when the price consolidates before continuing to move in the direction of the main trend.
Divergence in general is when the price moves in one direction, but the indicator shows something else. It sounds strange, but it’s in this contradiction that the signal is hidden that the current trend may reverse or continue with renewed strength. There are two main types: classic divergence, which appears at the end of a long trend and warns of a reversal, and hidden divergence, which occurs during consolidation and says that the movement will continue.
Bullish divergence is when the price reaches a higher low, but the oscillator (for example, RSI or MACD) shows a lower low. This is a classic signal that the uptrend is not broken and is about to continue. I’ve seen this many times on Bitcoin hourly charts — the price consolidates, the indicator weakens, but then the price rockets 9-10% over a couple of days.
The bearish side is the mirror image: the price makes a lower high, but the indicator shows a higher high. This is a signal that the downtrend will continue. I remember an example with Ethereum in June 2021 — a hidden bearish divergence gave a clear signal, and two days later the price dropped 20%.
Now to practice. If you want to trade divergences, the first thing is to choose an indicator that you’re comfortable working with. I prefer MACD and RSI, but Stochastic also shows pretty well. The main thing — use one indicator; you don’t need to pile the chart with oscillators. Thicken the line on the chart so you can see it better.
Next, determine the direction of the main trend. If the trend is going up, look specifically for bullish divergence and ignore bearish signals — this will give you a much more reliable entry. On the contrary, if the trend is falling, watch for bearish patterns.
When you notice a pattern, don’t rush. Place the stop-loss slightly beyond the recent price extreme — give the position room to breathe; don’t try to catch normal market moves. If you’re trading on the hourly chart and your stop is 100 units, aim for at least 200 — double the distance. This basic rule works.
But there’s a catch. Divergences are easy to see in the past, but in real time emotions can play a cruel joke on you. The market is rising, you’re excited, and then you realize it was a bearish divergence. Keep your emotions away from trading. One more thing — if the divergence appears at the end of an already developed trend, the profit may be more modest, because most of the move has already happened.
On small altcoins, patterns work less reliably due to low liquidity and volatility. On Bitcoin and Ethereum, the signals are cleaner. Practice on those first, then look at the rest.
The main takeaway: hidden bullish divergence is not just a pattern — it’s an opportunity to catch trend continuation with a good risk-profit profile. The key is to filter signals by the direction of the main trend and not let emotions distort your analysis. The more practice you have, the easier it becomes to spot these moments on charts.