Momentum Indicator MOM
The simplest momentum measure — today's price minus the price N bars ago.
Quick answer: The Momentum indicator measures the rate of price change by subtracting the price N periods ago from the current price, oscillating around a zero line to show whether momentum is positive or negative.
In simple words
Momentum is the most basic way to measure speed: take today's close and subtract the close from, say, 10 bars ago. If price is higher than it was 10 bars back, momentum is positive and rising; if lower, negative. The further from zero, the stronger the move. It is raw and unsmoothed, so it reacts fast but is noisy — the conceptual parent of ROC, RSI and most other momentum tools.
Momentum Indicator — visual
How Momentum Indicator looks on a chart
Momentum plots current price minus the price N bars ago, oscillating around zero. Above zero is upward momentum, below zero downward; distance from zero shows strength.
Professional explanation
The purest momentum
Momentum = Close − Close(N bars ago). That is the whole idea: is price higher or lower than it was N bars back, and by how much? A rising momentum line means the up-move is accelerating; a falling but still-positive line means price is rising but decelerating. This deceleration is often the first warning of a turn.
Zero-line crosses and divergence
A cross above zero means price has overtaken its level of N bars ago — bullish; a cross below is bearish. Because momentum peaks before price when a trend tires, momentum divergence (price higher high, momentum lower high) is a classic early reversal signal.
Why traders prefer its refinements
Raw momentum's scale depends on the instrument's price and is noisy, so most traders use its normalised cousins — ROC (percentage form) or RSI (bounded form). But understanding raw momentum clarifies what all of them are really doing: measuring the change of price over a look-back window.
Formula
Momentum Indicator formula
Momentum = Close − Close₍ₙ ago₎
Some platforms plot it as a ratio (Close / Close N ago × 100) instead. Default N is 10 or 14.
- Close — Current closing price
- Close₍ₙ ago₎ — Closing price N periods ago
- N — Look-back period, default 10 or 14
How it is calculated
- Choose a look-back N (default 10 or 14).
- Subtract the close N bars ago from the current close.
- Plot the result around a zero line (or as a ratio around 100).
- Read above zero as positive momentum, below as negative, and watch for divergence.
Interpretation & signals
Traders watch the zero-line crosses for momentum direction, the distance from zero for strength, and divergence against price for early reversal warnings.
Buy / bullish signals
- Momentum crosses above zero.
- Momentum turns up from below zero while price holds support.
- Bullish divergence against price.
Sell / bearish signals
- Momentum crosses below zero.
- Momentum turns down from above zero.
- Bearish divergence against price.
False signals to beware
- Noisy zero-line crosses in ranges.
- Scale varies with price, so 'strong' is instrument-dependent.
- Whipsaws without smoothing.
Settings, timeframe & conditions
Advantages & limitations
Advantages
- Simplest possible momentum measure.
- Reacts fast.
- Divergence gives early warnings.
- Foundation for understanding all momentum tools.
Limitations & disadvantages
- Unbounded and price-dependent scale.
- Noisy without smoothing.
- No fixed overbought/oversold levels.
- Superseded by ROC/RSI for most uses.
Combining Momentum Indicator with other indicators
- Exponential Moving Average — A moving average of the momentum line smooths it and aligns crosses with the trend.
- Relative Strength Index — RSI is a bounded refinement of momentum; using the raw line for divergence and RSI for levels combines both.
Practical examples (Nifty & Bank Nifty)
NIFTY example
As Nifty grinds higher, the momentum line stays above zero but its peaks get progressively lower even as price makes new highs — momentum divergence. That fading of raw momentum warns that the trend is decelerating well before price rolls over, giving an alert to tighten stops.
BANKNIFTY example
Bank Nifty gaps down and the momentum line plunges below zero, confirming strong downward momentum. When it later crosses back above zero as price reclaims the prior close-of-N-bars-ago level, it signals the down-move has, at least for now, been overcome.
Common mistakes
- Comparing raw momentum values across instruments.
- Trading zero crosses in a range.
- Ignoring smoothing and drowning in noise.
- Expecting fixed overbought/oversold levels that do not exist.
Professional usage
Professionals rarely trade raw momentum alone; they use it to understand and to spot divergence, and prefer its normalised forms (ROC, RSI) for signals. Where raw momentum is used, it is smoothed and combined with trend context, and the zero line frames the directional bias.
Key takeaway
Momentum is the simplest speed gauge: price now minus price N bars ago. Above zero and rising means accelerating strength; a fading line into new highs warns of a turn. Most traders use its refined cousins ROC and RSI, but the idea is the same.
Frequently asked questions
What is the Momentum indicator?
What is the difference between Momentum and ROC?
What are good Momentum settings?
Is Momentum leading or lagging?
What does Momentum above zero mean?
How is Momentum used for divergence?
Voice search & related questions
Natural-language questions people ask about Momentum Indicator.
What is momentum in trading?
Is momentum a good indicator?
Sources & references
Last reviewed 8 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.