Lesson 8 — Elliott Waves Introduction
Understand Elliott Waves as a way to study impulse, correction, rhythm, crowd behavior, and market phases.
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Login to Track ProgressElliott Wave theory studies market movement as a sequence of impulse and corrective waves. The basic idea is that markets often move in phases because crowd behavior develops in patterns: expansion, correction, continuation, and exhaustion.
This lesson introduces wave thinking without making it overly complicated. Students learn the difference between impulse waves and corrective waves. An impulse wave moves in the direction of the dominant trend. A corrective wave moves against that trend or pauses it.
Elliott Wave analysis can help traders understand market rhythm, but it can also become subjective. Different traders may label the same chart differently. This is why wave analysis should be used carefully and combined with structure, levels, and risk management.
The value of Elliott Waves is not that they provide perfect prediction. The value is that they help organize movement. A trader can ask: is the market expanding, correcting, exhausting, or preparing for continuation?
Students should finish this lesson with a practical understanding of wave logic and a clear awareness of its limitations.
1. Label one simple five-wave impulse structure on a historical chart.
2. Identify one corrective movement after a strong trend.
3. Write why Elliott Wave labeling can be subjective.
4. Combine wave analysis with one support/resistance or Fibonacci zone.
- 1. What does Elliott Wave theory study?
- 2. What is an impulse wave?
- 3. What is a corrective wave?
- 4. Why can wave labeling be subjective?
- 5. Why should Elliott Waves be combined with risk management?