Elliott Wave Timing Beyond Ordinary Fibonacci Methods
By Mark Lytle
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About this ebook
This book provides a method for extracting timing information from market data using a variant of Elliott Wave labelling. Using the revised labelling, specific points in price and time are run through a series of equations via spreadsheets that give timing information, as well as uncovering powerful trend lines that are invisible on normal charts. Instructions are provided for constructing he necessary spreadsheets, and tutorials are included using a standard calculator to familiarize the reader with how the equations work. Some trading principals are also discussed.
The core of the system produces corrections to the use of calendar days as the ordinate or x-axis on most market charting programs. These corrections replot the charts on a modified logarithmic scale. This scale has precisely calibrated increments called 'nodes' which statistically have higher than average probabilities of trend change at the points in calendar time that these labelled increments represent. By combining results from either nested or adjacent Elliott Wave patterns, 'overlapping' nodes from both patterns reinforce the windows in time where trend change will be the most common.
Mark Lytle
Retired IT worker from Phillips Petroleum. Dabble in esoteric subjects including markets, history, anthrpology, and other things.
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Elliott Wave Timing Beyond Ordinary Fibonacci Methods - Mark Lytle
Chapter 1
Definitions and Core Concepts
Exponential Time Nodes
This chapter will explain how to begin the process of analysis, what to look for, and how to select the appropriate input information to do an analysis with.
For starters we are looking for Elliot Wave patterns. I prefer simple ones, standard A-B-C patterns (3's), and sometimes 1-2-3-4-5 patterns (5's). This book will not be an Elliot Wave primer, I will assume some familiarity with these concepts.
Being that the simplest pattern is the A-B-C pattern, this is where we will start.
Here is an example of this pattern:
It would be nice to know where this pattern would bottom, wouldn't it?
To help determine this, we need some standard concepts to apply to all charts, and this will help to determine what price and time information is to be copied from this, or any other price chart, to make calculations possible.
All price and time measurements will be taken from a 'start' point that represents where the pattern started. You can see that this clearly is the point where the two red lines cross in the picture below. This is the 'start' point, which is the most important price and time point.
So what are the important parameters and how do we measure them?
We need the price and time covered by wave A, and the price and time covered by wave C. The parameters of wave B are unimportant, and won't be needed.
So what we are looking for is the following quantities as in this diagram:
We are seeking the price spans and time spans of waves A and C, as they relate to the price and time levels of the 'start' point.
So these calculations are fairly straightforward. We subtract the height of waves A and C from the 'base price' of the 'start' point to get the price spans of waves A and C. Then, we subtract the date of the 'start' date, from the dates of the tops of waves A and C to get the time spans of waves A and C. No higher math here.
So when we have these quantities measured, we have one final calculation yet to do to produce a very simple but important measurement. It is as follows:
The PTP is the basic math concept, the building block of all of the math to follow. It is clearly a simple concept.
Now, what do we use this for?
The PTP is the 'atom' of this analysis. In a sense, we are going to use it to build a slightly more complex formula, sort of an analogue to a 'molecule'. This new formula is expressed as follows:
EPTP = e^(-(LN(PTP) *time span of A) / time span of C)
For 'timespan