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The Wave Principle is
unparalleled in providing an overall perspective on the position
of the market most of the time. Most important to individuals,
portfolio managers and investment corporations is that the Wave
Principle often indicates in advance the relative magnitude
of the next period of market progress or regress. Living in
harmony with those trends can make the difference between
success and failure in financial affairs.
Despite the fact that many
analysts do not treat it as such, the Wave Principle is by all
means an objective study, or as Collins put it, "a
disciplined form of technical analysis." Bolton used to say
that one of the hardest things he had to learn was to believe
what he saw. If the analyst does not believe what he sees, he is
likely to read into his analysis what he thinks should be there
for some other reason. At this point, his count becomes
subjective. Subjective analysis is dangerous and destroys the
value of any market approach.
What the Wave Principle provides
is an objective means of assessing the relative probabilities
of possible future paths for the market. At any time, two or
more valid wave interpretations are usually acceptable by the rules
of the Wave Principle. The rules are highly specific and keep
the number of valid alternatives to a minimum. Among the valid
alternatives, the analyst will generally regard as preferred the
interpretation that satisfies the largest number of guidelines,
and so on. As a result, competent analysts applying the rules
and guidelines of the Wave Principle objectively should usually
agree on the order of probabilities for various possible
outcomes at any particular time. That order can usually be
stated with certainty. Let no one assume, however, that
certainty about the order of probabilities is the same as
certainty about one specific outcome. Under only the rarest of
circumstances does the analyst ever know exactly what the
market is going to do. One must understand and accept that even
an approach that can identify high odds for a fairly specific
outcome will be wrong some of the time. Of course, such a result
is a far better performance than any other approach to market
forecasting provides.
Using Elliott, it is often
possible to make money even when you are in error. For instance,
after a minor low that you erroneously consider of major
importance, you may recognize at a higher level that the
market is vulnerable again to new lows. A clear-cut three-wave
rally following the minor low rather than the necessary five
gives the signal, since a three-wave rally is the sign of an
upward correction. Thus, what happens after the turning
point often helps confirm or refute the assumed status of the
low or high, well in advance of danger.
Even if the market allows no such
graceful exit, the Wave Principle still offers exceptional
value. Most other approaches to market analysis, whether
fundamental, technical or cyclical, have no good way of forcing
a change of opinion if you are wrong. The Wave Principle, in
contrast, provides a built-in objective method for changing your
mind. Since Elliott Wave analysis is based upon price patterns,
a pattern identified as having been completed is either over or
it isn't. If the market changes direction, the analyst has
caught the turn. If the market moves beyond what the apparently
completed pattern allows, the conclusion is wrong, and any funds
at risk can be reclaimed immediately. Investors using the Wave
Principle can prepare themselves psychologically for such
outcomes through the continual updating of the second best
interpretation, sometimes called the "alternate
count." Because applying the Wave Principle is an exercise
in probability, the ongoing maintenance of alternative wave
counts is an essential part of investing with it. In the event
that the market violates the expected scenario, the alternate
count immediately becomes the investor's new preferred count. If
you're thrown by your horse, it's useful to land right atop
another.
Of course, there are often times
when, despite a rigorous analysis, the question may arise as to
how a developing move is to be counted, or perhaps classified as
to degree. When there is no clearly preferred interpretation,
the analyst must wait until
the count resolves itself, in other words, to "sweep it
under the rug until the air clears," as Bolton suggested.
Almost always, subsequent moves will clarify the status of
previous waves by revealing their position in the pattern of the
next higher degree. When subsequent waves clarify the picture,
the probability that a turning point is at hand can suddenly and
excitingly rise to nearly 100%.
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