پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-161

Can I use the Time rules (in Chapter 9 of MEW) to allow wave-A of a Flat, Zigzag or Triangle to be equal to the combined times of waves-B and C?

ANSWER:

Unlike many questions in this section, this one requires little elaboration. No matter what pattern is forming (a standard Flat, Zigzag or Triangle, or a NEoWave Diametric or Symmetrical), wave-A can NEVER take the most time of those first, three waves. As a result, the time of wave-A can never be equal to the total time of waves-B and C because that would mean wave-A took the most time of the first three waves. If you see a situation in which you think such a situation has occurred, your count is wrong and should be altered.

پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-160

Rather than a 4-6 year bear market staring Jan. 2008, is there a level on the S&P 500 that would indicate a new, bull market started March 2009?

ANSWER:

Simply stated, the answer to your question is NO…such a level cannot be identified at this time. Why? The 4-6 year bear market (beginning January 2008) is a small piece of a much larger, 20-30 bear market starting September 2000. Consequently, even if the S&P made a new, all-time high this year, the rally off 2009’s low would remain corrective. For that reason, the rally off 2009’s low must (at some point) be retraced at least 61.8% BEFORE a new bull market is “allowed” to begin. In addition, since wave-C (beginning January 2008) is corrective, it must be part of a larger, ongoing formation, which means a D and E wave will unfold following the conclusion of wave-C. Combining wave structure implications with the above facts, I can confidently predict the S&P will spend 90% (or more) of the next 10-20 years gyrating between the highs and lows it has already established since January 2000.

پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-159

When are you are going to provide archives of your NEoWave forecasts?

ANSWER:

NEoWave Trading and Forecasting customers can access historical archives of past updates going back to 2007. This has been a option to our customers for at least the last 3 years. To see those updates, do the following…

1. Go to www.neowave.com

2. Login into your account using your email address and password

3. When in the Member Area, click on “NEoWave Updates” at the top right

4. Next, click on “View Historical Updates” at the bottom of that new page

5. On the “Historical” page, you have the option to see ALL update, updates based on a specific market, a specific year and then a specific month, if you choose.

پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-158

How can you determine the beginning and end of a wave?

ANSWER:

This is one of the most basic questions ever asked in this forum. Because of its importance, it is addressed (in great detail) very early in Mastering Elliott Wave (MEW). In Chapter 2 of MEW I describe the proper way to plot charts. If you use bar charts, futures data, candlesticks or moving averages to do your wave analysis, you will be sadly disappointed with your results or your ability to analyze and forecast markets. You’ll repeatedly need to go back in time to adjust past structure to fit future reality. 

If you want reliable, consistently accurate wave patterns, that stand the test of time, you must begin with the right type of chart – what I call a WAVE chart. Even with this process, there will be times (near the center of formations) when price action simply can’t be predicted. But, here’s how you create charts that provide the proper foundation for good wave analysis.

1. Use Cash data (this is essential) whenever possible

2. The high and low of each period (hourly, daily, weekly, monthly) must be determined

3. Those highs and lows must be plotted, as dots, equidistant apart, in the order they occurred in real time

4. Each dot must then be connected, with a straight line, to its next closest dot. 

The resulting chart is a highly accurate representation of the ebb and flow of price history. EVERY TURN in price (of a properly drawn, cash chart) creates a single “wave,” or what I call a “monowave.” Those monowaves are the building blocks of all Elliott and NEoWave patterns.

پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-157

Since mid 2009, despite how much the stock market has rallied, no Elliottician (including NEoWave) have us in a new bull market. Why?

ANSWER:

Wave theory is very clear about what constitutes a “trend” and a “correction.” Trends are composed of 5-waves and are called impulsions. Counter-trends are frequently composed of 3 waves and are called corrections. When a correction is composed of more than 3 waves, the overall effect is almost always a sideways period from beginning to end with many waves overlapping the same price range. 

Under wave theory, the only time a “true bull market” exists is when the uptrend forming is wave-1, wave-3 or wave-5 of a larger impulsion. If the rally (no matter how large) is wave-b, wave-d, wave-x, wave-2 or wave-4, it is (by definition) a correction against the trend. In addition, if wave-c is itself a correction (i.e., a 3-legged move), then it will be part of a larger, ongoing correction until a future d-wave and e-wave form. 

On September 5, 2000, the S&P began a 20-30 year correction for wave-4. Why 20-30 years? Because wave-3 took nearly 20 years and 4th-waves must take more time than 3rd waves (at least when they are part of a standard impulsion, which this one is). While in wave-4’s “downtrend,” any rally must be counter-trend (i.e., corrective). So, for the next 20+ years, any large rally in the S&P MUST be – by definition – counter to the larger downtrend (i.e., the rally must be wave-b, wave-d, wave-x, wave-2 or wave-4). In this case it appears to be wave-(B) of a larger C-wave that began January 2008. So, no matter how large the rally off 2009’s low becomes, it will be counter-trend (i.e., a correction of the ongoing downtrend – not a new, bull market). This is reinforced by the fact the rally off 2009’s low is designed like a correction (not an impulsion), which means it does not contain 5-waves. When corrections get very large and last a year or more, it is confusing to non-Wave analysts how a large rally cannot be called a “bull market,” but it is a matter of “definition,” not duration or size of the upmove. 

This question exposes a crucial flaw of wave analysis, which I’ve stated many times in the past – that markets, under Wave theory, are NOT predictable all the time, especially during the middle of corrections (i.e., B-waves in Flats and Zigzags, C-waves in Triangles, X-waves in complex formations, D-waves in Diametrics and E-waves in Symmetricals [the last two are NEoWave formations). The rally since 2009’s low appears to be the (B)-wave of a correctively designed, downward-moving C-wave that began January 2008. That puts the S&P in the middle of the middle of a 20-30 year correction, which is the time when wave structure is the most difficult to decipher and when forecasting is highly prone to error. The forecasts released by most EW analysts since mid 2009, including myself, attest to the difficulty of predicting markets while Wave structure is close to the middle of a large, complex, multi-year (or multi-decade) formation.

پرسش و پاسخ با گلن نیلی-156

How do you reconcile (or view) current news events within the context of wave structure and expected, future market action?

ANSWER:

It is a mistake, and a waste of time, to “reconcile” news with wave structure. The news you hear on TV (or read about in newspapers) is never all the news, just some of it. There are hundreds, or even thousands, of positive and negative news events going on around the world all the time. Depending on the public’s “collective state-of-mind” at a particular time, the media picks and chooses the information it releases. They must sell subscriptions or advertising to stay in business, so they must present us with information that is most likely to get us to spend money. Such information may have nothing to do with what is most important to the financial stability of the world or the physical health of its inhabitants. 

For example, when a famous celebrity dies, or commits a crime, is that the most important news of the day, week or month? There are wars constantly being fought around the world with people dying and starving daily; but, in the U.S., when a celebrity dies, it can dominate print and digital media for weeks! Does our interest in that celebrity make that news important (it does to those selling it) and does it have any, relevance to our daily lives, personal safety, financial well-being, or future prospects for prosperity?

A market’s price action is the net result of ALL news (even the news we don’t hear) and all knowledge (even that which we don’t, personally know). As a result, no matter what “news” is begin sold to us, price action reveals the totality of all collectively known news, facts, opinions and expectations. It is that net-reality which market price action reflects. With the aid of wave theory, which describes the ebb and flow of mass-human action, we attempt to compartmentalize and structure the past in order to attempt to predict the future.