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With a knowledge of the tools in
Lessons 1 through 15, any dedicated student can perform expert
Elliott Wave analysis. People who neglect to study the subject
thoroughly or to apply the tools rigorously have given up before
really trying. The best learning procedure is to keep an hourly
chart and try to fit all the wiggles into Elliott Wave patterns,
while keeping an open mind for all the possibilities. Slowly the
scales should drop from your eyes, and you will continually be
amazed at what you see.
It is important to remember that
while investment tactics always must go with the most valid wave
count, knowledge of alternative possibilities can be extremely
helpful in adjusting to unexpected events, putting them
immediately into perspective, and adapting to the changing
market framework. While the rigidities of the rules of wave
formation are of great value in choosing entry and exit points,
the flexibilities in the admissible patterns eliminate cries
that whatever the market is doing now is "impossible."
"When you have eliminated
the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable,
must be the truth." Thus eloquently spoke Sherlock Holmes
to his constant companion, Dr. Watson, in Arthur Conan Doyle's The
Sign of Four. This one sentence is a capsule summary
of what one needs to know to be successful with Elliott. The
best approach is deductive reasoning. By knowing what Elliott
rules will not allow, one can deduce that whatever remains must
be the most likely course for the market. Applying all the rules
of extensions, alternation, overlapping, channeling, volume and
the rest, the analyst has a much more formidable arsenal than
one might imagine at first glance. Unfortunately for many, the
approach requires thought and work and rarely provides a
mechanical signal. However, this kind of thinking, basically an
elimination process, squeezes the best out of what Elliott has
to offer and besides, it's fun!
As an example of such deductive
reasoning, take another look at Figure 1-14, reproduced below:

Figure 1-14
Cover up the price action from
November 17, 1976 forward. Without the wave labels and boundary
lines, the market would appear as formless. But with the Wave
Principle as a guide, the meaning of the structures becomes
clear. Now ask yourself, how would you go about predicting the
next movement? Here is Robert Prechter's analysis from that
date, from a personal letter to A.J. Frost, summarizing a report
he issued for Merrill Lynch the previous day:
Enclosed you will find my current
opinion outlined on a recent Trendline chart, although I use
only hourly point charts to arrive at these conclusions. My
argument is that the third Primary wave, begun in October of
1975, has not completed its course as yet, and that the
fifth Intermediate wave of that Primary is now underway. First
and most important, I am convinced that October 1975 to March
1976 was so far a three-wave affair, not a five, and that only
the possibility of a failure on May 11th could complete that
wave as a five. However, the construction following that
possible "failure" does not satisfy me as correct,
since the first downleg to 956.45 would be of five waves and the
entire ensuing construction is obviously a flat. Therefore, I
think that we have been in a fourth corrective wave since March
24th. This corrective wave satisfies completely the
requirements for an expanding triangle formation, which of
course can only be a fourth wave. The trendlines concerned are
uncannily accurate, as is the downside objective, obtained by
multiplying the first important length of decline (March 24th to
June 7th, 55.51 points) by 1.618 to obtain 89.82 points. 89.82
points from the orthodox high of the third Intermediate wave at
1011.96 gives a downside target of 922, which was hit last week
(actual hourly low 920.62) on November 11th. This would suggest
now a fifth Intermediate back to new highs, completing the third
Primary wave. The only problem I can see with this
interpretation is that Elliott suggests that fourth wave
declines usually hold above the previous fourth wave decline of
lesser degree, in this case 950.57 on February 17th, which of
course has been broken on the downside. I have found, however,
that this rule is not steadfast. The reverse symmetrical
triangle formation should be followed by a rally only
approximating the width of the widest part of the triangle. Such
a rally would suggest 1020-1030 and fall far short of the
trendline target of 1090-1100. Also, within third waves,
the first and fifth subwaves tend toward equality in time and
magnitude. Since the first wave (Oct. 75-Dec.75) was a 10% move
in two months, this fifth should cover about 100 points
(1020-1030) and peak in January 1977, again short of the
trendline mark.
Now uncover the rest of the chart
to see how all these guidelines helped in assessing the market's
likely path.
Christopher Morley once said,
"Dancing is a wonderful training for girls. It is the first
way they learn to guess what a man is going to do before he does
it." In the same way, the Wave Principle trains the analyst
to discern what the market is likely to do before it does it.
After you have acquired an
Elliott "touch," it will be forever with you, just as
a child who learns to ride a bicycle never forgets. At that
point, catching a turn becomes a fairly common experience and
not really too difficult. Most important, in giving you a
feeling of confidence as to where you are in the progress of the
market, a knowledge of Elliott can prepare you psychologically
for the inevitable fluctuating nature of price movement and free
you from sharing the widely practiced analytical error of
forever projecting today's trends linearly into the future.
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