The underlying 5-3 pattern remains constant,
though the time span of each may vary.
The basic pattern is made up of eight waves (five
up and three down) which are labeled 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, a, b, and c on the
following chart.
Waves 1, 3, and 5 are called impulse waves. Waves
2 and 4 are called corrective waves. Waves a, b, and c correct the
main trend made by waves 1 through 5.
The main trend is established by waves 1 through 5
and can be either up or down. Waves a, b, and c always move in the
opposite direction of waves 1 through 5.
Elliott Wave Theory holds that each wave within a
wave count contains a complete 5-3 wave count of a smaller cycle. The
longest wave count is called the Grand Supercycle. Grand Supercycle
waves are comprised of Supercycles, and Supercycles are comprised of
Cycles. This process continues into Primary, Intermediate, Minute,
Minuette, and Sub-minuette waves.
The following chart shows how 5-3 waves are
comprised of smaller cycles.
This chart contains the identical pattern shown in
the preceding chart (now displayed using dotted lines), but the
smaller cycles are also displayed. For example, you can see that
impulse wave labeled 1 in the preceding chart is comprised of five
smaller waves.
Fibonacci numbers provide the mathematical
foundation for the Elliott Wave Theory. Briefly, the Fibonacci number
sequence is made by simply starting at 1 and adding the previous
number to arrive at the new number (i.e., 0+1=1, 1+1=2, 2+1=3, 3+2=5,
5+3=8, 8+5=13, etc). Each of the cycles that Elliott defined are
comprised of a total wave count that falls within the Fibonacci number
sequence. For example, the preceding chart shows two Primary waves (an
impulse wave and a corrective wave), eight intermediate waves (the 5-3
sequence shown in the first chart), and 34 minute waves (as labeled).
The numbers 2, 8, and 34 fall within the Fibonacci numbering sequence.
Elliott Wave practitioners use their determination
of the wave count in combination with the Fibonacci numbers to predict
the time span and magnitude of future market moves ranging from
minutes and hours to years and decades.
There is general agreement among Elliott Wave
practitioners that the most recent Grand Supercycle began in 1932 and
that the final fifth wave of this cycle began at the market bottom in
1982. However, there has been much disparity since 1982. Many heralded
the arrival of the October 1987 crash as the end of the cycle. The
strong recovery that has since followed has caused them to reevaluate
their wave counts. Herein, lies the weakness of the Elliott Wave
Theory--its predictive value is dependent on an accurate wave count.
Determining where one wave starts and another wave ends can be
extremely subjective.