R. N.
Elliott believed markets had
well-defined
waves that could be used to
predict market direction. In 1939,
Elliott
detailed the
Elliott
Wave Theory, which states that stock prices are governed by cycles
founded upon the Fibonacci series (1-2-3-5-8-13-21...).
According to the Elliott
Wave Theory, stock prices tend to move in a
predetermined number of waves consistent with
the
Fibonacci series. Specifically, Elliott
believed the market moved in five distinct waves
on the upside and three distinct on the downside. The basic shape of the
wave is shown below.
Waves one, three and five represent the
'impulse', or minor up-waves in a major bull
move. Waves two and four represent the
'corrective,' or minor down-waves in the major
bull move. The waves lettered A and C
represents the minor down-waves in a major
bear move, while B represents the one up-wave
in a minor bear wave.
Elliott proposed that the
waves existed at many levels, meaning there
could be waves within
waves. To clarify, this means that the chart above not only represents
the primary wave pattern, but it could also
represent what occurs just between points 2 and 4. The diagram below shows how
primary waves could be broken down into
smaller waves.
Elliott Wave
theory ascribes names to the waves in order of
descending size:
-
Grand Supercycle
-
Supercycle
-
Cycle
-
Primary
-
Intermediate
-
Minor
-
Minute
-
Minuette
-
Sub-Minuette
The major waves determine the major trend
of the market, and minor waves determine minor
trends. This is similar to the way
Dow Theory postulates primary and secondary trends.
Elliott provided numerous variations on the
main wave, and placed particular importance on
the golden mean, 0.618, as a significant percentage for retracement.
Trading using
Elliott Wave patterns is quite simple.
The trader identifies the main wave or
Supercycle, enters long, and then sells or shorts, as the reversal is
determined. This continues in progressively shorter cycles until the cycle
completes and the main wave resurfaces. The
caution to this is that much of the wave
identification is taken in hindsight and disagreements arise between
Elliott Wave
technicians as to which cycle the market is in.
Here is an example of a classic Elliott
Wave cycle that occurred in the NASDAQ
Composite in late 2003.