Does Elliott Wave Theory actually work?

Discussion in 'Technical Analysis' started by Vincent S. Ashmore, Nov 25, 2015.

  1. Pekelo

    Pekelo



    Personally, I think it worked much better in the past, before computers. Nowadays it is probably a coinflip.
     
    #71     Dec 27, 2017
  2. Pekelo

    Pekelo

    Technical analyst David Aronson wrote:

    The Elliott Wave Principle, as popularly practiced, is not a legitimate theory, but a story, and a compelling one that is eloquently told by Robert Prechter. The account is especially persuasive because EWP has the seemingly remarkable ability to fit any segment of market history down to its most minute fluctuations. I contend this is made possible by the method's loosely defined rules and the ability to postulate a large number of nested waves of varying magnitude. This gives the Elliott analyst the same freedom and flexibility that allowed pre-Copernican astronomers to explain all observed planet movements even though their underlying theory of an Earth-centered universe was wrong.
     
    #72     Dec 27, 2017
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  3. My understanding is that he was of limited financial means when he passed. So perhaps it worked even better before he discovered it...
     
    #73     Dec 27, 2017
  4. Precisely. Constructing evidence after the fact.
     
    #74     Dec 27, 2017
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  5. baro-san

    baro-san

    Paul Tudor Jones and Elliott Wave Theory
    By JLTrader | September 12, 2015

    A few months ago I wrote an article addressing the magical powers attributed by some to Fibonacci analysis. What I had planned to write next about was Elliot Wave Theory, which I consider to be an equally ridiculous and degrading part of technical analysis. But, a couple of things held me back. Firstly, there’s much more haziness here compared to Fibonacci. Secondly, and most important, Paul Tudor Jones is quoted in Market Wizards (1988) as being a supporter:

    Are there any market advisers that you pay attention to ? Bob Prechter is the champion. Prechter is the best because he is the ultimate market opportunist.
    What do you mean by opportunist ?
    The reason he has been so successful is that the Elliott Wave theory allows one to create incredibly favorable risk/reward opportunities. That is the same reason I attribute a lot of my own success to the Elliott Wave approach.
    Whenever I wanted to criticize the Elliot Wave aficionados, I got stopped in my tracks by the quote above. Well, this week I’ve been reading More Money Than God, a book which provides a history of hedge-funds. Paul Tudor Jones is of course mentioned, and new light is shone on a couple of things: the attribution of his trading success to Elliot Wave; the fact that together with his chief economist and statistician, Peter Borish, predicted the 1987 crash by noting an eerie parallelism when they superimposed the charts of the 1980s on the 1920s.

    Firstly, as it can be seen in Trader: The Documentary (1987), Borish predicted that the crash would arrive in the spring of 1988. This forecast was no better than the many others made at a time when a lot of Wall Street players were expecting a market break – unsurprisingly after a five year bull run. Secondly, in an interview in Barron’s in the first half of 1987, Peter Borish admitted to fudging the results of the 1980s-1920s comparison, juggling with the starting points for the two lines until he got the fit he wanted.

    How about the connection between Paul Tudor Jones, Elliott Wave theory and Robert (Bob) Prechter ? It must be said that Prechter was an investment guru in the 1980s, mainly because he had correctly predicted the start of the bull market in 1982 (by using Elliot Wave). After the crash, expecting the stocks to plunge at least 90%, he became a perma-bear and remains one to the present day. It’s clear that the stellar performance Paul Tudor Jones had in 1987 (200%) can’t be attributed to Prechter. Not only he didn’t pinpoint the date of the crash, but Jones said in an interview to Barron’s that he decided to fade Prechter (in other words, fade Elliot Wave), due to Prechter’s becoming such a large market force.
    But the author knows better than Paul Tudor Jones what is the source of PTJ's success. (ridiculous!)

    A quote from More Money Than God offers what I believe to be the real reason for PTJ’s success:

    The truth was that Jones’s trading profits came from agile short-term moves, not from understanding multidecade supercycles whose existence was dubious. Like the traders at Commodities Corporation, Jones was adept at riding market waves; he would get up on his surfboard when a swell seemed to be coming, ready to jump off quickly if the market turned against him. “When you take an initial position, you have no idea if you are right,” he once confessed, undermining the notion that any long-range analysis could explain his success. Rather, as he explained in his more candid moments, his method was “to write a script for the market,” setting out how it might behave; and then to test the hypothesis repeatedly with low-risk bets, hoping to catch the moment when his script became reality.

    This sounds very similar to Jesse Livermore’s method of placing ‘exploratory bets’ until the market confirmed its direction and allowed him to add to the original position.

    To conclude: although Paul Tudor Jones might have genuinely believed that his success was due to Elliot Wave, as he’s quoted in Market Wizards, all the evidence points to the contrary. Again, from More Money Than God:

    In one example of Jones’s loose grip on the causes of his own success, analysis by Commodities Corporation, which had seeded Jones, determined that he tended to lose money on cotton, the market he believed he knew best. When the Commodities Corporation analysis was presented to Jones, he had difficulty accepting it.
    That's a ridiculous, but typical conclusion, isn't it?

    A better conclusion: Those who can, do; those who can't, write :)
     
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2017
    #75     Dec 27, 2017
  6. tommcginnis

    tommcginnis

    Another *inspired* post, V.
     
    #76     Dec 27, 2017
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  7. Pekelo

    Pekelo


    By the way this is NOT an evidence for EWT itself. 2 charts being similar is one thing, having waves with predicting power is another.

    I also notice a similarity between the Dow Jones chart and Bitcoin's chart:

    [​IMG]
     
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2017
    #77     Dec 27, 2017
  8. baro-san

    baro-san

    you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink
    saying; emphasizes that you can make it easy for someone to do something, but you cannot force them to do it
     
    #78     Dec 27, 2017
  9. Pekelo

    Pekelo


    (Richard Prechter)"His visibility increased further after he won the U.S. Trading Championship in 1984, with a then-record 444% return in a monitored options trading account."

    His company EWI, is still in business after 35 years, employing 80 people:

    https://www.marketwatch.com/story/w...ning-of-a-sharp-collapse-in-stocks-2015-06-08

    Edit: This is a shitload of BAD predictions:

    https://macromon.wordpress.com/2010/10/28/robert-prechters-100-predictions-7-years-later/
     
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2017
    #79     Dec 27, 2017
  10. What time frame, or how long or short, was the duration of that trading competition?

    I don't want to sound arrogant or cocky or anything, but I think I can maybe beat that.

    All these trading competitions are from the 80's; you rarely, if ever, hear about someone currently winning something like that in today's day.

    Make Trading Competitions Great Again,
    kind of like the Olympics or various sports annual Final competitions....Star Traders should stick out and be recognized somehow by some official monitoring organization.
     
    Last edited: Dec 27, 2017
    #80     Dec 27, 2017