Elliott Wave
Elliott Wave Three Inviolate Rules
Elliott Wave Three Inviolate Rules
These are the three absolute rules that validate any Elliott Wave count. Rule 1: Wave 2 cannot retrace beyond the start of Wave 1. Rule 2: Wave 3 cannot be the shortest among Waves 1, 3, and 5. Rule 3: Wave 4 cannot overlap the end point of Wave 1. Violating even one rule invalidates the count and requires reanalysis.
Key Takeaways
Elliott Wave Fundamentals
Source: Frost & Prechter, Elliott Wave Principle
ew_five_wave_pattern
The Five-Wave Pattern — Basic Structure of Motive Waves
Elliott Wave Theory is a market analysis framework discovered by Ralph Nelson Elliott in the 1930s. He observed that while price movements in stock markets appear chaotic on the surface, they actually follow repetitive wave structures. The Five-Wave Motive Pattern, the core of this theory, is the basic structure that progresses in the direction of the trend — applicable equally to both uptrends and downtrends.
Composition:
- Impulse Waves: Waves 1, 3, 5 — move in the direction of the main trend
- Corrective Waves: Waves 2, 4 — move against the direction of the main trend
Key Validation Rules:
-
Structural Validation
- Waves 1, 3, and 5 each subdivide into 5-wave substructures
- Waves 2 and 4 each subdivide into 3-wave substructures
- The complete wave forms a 5-3-5-3-5 internal structure
-
Technical Validation
- Volume: Tends to peak during Wave 3 and decline during Wave 5
- Momentum: Wave 3 is the strongest; divergence may occur during Wave 5
- Volatility: Relatively high during Waves 1 and 5
Cryptocurrency Market Note: Cryptocurrency markets exhibit far more extreme volatility than traditional markets, so the proportions of the 5-wave structure often appear exaggerated. It is common for Wave 3 extensions to reach 2.618× to 4.236× the length of Wave 1.
Practical Trading Strategies:
Bull Market Trading Strategy:
- Early Wave 1: Test buy; enter fully after breakout confirmation
- Wave 2 Correction: Additional buying opportunity; use Fibonacci 38.2%–61.8% support levels
- Wave 3 Progression: Hold core position; ride to target price
- Wave 4 Correction: Partial sell or hedge; expect complex corrective patterns
- Wave 5 Progression: Scale out gradually; monitor closely for termination signals
Bear Market Application:
- In a bearish 5-wave decline, the structure is applied in reverse
- Sell or short at each of Wave 1 (decline begins), Wave 3 (sharp drop), and Wave 5 (final decline)
- Capture additional selling opportunities during Wave 2 and Wave 4 bounces
Psychological Background and Market Characteristics:
| Wave | Market Sentiment | Volume Characteristics | Technical Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 | Skeptical, cautious participation | Normal to high | Breakout patterns, initial momentum |
| Wave 2 | "I knew it wouldn't work" — disappointment | Declining | Deep retracement, complex patterns |
| Wave 3 | Conviction, active participation | Maximum | Strong momentum, gaps |
| Wave 4 | Anxiety, confusion | Declining | Sideways movement, time-consuming |
| Wave 5 | Excessive optimism | Tends to decline | Divergence, final rally |
This psychological pattern reflects the collective behavior of market participants. In Wave 1, only a few leading investors act. In Wave 3, the crowd joins in. In Wave 5, latecomers drive the market higher. Understanding this psychological cycle helps you infer which wave the market is currently in.
Wave-by-Wave Detailed Strategies:
-
Wave 1 Entry Strategy
- Confirm completion of the prior corrective wave (Wave C)
- Verify that a 5-wave structure is forming on a lower timeframe
- Set a stop-loss at the support break level
- Indicator Combination: Confirming a MACD golden cross and increasing volume significantly improves reliability
-
Wave 3 Exploitation Strategy
- Set a target at 1.618× the length of Wave 1
- Confirm direction using momentum oscillators (RSI, Stochastic, etc.)
- Continue adding to positions during Wave 3 progression
- Note: Place the stop-loss below the Wave 2 low to allow the trend sufficient room to develop
-
Wave 5 Termination Judgment
- Compare length relative to Wave 3 (equal or 0.618×)
- Check for RSI divergence (price makes a new high, RSI declines)
- Observe declining volume patterns
- Bollinger Band Application: If price touches or exceeds the upper Bollinger Band near the end of Wave 5 and then re-enters the band, this can serve as a termination signal
Failure Cases and Responses:
-
Truncation (Wave 5 Failure): When Wave 5 fails to exceed the high of Wave 3
- Close positions immediately
- Interpret as the beginning of a corrective wave
- Truncation most commonly occurs when Wave 3 was extremely strong
-
Extension: When a specific wave becomes abnormally elongated
- Reanalyze using a 5-wave subdivision
- Adjust the wave count accordingly
- In cryptocurrency markets, Wave 3 extension is most common, though Wave 5 extension occasionally occurs
ew_inviolate_rules
The Three Inviolate Rules of Elliott Wave
These are the core rules that must never be violated in any Elliott Wave analysis. These three rules form the mathematical and logical foundation of Elliott Wave Theory and, unlike guidelines (recommendations), admit no exceptions. If a wave count violates even one of these rules, that count must be unconditionally discarded.
Rule 1: Wave 2 Cannot Retrace Beyond the Start of Wave 1
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Rule | Wave 2 cannot retrace beyond the starting point of Wave 1 |
| Bull Market | Wave 2 low > Wave 1 starting point |
| Bear Market | Wave 2 high < Wave 1 starting point |
| If Violated | Invalidate the Wave 1 count; reanalyze as part of a larger corrective wave |
Practical Verification Methods:
- Draw a horizontal line at the starting point of Wave 1 on the chart
- Monitor in real time whether Wave 2 crosses this line
- Set a stop-loss just below the starting point of Wave 1 (before violation)
- Key Tip: Even if Wave 2 retraces 99% of Wave 1, the rule is not violated. However, such a deep retracement significantly reduces the reliability of the wave count and warrants caution
Rule 2: Wave 3 Cannot Be the Shortest
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Rule | Wave 3 cannot be the shortest among Waves 1, 3, and 5 |
| Comparison Basis | Absolute price distance traveled |
| Typical Characteristic | Wave 3 is usually the longest and strongest |
| If Violated | Review the entire wave structure; consider alternative patterns |
Practical Measurement Method:
- Wave 1 length = |Wave 1 high − Wave 1 low|
- Wave 3 length = |Wave 3 high − Wave 3 low|
- Wave 5 length = |Wave 5 high − Wave 5 low|
- Verify the condition: Wave 3 ≥ max(Wave 1, Wave 5)
Note: This rule does not mean "Wave 3 must be the longest." Either Wave 1 or Wave 5 can individually be longer than Wave 3, but both Wave 1 and Wave 5 cannot be longer than Wave 3. In practice, Wave 3 is overwhelmingly the longest in most cases.
Rule 3: Wave 4 Cannot Enter the Price Territory of Wave 1
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Rule | Wave 4 cannot overlap with the price territory of Wave 1 |
| Bull Market | Wave 4 low > Wave 1 high |
| Bear Market | Wave 4 high < Wave 1 low |
| Exception | Permitted only in Diagonal Triangles |
Cryptocurrency Caution: In highly volatile cryptocurrency markets, momentary wicks may appear to invade Wave 1 territory. Judgment should be based on real-time price action, not closing prices. On exchanges with wide spreads, ensure you use reliable data sources.
Advanced Verification Techniques:
-
Real-Time Monitoring System
Rule 1 Alert: Warning when Wave 2 approaches 90% of Wave 1's starting point Rule 2 Check: Continuously monitor length comparison during Wave 3 progression Rule 3 Alert: Warning when Wave 4 approaches within 10% of Wave 1's high -
Multi-Layer Verification Process
- Confirm simultaneously on daily, hourly, and minute charts
- Reliability is maximized when multiple timeframes agree
- If any violation occurs, prioritize the higher timeframe pattern
Response Strategy When Rules Are Violated:
-
Immediate Response
- Invalidate the current wave count
- Close positions or execute stop-loss
- Switch to an alternative wave count
-
Reanalysis Process
- Re-examine wave structure on a higher timeframe
- Consider the possibility of complex corrective waves
- Combine with other technical analysis tools such as Bollinger Bands, moving averages, and MACD for comprehensive judgment
Important Considerations When Applying the Rules:
- Price Scale: Judge based on arithmetic price scale (logarithmic scale requires separate interpretation, but the arithmetic basis is the standard)
- Time Independent: The time duration of waves is irrelevant to these rules
- Absolute: No exceptions or approximations are permitted
- Priority: These three rules take precedence over all other guidelines
Practical Case Analysis:
Success Case:
- During the recovery following the March 2020 COVID crash, a clear 5-wave structure was observed with strict adherence to all three inviolate rules. High returns were achievable in impulse waves where every rule was perfectly maintained.
Failure Case:
- Ignoring rule violations and stubbornly holding to an existing wave count almost always led to losses. A common example involves investors who rationalized a Wave 2 breakdown below the Wave 1 starting point as a "temporary deviation" and continued to expect a Wave 3 rally. There are no exceptions to rule violations — this principle must be followed without compromise.
ew_corrective_wave_types
Types of Corrective Waves (3-Wave Patterns)
Corrective waves move against the main trend direction, partially retracing the preceding motive wave. If motive waves represent the stage where the market releases energy, corrective waves are the stage where that energy is recharged. Because corrective waves appear in a wide variety of forms, they are more difficult to identify and more analytically challenging than motive waves.
Fundamental Principles of Corrective Waves:
- 3-Wave Structure: All corrective waves are fundamentally composed of an A-B-C 3-wave pattern (triangles have an A-B-C-D-E 5-wave structure)
- Partial Retracement: They do not fully retrace the preceding motive wave (typically 38.2%–61.8%)
- Energy Dissipation: They serve to dissipate excess energy from the preceding trend
- Time Consumption: Price correction is accompanied by time-based correction as well
- Guideline of Alternation: Waves 2 and 4 tend to exhibit different types of corrections (e.g., if Wave 2 is a zigzag, Wave 4 tends to be a flat or triangle)
Major Corrective Wave Types:
1. Zigzag — 5-3-5 Structure
The zigzag is the sharpest and fastest corrective form. It most commonly appears in the Wave 2 position and produces a strong counter-trend retracement.
Characteristics:
- Wave A: Strong initial correction with a 5-wave subdivision
- Wave B: Weak bounce with a 3-wave subdivision (retraces 38.2%–61.8% of Wave A)
- Wave C: Strong final correction with a 5-wave subdivision
Sub-Patterns:
- Single Zigzag: The most common sharp correction pattern
- Double Zigzag (W-X-Y): Two zigzags connected by an X wave; occurs when a single zigzag fails to achieve sufficient retracement
- Triple Zigzag (W-X-Y-X-Z): Extremely rare; three zigzags connected in sequence
Practical Application:
Entry Timing: After Wave C completion (C ≈ A × 1.0 to 1.618)
Target: 61.8% to 78.6% retracement of the preceding trend
Stop-Loss: Below Wave C low
Trading Strategy:
- Avoid premature buy-the-dip during Wave A decline (a larger drop is expected)
- Capture additional sell opportunities during the Wave B bounce
- Judge Wave C completion using Fibonacci ratios, and confirm 5-wave structure completion on a lower timeframe
2. Flat — 3-3-5 Structure
The flat is a more gradual corrective form than the zigzag. It most commonly appears in the Wave 4 or Wave B position and exhibits sideways movement.
Characteristics:
- Wave A: Weak initial correction with a 3-wave subdivision (the key distinction from a zigzag)
- Wave B: 3-wave subdivision retracing to near the starting point of Wave A
- Wave C: Final correction with a 5-wave subdivision
Sub-Types:
Regular Flat:
- Wave B retraces to approximately 90%–105% of Wave A's starting point
- Wave C completes near the same level as Wave A's endpoint
Expanded Flat:
- Wave B exceeds Wave A's starting point, forming a new extreme
- Wave C significantly exceeds Wave A's endpoint
- The most common flat type; easily mistaken by beginners for a trend reversal
Running Flat:
- Wave B exceeds Wave A's starting point, but Wave C fails to reach Wave A's endpoint
- Occurs within strong trends; a relatively rare pattern
Practical Application:
Identification: Always confirm whether Wave A has a 3-wave structure (to distinguish from a zigzag's 5-wave A)
Entry Preparation: Suspect an expanded flat when Wave B forms a new extreme
Target: C = A × 1.0 to 1.618 (in the case of an expanded flat)
3. Triangle — 3-3-3-3-3 Structure
A triangle is a pattern formed as market energy gradually converges. It appears almost exclusively in the Wave 4 or Wave B position, and this positional rule is an important identification criterion.
Characteristics:
- Five subwaves (A-B-C-D-E), all with 3-wave subdivisions
- Converging or expanding triangular shape
- Volume declines progressively
- A sharp directional move (Thrust) occurs after triangle completion
Sub-Types:
Contracting Triangle:
- A converging pattern where each successive wave is smaller
- The most common triangle pattern
- Further classified as: symmetrical, ascending, descending
Expanding Triangle:
- A diverging pattern where each successive wave is larger
- Relatively rare and difficult to forecast
Practical Application:
Identification: All 5 waves have 3-wave subdivisions + converging/diverging pattern
Entry: Enter in the direction of the breakout after Wave E completion
Target: A move equal to the widest part of the triangle (Wave A length)
Caution: The thrust following a triangle often becomes the final motive wave
Practical Tip: A triangle is like the "calm before the storm." Rather than forcing trades inside the triangle, it is more efficient to confirm the breakout direction first and then enter. Also, when a triangle appears in Wave 4, the subsequent Wave 5 tends to be short — often less than or equal to the widest width of the triangle.
4. Complex Corrections
Double Three (W-X-Y):
- Two simple corrective waves connected by an X wave
- W and Y can each be a zigzag, flat, or triangle
- However, a triangle can only appear in the final position (Y)
Triple Three (W-X-Y-X-Z):
- Three corrective waves connected by two X waves
- Extremely complex and time-consuming
- The most difficult pattern to identify in real time
Practical Response Strategy:
-
Assume Simple Correction First
- Always consider the simplest patterns (zigzag, flat) first
- Only consider complex corrections when simple patterns fail to complete
-
Understand X Wave Characteristics
- X waves are connecting waves, usually with a 3-wave structure
- A shallow X wave suggests an overall sideways correction; a deep X wave suggests a sloping correction
-
Balance of Price and Time
- Complex corrections consume significant time
- When price correction is minimal, time correction tends to be extended ("If price doesn't drop, time will do the correcting")
Corrective Wave Trading Strategy Comparison:
| Correction Type | Structure | Entry Timing | Target Setting | Risk Management | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zigzag | 5-3-5 | After Wave C completion | A × 1.0–1.618 | Stop-loss below Wave C | Short |
| Flat | 3-3-5 | After Wave C completion | A × 1.0–1.618 | Stop-loss below Wave C | Medium |
| Triangle | 3-3-3-3-3 | After breakout confirmation | Width of triangle | Stop-loss on re-entry into triangle | Long |
| Complex | Various | After final wave completion | Complex calculation | Staged stop-losses | Very long |
Advanced Analysis Techniques:
-
Early Identification of Corrective Waves
- The key is distinguishing whether the first decline after a trend reversal has a 5-wave or 3-wave structure
- A 5-wave structure suggests Wave A of a zigzag; a 3-wave structure suggests Wave A of a flat
-
Applying the Guideline of Alternation
- If Wave 2 is a zigzag (sharp correction), expect Wave 4 to be a flat or triangle (gradual correction)
- If Wave 2 is a flat (gradual correction), expect Wave 4 to be a zigzag (sharp correction)
- This guideline is not an absolute rule, but it is highly useful for validating wave counts
-
Ratio Analysis
- Zigzag: Wave C = Wave A × 1.0, 0.618, or 1.618
- Flat: Wave C = Wave A × 1.0 to 1.618 (1.618 is common in expanded flats)
- Key retracement levels for correction depth: 38.2%, 50%, and 61.8% of the preceding motive wave
ew_complete_cycle
The Complete 8-Wave Cycle
A complete Elliott Wave cycle consists of 8 waves and represents the natural rhythm of the market. This cycle is the organic union of trend advancement (motive phase) and retreat (corrective phase), forming a fundamental pattern that repeats across all timeframes.
Cycle Composition:
- Motive Phase: Waves 1-2-3-4-5 (5 waves in the trend direction)
- Corrective Phase: Waves A-B-C (3 waves against the trend)
- Total 8-Wave Structure: 5 (motive) + 3 (corrective) = 8-wave complete cycle
Mathematical Structure of the Cycle:
The total number of waves follows the Fibonacci sequence:
- Subdivision Level 1: 2 waves (1 motive + 1 corrective)
- Subdivision Level 2: 8 waves (5 motive + 3 corrective)
- Subdivision Level 3: 34 waves (21 motive + 13 corrective)
- Subdivision Level 4: 144 waves (89 motive + 55 corrective)
2, 8, 34, and 144 are all Fibonacci numbers (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144...). This mathematical structure reveals the fundamental connection between Elliott Waves and Fibonacci ratios.
Cycle Application Across Timeframes:
Ultra-Short-Term Cycle (Minute/Hourly Charts)
Characteristics:
- Completion period: Minutes to hours
- Applicable charts: 1-minute, 5-minute, 15-minute, 1-hour
- Primary use: Day trading, scalping
Practical Strategy:
- Consider opposite positions immediately after 5-wave completion
- Counter-trade at Wave B during A-B-C corrections
- Carefully evaluate profitability against transaction costs (consider slippage and fees in crypto)
Short-Term Cycle (Daily Chart)
Characteristics:
- Completion period: Days to weeks
- Applicable charts: Daily, weekly
- Primary use: Swing trading
Practical Strategy:
5-Wave Motive Phase (2–3 weeks):
- Wave 1: Test buy
- Wave 3: Hold core position
- Wave 5: Scale out gradually
3-Wave Corrective Phase (1–2 weeks):
- Wave A: Stand aside or hedge
- Wave B: Additional sell (B wave bounces can be traps)
- Wave C: Prepare for re-entry
Medium-Term Cycle (Weekly/Monthly Chart)
Characteristics:
- Completion period: Months to years
- Applicable charts: Weekly, monthly
- Primary use: Medium- to long-term investment
Practical Strategy:
- Build core positions during the 5-wave motive phase
- Apply Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) during the corrective phase
- For cryptocurrency, also consider correlation with Bitcoin halving cycles
Long-Term Cycle (Monthly/Yearly Chart)
Characteristics:
- Completion period: Years to decades
- Applicable charts: Monthly, yearly
- Primary use: Asset allocation, macro market outlook
Phase-by-Phase Characteristics Analysis:
Motive Phase (5 Waves) Characteristics
| Phase | Duration Weight | Price Movement (Example) | Volume | Investor Sentiment | Media Attention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 | ~15% | Moderate rise | Normal | Skeptical | Low |
| Wave 2 | ~20% | Deep correction | Declining | Disappointment | Low |
| Wave 3 | ~25% | Largest advance | Peak | Euphoria | Increasing |
| Wave 4 | ~25% | Sideways correction | Declining | Anxiety | Moderate |
| Wave 5 | ~15% | Final advance | Declining | Overheating | Peak |
Corrective Phase (3 Waves) Characteristics
| Phase | Duration Weight | Price Movement (Example) | Volume | Investor Sentiment | Response Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wave A | ~30% | Initial decline | Increasing | Denial ("just a dip") | Stand aside |
| Wave B | ~40% | Bounce | Declining | Hope ("it's coming back") | Selling opportunity |
| Wave C | ~30% | Sharp decline | Surging | Despair ("it's over") | Prepare to buy |
The Wave B Trap: Wave B is the most dangerous phase for investors. Because it looks like the uptrend is resuming, many investors buy near the Wave B high. However, Wave C follows with significant downside, so selling — not buying — should be considered during Wave B bounces.
Identifying Cycle Turning Points:
-
Wave 5 → Wave A Transition (End of Uptrend)
- Volume divergence (price makes a new high but volume declines)
- Technical indicator divergence (RSI, MACD, etc.)
- Wave 5 length is noticeably shorter than Wave 1 or Wave 3
- Excessive optimism pervading media coverage
-
Wave C → Wave 1 Transition (End of Downtrend)
- Extreme fear readings (e.g., Crypto Fear & Greed Index at extreme lows)
- Capitulation confirmed: sharp decline on massive volume
- Positive divergence appears (price makes a new low but RSI rises)
- Extreme pessimism dominating media coverage
Practical Cycle Trading Strategies:
Cycle Early Entry Strategy (Wave 1)
Entry Conditions:
- Confirm completion of the prior Wave C (5-wave decline structure completed on lower timeframe)
- Bullish 5-wave structure emerging on lower timeframe
- Resistance breakout accompanied by increasing volume
Risk Management:
- Stop-loss if price breaks below the Wave C low (applying Inviolate Rule 1)
- Position size: 10–20% of total capital
Cycle Mid-Phase Hold Strategy (Wave 3)
Holding Strategy:
- Expand position after Wave 3 confirmation
- Target: 1.618× or 2.618× the length of Wave 1
- Use trendlines and moving averages for holding discipline
Risk Management:
- Adjust trailing stop-loss based on the Wave 2 low
- Position size: 30–50% of total capital
Cycle Late-Phase Exit Strategy (Wave 5)
Exit Strategy:
- Scale out progressively as Wave 5 develops
- Partial sells at 25% → 50% → 75% levels
- Full exit upon confirmation of technical divergence
Risk Management:
- Full exit on remaining position if price falls below the Wave 4 high
- Lock in profits and wait for the next cycle
Important Considerations:
- Longer cycles offer higher return potential but demand proportionally greater patience and volatility tolerance
- Reliability is maximized when cycles across multiple timeframes are synchronized (aligned in the same direction)
- Macroeconomic factors (interest rates, regulation, etc.) have a greater impact on longer-term cycles
- In cryptocurrency, particularly powerful trends tend to form when the 4-year halving cycle and Elliott Wave cycle overlap
ew_fractal_structure
Fractal Self-Similarity of Waves
One of the most fundamental characteristics of Elliott Wave Theory is its fractal structure. A fractal is a structure where the shape of the parts resembles the shape of the whole — observed in nature in coastlines, tree branches, snowflakes, and more. In markets, this manifests as the principle that every wave is composed of smaller waves, while simultaneously being part of a larger wave.
Core Principles of Fractals:
-
Self-Similarity
- Patterns at smaller scales repeat at larger scales
- Zooming in or out on the time axis reveals the same structures
-
Infinite Subdivision
- Every wave can be decomposed into smaller subwaves
- Theoretically infinite subdivision is possible, but practical limits exist due to data quality and market noise
-
Hierarchical Structure
- Higher-degree waves determine the directionality of lower-degree waves
- Completion of lower-degree waves confirms the progression of higher-degree waves
Fractal Subdivision Rules:
Motive Wave Subdivision (5-Wave Structure)
Parent Wave 1 = Subwaves (1-2-3-4-5) ← 5-wave subdivision
Parent Wave 2 = Subwaves (A-B-C) ← 3-wave subdivision
Parent Wave 3 = Subwaves (1-2-3-4-5) ← 5-wave subdivision
Parent Wave 4 = Subwaves (A-B-C) ← 3-wave subdivision
Parent Wave 5 = Subwaves (1-2-3-4-5) ← 5-wave subdivision
Corrective Wave Subdivision (3-Wave Structure)
Parent Wave A = Subwaves (1-2-3-4-5) [Zigzag] or (A-B-C) [Flat]
Parent Wave B = Subwaves (A-B-C)
Parent Wave C = Subwaves (1-2-3-4-5)
Key Point: Distinguishing whether Wave A has a 5-wave or 3-wave subdivision is the key to early identification of zigzags versus flats. If Wave A completes with a 5-wave structure, a zigzag is likely. If it has a 3-wave structure, a flat is more probable.
Mathematical Expansion of Wave Counts:
Wave count expansion following the Fibonacci sequence:
Level 0: 1 wave (single trend)
Level 1: 2 waves (1 up + 1 down)
Level 2: 8 waves (5 up + 3 down)
Level 3: 34 waves (21 up + 13 down)
Level 4: 144 waves (89 up + 55 down)
Level 5: 610 waves (377 up + 233 down)
Practical Fractal Analysis Methods:
1. Multi-Timeframe Analysis
The most powerful practical application of fractal structure is multi-timeframe analysis. Analyzing a single timeframe makes it difficult to pinpoint the current wave position accurately, but analyzing multiple timeframes simultaneously allows you to capture both the big picture and precise entry timing.
Standard Setup:
- Primary analysis chart: 1-hour
- Higher confirmation chart: 4-hour, daily
- Lower entry chart: 15-minute, 5-minute
Analysis Process:
Step 1: Identify the large wave structure on the daily chart (Which wave are we in?)
Step 2: Confirm the current position on the 4-hour chart (Where within that wave?)
Step 3: Analyze detailed waves on the 1-hour chart (Define the entry zone)
Step 4: Pinpoint entry timing on the 15-minute chart (Precise entry point)
2. Wave Synchronization
Synchronization Principle:
- Reliability increases significantly when waves across multiple timeframes point in the same direction
- Higher timeframe Wave 3 + Lower timeframe Wave 3 = Strongest trend zone
- Higher timeframe correction + Lower timeframe correction = Stand-aside zone
Synchronization Matrix:
| Higher Timeframe | Lower Timeframe | Reliability | Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 (up) | Wave 1 (up) | ★★★☆☆ | Aggressive buy |
| Wave 3 (up) | Wave 3 (up) | ★★★★★ | Maximum buy |
| Wave 5 (up) | Wave 5 (up) | ★★★☆☆ | Prepare to scale out |
| Wave 2 (correction) | Wave A (correction) | ★★☆☆☆ | Stand aside |
| Wave 4 (correction) | Triangle | ★★★★☆ | Wait for breakout |
3. Fractal Confirmation Signals
Bullish Confirmation Signal:
Condition 1: Higher timeframe in bullish motive wave (1, 3, or 5)
Condition 2: Current timeframe completes a 5-wave structure
Condition 3: Lower timeframe begins a new bullish Wave 1
→ Strong bullish signal
Bearish Confirmation Signal:
Condition 1: Higher timeframe in corrective wave (A, C) or bearish motive wave
Condition 2: Current timeframe completes a 3-wave decline structure
Condition 3: Lower timeframe begins a new bearish Wave 1
→ Strong bearish signal
Practical Application Examples:
Example 1: Entry Timing Using Fractal Structure
Scenario: Daily chart in Wave 3 progression
Analysis:
- 4-hour chart: (1)-(2) complete within Wave 3, (3) expected to begin
- 1-hour chart: Sub-waves 1-2 complete within (3), sub-wave 3 confirmed
- 15-minute chart: (1)-(2) complete within sub-wave 3, (3) breakout
Entry: Buy after breakout confirmation on the 15-minute chart
Target: Until Wave 3 completion on the 1-hour chart
Stop-loss: Below the (2) low on the 15-minute chart
Example 2: Risk Management Using Fractal Structure
Scenario: Weekly chart in late Wave 5 progression
Warning Signals:
- Daily chart: Wave 5 internal structure is incomplete (truncation suspected)
- 4-hour chart: RSI/MACD divergence detected
- 1-hour chart: Wave 5 completed, bearish Wave A may be starting
Response: Reduce position by 50%, tighten stop-loss levels
Advanced Fractal Analysis Techniques:
1. Fractal Application of Wave Ratios
- Fibonacci ratios of higher-degree waves tend to repeat in lower-degree waves
- Example: If the parent Wave 3 is 1.618× of Wave 1, the sub-Wave 3 often completes near 1.618× of its sub-Wave 1
2. Fractal Characteristics of Time Cycles
- The time duration of a higher-degree Wave 1 often corresponds proportionally to a complete lower-degree cycle
- Fibonacci time ratios (8 days, 13 days, 21 days, etc.) also tend to follow fractal patterns
3. Fractal Repetition of Volume Patterns
- The volume surge pattern in Wave 3 repeats across all timeframes
- Wave 5 volume divergence also synchronizes across multiple timeframes
Cautions and Limitations:
-
Risk of Over-Subdivision
- Analyzing excessively small timeframes increases market noise
- Profitability deteriorates relative to transaction costs
- Practical guideline: A combination of 3–4 timeframes is optimal
-
Confirmation Bias
- The psychological tendency to find only waves that support your desired direction
- Always maintain an alternative count in parallel
- Prioritize objective criteria (whether inviolate rules are violated)
-
Limits of Market Efficiency
- On ultra-short timeframes, random walk characteristics dominate and fractal structure becomes unclear
- Fractal structure is not always perfect; use it as "approximately correct" rather than precise
Optimal Application Principles:
- Higher timeframe priority: The big picture always takes precedence (when higher and lower timeframes conflict, follow the higher)
- Lower timeframe for timing only: Use exclusively for precision entry and exit timing
- Focus during synchronization: Trade aggressively only when multiple timeframes point in the same direction
ew_wave_degree
Wave Degree — The 9-Level Hierarchy
Elliott established a system that classifies all market waves into 9 degrees of scale. This hierarchy provides a framework capable of systematically categorizing all market activity — from macro movements spanning centuries to micro movements lasting seconds. Each degree corresponds to a specific time range and group of market participants.
The 9-Degree Hierarchy:
| Level | Degree Name | Typical Duration | Applicable Chart | Primary Participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Grand Supercycle | Decades to centuries | Yearly/Decadal | Nations, central banks |
| 2 | Supercycle | Years to decades | Monthly/Yearly | Pension funds, sovereign wealth funds |
| 3 | Cycle | 1 year to several years | Weekly/Monthly | Institutional investors |
| 4 | Primary | Months to 2 years | Daily/Weekly | Hedge funds, mutual funds |
| 5 | Intermediate | Weeks to months | Daily | Retail investors, small funds |
| 6 | Minor | Days to weeks | Hourly/Daily | Active traders |
| 7 | Minute | Hours to days | Minute/Hourly | Day traders |
| 8 | Minuette | Minutes to hours | Minute | Scalpers |
| 9 | Subminuette | Seconds to minutes | Second/Minute | HFT, algorithms |
Important: The "Typical Duration" in the table above is based on traditional stock markets. Cryptocurrency markets, with 24/7 trading and high volatility, tend to compress the duration of each degree compared to traditional markets. For example, an Intermediate-degree move that takes months in traditional markets may complete in just weeks in crypto.
Core Principles for Determining Degree:
1. Relative Size Takes Priority
- Determined by relative comparison with preceding waves, not absolute time or price
- Assessed by scale and complexity relative to the previous wave
- Different time standards apply to different markets and assets
2. Form-Based Classification
- Internal structure and complexity of the wave are the primary criteria
- Completeness and clarity of the 5-wave structure
- Number and development of subwaves
3. Contextual Interpretation
- Position within a larger wave structure
- Role within the overall market cycle
- Consistency with macroeconomic context
Practical Degree Identification Methods:
Method 1: Time-Based Classification
Based on daily chart analysis:
- 1–2 week movements = Minor degree
- 1–3 month movements = Intermediate degree
- 6 months to 2 years = Primary degree
Method 2: Complexity-Based Classification
Internal wave structure analysis:
- Simple 5-wave structure (undeveloped subwaves) = Lower degree
- Contains 1 extended wave = Middle degree
- Multiple extensions + complex corrections = Higher degree
Method 3: Relative Size Comparison
Comparison with preceding waves:
- Less than 50% of prior wave size = One degree lower
- Similar size = Same degree
- More than 2× prior wave size = One degree higher
Practical Application by Degree:
Grand Supercycle & Supercycle (Levels 1–2)
Characteristics:
- Reflect epoch-defining changes from a historical perspective
- Linked to technological innovation, demographic shifts, and geopolitical transformation
Practical Application:
- Foundation for long-term asset allocation decisions
- Assessing the overall direction of cryptocurrency as an asset class (e.g., the grand cycle of blockchain technology adoption)
Historical Examples:
- Industrial Revolution (1750–1850): Grand Supercycle advance
- Great Depression (1929–1932): Supercycle correction
- Bitcoin's birth (2009–present): Possible start of a new Supercycle
Cycle & Primary (Levels 3–4)
Characteristics:
- Closely related to business cycles
- Central bank policy, inflation cycles, regulatory changes
- For cryptocurrency, corresponds to halving cycles
Investment Strategy:
Cycle Upswing (Waves 1-3-5):
- Increase allocation to altcoins and high-risk assets
- Consider leverage (conservatively)
- Raise risk asset exposure
Cycle Corrective Phase (Waves A-B-C):
- Increase BTC allocation; raise stablecoin holdings
- Increase cash or stablecoin exposure
- Secure safer yield sources such as DeFi interest
Intermediate & Minor (Levels 5–6)
Characteristics:
- Sensitive to individual events and news
- Primary focus of technical analysis
- The degree most swing traders analyze
Trading Strategy:
Intermediate Degree Application:
- Match with quarterly major events (halvings, network upgrades, etc.)
- Analyze relationship to 52-week highs/lows
- Relative strength analysis (altcoin strength vs. BTC)
Minor Degree Application:
- Utilize short-term technical indicators (RSI, MACD, Bollinger Bands)
- Daily chart pattern analysis
- Short-term news and event response
Minute through Subminuette (Levels 7–9)
Characteristics:
- Reflects market microstructure
- High proportion of noise makes wave identification increasingly difficult
- Transaction costs have a larger impact on profitability
Cautions:
- Fractal structure becomes less reliable at these scales due to market noise
- Requires extremely disciplined execution and tight risk management
- Best suited for experienced traders with low-latency infrastructure
- Always validate micro-degree counts against higher-degree context before acting
Related Concepts
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