12,000 YEARS OF ELLIOTT
WAVES:
Appendix A:
Introduction to Elliott Wave
Theory.
R. N. Elliott was a businessman during the early
part of the Twentieth Century. He traveled widely throughout the Americas and during
these travels he developed a serious illness that caused him to interrupt his
work and travels. During his convalescence, he turned his attention to the
stock market. In his study of the stock market, he discovered a sequence of
waves, which reoccurred in stock market trading over time.
Elliott refined his studies and published the
results first in a monograph titled The Wave Principle in 1938. He
published more on his Principle in a series of articles in the Financial
World during 1939. He added to the
body of literature on his Principle by publishing another monograph in 1946
titled Nature’s Law, plus various Interpretive Letters between 1938 and
1947. He died in 1948.
By the time Elliott wrote Nature’s Law, he
had reached a point where he was convinced the waves and Principle he had
discovered was not only present in organized financial markets, but also in all
human endeavors and development. He wrote the following: “Nature’s Law has
always functioned in every human activity. Waves of different degrees occur
whether or not recording machinery is present. When the machinery described
below is present, the patterns of waves are perfected and become visible to the
experienced eye.”
The machinery he described was a viable stock market
average. Such averages have only been available for about 150 years. It is the
authors’ faith in this belief that has been the motivating force in expanding
the years covered in this Elliott Wave analysis of history, from a few hundred
to 12000 years. This fact is vital if the reader is to understand the purpose
and the importance of the conclusions drawn from this work.
Elliott empirically derived the Elliott Wave
Principle. It came into being after long study of stock market movements. He
discovered form and structure in stock price movements, which no one before him
had observed. The form and structure he uncovered is both simple and elegant in
its basic manifestation. He discovered that all stock market movements take
place in eight waves or sequences. Each wave in this sequence is a move by the
index that occupies a predetermined position in terms of direction and duration
in relation to the other 7 waves of the sequence.
The eight waves consist of five waves that typically
form a bull market, which is then followed by a corrective phase (or bear
market) that consists of three waves. The form and structure of this discovery
is displayed in the chart below (Figure A1).

Figure A1
You can see that the bull market phase of five waves
consists of three waves up
(Waves 1,3, and 5), with two corrective waves down
(waves 2 and 4). This is followed by three waves down in the bear phase of the
cycle, completing the eight-wave sequence. He further discovered that these
eight wave sequences appeared one after another and became part of a larger
wave sequence. Elliott after making this discovery decided he needed to find a
name for these waves of differing degree. He started by naming the smallest
wave he observed a subminuette wave, and continued naming these waves in order
of rising magnitude as follows:
subminuette
minuette
minute
minor
intermediate
primary
cycle
super cycle
grand super cycle
He felt this range of wave sizes would cover all possible observations from the
smallest to a wave lasting several hundreds of years. Our focus will dwell on
the larger waves and mostly ignore the smaller magnitude waves.
At this juncture it is appropriate for us to
introduce the idea that there are waves of longer duration which are important,
which Elliott did not discuss. The reason for this omission on his part was
simply due to the fact there was no need for him to address longer periods of
time. If he had not been in poor health and lived longer, it is most likely
that he would have addressed waves of larger and longer duration than his Grand
Super Cycle Wave which lasts several hundred years. The purpose of this current
work is simply to continue where Elliott stopped.
One point that needs to be made because it is
relevant to the main discussion is that occasionally a 5-wave bull sequence
ends with an irregular top. When this happens, the A-wave correction is as
usual, but the upward B-wave extends well beyond the top of the previous fifth
wave in a final display of “irrational exuberance”. As a consequence of this
blow-off end to the bull market, the subsequent C-wave correction is steeper,
more severe and longer lasting than what is normally the case with an ABC
correction.
The diagram below illustrates this kind of event.

FIGURE A2
We can conclude at this juncture of our work that
Elliott’s Principle suggests the stock market expands and contracts in line
with a set structure (form). Bull (upward) waves start at the end of a
three-wave correction and progress upward in a five-wave structure. This is
followed by a three-wave bear (downward) corrective structure. The empirical
evidence on which the Elliott Principle is based indicates that prices do not
return to the low point of the previous 8 wave sequence, prices only approach the
previous low. This phenomenon indicates the pathway of humankind is ever
upward. A happy thought.
These eight wave sequences build up into eight wave
patterns of larger degree which can ultimately expand to include scores of
years, hundreds of years, and even thousands of years. It is the goal of this
article to show how these waves fit together in a logical structure, which has
relevance to historical facts. We will endeavor to determine where we have been
and where we are now in this sequence of large waves, and then draw some
conclusions about what this may portend for future human history and stock
market movements.
More detailed information can be obtained on the
Elliott Wave Principle in the following sources:
Books
Prechter, Robert R. Jr. The Major Works of R.N.
Elliott. New Classics Library
Frost and Prechter. Elliott Wave Principle.
New Classics Library
Other books can be found by searching at amazon.com
or other bookstore websites.
Internet Resources
http://home.netvigator.com/~pcwonghk/ew
http://www.ozsurf.net.au/elliott/correc
http://www.gamesdomain.com/directd/pc/windows/edutainment/ewt2_2.html
http://www.elliottwave.com/basics1.htm
Other web resources can be
obtained by searching on the web.
(C) 1999 By The Authors
All Rights Reserved