It looks like I had the wave structure from
1567.97 completely wrong. I still think that is the end point of Wave 4 from
1538.57, and that that point will hold this decline. It is now most likely that
the market completed Wave 1 of 5 from 1538.57 at 1597.35. The market has now
completed a 5 Wave sequence from that point at 1579.97. That could very well be
Wave 2 of 5. I am still looking for around 1605 and then 1621.
This blog introduces a new way to analyze the stock market. The 5 Wave Model uses relationships between up and down movements, or waves, in the price action to determine turning points in the market.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Thursday's Market 04/11/2013
Although the market moved higher again today, it
was a much choppier trading session than yesterday. Along the way, there were a
number of interesting wave formations, and left open a slight possibility that
a 5 Wave sequence has completed from 1540.29.
The market opened slightly lower, falling to
1586.17 before resuming yesterday’s strong rally. From that point it looked
like a continuation from yesterday, as the SPX rose to a high of 1597.35, with
the largest dip being less than two points. Just when it looked like the market
was going to attempt to break 1600, it began to sell off. It quickly fell to
1592, and then came a series of oscillations with slightly lower highs, and
slightly lower lows. From 1592 the SPX went to 1596.75, 1591.43, 1595.63, and
finally 1591.05. The market then rose slightly into the close.
The rise from 1585.33 to 1597.35 contained 5
distinct 5 wave sequences, 1585.33-1589.07-1586.17-1592.32-1590.63-1597.35.
However these individual sequences did not complete a 5 Wave sequence, as the
correlation for this is only .9378, well below my model’s threshold value. This
indicated a more complex wave structure was underway, and indeed I believe that
is what happened. It appears the market is forming a nested inverted corrective
wave structure that should carry the market higher. This structure contains a
wave 1 up, a wave 1 down to initiate the inverted corrective wave, another wave
1 up, followed by another wave 1 down to start a second inverted corrective
wave. I will spare everyone the gory details of how this wave unfolded. The
result was the second inverted corrective wave terminated at 1592.44, and the
second 5 wave structure completed at 1596.75. The first inverted corrective
wave carried the market back down to 1591.05, which leaves us with one 5 Wave
sequence to complete.
If 1591.05 is Wave 2 of this sequence, I would
expect a move above 1597 for Wave 3, a slight pullback, and then Wave 5 near
1605. It was correctly pointed out to me yesterday that I made a calculation
error. I said the sequence from 1567.97 would complete as 1599-1597-1621. It
should have read 1605-1599-1621. I apologize for the error.
When the current sequence from 1567.97 completes
at 1605, it will complete Wave 3 from that point. I would expect a small
correction to 1599, and then a final push to 1621 to complete the 5 Wave
sequence from 1538.57. At that point I would expect a correction, possibly to
1551, before one more rise to slightly higher levels to complete the sequence
from 666.79.
I mentioned at the start that there is a slight
possibility of a 5 Wave sequence having completed from 1540.29. I counted the
move from 1540.29 to 1573.89 as a 5 Wave sequence. The move then from
1567.97-1586.39 completed another sequence, which I see as one degree less than
the first, followed by an inverted corrective wave to 1585.33. Putting the
sequence together from 1540.29 to today’s high gives us 1540.29-1573.89-1567.97-1586.39-1585.33-1597.35.
This sequence has a correlation of .9913, within my model’s threshold. However,
as I described above, I do not see the move from 1585.33 to 1597.35 as a
complete 5 Wave sequence. If it is not, a sequence from 1540.29 cannot be
completed. It is possible that I have misread the wave, and since the sequence
from 1540.29 to 1597.35 does fall within my model’s parameters, it needs to be
considered as a possibility. If the market falls below 1585.33, this will be
the likely scenario, with a target around 1551.
Thank you.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Wednesday's Market 04/10/2013
WOW! What a day for the market. As anticipated,
the slight pullback into the close yesterday, proved to be the low. The market
started strong, and remained strong throughout the day.
Another gap to the upside took the market to
1576.10 at the open, followed by a two point pullback. That was only the
beginning, as the market continued higher, and higher, until it reached
1586.39. This move higher was only interrupted by a couple of small pullbacks.
One more pullback set the stage for the final push of the day, which brought
the SPX to 1588.85. From there the market saw its most substantial drop of the
day, plummeting nearly three and a half points to 1585.33. The market recovered
at that point and rose nearly to its previous high before the close.
The first 5 Wave sequence of the day was a
familiar wave, with an inverted corrective wave 2. This completed as the market
hit 1586.39. From there, the market turned a little choppy, eventually wending
its way to 1585.33. This was itself a corrective wave 2 from the 1586.39 high.
Looking at this entire wave sequence from 1538.57,
the market as now completed four waves, and Waves 1, and 2 of Wave 5. Wave 1
was the rise from 1538.57 to 1564.91 on 3/25/2013. Wave 2 was then the
semi-inverted corrective wave that stretched from 1564.91 to 1540.29. Wave 3
went from that low, to yesterday’s 1573.89 high. Wave 4 then completed at
yesterday afternoon’s low of 1567.97.
Today the market completed Wave 1, and Wave 2 of 5
at 1586.39, and 1585.33 respectively. Waves 3, 4, and 5 of 5 should lead to the
end of this sequence. With more waves completed, it is now likely that this
wave will carry slightly higher than the 1619 I had previously mentioned. The
SPX should now top over 1621.
A likely path for these final waves would be
something like 1599-1597-1621. After this wave completes, the market should
finally be ready for a correction.
Thank you.
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