TimelessMarket Theory
Educational only — not financial advice. The example is illustrative. Mean reversion fails badly in downtrends; always define risk and backtest yourself.
Strategy Playbook · Mean reversion

Connors RSI-2 Mean Reversion

Buy short-term oversold dips inside a confirmed uptrend, exit on the bounce.

Method from → Larry Connors · Concepts: RSI, Trends

TypeMean reversion
BiasLong (dips)
TimeframeDaily / swing
StyleSystematic

1 The Edge — why it works

Buy the dip — but only inside an uptrend

The 2-period RSI strategy buys short-term oversold extremes within a confirmed uptrend. A 2-period RSI is so fast it routinely spikes into single digits on a normal pullback — and in an uptrend, those pullbacks tend to bounce.

It fades the panic, never the trend. The 200-day moving average is the gate that keeps you on the right side.

2 Where it works — and doesn't

Mean reversion needs a trend to revert to

Works best when…

  • Liquid indices & large-caps in a clear uptrend (price > 200-day MA).
  • Orderly pullbacks, not news-driven collapses.
  • Markets with a mean-reverting character.

Fails / avoid when…

  • Downtrends — buying RSI(2) lows is catching a falling knife.
  • Strong gaps / earnings — the dip keeps going.
  • Runaway momentum that never pulls back.

3 Setup checklist

All true before you act

4 The process

Connors' rules, with risk added

1

Entry

On the close when RSI(2) < 5 and price is above the 200-day MA.

2

Stop (1R)

Connors' original uses an indicator exit, not a hard stop — but for risk control set a disaster stop (e.g., below the recent swing low or a fixed ATR multiple). Entry − stop = 1R.

3

Position size

Risk a small fixed % of the account; shares = risk ÷ 1R.

shares = (account × risk%) ÷ 1R
4

Exit & management

Exit when price closes above its 5-day moving average (the bounce has played out), or if price closes back below the 200-day MA.

5 Worked example (illustrative)

In R

Connors RSI-2 — buy oversold dips inside an uptrend price200-MA (uptrend) 90 10 RSI(2) Green dots: RSI(2) oversold while price is above its long moving average — the buy condition.
Green dots mark RSI(2) oversold readings while price is above its long moving average — the buy condition. The exit is a close back above the short (5-day) average.
Account / risk$25,000 · 1% = $250
Entry (RSI2 < 5, uptrend)$98.00
Disaster stop — 1R$94.00 · 1R = $4.00
Size = $250 ÷ $4.00≈ 62 shares
Exit (close > 5-day MA), +1.5R$104.00 · +$375
If stopped: −1R− $250

6 Honest expectancy

High hit-rate, fat-tail risk

Connors' published backtests show high win rates for RSI(2) on indices — but two honest caveats matter. First, the original rules have no hard stop, so a minority of trades become large losers when a dip doesn't bounce; that's why we add one. Second, backtests are historical — mean reversion works until a trend regime breaks, and it fails badly in bear markets.

expectancy (R) = (win% × avg win) − (loss% × avg loss)

A genuine edge here comes from the trend filter, selectivity, and risk control — and it is an expectation, never a guarantee.

7 Make it yours

Test before you trade

A no-risk validation routine

Backtest the exact rules on your own market and timeframe. Compare RSI(2) < 5 vs < 10, test adding a hard stop, and confirm the 200-day filter actually improves results. Track everything in R before risking a cent.

8 Common mistakes

How traders blow this up