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Lesson 1:
Introduction to the Wave Principle
In The Elliott Wave
Principle A Critical Appraisal, Hamilton Bolton
made this opening statement:
As we have advanced
through some of the most unpredictable economic climate
imaginable, covering depression, major war, and postwar
reconstruction and boom, I have noted how well Elliott's
Wave Principle has fitted into the facts of life as they
have developed, and have accordingly gained more
confidence that this Principle has a good quotient of
basic value.
"The Wave
Principle" is Ralph Nelson Elliott's discovery that
social, or crowd, behavior trends and reverses in
recognizable patterns. Using stock market data as his
main research tool, Elliott discovered that the
ever-changing path of stock market prices reveals a
structural design that in turn reflects a basic harmony
found in nature. From this discovery, he developed a
rational system of market analysis. Elliott isolated
thirteen patterns of movement, or "waves," that
recur in market price data and are repetitive in form,
but are not necessarily repetitive in time or amplitude.
He named, defined and illustrated the patterns. He then
described how these structures link together to form
larger versions of those same patterns, how they in turn
link to form identical patterns of the next larger size,
and so on. In a nutshell, then, the Wave Principle is a
catalog of price patterns and an explanation of where
these forms are likely to occur in the overall path of
market development. Elliott's descriptions constitute a
set of empirically derived rules and guidelines for
interpreting market action. Elliott claimed predictive
value for The Wave Principle, which now bears the name,
"The Elliott Wave Principle."
Although it is the best
forecasting tool in existence, the Wave Principle is not
primarily a forecasting tool; it is a detailed
description of how markets behave. Nevertheless, that
description does impart an immense amount of knowledge
about the market's position within the behavioral
continuum and therefore about its probable ensuing path.
The primary value of the Wave Principle is that it
provides a context for market analysis. This context
provides both a basis for disciplined thinking and a
perspective on the market's general position and outlook.
At times, its accuracy in identifying, and even
anticipating, changes in direction is almost
unbelievable. Many areas of mass human activity follow
the Wave Principle, but the stock market is where it is
most popularly applied. Indeed, the stock market
considered alone is far more important than it seems to
casual observers. The level of aggregate stock prices is
a direct and immediate measure of the popular valuation
of man's total productive capability. That this valuation
has form is a fact of profound implications that will
ultimately revolutionize the social sciences. That,
however, is a discussion for another time.
R.N. Elliott's genius
consisted of a wonderfully disciplined mental process,
suited to studying charts of the Dow Jones Industrial
Average and its predecessors with such thoroughness and
precision that he could construct a network of principles
that covered all market action known to him up to the
mid-1940s. At that time, with the Dow in the 100s,
Elliott predicted a great bull market for the next
several decades that would exceed all expectations at a
time when most investors felt it impossible that the Dow
could even better its 1929 peak. As we shall see,
phenomenal stock market forecasts, some of pinpoint
accuracy years in advance, have accompanied the history
of the application of the Elliott Wave approach.
Elliott had theories
regarding the origin and meaning of the patterns he
discovered, which we will present and expand upon in
Lessons 16-19. Until then, suffice it to say that the
patterns described in Lessons 1-15 have stood the test of
time.
Often one will hear
several different interpretations of the market's Elliott
Wave status, especially when cursory, off-the-cuff
studies of the averages are made by latter day experts.
However, most
uncertainties can be avoided by keeping charts on both
arithmetic and semilogarithmic scale and by taking care
to follow the rules and guidelines as laid down in this
course. Welcome to the world of Elliott.
BASIC
TENETS
Under the Wave Principle,
every market decision is both produced by meaningful
information and produces meaningful information. Each
transaction, while at once an effect, enters the fabric
of the market and, by communicating transactional data to
investors, joins the chain of causes of others' behavior.
This feedback loop is governed by man's social nature,
and since he has such a nature, the process generates
forms. As the forms are repetitive, they have predictive
value.
Sometimes the market
appears to reflect outside conditions and events, but at
other times it is entirely detached from what most people
assume are causal conditions. The reason is that the
market has a law of its own. It is not propelled by the
linear causality to which one becomes accustomed in the
everyday experiences of life. Nor is the market the
cyclically rhythmic machine that some declare it to be.
Nevertheless, its movement reflects a structured formal
progression.
That progression unfolds
in waves. Waves are patterns of directional movement.
More specifically, a wave is any one of the patterns that
naturally occur under the Wave Principle, as described in
Lessons 1-9 of this course.
The
Five Wave Pattern
In markets, progress
ultimately takes the form of five waves of a specific
structure. Three of these waves, which are labeled 1, 3
and 5, actually effect the directional movement. They are
separated by two countertrend interruptions, which are
labeled 2 and 4, as shown in Figure 1-1. The two
interruptions are apparently a requisite for overall
directional movement to occur.

Figure
1-1
R.N. Elliott did not
specifically state that there is only one overriding
form, the "five wave" pattern, but that is
undeniably the case. At any time, the market may be
identified as being somewhere in the basic five wave
pattern at the largest degree of trend. Because the five
wave pattern is the overriding form of market progress,
all other patterns are subsumed by it.
Wave
Mode
There are two modes of
wave development: motive and corrective. Motive waves
have a five wave structure, while corrective waves have a
three wave structure or a variation thereof. Motive mode
is employed by both the five wave pattern of Figure 1-1
and its same-directional components, i.e., waves 1, 3 and
5. Their structures are called "motive" because
they powerfully impel the market. Corrective mode is
employed by all countertrend interruptions, which include
waves 2 and 4 in Figure 1-1. Their structures are called
"corrective" because they can accomplish only a
partial retracement, or "correction," of the
progress achieved by any preceding motive wave. Thus, the
two modes are fundamentally different, both in their
roles and in their construction, as will be detailed
throughout this course.
Next Lesson:
Details of the Complete Cycle
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