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The Fundamental Error of Elliott Wave Theory

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  • First Post: Edited 2:23pm May 8, 2009 1:43pm | Edited 2:23pm
  •  paulharris
  • | Joined May 2009 | Status: Member | 10 Posts
I'm interested if anybody else has read this logical attack on Elliott Wave theory: http://orvinfive.blogspot.com .
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  • May 9, 2009 2:32am May 9, 2009 2:32am
  •  paulharris
  • | Joined May 2009 | Status: Member | 10 Posts
“The Fundamental Error of Elliott Wave Theory”


by Orvin Five


The underlying premise of Elliott Wave theory is that human behavior—as manifested in the movement of the stock market—can be modeled mathematically as a series of patterns expressed by a deterministic function. This conclusion arises from a mistaken analogy between stock price movements and other phenomena found in nature. For centuries, people noticed that there were patterns in snail shells, planetary orbits, ocean tides, and many other phenomena. Often, these patterns were so consistent that they could be mapped to mathematical functions with a high degree of accuracy. Crucially, it was not necessary to understand why a particular mathematical function was able to predict a natural pattern. In other words, the underlying inputs (causal variables) of the pattern could remain unknown for centuries even though the mathematical model continued to forecast the pattern accurately. As an example, people were able to predict the movements of celestial bodies long before they had identified and understood the main underlying input (gravity) responsible for the model.

If you want to understand why Elliott Wave theory is flawed, it is important to distinguish between two very different categories of knowledge (and/or ignorance) about an underlying input. The first, which I will call the “Input Identity” or “Input Existence”, is simply the identification that the input exists at all. The second, which I call the “Input Degree” is the quantitative (or at least, relatively ordinal qualitative) value for the underlying input once its existence/identity has already been determined.

Input Existence and Input Degree are two very different things. To illustrate this idea using our example of celestial motion, early astronomers had neither (1) identified that a force yet to be called “gravity” existed at all (i.e. they lacked knowledge of the Input Existence), nor had they (2) the means to assign any value (Input Degree) to this input, regardless of whether they had yet identified its existence or not. Thus, it was an “unknown unknown”.

Once both the gravitational force and the tools for calculating it were discovered, the patterns of celestial bodies suddenly made more sense. The history of science is full of such examples of discoveries of underlying input(s) that explain particular mathematical models of natural patterns. What’s important to note here is that the explanatory variables for these patterns were most often (1) relatively few in number (2) not considered to be exhaustive and/or capable of making the mathematical model perfect. In the case of the movements of celestial bodies, we know that the basic gravitational calculation of masses and distances won’t be enough to predict a planet’s movement with 100% accuracy, since there are relativistic and other effects at play as well (including even changes in mass due to atmospheric dissipation, etc.). But what’s important is that the errors are small—in other words, our knowledge of the Input Existence and Input Degree for celestial motion is robust enough to facilitate launching probes to other planets.

To quickly recapitulate: (1) an apparent pattern in nature is observed, (2) a mathematical model is developed which robustly expresses the pattern and has predictive power, (3) the mysterious underlying causal inputs of the natural phenomenon are finally discovered/identified, (4) a means of properly calculating the values of the underlying inputs is finally discovered/identified, and (5) the pattern is now robustly (though perhaps not 100%) understood.

This brings us to the fundamental error of Elliott Wave theory. Looking at a stock index chart, we see an apparent series of loosely identifiable patterns, some of which seem to repeat sporadically. We then ask ourselves if it is possible that these patterns can be modeled mathematically in the same way that other natural phenomena have been. For this to be true, we would have to first (1) identify the main underlying inputs to the model, and (2) assign such inputs their respective degrees of value. Even though we might miss a few inputs, our model should still be robust enough if we catch the main ones.

So, is it possible? The answer is no.

We can state the reason as follows: Stock prices do not move as a result of unknown unknowns that have yet to be BOTH identified and THEN valued. We’re not looking for something mysterious and new--we in fact ALREADY KNOW the handful of main Input Identities that robustly explain stock price movements. We also already know that these inputs (often correlated) are themselves dependent on countless other, secondary inputs that we cannot accurately value, even if we occasionally can estimate some of them correctly. And here is our theoretical lynchpin: We ALREADY KNOW, a priori, that no single theory or mathematical model can accurately predict the values (Input Degrees) of certain of these secondary inputs.

Or more verbosely and accurately, we already know that no single theory or mathematical model can accurately predict the values of the members in any arbitrary subset of these secondary inputs, as long as such arbitrary subset contains only members that are themselves substantially independent of each other. For the purpose of our analysis, we will focus on subsets of variables consisting of only two members (i.e. pairs of secondary inputs).

To clarify the above more concretely, let’s start by looking at an extremely important underlying “main input” that should enter into any mathematical model purported to predict the price movement of the S&P 500: next year’s earnings. Although a massively important input, the exact value of “next year’s earnings” would not alone allow you to predict the price direction of the stock market, although knowing this input’s exact value would give you a major advantage and probably make any model much more accurate. If you were to couple this input with a precise knowledge of the U.S. dollar’s value relative to other currencies at the end of next year, it would make your model even more robust. There are probably just a dozen or less such “most major” inputs that, when put together, would produce a mathematical model that was strikingly predictive if the actual (quantitative or ordinal qualitative) values of such inputs were known with certainty. The fact that many of these inputs (economic, behavioral, social, etc.) are correlated to various degrees does not change matters. Nor does it matter that these dozen inputs could be “swapped” with a dozen other similar inputs to yield a similar result (i.e. tell me next year’s Nasdaq earnings instead, and my S&P stock price model will still work robustly, due to correlation). As stated above, what’s important is that these dozen (or so) interchangeable “main inputs”, or “input categories”, are themselves functions of countless (effectively billions) of other, secondary inputs that no one mathematical model (including EWT) can predict.

But how can we claim that we know this a priori? Firstly, we can show (in practice actually, not just in theory) that within the set of billions of secondary inputs, there are countless pairs of any two such inputs that cannot be expressed as predictive functions of each other no matter how much we try. Usually, basic common sense alone will identify such pairs of inputs (for example, “average summer temperature in North America” and “probability that the Chinese minister of finance unexpectedly dies” are two inputs that have miniscule mathematical interdependence, while both influence the S&P 500 to at least some very small degree). By definition, if the two secondary inputs making up any particular pair showed a strong enough degree of correlation (or indeed any strong enough mathematical relationship), then either one of the inputs would become redundant. This is because that particular input would not add much explanatory power to a mathematical model that already contains the other input in the pair. But we find instead (in practice) that when we do properly estimate secondary inputs individually, our overall predictions meaningfully improve in increments. In addition to this, we also know that the values of our countless “non-interdependent secondary inputs” are not totally random. If they were totally random, then we would have to treat them as errors (or potentially disregard them) within our main mathematical model. Note that I use the word “totally” because all of these inputs reflect at least some degree of effective randomness (even prior to being deconstructed down to the physical level of quanta, if that were even possible). Now—how do we know that these secondary inputs are not totally random? Because IT IS POSSIBLE to sometimes predict, very accurately, the values of some of these inputs using direct, observational methods—i.e. imperfect but reliable, fundamental analysis. For example, a diligent analyst rolls up his sleeves, pours over tons of data, and then accurately (or at least robustly) predicts next year’s corn harvest. At the same time, he also correctly predicts some changes to certain of next year’s tax rates, after reading 21 articles on the subject. He looks at the data historically, and finds that the corn harvests and the tax rates show no meaningful correlation or other mathematical relationship to each other.

He plugs both of these values into separate areas of a larger mathematical model that he uses to predict agricultural sector profits for next year. He then plugs this figure into an even bigger model and uses it to predict the value of the S&P 500 slightly more accurately than he would have otherwise.

Note that our analyst has arrived at a value for each input “deterministically” from even more basic constituent data, and in total mathematical isolation from the other input in the pair. Now for Elliott Wave theory to make any sense, one would have to take the absurd position that these two inputs in fact are indeed mathematically related at an even higher functional level than what the analyst understands (perhaps you might refer to it as holistic or biblical?). With all due respect, I believe that it would be the Elliott Wave theoretician who should have the responsibility of proving this mathematical interdependence to the analyst, and not the other way around. It would need to be proven for each and every pair (or at least a heck of a lot of them) for the main mathematical model to be valid.

What our analyst has done is use two secondary inputs, each of which somehow fulfills the seemingly “miraculous” criteria of (1) being individually predictable by fundamental analysis of more basic data, (2) not mathematically interdependent with its counterpart, and (3) partially explanatory for the future value of the market. There is nothing odd about this unless you look at the problem with deterministic preconceptions. Now—the fact that ALL THREE of these criteria have been fulfilled proves that the two inputs cannot both be variables within any deterministic mathematical function whose final output value (the market) we already know. If they were, you would be able to use such a mathematical function in reverse to robustly predict either of the inputs themselves in terms of the other. Try using Elliott Waves to predict next year’s tax rates in terms of corn harvests, and you’ll see what I mean. At the same time, nobody could argue that tax rates have absolutely no influence on the S&P 500. You could repeat this argument using thousands of other examples. Every time, you would find that no “global” mathematical function (such as Elliott Wave theory) would be able to robustly predict your independent variables in reverse. By their absolute (rather than just marginal) nature, these thousands of predictive errors do not “cancel out” each other in the aggregate to yield a convergent result. Elliott Wave theory just can’t work, by definition.

At this point in the argument, an Elliott Wave adherent may cry foul. How could you use Elliott Waves “in reverse” to predict the value of just one variable in a massive function, when you don’t know all of the other variables (and their relative influences) within the function as well? My answer to this question is that you can’t have it both ways. If you accept the idea that fundamental analysis works at all (which I do), then that means that you also accept the idea that sufficiently robust (though hardly perfect) mathematical models of stock index movements can be constructed using values determined by rigorous fundamental analysis (otherwise there would be no point to fundamental analysis). Now take your pick from any of these fundamental models that you care to choose. One by one, strip away the rigorously, independently determined value of each variable and replace it with the value (of that same specific variable) implied by plugging in the Elliott Wave prediction for the final output result (i.e. the future value of the stock market) while keeping the other variables the same. Soon, the model will begin to spit out nonsensical retro-predictions of crop harvests, tax rates, Alt-A mortgage defaults, or any other variable you care to name that might legitimately contribute to stock market movements. I bring this up because many Elliott Wave adherents claim to jointly use fundamental analysis, as if the two methods were complementary to each other. Ironically, they are in conflict. According to the logic behind the above refutation of Elliott Wave theory, every input variable correctly determined by fundamental analysis constitutes yet another reason why the remaining, undetermined input variables are not part of a deterministic mathematical function.

As you can see, the relationships of underlying inputs to stock values are totally different from the relationships of underlying causes to natural patterns that intrigued R.N. Elliott. When 19th century chemists could not understand why the elements of the periodic table displayed predictable, recurring patterns, it was the concept of electrons/orbitals that finally explained it all (just as gravity did for astronomers). For stock traders, there is no analogy—no all-encompassing force, particle, or wave that will one day be identified, valued and then plugged into an equation to predict the future. Rather, there are dozens of major factors that have ALREADY BEEN IDENTIFIED, yet whose values are known to be unpredictable in the aggregate—even if we can occasionally predict some of them individually by rigorous analysis of their constituent elements.

Proponents of Elliott Wave methods are likely to contend that my theoretical arguments are not relevant if the EW theory yields practical trading results. I will not dwell on the many arguments against the notion that an individual trader’s success necessarily proves the perpetual validity of the underlying method that he/she uses. But I will point out that it’s impossible to either prove or disprove the Elliott Wave theory’s validity by reference to its practical results. For this praxeological reason, a purely theoretical analysis is obligatory.

Finally, I should point out that, in practice, most Elliott Wave practitioners admit that their system is only meant to be a “general guide” with many possible outcomes (i.e. additional randomness and variability is introduced). That is, there is an “ideal” wave pattern according to the theory, but in practice there can be deviations from this pattern. Nothing about this admission refutes the above arguments, nor does it strengthen the underlying predictive power of Elliott Waves.
 
 
  • Post #3
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  • Aug 20, 2009 5:47pm Aug 20, 2009 5:47pm
  •  paulharris
  • | Joined May 2009 | Status: Member | 10 Posts
seems a few phrases were clarified, but otherwise total silence.
 
 
  • Post #4
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  • Sep 18, 2009 9:05am Sep 18, 2009 9:05am
  •  panguFX
  • | Joined Mar 2009 | Status: Member | 226 Posts
elliot waves occur all the time,

the problem is finding the elliot waves on the proper timeframe,

and the time frame should be far more adjustable than is

allowable by MT4.
 
 
  • Post #5
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  • Sep 18, 2009 9:20am Sep 18, 2009 9:20am
  •  PeterFM
  • Joined Apr 2006 | Status: Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re | 1,851 Posts
Perhaps this should be made a stickie in the Rookies Section?
 
 
  • Post #6
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  • Sep 18, 2009 9:58pm Sep 18, 2009 9:58pm
  •  aquaart
  • | Joined Nov 2008 | Status: Tech Analyst- Right 50% of the time | 528 Posts
Quoting paulharris
Disliked
“The Fundamental Error of Elliott Wave Theory”
by Orvin Five
Ignored
I am a mathematician and because I understood the basic ideas of EW, I assumed that it must work.

But after trying to apply them, I realised that they were just a guide and for me the most the I need to know about EW is that there are waves that produce points of S/R. However the waves do work quite well at times and are worth knowing.

By looking at the above I can see why they don't always work and I am now getting a lot more trading done now that I have eliminated complexity like EW.


Thanks Orvin
 
 
  • Post #7
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  • Sep 19, 2009 10:58am Sep 19, 2009 10:58am
  •  soso
  • Joined Aug 2007 | Status: Fluid | 1,133 Posts
No this shouldnt be a sticky. Why should be a sticky, simply because you dont like EW and the article is on the same wavelength with your feelings? It really doesnt say anything about the profitability of a trader who designs his system around EW, or parts of EW. If you go read that blog and his comments you'll see that the guy doesn't believe in TA overall, not just EW:

"What teachers of Elliott Wave theory often do is try to convince students that their special descriptions of prior events (by assigning wave labels retroactively) imply predictions of future events. This is wrong."

Now go put instead of "Elliot Wave theory" your favorite analysis method S/R, James16, Fibs whatever and you'll see it is the same thing.

EW is NOT a trading system. It is just a guide, a possible market map. You either accept it or you dont, period. If you accept it then it is your job to extract patterns out of it and design a trading system around it. If you dont accept it then fine, just dont make such a fuss about it.
Trading = a mirror to your human flaws. Fix them or be fixed.
 
 
  • Post #8
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  • Sep 19, 2009 12:14pm Sep 19, 2009 12:14pm
  •  PeterFM
  • Joined Apr 2006 | Status: Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re | 1,851 Posts
It was said with 'tongue in cheek', that's English for irony. If you can't see the joke that's your problem, not mine.

If you can find 10 EW traders all singing from the same hymn sheet then I might be interested. If you can show me how it tells me anything that I can't already see on the chart then I might be interested.
 
 
  • Post #9
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  • Oct 12, 2009 2:46pm Oct 12, 2009 2:46pm
  •  paulharris
  • | Joined May 2009 | Status: Member | 10 Posts
Yes, most of his arguments could be applied to all of TA, not just EW.
 
 
  • Post #10
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  • Nov 29, 2009 9:29am Nov 29, 2009 9:29am
  •  halfstep
  • | Joined Nov 2009 | Status: Guitar Hero | 270 Posts
I think the only to know whether EW works or not, is to get your own hands dirty and try it yourself, which i will do.

EW do sounds like a bunch of hokus voodoo pokus. but then again so did fibonnaci, but it works
 
 
  • Post #11
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  • Jan 8, 2010 8:15am Jan 8, 2010 8:15am
  •  edmturk
  • | Joined Dec 2009 | Status: Yilmaz | 348 Posts
These are theories and not writen on stone. There will those believe in some theories and some oppose to them.
 
 
  • Post #12
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  • Apr 22, 2010 3:28am Apr 22, 2010 3:28am
  •  kheme
  • | Joined Apr 2009 | Status: Demo trading for now | 12 Posts
one question i NEVER seem to find answers to in all videos and articles i've read about the Elliot wave theory is... HOW DO I IDENTIFY THE ORIGIN OF THE WAVES??? I mean... how do i draw or count the waves? where do i start from? how do i know where to start from? i've seen several examples on charts but no one ever seems to explain why they chose theirs points as the origin of the 1st wave.

So could someone please explain this to me? i know quite a bit about the Elliot wave theory now, but all that knowledge is USELESS cos i still can't apply anything i've learned.

so a little help PLEASE http://cdn.forexfactory.com/images/smilies/yim/sad.gif
 
 
  • Post #13
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  • Edited 4:11am Apr 22, 2010 3:48am | Edited 4:11am
  •  FXSurfer
  • Joined Mar 2007 | Status: ~~~~~~~~~ | 3,692 Posts
Out of the different stuff I have by Elliott, there are about 2-3 pages only of decent material - It's the first chapter (Rhythm in Nature) from his first book "The Wave Principle". (I'll try and find a link to it.)

IMO it was all downhill from there. Why? Instead of keeping it basic and simple the guy, and his followers, just kept getting more and more complicated and abstract.

Edit: Can't find a link to the chapter that I mentioned but, no big loss.
I'll summarize: Things in nature move in waves, the market Blah, Blah, Blah...

Edit2: Now that I look at, I'm taking that book, R. N. Elliott's Masterworks, and giving it to the library tomorrow - just to get it out of my face.
 
 
  • Post #14
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  • Apr 23, 2010 8:54am Apr 23, 2010 8:54am
  •  halfstep
  • | Joined Nov 2009 | Status: Guitar Hero | 270 Posts
pphhewfff, just another attack on another theory, this guy should a logical dissection on how technical analysis doesn't work.

nobody can prove or disprove why EW or technical works or not, just like neither Einstein or a great theologian can approve whether god exist or not.

some things has to be seen to be believed, after being university for 3 full years and reading a tons of logical academic attacks and argumentative essay on how everything should and shouldn't work. you start placing very little weight on what things on paper reads like and more weight on what actually works and have effects in the real world.
 
 
  • Post #15
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  • Apr 23, 2010 10:08am Apr 23, 2010 10:08am
  •  waves
  • | Joined Jan 2009 | Status: Member | 92 Posts
You guys are right...it doesn't work and you should not trade it......keep right on doing what your doing now....I'm sure everyone that has posted on this thread has spent years getting to know wave theory and knows from that study why it will never produce consistant winners.....I am also sure everyone posting on this thread is a long time trader who is extremely profitable..congrats to all you experts who have uncovered the falicy of profitable wave trading
 
 
  • Post #16
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  • Apr 23, 2010 10:29am Apr 23, 2010 10:29am
  •  Ted1983
  • | Joined Oct 2006 | Status: Britunculus | 940 Posts
Quoting halfstep
Disliked
pphhewfff, just another attack on another theory, this guy should a logical dissection on how technical analysis doesn't work.

nobody can prove or disprove why EW or technical works or not, just like neither Einstein or a great theologian can approve whether god exist or not.

some things has to be seen to be believed, after being university for 3 full years and reading a tons of logical academic attacks and argumentative essay on how everything should and shouldn't work. you start placing very little weight on what things on paper reads like...
Ignored
If you actually read the article he offers logical proof that EW is flawed. The very premise is complete nonsense in the first place, so I don't even see why anyone needs to offer a refutation. The article doesn't say technical analysis doesn't work, so why do you assume the author thinks it doesn't?

Also many logical proofs of the non existence of God have been offered over the centuries. It's just that idiots don't even understand the meaning of the word proof.
 
 
  • Post #17
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  • Apr 23, 2010 11:24am Apr 23, 2010 11:24am
  •  Ivan
  • | Additional Username | Joined Apr 2010 | 229 Posts
I believe in EW. The main its flaw is that people complicated it to craziness. When you look at history, you may see that it has sense and work. The main problem in going forward is to know when formation of a wave is over. If you have a strategy that help you determine when the formation is over, so the EW
wave can be of a great help, otherwise it can be of great frustration.
The more experience the closer to the reality
 
 
  • Post #18
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  • Jul 12, 2010 9:30pm Jul 12, 2010 9:30pm
  •  Wab
  • Joined Dec 2009 | Status: Member | 769 Posts
Obviously they can.

It is the same with the EW, which flies along happily in spite of all naysayers and egotistical mathematicians.

Check the Profitunity or Chaos forum to get a real EW education or buy a copy of Elwave software.
 
 
  • Post #19
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  • Jul 12, 2010 10:28pm Jul 12, 2010 10:28pm
  •  jaygee
  • | Membership Revoked | Joined Jul 2010 | 2,878 Posts
I have found that when a large number of people use the same or similar methods, they work. No kidding right. If everyone uses the same EW strategy, it suddenly gets very accurately predictable. Thats why EW traders try so hard to get everyone to trade off it. "If only everyone would use this, it would always work ". Uh huh. Instead of trying to find complex theories or even worse develop my own, i look for patterns that develop when i trade. The only way they work, imho is if "most" people use the same or similar moving average, indicator, s/r, timeframe, etc. When you find those, you suddenly find yourself feeling like you are the greatest trader...until ofc the masses move to something else. I do not trade to impress anyone. I trade to make money so finding the holy grail is not my bag. And trying to impress you with my strategy actually would work against me. Finding what the majority uses works until you tell everyone and then they suddenly don't. People begin to try and pre-empt the grail that "everyone" is about to trade off of. Its a lot like a self fulfilling prophesy. So i won't tell you that EW theory is the best trading strategy ever. Or the worst. I will tell you however that i have found several strategies that do work and I won't share them. Trading successfully isn't that difficult but when people get complex about it, losses usually follow. Or a lot of complex mathematical discussion ensues that really doesn't matter much to me. The single most important number i look at everyday is my account balance. As long as it steadily increases, i don't change anything. Its the only variable that matters. peace and good luck.
 
 
  • Post #20
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  • Jul 13, 2010 2:27am Jul 13, 2010 2:27am
  •  Wab
  • Joined Dec 2009 | Status: Member | 769 Posts
If you read Bill Williams book, "Trading Chaos", you will find a deeper understanding of the EW and more importantly a way to trade it very successfully.

I have read dozens, if not hundreds of trading related books magazines and articles and traded for 30 years. The best of what I have found useful is in that one book.

Elliott, Fibonacci and Fractals work time and again in just about any chart you care to look at. Bill Williams puts it together in a way that is easy to understand and rigorous to apply.

Well worth the price.

Now I wonder how many people even have an inkling of the EW theory when they collectively panic at the same time and price?
 
 
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