The
Elliott Wave Principle
Source:
Elliott
Wave International - www.elliottwave.com
In
the 1930s, Ralph
Nelson Elliott, a corporate accountant by profession,
studied price movements in the financial markets
and observed that certain patterns repeat themselves.
He offered proof of his discovery by making astonishingly
accurate stock market forecasts. What appears random
and unrelated, Elliott said, will actually trace
out a recognizable pattern once you learn what to
look for. Elliott called his discovery "The Elliott
Wave Principle," and its implications were huge.
He had identified the common link that drives the
trends in human affairs, from financial markets
to fashion, from politics to popular culture.
Robert
Prechter, Jr., president of Elliott
Wave International, resurrected the Wave Principle
from near obscurity in 1976 when he discovered the
complete body of R.N.
Elliott's work in the New York Library. Robert
Prechter, Jr. and A.J. Frost published
Elliott
Wave Principle in 1978. The book
received enthusiastic reviews and became a Wall
Street bestseller. In Elliott
Wave Principle, Prechter and Frost's forecast
called for a roaring bull market in the 1980s, to
be followed by a record bear market. Needless to
say, knowledge of the Wave Principle among private
and professional investors grew dramatically in
the 1980s.
When
investors and traders first discover the Elliott
Wave Principle, there are several reactions:
-
Disbelief
– that markets are patterned and largely
predictable by technical analysis alone
-
Joyous
“irrational exuberance” –
at having found a “crystal ball”
to foretell the future
-
And
finally the correct, and useful response
– “Wow, here is a valuable new tool
I should learn to use.”
Just
like any system or structure found in nature, the
closer you look at wave patterns, the more structured
complexity you see. It is structured, because
nature’s patterns build on themselves, creating
similar forms at progressively larger
sizes. You can see these fractal patterns in botany,
geography, physiology, and the things humans create,
like roads, residential subdivisions… and
– as recent discoveries have confirmed –
in market prices.
Natural
systems, including Elliott wave patterns in market
charts, “grow” through time, and their
forms are defined by interruptions to that growth.
Here's
what is meant by that. When your hands formed
in the womb, they first looked like round paddles
growing equally in all directions. Then, in the
places between your fingers, cells ceased growing
or died, and growth was directed to the five digits.
This structured progress and regress is essential
to all forms of growth. That this “punctuated
growth” appears in market data is only natural
– as Robert Prechter, Jr., the world's
foremost Elliott wave expert and president of Elliott
Wave International, says, “Everything that
thrives must have setbacks.”
The
first step in Elliott wave analysis is identifying
patterns in market prices. At their core, wave patterns
are simple; there are only two of them: “impulse
waves,” and “corrective waves.”
Impulse waves
are composed of five sub-waves and move
in the same direction as the trend of the next larger
size (labeled as 1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Impulse waves are
called so because they powerfully impel the market.
A
corrective wave follows, composed of three
sub-waves, and it moves against the trend of
the next larger size (labeled as a, b, c). Corrective
waves accomplish only a partial retracement, or
"correction," of the progress achieved by any preceding impulse
wave.
As
the figure to the right shows, one complete
Elliott wave consists of eight waves and two
phases: five-wave impulse phase, whose sub-waves
are denoted by numbers, and the three-wave corrective
phase, whose sub-waves are denoted by letters.
What
R.N. Elliott set out to describe using the Elliott
Wave Principle was how the market actually behaves.
There are a number of specific variations on the
underlying theme, which Elliott meticulously described
and illustrated. He also noted the important fact
that each pattern has identifiable requirements
as well as tendencies. From these observations,
he was able to formulate numerous rules and guidelines
for proper wave identification. A thorough knowledge
of such details is necessary to understand what
the markets can do, and at least as important, what
it does not do.
You have
only just begun to learn the power and complexity
of the Elliott Wave Principle. So, don't let
your Elliott wave education end here. Join
Elliott Wave International's free Club EWI and access
the Basic
Tutorial: 10 lessons on The Elliott Wave Principle and
learn how to use this valuable tool in your own
trading and investing.
Source:
Elliott
Wave International - www.elliottwave.com
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