Negative Directional Indicator (-DI)
What it is
The Negative Directional Indicator (-DI) is a component of the Average Directional Index (ADX) system. It quantifies recent downward price movement. When -DI rises and sits above the Positive Directional Indicator (+DI), downward momentum is stronger than upward momentum.
Key points
- -DI is used together with +DI and ADX to identify trend direction and trend strength.
- A -DI above +DI suggests a prevailing downtrend; +DI above -DI suggests an uptrend.
- Crossovers between -DI and +DI are often used as trade signals: -DI crossing above +DI can signal a sell/short opportunity; the reverse can signal a buy.
- ADX (the third line in the system) measures trend strength—readings above ~20–25 typically indicate a meaningful trend.
How -DI is calculated (overview)
- Compute directional movements (for each period):
- Raw -DM = prior low − current low, if that value is positive and greater than raw +DM; otherwise set -DM = 0.
- Raw +DM = current high − prior high, if that value is positive and greater than raw -DM; otherwise set +DM = 0.
- Compute True Range (TR) for each period as the greatest of:
- current high − current low
- |current high − prior close|
- |current low − prior close|
- Smooth the series (Wilder’s smoothing, commonly with a 14-period lookback):
- First smoothed value = sum of the first 14 raw values.
- Subsequent smoothed value = prior smoothed − (prior smoothed / 14) + current raw value
Apply this smoothing separately to the -DM series and to TR (the smoothed TR is the ATR). - Compute -DI:
- -DI = (Smoothed -DM / Smoothed TR) × 100
Notes on smoothing: Wilder’s smoothing is an exponential-like moving average that preserves prior sums while adding the current period. Use the same period (commonly 14) for both -DM and TR.
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Interpretation and usage
- Direction: If -DI > +DI, downward movement is stronger; if +DI > -DI, upward movement is stronger.
- Crossovers: Traders often use -DI/+DI crossovers as entry/exit signals (e.g., sell when -DI crosses above +DI).
- Combine with ADX: Use ADX to filter signals—only act on DI crossovers when ADX indicates a sufficiently strong trend (commonly ADX > 20–25).
- Example strategy: Take long trades only when ADX > 20 and +DI > -DI; take short trades when ADX > 20 and -DI > +DI.
Differences from moving averages
- A moving average is an average of price levels over a period. -DI is based on directional movement (changes in lows) and the relationship to volatility (TR), not a direct price average.
- Consequently, -DI and moving averages provide different insights: -DI focuses on directional pressure, while moving averages smooth price levels.
Limitations and cautions
- -DI alone is limited; it indicates relative downward pressure but not trend strength (use ADX for strength).
- Frequent intersections between +DI and -DI can produce whipsaws—false signals that lead to losses.
- Best practice: confirm DI signals with other technical tools (volume, support/resistance, price patterns) and consider higher-timeframe context.
Quick checklist to calculate -DI
- Calculate raw -DM and raw +DM for each period (set to zero if conditions not met).
- Calculate TR for each period.
- Smooth raw -DM and TR using Wilder’s smoothing (commonly 14 periods).
- Compute -DI = (Smoothed -DM / Smoothed TR) × 100.
- Compare -DI to +DI and consult ADX for trend strength before trading.
Summary
-DI is a directional momentum tool that, when paired with +DI and ADX, helps determine whether downward or upward movement is dominant and whether a trend is strong enough to trade. Use smoothed -DM and ATR values (typically 14 periods) to compute -DI, and always confirm signals to reduce whipsaws.