BreadthMarket-breadth volume ratio indicatorTRIN

TRIN (Arms Index) TRIN

The ratio that compares advancing/declining stocks to advancing/declining volume — breadth with volume built in.

Quick answer: TRIN, or the Arms Index, is a breadth indicator that divides the advance/decline ratio by the advancing/declining volume ratio, measuring whether volume is flowing into rising or falling stocks, with readings above 1 bearish and below 1 bullish.

In simple words

TRIN (short for TRading INdex) adds volume to breadth. It asks whether the volume is going into the stocks that are rising or the ones that are falling. It takes the ratio of advancing to declining stocks and divides it by the ratio of advancing to declining volume. A TRIN below 1 means volume is concentrated in advancing stocks — bullish; above 1 means volume is pouring into decliners — bearish. It is inverted, so low is strong and high is weak, which trips up beginners. Very high spikes often mark panic-selling washouts and potential bottoms. For Indian markets it uses NSE advancers, decliners and their traded volumes.

TRIN (Arms Index) — visual

How TRIN (Arms Index) looks on a chart

TRIN divides the advance/decline ratio by the up/down volume ratio. Below 1 is bullish (volume favours advancers), above 1 bearish (volume favours decliners); extreme high spikes often mark selling climaxes.

1.0 neutral1.61TRIN (Arms)Time (illustrative bars →)
Category
Market Breadth Indicators
Type
Market-breadth volume ratio indicator
Created by
Richard Arms (1967)
Best timeframe
Intraday for live tone; daily for climax and washout signals

Professional explanation

Breadth plus volume in one ratio

The A/D Line counts stocks; TRIN weighs them by volume. It compares two ratios: how many stocks are up versus down, and how much volume is in up stocks versus down stocks. If advancers also carry most of the volume, the two ratios roughly match and TRIN sits near 1. If a lot of stocks are up but the volume is actually piling into the few decliners, TRIN rises above 1 — a warning that the advance lacks conviction. So TRIN reveals whether participation and volume agree.

The inverted scale

TRIN's most confusing feature is that it is inverted: a low reading is bullish and a high reading is bearish. A TRIN under 1 means volume favours rising stocks (strength); over 1 means volume favours falling stocks (weakness). Readings near 1 are neutral. Because of the inversion, a falling TRIN accompanies a rising market and vice versa. Getting this backwards is the single most common TRIN mistake.

Extremes as climax signals

TRIN's most valued use is spotting climaxes. A very high spike — say above 2 or 3 — means volume is gushing into declining stocks in a panic, which often marks a selling climax and a short-term bottom, a contrarian buy signal. A very low reading (well below 0.5) can signal an overheated, overbought buying climax. Because these extremes reflect emotional, capitulatory flow, they are watched as mean-reversion cues rather than trend signals.

Intraday and Indian usage

TRIN is popular intraday because it updates continuously as volume accumulates. In India it is computed from NSE advancers, decliners and their traded volumes, which most terminals display live during the session. Because Indian volume data and the counted universe can be noisier than in older US markets, TRIN is best read for extremes and intraday tone rather than precise levels, and smoothed or averaged versions reduce its inherent jumpiness.

Formula

TRIN (Arms Index) formula

TRIN = (Advancing stocks / Declining stocks) / (Advancing volume / Declining volume)

Computed over a chosen universe (for India, NSE advancers/decliners and their volumes). A value of 1 is neutral; below 1 is bullish, above 1 bearish. It is often smoothed to reduce noise.

  • Advancing stocks / Declining stocks — The advance/decline ratio — how many stocks are up versus down
  • Advancing volume / Declining volume — The up/down volume ratio — how much volume is in rising versus falling stocks
  • TRIN — The advance/decline ratio divided by the up/down volume ratio (inverted scale)
  • Neutral level — TRIN = 1, where the two ratios match; below 1 bullish, above 1 bearish

How it is calculated

  1. Count advancing and declining stocks over the universe (for India, the NSE tape) and compute the advance/decline ratio.
  2. Sum the volume in advancing stocks and in declining stocks and compute the up/down volume ratio.
  3. Divide the advance/decline ratio by the up/down volume ratio to get TRIN.
  4. Read below 1 as bullish (volume favours advancers) and above 1 as bearish (volume favours decliners).
  5. Watch extremes: very high spikes flag selling climaxes and potential bottoms; very low readings flag buying climaxes.

Interpretation & signals

Traders read TRIN on its inverted scale: below 1 volume favours advancers (bullish), above 1 it favours decliners (bearish), and near 1 is neutral. Extreme high spikes often mark panic-selling washouts and short-term bottoms, while very low readings warn of an overbought buying climax.

Buy / bullish signals

  • A very high TRIN spike (above ~2–3) signals a selling climax — a contrarian short-term buy as panic peaks.
  • TRIN falls below 1 and stays there, confirming volume is flowing into advancing stocks.
  • TRIN turns down from an extreme high as decliner volume dries up, hinting a bottom is forming.
  • TRIN holds well below 1 through a rally, confirming broad, volume-backed strength.

Sell / bearish signals

  • TRIN rises above 1 while the index is still climbing, warning volume is quietly favouring decliners.
  • A very low TRIN (well below 0.5) signals a buying climax — an overbought, exhaustion warning.
  • TRIN turns up from a low reading as advancer volume fades, hinting the up-move is tiring.
  • TRIN stays persistently above 1 through a decline, confirming volume-backed weakness.

False signals to beware

  • TRIN is jumpy and noisy — single-print spikes without follow-through mislead if unsmoothed.
  • In thin or holiday sessions, low volume distorts the ratio badly.
  • Reading the inverted scale backwards turns every signal upside down.

Settings, timeframe & conditions

Best settings
Raw TRIN for extremes; a short moving average (e.g. 5–10 period) to smooth the noise
Avoid
Reading the inverted scale backwards — treating high TRIN as bullish
Works best in
Emotional, high-volume climaxes and washouts
Struggles in
Thin, low-volume sessions where the volume ratio is unreliable

Advantages & limitations

Advantages

  • Combines breadth and volume in a single, intuitive ratio.
  • Extreme spikes are among the better contrarian climax and washout signals.
  • Updates live intraday as volume accumulates, giving real-time market tone.
  • Reveals when volume disagrees with the stock count, exposing weak advances.

Limitations & disadvantages

  • The inverted scale confuses beginners — low is bullish, high is bearish.
  • Very noisy and jumpy without smoothing.
  • Highly sensitive to unreliable volume in thin sessions.
  • Depends on accurate advancing/declining volume data, which is noisier in India.

Combining TRIN (Arms Index) with other indicators

  • Advance/Decline Line — The A/D Line counts stocks while TRIN weighs them by volume; a broad A/D Line rise confirmed by a low TRIN is a volume-backed advance, not just a wide one.
  • McClellan Oscillator — A McClellan breadth extreme confirmed by a TRIN climax spike is a far stronger overbought/oversold breadth signal than either alone.
  • Volume Weighted Average Price — VWAP frames intraday volume-weighted price while TRIN frames intraday volume-weighted breadth — together they read the session's real conviction.

Practical examples (Nifty & Bank Nifty)

NIFTY example

The Nifty 50 gaps down and sells off hard, and TRIN computed on the NSE tape spikes to 3.5 as huge volume floods into declining stocks — a panic reading. Rather than chasing the fall, a contrarian trader treats that extreme high TRIN as a selling-climax signal: when it starts falling back toward 1 as decliner volume dries up, it hints the washout is exhausting and a short-term bottom in the Nifty may be forming.

BANKNIFTY example

Bank Nifty leads an intraday rally and the Nifty edges higher, but TRIN on the NSE quietly climbs above 1.3 — meaning volume is actually concentrating in the declining stocks even as the headline indices rise. That hidden volume weakness, with financials doing the lifting on thin breadth, warns that the advance lacks broad volume conviction; a trader reads the rising TRIN as a caution flag beneath a superficially strong Bank Nifty tape.

Common mistakes

  • Reading the inverted scale backwards — thinking a high TRIN is bullish.
  • Acting on single jumpy prints instead of smoothed or confirmed readings.
  • Trusting TRIN in thin sessions where the volume ratio is distorted.
  • Using precise TRIN levels rigidly instead of focusing on extremes and direction.

Professional usage

Professionals use TRIN mainly to read volume-weighted breadth and to spot climaxes. Intraday they watch it for the market's real tone — whether volume genuinely supports a move — and they treat extreme high spikes as selling-climax, washout signals and very low readings as buying-climax warnings, both as contrarian mean-reversion cues. Because it is noisy, they smooth it and focus on extremes and direction rather than precise levels, and in Indian markets they read it from the NSE advancer/decliner volume with an eye on the reliability of that data.

Key takeaway

TRIN, the Arms Index, folds volume into breadth: it compares the advance/decline ratio to the up/down volume ratio, and on its inverted scale below 1 is bullish, above 1 bearish. Its best signals are extremes — high spikes marking panic washouts and potential bottoms, very low readings marking buying climaxes. Remember the inversion, smooth the noise, and in India read it off the NSE volume.

Frequently asked questions

What is TRIN (the Arms Index)?
TRIN, or the Arms Index, is a market-breadth indicator created by Richard Arms in 1967 that divides the advance/decline ratio by the advancing/declining volume ratio. It measures whether volume is flowing into rising or falling stocks, with readings below 1 bullish and above 1 bearish.
How is TRIN calculated?
You divide the advance/decline ratio (advancing stocks divided by declining stocks) by the up/down volume ratio (volume in advancing stocks divided by volume in declining stocks). A result of 1 is neutral, below 1 is bullish, and above 1 is bearish.
Why is TRIN inverted?
TRIN is inverted because a low reading is bullish and a high reading is bearish. When volume concentrates in advancing stocks the denominator grows and TRIN falls below 1; when volume floods into decliners TRIN rises above 1. Reading the scale backwards is the most common TRIN mistake.
What does a high TRIN mean?
A high TRIN means volume is pouring into declining stocks — a bearish, weak condition. But a very high spike, above roughly 2 to 3, often marks a selling climax or panic washout, which contrarian traders read as a potential short-term bottom.
What does a low TRIN mean?
A low TRIN, below 1, means volume favours advancing stocks — a bullish condition. A very low reading, well under 0.5, can signal a buying climax, an overbought and overheated state that warns of exhaustion.
What does TRIN equal to 1 mean?
A TRIN of 1 is neutral: the advance/decline ratio and the up/down volume ratio match, so volume is distributed in line with the number of advancing and declining stocks. There is no breadth bias in either direction.
How do you use TRIN for climax signals?
You watch for extremes. A very high TRIN spike shows panic volume into decliners and often marks a selling climax and short-term bottom; a very low TRIN shows an overheated buying climax. Both are treated as contrarian mean-reversion cues rather than trend signals.
Is TRIN a leading or lagging indicator?
TRIN is largely a coincident-to-leading breadth indicator, especially at extremes, where its climax readings can precede short-term reversals. However, it is noisy, so its signals are best confirmed and it is often smoothed to be usable.
Can TRIN be used for Indian markets?
Yes. TRIN is computed from NSE advancers, decliners and their traded volumes, which most Indian terminals show live. Because Indian volume data and the counted universe can be noisier than older US markets, TRIN is best read for extremes and intraday tone rather than precise levels.
How do you use TRIN intraday?
Intraday, TRIN updates continuously as volume accumulates, giving a live read on whether volume supports the move. Traders watch whether it sits below or above 1 to gauge real tone, and watch spikes for climaxes, usually smoothing it to cut the noise.
What is the difference between TRIN and the A/D Line?
The A/D Line simply counts advancing minus declining stocks cumulatively, while TRIN weighs breadth by volume, comparing the stock count to where the volume is flowing. TRIN therefore reveals whether volume confirms or contradicts the breadth of a move.
Why does TRIN spike so much?
TRIN is a ratio of ratios and is highly sensitive to sudden shifts in volume concentration, so it jumps sharply, especially intraday and in thin sessions. This is why it is usually smoothed and read for extremes and direction rather than exact values.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about TRIN (Arms Index).

What is TRIN in simple words?
TRIN checks whether the day's volume is going into the stocks that are rising or the ones that are falling. Below 1 means volume favours the winners, which is bullish; above 1 means it favours the losers, which is bearish.
Is a high TRIN good or bad?
A high TRIN is bearish because volume is flowing into falling stocks — the scale is inverted. But a very high spike often marks panic selling and can signal a short-term bottom, so extremes are read as contrarian.
Why is TRIN inverted?
Because of how the ratio is built, a low number means strength and a high number means weakness. When volume piles into rising stocks TRIN drops below 1; when it piles into falling stocks TRIN rises above 1.
How do I use TRIN for Nifty?
Compute it from the NSE advancers, decliners and their volumes. Below 1 tells you the day's volume favours rising stocks, and a big spike above 2 or 3 often flags a panic washout that can precede a bounce.
What is a good TRIN level?
Around 1 is neutral, below 1 is bullish and above 1 is bearish. There is no single good level — traders focus on whether it is under or over 1 and on extreme spikes that mark climaxes.

Sources & references

Last reviewed 8 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.

Educational content only — not investment advice. Indicator diagrams are illustrative, computed from a fixed synthetic price series. Trading involves substantial risk. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.