ELLIOT WAVES BASIC (Contd)
Three Guidelines
There are numerous
guidelines, but this article will focus on three key guidelines. In contrast to
rules, guidelines should hold true most of the time, not necessarily all of the
time.
Guideline 1: When
Wave 3 is the longest impulse wave, Wave 5 will approximately equal Wave 1.
Guideline 2: The
forms for Wave 2 and Wave 4 will alternate. If Wave 2 is a sharp correction,
Wave 4 will be a flat correction. If Wave 2 is flat, Wave 4 will be sharp.
Guideline 3: After a
5-wave impulse advance, corrections (abc) usually end in the area of prior Wave
4 low.
The first guideline is useful for targeting the end of Wave 5. Even though Wave 5 could be longer than Wave 3 and Wave 3 could still be longer than Wave 1, chartists can make initial Wave 5 projections once Wave 4 ends. In a larger uptrend, chartists simply apply the length of Wave 1 (percentage change) to the low of Wave 4 for an upside target. The opposite is true for a 5-wave decline. The percentage decline in Wave 1 would be applied to the high of Wave 4 for a Wave 5 estimate.
The guideline of
alternation (2) is useful for determining the time of correction for Wave 4.
After a sharp decline for Wave 2, chartists can expect a relatively flat
correction for Wave 4. If Wave 2 is relatively flat, then chartists can expect
a relatively sharp Wave 4. In practice, Wave 2 tends to be a rather sharp wave
that retraces a large portion of Wave 1. Wave 4 comes after an extended Wave 3.
This Wave 4 marks more of a consolidation that lays the groundwork for a Wave 5
trend resumption.
The third guideline
is useful for estimating the end of a Wave II correction after a Wave I
advance. Waves I and II are the larger degree waves. Waves 1-2-3-4-5 are lesser
degree waves within Wave I. Once the Wave II correction unfolds, chartists can
estimate its end by looking at the end of the prior wave 4 (lesser degree wave
4). In a larger degree uptrend, Wave II would be expected to bottom near the
low of lesser degree Wave 4. In a larger degree downtrend, Wave II would be
expected to peak near the high of lesser degree Wave 4.
Conclusions
Even though this
article just scratches the surface of Elliott Wave Theory, chartists can
greatly improve their counting by applying the three rules and three guidelines
listed. Elliott Wave counts start with a process of elimination. Apply the
rules for the first count attempt and then the guidelines on the second.
Eliminating bogus counts paves the way to a more accurate count. Even with
accurate counts, chartists will still need to re-evaluate and adjust counts as
new price information emerges. It is just the nature of the beast.
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