Elliott Wave Theory: Basic Principles and History
An introduction to Ralph Nelson Elliott's wave theory, its natural-law foundations, and how crowd psychology shapes repeating price patterns.
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Elliott Wave Theory: Basic Principles and History
Elliott Wave Theory is a form of technical analysis that explains market movements through recurring, fractal wave patterns driven by investor psychology. Developed in the 1930s, it remains one of the most widely studied — and debated — frameworks in trading.
Who was Ralph Nelson Elliott?
Ralph Nelson Elliott (1871–1948) was an American accountant who, while recovering from illness, studied decades of Dow Jones market data. In 1938 he published The Wave Principle, followed by Nature's Law — The Secret of the Universe in 1946. Elliott observed that markets do not move randomly; they advance and retreat in identifiable, repeating structures that reflect the rhythm of crowd behavior.
The core principle: fractal waves
Elliott's central insight was fractality. The same basic pattern appears at every time scale — from tick charts to yearly charts. A wave on a daily chart is built from smaller waves on an hourly chart, and is itself a sub-wave of a larger weekly structure. This self-similar property lets analysts apply one set of rules across all degrees of trend.
The 5-3 structure
Every complete cycle consists of eight waves:
- Five impulse waves (labeled 1-2-3-4-5) moving in the direction of the larger trend
- Three corrective waves (labeled A-B-C) moving against the larger trend
Waves 1, 3, and 5 are "motive" sub-waves within the impulse; waves 2 and 4 are counter-trend corrections. Wave 3 is typically the longest and strongest.
Natural law and crowd psychology
Elliott believed the patterns reflected a natural order — what he called the "Law of Nature." Modern practitioners reframe this in terms of behavioral finance: fear and greed alternate in recognizable sequences, producing the same wave shapes across markets, instruments, and centuries.
Why it matters for traders
Elliott Wave gives traders:
- A framework for identifying where the market is within a larger cycle
- Forward-looking targets based on wave structure
- Context for entering or exiting positions before a turn completes
Criticism and reality
The theory is famously subjective. Two analysts can label the same chart differently, especially in real time. Elliott Wave is best used as a context tool alongside indicators, volume analysis (see our Wyckoff articles), and risk management — never as a standalone oracle.
Getting started
Begin by learning the impulse and corrective structures, then move on to wave degrees and the three unbreakable rules. Mastery takes years of chart practice, but the principles themselves are simple to grasp.
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