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Friday, July 17, 2009

Spot a Pattern You Recognize: One Simple Tip for Becoming a Better Trader

By Gary Grimes

The following article is adapted from market analysis by Elliott Wave International Chief Commodity Analyst Jeffrey Kennedy. Now through July 22, Jeffrey Kennedy’s daily, intermediate, and long-term forecasts for up to 18 markets are free via EWI’s FreeWeek. Learn more here.

Wave patterns are like beautiful women, classic cars and great art – you know them when you see them.

EWI analyst Jeffrey Kennedy drives this point home during his live Elliott wave trading tutorial. It's my favorite of his tips for trading with Elliott waves.

"Trade the pattern not the count," Jeffrey says.

If you don't recognize a pattern at a glance, don't trade it – plain and simple. After all, your wave count can be wrong; the pattern cannot.

Does that mean you must know the exact wave count at a glance, as well? No. Simply spotting a pattern you recognize is where you should start.

Jeffrey scans hundreds of charts, clicking through them one by one, spending mere seconds with each. If he doesn't spot a pattern he recognizes, a click of his mouse takes him to another potential opportunity.

Does price action look extended or choppy? Is it trading in a channel? Is it forming a wedge or triangle shape? These are some of the signals Jeffrey's looking for. Each could help him identify – at the quickest of glances – whether price action is impulsive or corrective. This is the first critical step, Jeffrey says, to spotting high-confidence, Elliott wave trade setups.

That brings us to the following chart. Do you see a pattern you recognize? I do.



Look at the downward price action; the moves look decisive, almost in straight lines like impulse waves. Now look at the upward moves; they look indecisive and choppy like corrections. There's also one down move that is clearly longer than the others – that's almost certainly a third wave of some degree.

At just a glance, here are a few things we can determine:

This is a bearish market pattern, because downward impulses are interrupted by upward corrections.
The price action from September to November seems to be a pretty clear wave 3 down, followed by waves 4 up then 5 down, completing what appears to be a larger degree wave 1 in early March.
Wave 2 follows wave 1, so the upward move starting in early March is most likely a larger degree wave 2.
Wave 3 follows wave 2, so that's what we can expect next.
Wave 3 is never the shortest and often the longest of all five waves, so we can expect the next impulse move to take prices to new lows.
You see, with just a quick glance, we've put a finger on the pulse of the market. Negative psychology pulls prices down, and brief reversals of mood result in upward corrections – this appears to be a long-term bear market.

If you can gain this much insight simply by glancing at a chart, just think of what else you can glean by spending more time with it. Look at this pattern within a longer time frame, and you can determine the degree of trend (this one appears to be primary). Formulate Fibonacci price and time targets, and you can be confident about when and where prices will most likely turn.
There are literally hundreds of things you can do with a good chart, but none of them mean much unless you can first identify a pattern you recognize.

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For more information on using patterns to spot trading opportunities, access Elliott Wave International’s FreeWeek. Now through July 22, all of EWI Chief Commodity Analyst Jeffrey Kennedy’s daily, intermediate, and long-term market forecasts are completely free. Learn more here.


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Gary Grimes focuses on mass psychology, U.S. stocks and the U.S. economy. Gary has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Auburn University in Auburn, AL, where he was first turned onto the Austrian School of economics by way of the world-famous Mises Institute. His study of classical liberalism eventually led him to discover the Elliott Wave Principle and Robert Prechter’s theory of socionomics.

The Versatility of The Wave Principle







The Versatility of The Wave Principle
In this classic Elliott Wave International educational video, Chief Commodity Analyst Jeffrey Kennedy demonstrates the versatility of The Wave Principle by showing you how to identify high-probability trade set-ups at-a-glance, and in any market. Watch the video and then find out how to access Jeff's current high-probability commodity forecasts FREE during EWI's FreeWeek - but only until July 22.


The Versatility of The Wave Principle


Get the best daily commodity picks FREE, but only until July 22!

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Elliott Wave International's Free Week (15-22 Jul 09)

Our friends at Elliott Wave International have just announced the beginning of their wildly popular FreeWeek event, where they throw open the doors to some of their most popular paid services to non-subscribers for one week only. Having an independent forecasting and opportunity-spotting service on your side is more important now than ever. FreeWeek lets you see for yourself, giving you top-level access and FREE forecasts for up to 18 different commodity markets on daily and monthly timeframes.

If you’re not taking part in EWI’s Futures Junctures FreeWeek right now, you’re already missing the valuable opportunities your peers are getting for free, and FreeWeek only lasts from noon Wednesday, July 15 to noon Wednesday, July 22.

Dive into EWI's FreeWeek Now!

Friday, July 3, 2009

New Video from Elliott Wave International (EWI)

Appears more people are putting out videos. Here's one from EWI that may interest you.







Deflation is Winning. Are You?
The mainstream media couldn't predict the biggest bear market in 100 years; how do you expect them to anticipate what
will unfold next? Watch this quick video clip from financial analyst and sought-after speaker Steven Hochberg about
why you should challenge the consensus view for inflation.
Then access the full 20-minute video, FREE.


Deflation is Winning. Are You?


Watch the full presentation, FREE. Click Here!

S&P 500 Update July 1st

I'm sorry this video came up late. I mentioned earlier that I don't put up videos using (only) blackbox methodologies, and I still don't. :)

In this video by INO MarketClub, S&P 500 Update July 1st, he does use his trade triangles technology. But watch for how he describes the trend, draws the trendlines, pulls of fibs, and describes how he would possibly address the trade as prices moves.

The video was dated 1 July.... but its still not too late because he's looking at a break of the trendline around 880 before expecting prices to go lower. (so you could possibly go short even without his trade triangle technology).

Now... for me, I used Elliott Waves, and that's how I got my entry at 930 (61.8% retracement on previous 5 waves decline). Hope you enjoy the video and have something to take away from it.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

E/Y, G/Y Shorts Closed

Prices have moved significantly after the NFP results were out. So I decided to take profits and close out the positions. My original TP was much further, but after such sharp movements, there's a tendency for a move in the opposite direction. So I decided that I should probably close out the trades and perhaps look for another entry.

If I had larger positions, then I would be looking to close out a portion of the position and let the rest run, perhaps on a trailing stop. But I'm working on half-minilots, the smallest possible for my Saxo miniaccount. So there.... decided to close out the positions for now. (Yes... prices are still dropping somewhat right now, but I've decided to take some profits for now)

So the trades are as follows... all triggered by limit orders last night:

EURJPY
Shorted at 136 (Limit Order)
Closed at 134.84 (Manual)
Profit 116 pips

GBPJPY
Shorted at 159.65 (Limit Order)
Closed at 157.23 (Manual)
Profit 242 pips

SP500
Shorted at 930
Closed at 903.27
Profit $26.27

So its a pretty good trading day. It pays to be patient, and not have itchy fingers. In fact, my itchy fingers caused me some dough last week.

For the closing of this trades.... I struggled somewhat, because my original Take-Profit Levels are further. I just hope I don't end up kicking myself later. :P

Short on GBPJPY and EURJPY

Hi Folks,

Just a quick update. My entry for EURJPY and GBPJPY were trigged last night, and I'm also expecting Equities which usually have a positive correlation with the two pairs to be dropping.

I'm experimenting with the SP500 Index (currently triggered short too) for now and seeing how it goes. First experiment using EW on an Index.

Here are some articles by DailyFX which supports my trade direction.
Yen Crosses: Tops in Place?
DOW Warning: Risk of Sharp Decline Increased

Good luck with your trades!