“You can’t predict the market with lines on a chart.”
This is a common criticism of technical analysis. And it’s true — no indicator predicts the future. But technical analysis is not about prediction. It’s about probability.
When enough traders watch the same level, their collective actions make that level matter. A support level holds because traders buy there. A resistance level breaks because traders pile in.
Here is what every beginner needs to know about technical analysis — explained for both crypto and forex markets.
Support and Resistance
Support is a price level where buying pressure is strong enough to stop a downtrend. Resistance is where selling pressure stops an uptrend.
How they form:
- Previous price reversals create memory
- Round numbers act as psychological levels ($50,000 BTC, 1.2000 EUR/USD)
- Traders place orders near these levels
What to watch:
- When support breaks, it often becomes resistance
- When resistance breaks, it often becomes support
- The more times a level is tested, the weaker it becomes
Trendlines
A trendline connects higher lows in an uptrend or lower highs in a downtrend. It gives you a visual guide for where the trend might continue or reverse.
Trend types:
- Uptrend — Higher highs and higher lows. Trendline connects the lows.
- Downtrend — Lower highs and lower lows. Trendline connects the highs.
- Sideways — Price moves in a range. Support and resistance are horizontal.
The steeper the trendline, the less reliable it is. A 45-degree angle can persist for months. A 75-degree angle usually breaks quickly.
Moving Averages
A moving average smooths price data to show the average price over a period. It filters out daily noise so you can see the trend.
Common periods:
- 20-period (short-term) — Follows price closely, shows short momentum
- 50-period (medium-term) — Trend direction for swing trades
- 200-period (long-term) — The “line in the sand” for the overall trend
How traders use them:
- Price above 200 MA = long-term uptrend
- 50 MA crossing above 200 MA = “golden cross” (bullish signal)
- 50 MA crossing below 200 MA = “death cross” (bearish signal)
Moving averages work in both forex and crypto. The same 200 MA that acts as support for Bitcoin also acts as support for EUR/USD.
Relative Strength Index (RSI)
RSI measures the speed and magnitude of recent price changes on a scale of 0 to 100.
- Above 70 — Overbought (price may reverse down)
- Below 30 — Oversold (price may reverse up)
The catch: In strong trends, RSI can stay overbought or oversold for weeks. A stock in a strong uptrend can have RSI at 80 and keep rising. RSI is most useful in sideways markets or as a warning sign, not a trigger.
Chart Patterns
Recognizable formations that signal what might happen next:
Reversal patterns:
- Head and shoulders — Three peaks, middle highest. Signals trend reversal.
- Double top / double bottom — Price tests a level twice and reverses.
- Rounding bottom — Gradual U-shaped reversal from downtrend to uptrend.
Continuation patterns:
- Flags and pennants — Small consolidations after sharp moves. Price usually continues in the same direction.
- Triangles — Converging trendlines. Ascending, descending, or symmetrical.
Volume and Its Role
Volume confirms price moves. A breakout with high volume is credible. A breakout with low volume often fails.
Volume in crypto vs forex:
- Crypto: On-chain volume is transparent. You can see real exchange flow.
- Forex: No centralized volume. Brokers show “tick volume” which estimates activity.
This is why technical analysis works slightly differently in each market. In forex, price action and support/resistance matter more. In crypto, you have the advantage of real volume data.
Timeframes Matter
A pattern on a 1-minute chart means almost nothing. The same pattern on a daily chart is significant.
General rule: The higher the timeframe, the more reliable the signal.
- Scalping (seconds to minutes): Mostly noise
- Day trading (minutes to hours): Some patterns work
- Swing trading (days to weeks): Reliable levels
- Position trading (weeks to months): Strongest signals
Beginners should focus on daily and 4-hour charts. Lower timeframes create the illusion of predictability but mostly show random movement.
Putting It Together
No single tool is enough. Here is how experienced traders combine them:
- Start with the trend — Is price above or below the 200 MA? That’s your bias.
- Find key levels — Where is support and resistance on the daily chart?
- Look for confirmation — Is RSI confirming the move or diverging?
- Check volume — Is the move backed by real activity?
- Time your entry — On lower timeframe, wait for a pullback to support in an uptrend.
Verdict
Technical analysis is not magic. It is a framework for making probabilistic decisions. Support and resistance levels matter because traders believe in them. Moving averages show trend direction. RSI warns of extreme conditions.
Learn these basics before touching any indicator. Fibonacci, Bollinger Bands, MACD, and Ichimoku are all variations of the same principles — trends, levels, and momentum.
Master the foundation first.
Related: How to Read a Trading Chart | Candlestick Patterns for Beginners | What Drives Crypto Prices? | Market Liquidity Explained
BitcoinTalk traders have debated technical analysis since 2010. The consensus: it works as a framework, fails as a prediction tool. Use levels and trends to plan trades, not to forecast the future.