|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Elliot Wave Theory | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
About Elliott Waves Theory BasicsThe Elliott Wave Theory is named after Ralph Nelson Elliott. Inspired by the Dow Theory and by observations found throughout nature, Elliott concluded that the movement of the stock market could be predicted by observing and identifying a repetitive pattern of waves. In fact, Elliott believed that all of man's activities, not just the stock market, were influenced by these identifiable series of waves. Elliott based part his work on the Dow Theory, which also defines price movement in terms of waves, but Elliott discovered the fractal nature of market action. Thus Elliott was able to analyze markets in greater depth, identifying the specific characteristics of wave patterns and making detailed market predictions based on the patterns he had identified.
Definition of Elliott WavesIn the 1930s, Ralph Nelson Elliott found that the markets exhibited certain repeated patterns. His primary research was with stock market data for the Dow Jones Industrial Average. This research identified patterns or waves that recur in the markets. Very simply, in the direction of the trend, expect five waves. Any corrections against the trend are in three waves. Three wave corrections are lettered as "a, b, c." These patterns can be seen in long-term as well as in short-term charts. Ideally, smaller patterns can be identified within bigger patterns. In this sense, Elliott Waves are like a piece of broccoli, where the smaller piece, if broken off from the bigger piece, does, in fact, look like the big piece. This information (about smaller patterns fitting into bigger patterns), coupled with the Fibonacci relationships between the waves, offers the trader a level of anticipation and/or prediction when searching for and identifying trading opportunities with solid reward/risk ratios. There have been many theories about the origin and the meaning of the patterns that Elliott discovered, including human behavior and harmony in nature. These rules, though, as applied to technical analysis of the markets (stocks, commodities, futures, etc.), can be very useful regardless of their meaning and origin. Simplifying Elliott Wave
Analysis When the analysis is not clear, why not find another market conforming to an Elliott Wave pattern that is easier to identify? From years of fighting this battle, we have come up with the following practical approach to using Elliott Wave principles in trading. The whole theory of Elliott Wave can be classified into two parts:
Elliott Wave Basics — Impulse
Patterns
The initial stages of the Wave 3
rally are slow, and it finally makes
it to the top of the previous rally
(the top of Wave 1). At this time, there are a lot of
stops above the top of Wave 1.
Traders are not convinced of the
upward trend and are using this
rally to add more shorts. For their
analysis to be correct, the market
should not take the top of the
previous rally. Therefore, many stops are placed above the top of Wave 1.
The next sequence of events are
as follows: Traders who were
initially long from the bottom
finally have something to cheer
about. They might even decide to add
positions.
This is the time
when the majority of the traders
have decided that the trend is up. Finally, all the
buying frenzy dies down; Wave 3
comes to a halt. Profit taking now begins to set
in. Traders who were long from the
lows decide to take profits. They
have a good trade and start to
protect profits.This causes a
pullback in the prices that is
called Wave 4. Wave 2 was a vicious sell-off;
Wave 4 is an orderly profit-taking
decline. While profit-taking
is in progress, the majority of
traders are still convinced the
trend is up. They were either late
in getting in on this rally, or they
have been on the sideline. They consider this profit-taking decline an excellent place to buy in and get even.
On the end of Wave 4, more buying
sets in and the prices start to
rally again. The Wave 5 rally lacks the huge
enthusiasm and strength found in the
Wave 3 rally. The Wave 5 advance is
caused by a small group of traders. Although the prices make a new
high above the top of Wave 3, the
rate of power, or strength, inside
the Wave 5 advance is very small
when compared to the Wave 3 advance. Finally, when this lackluster buying interest dies out, the market tops out and enters a new phase.
An impulse pattern consists of five waves. With the exception of the triangle, corrective patterns consist of 3 waves. An impulse pattern is always followed by a corrective pattern. Corrective patterns can be grouped into two different categories:
Simple Correction (Zig-Zag) Fibonacci
Ratios inside a Zig-Zag Correction
A simple correction is commonly called a Zig-Zag correction.
Complex Corrections
(Flat, Irregular, Triangle)
Flat Correction
Irregular Correction
Triangle Correction
Alteration
Rule |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||