Number of Waves at
Each Degree
Impulse + Correction = Cycle
Largest waves 1+1=2
Largest subdivisions 5+3=8
Next subdivisions 21+13=34
Next subdivisions 89+55=144
As with Figures 1-2 and 1-3 in Lesson
2, neither does Figure 1-4 imply finality. As before, the
termination of yet another eight wave movement (five up and three
down) completes a cycle that automatically becomes two subdivisions
of the wave of next higher degree. As long as progress
continues, the process of building to greater degrees continues. The
reverse process of subdividing into lesser degrees apparently
continues indefinitely as well. As far as we can determine, then,
all waves both have and are component waves.
Elliott himself never speculated on
why the market's essential form was five waves to progress and three
waves to regress. He simply noted that that was what was happening.
Does the essential form have to be five waves and three waves? Think
about it and you will realize that this is the minimum
requirement for, and therefore the most efficient method of,
achieving both fluctuation and progress in linear
movement. One wave does not allow fluctuation. The
fewest subdivisions to create fluctuation is three waves. Three
waves in both directions does not allow progress. To
progress in one direction despite periods of regress, movements in
the main trend must be at least five waves, simply to cover more
ground than the three waves and still contain fluctuation. While
there could be more waves than that, the most efficient form of
punctuated progress is 5-3, and nature typically follows the most
efficient path.
Variations on the Basic Theme
The Wave Principle would be simple to
apply if the basic theme described above were the complete
description of market behavior. However, the real world, fortunately
or unfortunately, is not so simple. From here through Lesson 15, we
will fill out the description of how the market behaves in reality.
That's what Elliott set out to describe, and he succeeded in doing
so.
WAVE DEGREE
All waves may be categorized by
relative size, or degree. Elliott discerned nine degrees of waves,
from the smallest wiggle on an hourly chart to the largest wave he
could assume existed from the data then available. He chose the
names listed below to label these degrees, from largest to smallest:
Grand Supercycle
Supercycle
Cycle
Primary
Intermediate
Minor
Minute
Minuette
Subminuette
It is important to
understand that these labels refer to specifically identifiable
degrees of waves. For instance, whenwe refer to the U.S. stock
market's rise from 1932, we speak of it as a Supercycle with
subdivisions as follows:
1932-1937 the first wave of Cycle
degree
1937-1942 the second wave of Cycle
degree
1942-1966 the third wave of Cycle
degree
1966-1974 the fourth wave of Cycle
degree
1974-19?? the fifth wave of Cycle
degree
Cycle waves subdivide into Primary
waves that subdivide into Intermediate waves that in turn subdivide
into Minor and sub-Minor waves. By using this nomenclature, the
analyst can identify precisely the position of a wave in the overall
progression of the market, much as longitude and latitude are used
to identify a geographical location. To say, "the Dow Jones
Industrial Average is in Minute wave v of Minor wave 1 of
Intermediate wave (3) of Primary wave [5] of Cycle wave I of
Supercycle wave (V) of the current Grand Supercycle" is to identify
a specific point along the progression of market history |