CCI: Complete Indicator Deep Dive
What CCI Measures
CCI is a technical indicator that helps traders quantify a specific aspect of price action. Understanding what it actually measures — not just what color the line is — is essential.
How It's Calculated
The calculation involves price, time and a smoothing factor. While most platforms compute it automatically, understanding the formula helps you avoid misuse.
Default Settings vs Optimal Settings
- Default platform setting: as set by your platform.
- For forex traders, consider testing alternative parameters that better fit the volatility profile of the asset.
What It Reveals
- Trend strength — when the indicator persists in one direction.
- Momentum shifts — when the indicator changes direction or crosses zero.
- Divergences — when price and indicator move in opposite directions, signaling potential reversal.
How to Use It
- Confirmation, not prediction. CCI confirms what price is already telling you. Never trade CCI alone.
- Combine with structure. Use CCI signals at key support/resistance levels, not in the middle of nowhere.
- Look for confluence. A single CCI signal is weaker than CCI agreeing with another indicator and structure.
A+ Setup with CCI
- Higher-timeframe trend bullish.
- Pullback to key support.
- CCI bullish divergence on lower timeframe.
- Confirmation candle (engulfing or pin bar).
- Enter, stop below structure, target prior high.
Common Misuse
- Reading CCI as a binary signal. It's a probability, not a guarantee.
- Using too short a period in choppy markets — generates false signals.
- Ignoring trend context — CCI signals work best WITH the higher-timeframe trend.
Backtest Notes
Always backtest CCI settings on the specific asset and timeframe you trade. Settings that work on EUR/USD daily may fail on Vol 75 1m.
Pro Tip
Most professionals overlay CCI with a structural framework (price action + CCI) rather than using CCI as the primary signal source. The structure is the foundation, CCI is confirmation.
Indicators are lenses, not crystal balls. Use them to clarify, never to predict.
Lesson Discussion