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Trader Profile · The Pioneers

Ralph Nelson Elliott

1871–1948 · American accountant; originator of the Elliott Wave Principle

An accountant who, recovering from illness, pored over seventy-five years of charts and found a hidden order — markets move in repeating, fractal waves driven by crowd psychology.

Elliott WaveFractalsFibonacciCrowd psychology
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Ralph Nelson Elliott · 1871–1948

1 The Story

The accountant who found order in the waves

Born in Marysville, Kansas in 1871, Elliott spent his career as an accountant, holding executive posts for railroad companies in Mexico and Central America. A serious illness forced him into retirement — and toward the stock market, where he studied seventy-five years of index data, from yearly charts down to half-hourly ones.1

In 1938 he published The Wave Principle, and in 1946 his final work, Nature's Law: The Secret of the Universe, arguing that market prices follow natural, repeating patterns that can be measured with Fibonacci numbers.1

2 The Big Idea

Markets move in repeating, fractal waves

Price isn't random — it traces the same shapes at every scale.

Elliott saw the market swinging between optimism and pessimism in a rhythm you can learn to recognize: the same wave forms appear in a 30-minute chart and a 30-year one. Many consider it as foundational to technical analysis as Dow Theory.2

3 The Method

The Wave Principle, in plain terms

The 5-3 structure

A complete cycle is eight waves — a five-wave impulse in the direction of the trend (1-2-3-4-5), then a three-wave correction against it (A-B-C).

Fractal & self-similar

Each wave is built from smaller waves of the same shape and is itself part of a larger one — the pattern repeats at every degree, from minutes to decades.

Three hard rules

Wave 2 never retraces more than 100% of wave 1; wave 3 is never the shortest; wave 4 never enters wave 1's price range. Break a rule and the count is wrong.

Fibonacci proportion

Waves relate by Fibonacci ratios (0.382, 0.618, 1.618…), a framework for projecting how far a wave may travel — a guide, not a guarantee.

Elliott's 5-3 cycle: a five-wave impulse, then a three-wave correction 1 2 3 4 5 A B C impulse (1–5, with the trend) correction (A–B–C)
A complete Elliott cycle: a five-wave impulse with the trend, followed by a three-wave A-B-C correction. The same form repeats at every scale.2

An honest caveat: wave counts are famously subjective — two analysts can label the same chart differently, and corrections are especially slippery. Treat Elliott as a lens on crowd psychology and structure, not a precise predictor.

4 Try It Today

Test the idea for yourself

A no-risk exercise

On a clearly trending chart, try to label a five-wave move up followed by a three-wave pullback. Check it against the three rules — if wave 4 dips into wave 1's range, your count is wrong and needs redrawing. Notice how the crowd's mood shifts from wave to wave.

5 The Books & Their Big Ideas

What they wrote — and what to take from it

The Wave Principle

Ralph Nelson Elliott · 1938
  • The original. Markets move in measurable, repeating waves of crowd psychology.1
  • Degrees of trend. The same pattern nests inside itself at every timeframe.2

Nature's Law: The Secret of the Universe

Ralph Nelson Elliott · 1946
  • Waves as a natural law. Elliott tied market form to Fibonacci and patterns found in nature.1

6 Watch & Read

Go deeper

▶ Curated video embeds here
(e.g. an "Elliott Wave explained for beginners" walkthrough — embedded from YouTube, credited)

§ Sources

  1. "Ralph Nelson Elliott," Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Nelson_Elliott
  2. "Elliott wave principle," Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elliott_wave_principle