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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Ending Diagonal or Not??


Over the past few days I have been seeing several bloggers, who missed the 12% rally from Nov bottom to January high, suggesting that the market is carving out an ending diagonal. And once this pattern is completed, we will fall of the cliff. Proponents of this pattern include Elliott Wave followers and chartists. However, based on UST’s Market Matrix analysis and proprietary trend indicators, it is highly unlikely that we are in an Ending Diagonal pattern. In the end, all those who are promoting the Ending Diagonal concept could once again miss another buying opportunity. UST's primary E/W count is presented here.

First of all, let me be very clear that Ending Diagonal patterns are a reality! They do exist. And they do result in sharp moves in the opposite direction. Ending diagonal patterns are defined as:

"An ending diagonal is a special type of wave that occurs primarily in the fifth wave position at times when the preceding move has gone "too far too fast," as Elliott put it. A very small percentage of ending diagonals appear in the C wave position of A-B- C formations. In double or triple threes (see next section), they appear only as the final "C" wave. In all cases, they are found at the termination points of larger patterns, indicating exhaustion of the larger movement.

Ending diagonals take a wedge shape within two converging lines, with each subwave, including waves 1, 3 and 5, subdividing into a "three," which is otherwise a corrective wave phenomenon. The ending diagonal is illustrated in Figures 8 and 9 and shown in its typical position in larger impulse waves." 

And they look like:



Following DJIA chart shows an ending diagonal drawn in the current market. There are many aspects of this ending diagonal which fulfill the technical requirements of this pattern.

DJIA - Weekly Chart 
DJIA - Daily Chart

Characteristics of this Ending Diagonal:
  1. Structure: Market traced out the ending diagonal pattern in an overlapping manner. Moreover, sub waves are seen as divided into 3-waves instead of 5. 5-wave advances suggest impulsive rise, while 3-wave and overlapping advances characterize correction or ending diagonal.
  2. Rapid Rally: This pattern has formed after more than 100% market rally in less than 4 years, which can be classified as a sharp rise. Therefore, sharp rise requirement has also been satisfied.
  3. Sentiment: Sentiment on this latest up move has touched extreme optimistic levels - levels not seen in many years. Therefore, it meets the requirement of optimistic extreme.
  4. Divergence: Finally, there is a clear divergence between large cap indices like DJIA and SP500, and Nasdaq. This divergence can be a negative omen for the overall market, as divergences typically occur towards the end of an advance.

Although above mentioned reasons support the possibility of an ending diagonal being formed, there are several reasons why the Ending Diagonal pattern assumption is doubtful. These reasons are based on personal experience, market’s analytic study and interpretation of Elliott Wave pattern in light of Market Matrix indicators/IPM Model.

In order for the market to confirm an ending diagonal, we need to see a very sharp decline, which will break below Nov 2012 lows. However, following reasons do not support the concept of a sharp decline.

Market developments that do not support Ending Diagonal:
  1. Internal market strength is very strong, which suggests that we have further rally left
  2. Recent rally saw a market breadth spike, which has previously been a sign of further gains after a brief pause.
  3. Start of new Bull market in Global Markets and Emerging Markets (A special report was emailed to subscribers in early December highlighting this development). A new bull market typically lasts longer than only 2 months. 
  4. A lot of people are publicizing and accepting this pattern, as logical next step. I have noticed that whenever a pattern becomes public news, it rarely happens
  5. No major sell signal yet e.g. 8/4 test etc.


Conclusion:
Yes we will see a market decline, but it will not be because of Ending Diagonal. Instead it will be because of Elliott Wave pattern shown on the UST blog, IPM Model top date, elevated Sentiment, trend line resistance, and overbought conditions. People who believe in the ending diagonal will go very short on this decline, and will most probably not cover at the bottom. Hence, they will not only not make money based on their ending diagonal belief but will also miss the upcoming rally. In order for our E/W count to remain intact, market should not decline below …


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3 comments:

  1. Does today's rally change your model predictions?

    ReplyDelete
  2. No. The model is showing a bottom at the next IPM Turn Window. In the last update sent to subscribers, the potential market trajectory shown suggested that the market can continue higher for some time, even after the turn date expiration. This happens when the internal strength of a rally has been very strong, which was the case from November-January. Since trees do not grow to the sky, there will be a pull back. The possibility of pullback is even stronger with sentiment survey optimism being extremely elevated across multiple important surveys.

    ReplyDelete
  3. This was also the reason why shorting the market was not the right thing to do!

    ReplyDelete

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