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Moving Averages and the Wave Principle

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1Moving Averages and the Wave Principle Empty Moving Averages and the Wave Principle Mon Aug 24, 2015 7:45 pm

time is money

time is money

Moving Averages and the Wave Principle
Improve your Elliott wave pattern identification skills with this lesson from Jeffrey Kennedy

Moving averages are one of the most widely-used methods of technical analysis because they are simple to use, and they work. Among Elliott wave traders, you will likely find an especially high percentage of investors and traders who incorporate moving averages into their Wave analysis.

If you’re new to the Wave Principle, I recommend using a moving average to get you started, and the reason why is that a moving average overlaid on a 
price chart will help train your eye to see developing Elliott wave patterns.

For an example of a schematic Elliott wave, look at the figure below:
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.] 


If you’ve read The Elliott Wave Principle by Robert Prechter and A.J. Frost, you know that wave patterns are illustrated as line diagrams.

When you look at a real price chart rather than a schematic, the basic chart is typically an open-high-low-close price chart. Each price bar represents a single period and is illustrated by a vertical line with a small mark to the left and a small mark to the right as seen in the next figure:
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.] 


The little lower line on the left-hand side of the vertical bar is the open; the little upper line on the right-hand side of the vertical line is the close; the top of the line is the day’s high or that trading period’s extreme; and the bottom of the line is that trading period’s low.

Here’s the thing: Whenever you’re making the transition from looking at a textbook diagram to actually counting Elliott waves on a real price chart, it can be confusing to the eye. If you use a moving average, it will help you to see the wave pattern more easily.

Let me prove my case more thoroughly with this chart of Corn:
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.] 


The blue line is an 8-period simple moving average of the close, which clearly shows that a five-wave decline has unfolded from the upper left-hand side of this price chart. With the aid of a moving average, the subdivisions within this selloff are more easily discernible than with the untrained naked eye.

Also, notice that the slope of the move up in wave 4 is shallow. This detail is important because one of the key characteristics of countertrend price action is that it moves slowly, thus its slope will be inherently more shallow than what one can expect to encounter when a motive wave is in force.

By Elliott Wave International

2Moving Averages and the Wave Principle Empty Re: Moving Averages and the Wave Principle Mon Jul 27, 2020 11:44 am

Derross




Moving Averages and the Wave Principle
Improve your Elliott wave pattern identification skills with this lesson from Jeffrey Kennedy

Moving averages are one of the most widely-used methods of technical analysis because they are simple to use, and they work. Among Elliott wave traders, you will likely find an especially high percentage of investors and traders who incorporate moving averages into their Wave analysis.

If you’re new to the Wave Principle, I recommend using a moving average to get you started, and the reason why is that a moving average overlaid on a 
price chart will help train your eye to see developing Elliott wave patterns.

For an example of a schematic Elliott wave, look at the figure below:
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.] 


If you’ve read The Elliott Wave Principle by Robert Prechter and A.J. Frost, you know that wave patterns are illustrated as line diagrams.

When you look at a real price chart rather than a schematic, the basic chart is typically an open-high-low-close price chart. Each price bar represents a single period and is illustrated by a vertical line with a small mark to the left and a small mark to the right as seen in the next figure:

The little lower line on the left-hand side of the vertical bar is the open; the little upper line on the right-hand side of the vertical line is the close; the top of the line is the day’s high or that trading period’s extreme; and the bottom of the line is that trading period’s low.

Here’s the thing: Whenever you’re making the transition from looking at a textbook diagram to actually counting Elliott waves on a real price chart, it can be confusing to the eye. If you use a moving average, it will help you to see the wave pattern more easily.

Let me prove my case more thoroughly with this chart of Corn:
local moving services near me [You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]
[You must be registered and logged in to see this image.] 


The blue line is an 8-period simple moving average of the close, which clearly shows that a five-wave decline has unfolded from the upper left-hand side of this price chart. With the aid of a moving average, the subdivisions within this selloff are more easily discernible than with the untrained naked eye.

Also, notice that the slope of the move up in wave 4 is shallow. This detail is important because one of the key characteristics of countertrend price action is that it moves slowly, thus its slope will be inherently more shallow than what one can expect to encounter when a motive wave is in force.

By Elliott Wave International



good!

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