Counting Waves Correctly - Workbook 2 1990

January 12, 2018 | Author: J4NY4R | Category: Market Trend, Financial Markets, Financial Economics, Market (Economics), Business
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Elliott Wave Educational Video Series

Counting Waves Correctly Workbook 2

WORKBOOK for the ELLIOTT WAVE EDUCATIONAL VIDEO SERIES WORKBOOK 2 COUNTING WAVES CORRECTLY Copyright © 1990 by Robert R. Prechter, Jr. Printed in the United States of America January 1990 For information, address the publishers: Elliott Wave International P.O. Box 1618 Gainesville, Georgia 30503

NOTICE All charts are copyright © Robert R. Prechter, Jr. 1990 or have been previously copyrighted by Elliott Wave International, Robert R. Prechter, Jr., or other entities. All rights are reserved. The material in this volume may not be reprinted or reporduced in any manner whatsoever without the written permission of the copyright holder. Violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. ISBN: 0-932750-25-7 Elliott Wave Educational Video Series 10 Volume videotape set including workbooks ISBN: 0-932750-27-3 Elliott Wave Educational Video Series Tape 2 and Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Background charts for some of the illustrations were provided courtesy of the following sources: Trendline (Standard & Poor’s Corp.), 25 Broadway, New York, NY 10004 Daily Graphs (William O’Neil & Co., Inc.), P.O. Box 24933, Los Angeles, CA 90024 Commodity Research Bureau, 75 Wall St., 22nd Fl., New York, NY 10005 Ned Davis Research, P.O. Box 1278, Nokomis, FL 34274 Foundation for the Study of Cycles, 3333 Michelson Dr., Irvine, CA 92715 Commodity Perspective, 30 S. Wacker Dr., Chicago, IL 60606 Securities Research Company, 208 Newbury St., Boston, MA 02116

The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

CALLING A BOTTOM It has long been recognized that wave analysis explains the past very well. Of course, that ability in itself reveals that the Wave Principle is a valid theory. After all, many constructs cannot even describe the past accurately. However, what most people want to know is whether wave structures can be analyzed in current time to provide a knowledge of when a turning point is likely at hand. The excerpt below is taken directly from the November 29, 1982 issue of The Elliott Wave Theorist. It shows how an analyst can use the Wave principle in “real time” to make profitable decisions on markets, even markets as exotic as futures contracts in Cocoa.

(The comments below are reprinted from the November 29, 1982 EWT.) COMMODITY CORNER Here are some charts that are worth their weight in candy bars. Cocoa is falling into what appears to be at least an intermediate low, if not a major bottom. Just look at these three charts: the long term picture, the breakdown for wave C, and the daily chart showing the final “fifth of a fifth.” Here’s the history: After a tremendous 12-year bull market lasting from 1965 to 1977, Cocoa dropped in five waves, then recovered in three, forming what appears to be waves “A” and “B” of an A-B-C bear market. Since then, a clear five-wave decline has taken Cocoa to its lowest levels since 1975, deeply into the area of the previous fourth wave of lesser degree, a normal bear market limit. What’s more, the fifth wave has occurred at the same time that Coffee has pulled back into its Primary wave 2 dating from June 1981. Coffee looks ready to move up sharply, and the two markets often move in the same direction. The minimum upside potential for Cocoa is around the 2100 level from the recent low at 1300. The shape of that rise should reveal whether Cocoa has indeed begun a new large bull phase, or is just tracing out the fourth wave up in a five-wave decline. In the meantime, it’s a bullish chart. (Note: The ensuing upswing took Cocoa to $2800.)

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly (The comments below are reprinted from the January 9, 1984 EWT.) HOW PSYCHOLOGY WORKS I no longer comment on commodities, but the development of psychology in Cocoa is extremely instructive. Remember after the close of November 26, 1982, when Elliott analysis recognized the bottom of a five-year bear market in Cocoa? The July contract ended that week at $1495/ton, as bearish articles filled the pages of financial publications. As an example, on the week of the low, an article entitled “Stocks Build Bearish Scenarios for Coffee, Sugar, Cocoa,” quoted analysts who gave all sorts of reasons why Cocoa was going to go lower. In June of last year, the same month that the first issue of David Weis’ Elliott Wave Commodity Letter (Box 1618, Gainesville, GA 30503) forecasted $3000/ton for Cocoa, I mentioned in EWT that I had read “nothing but bearish and skeptical articles on Cocoa. It closed Friday at $2110, and is still only in the middle of its third Intermediate wave.”

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Smith Barney, for instance, scrutinizing a cocoa chart, says it’s holding up like a Picasso. In 123456789012 123456789012 123456789012 XXXXXX view, the next stop is $3,000 a metric ton, “but that’s not the last stop.” 12345678901234567 12345678901234567 12345678901234567 XXXXXXXX of

A.G. Becher-Paribas thinks that the bull market will continue; she looks for a rally over the next few weeks to $2,800 a ton. 12345678901234567 12345678901234567

Shearson’s 12345678901234567 XXXXXXXX says that 12345678901234567 cocoa, “in a nutshell, is a blazing bull

Last week Cocoa met Dave’s wave 3 target of $2766 basis March, and we agree that it is now peaking in wave 3 of its second, and perhaps final, five-wave advance. In other words, although there is one more rise ahead following a correction, the most reliable profits in Cocoa are now behind us. A December 26 article in Barron’s correctly comments that “High prices are remarkable, since total cocoa stocks are huge, an imposing 600,000 tons.” The fact that stocks have been huge since the bottom highlights the role of market psychology as a crucial factor in determining prices. Then the article presents the latest commodity analysts’ opinions. Forget the fact that forecasting $2800 or $3000 when the price is already $2700 and going up vertically is no feat of prescience. The main point is that, in stark contrast to the opinion at the lows 13 months ago, no one (see bottom) is suggesting selling it! These are classic quotes. As we’ve seen over and over again, human beings will never change, and that’s why the Elliott Wave Principle will always work.

market.” He’s looking for prices to rise, not in a straight line, but erratically, and he thinks quotes ultimately could climb to the high $2,000-a-ton level. 1234567890123456 1234567890123456 1234567890123456 XXXXXXXX

of Cargill Investor Services says that cocoa’s funadmentals remain bullish. Stocks may well be high, she concedes, but they could fall sharply. Retracements are possible, she says, “but I look for the market to reach $2,800 at some point next year.” If so, she goes on, $3,000 is next.

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ACE International in Miami says he still is bullish, even at current levels. Any trader “in his right mind” must be bullish, he says, entering the new year. His initial objective on the 12345678901 12345678901 March contract is $2,800 a ton. 12345678901 XXXX 123456789 123456789 123456789 XXXX of Merrill Lynch Futures 123456789 describes herself as “emphatically bullish.” In her view, $2,800 to $3,000 a ton on the March contract is not out of sight, for she believes that prices will rise until the threat of buffer stock sales becomes real.

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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The Elliott Wave Educational Video Series — Workbook 2: Counting Waves Correctly

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