Quote from valleyvintner:
Elliott was both an accountant and a numerologist? Even so, the fact that Benoit Mandelbrot appears independently to have reached conclusions quite similar to Elliott persuades me that the failings of EWT are in the practitioners rather than the theory.
Elliott's Wave Principle is essentially correct. The problems arise when people treat their personal wave count as if it were a road map which the market must inevitably follow. EW may be a roadmap but it's a map fraught with detours and signs saying, "Caution: Bears working." What looked like an Impulse Wave One on Monday can turn into a Corrective Wave B by Wednesday. If you know that and you're prepared to amend your map, EW can be helpful. I think it's especially good for estimating future support/resistance because the Golden Ratio (0.382, 0.50, 0.618, 1.618, 2.618 etc.) appears so frequently in every chart. But you have to be flexible. Hybrid TA/Quants like me try to find "confluence" in EW studies - instances where different time frames give the same common target or turning point. And even then you have to be ready to revise if the market shows you something has changed.
Quote from valleyvintner:
Elliott was both an accountant and a numerologist? Even so, the fact that Benoit Mandelbrot appears independently to have reached conclusions quite similar to Elliott persuades me that the failings of EWT are in the practitioners rather than the theory.
Elliott's Wave Principle is essentially correct. The problems arise when people treat their personal wave count as if it were a road map which the market must inevitably follow. EW may be a roadmap but it's a map fraught with detours and signs saying, "Caution: Bears working." What looked like an Impulse Wave One on Monday can turn into a Corrective Wave B by Wednesday. If you know that and you're prepared to amend your map, EW can be helpful. I think it's especially good for estimating future support/resistance because the Golden Ratio (0.382, 0.50, 0.618, 1.618, 2.618 etc.) appears so frequently in every chart. But you have to be flexible. Hybrid TA/Quants like me try to find "confluence" in EW studies - instances where different time frames give the same common target or turning point. And even then you have to be ready to revise if the market shows you something has changed.
=======================Quote from Kwiatkowski:
I seem to recall that Paul Tudor Jones had good things to say about Elliott Wave in his interview for Market Wizards. Aha, found it, on p. 130, [/B]
Quote from rateesquad:
Well according to this dude.
Which specializes in wave. (not elliot, gann) Whoops...:eek:
Oh well. We already hit the highs. I love the commercials by the end of the video. Right.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wPr_2z78ISc