Trading Pro Q&A: What do you think is the worst indicator?
Is there such a thing as a "bad" trading indicator? We asked three market professionals to share the indicator they consider the worst—and, more importantly, the mistakes traders make when relying on indicators without context.
Technical indicators are among the most widely used tools in trading. They can help traders identify trends, measure momentum, and spot potential opportunities. But indicators are not magic formulas, and even the most popular ones have limitations.
One of the biggest mistakes traders make is treating indicators as standalone decision-making tools rather than using them as part of a broader trading framework. Whether it's relying on lagging signals, misunderstanding how an indicator works, or overcrowding charts with conflicting data, poor indicator use can lead to costly mistakes.
We asked three trading professionals a simple question: What do you think is the worst indicator and why? Their answers reveal a common theme—it's often not the indicator itself that's the problem, but how traders use it.
What do you think is the worst indicator and why?

Michael Stark
Financial content lead
Of the reasonably popular technical indicators, I pick the zig-zag as the worst. I don’t see when it’s useful: it’s easy for me to find (possible) trends, phases of trends, and support and resistance with just the chart, and no indicators. The zig-zag also lags more than many other popular indicators.
Insight for traders:
I believe almost any indicator has some situational use, but the worst indicators are those with extremely rare situational uses. Test to find what works for your approach.

Antreas Themistokleous
Exness trading specialist
The worst indicator is any indicator used in isolation, but if I had to pick one, I’d go with the moving average crossover. By the time it confirms the move, most of the opportunity is often gone. Without context, structure, or risk management, it reacts instead of predicts.
Insight for traders:
The worst indicator is the one you trust blindly. Traders who rely solely on indicator signals often react too late. Context and execution matter more.

Quoc Dat Tong
Senior financial market strategist
Honestly? The worst indicator is whichever one you don't actually understand. Most aren't broken; people just slap five on a chart, all saying the same thing, and call it confluence. That's not analysis. That's noise with extra steps.
Insight for traders:
Pick fewer tools. Know what each one measures, when it fails, and which market it's built for. Mastery beats a crowded chart.
Key takeaways
- There is no universally "bad" indicator, but some tools may offer limited value depending on your trading style.
- The zig-zag indicator can be viewed as overly lagging and unnecessary for traders who can identify trends directly from price action.
- Moving average crossovers often provide confirmation after much of the move has already occurred.
- Indicators used without context, market structure, or risk management can lead to poor trading decisions.
- Many traders create confusion by using multiple indicators that measure similar market conditions.
- Understanding how an indicator works is often more important than which indicator you choose.
- Simplicity and mastery of a few well-understood tools generally outperform a chart overloaded with indicators.
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