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Q&A With Robert Prechter
As the major stock markets turned down in late 2007 and then started to rally
in March 2009, many people who believed in fundamental analysis have begun
to question its validity.
Famed technical analyst and Elliott wave expert Robert Prechter has long called
for the bear market we are now in the midst of. (He views the rally of 2009
to be a bear-market rally not the beginning of a new bull market.) But over
the years, his methods of technical analysis have been criticized. Here are
his most succinct arguments as to why wave analysis outdoes competing forms
of analysis.
Learn
the Wave Principle and Other Forms of Technical Analysis. Elliott
Wave International has just released The Ultimate Technical Analysis Handbook.
This FREE 50-page ebook is dedicated solely to teaching reformed fundamentals
followers to incorporate technical analysis into their own investing decisions. Learn
more and download your free copy here.
Excerpted from Prechter's Perspective, re-issued 2004
Question: Suppose everyone agreed, "The Wave Principle is not always
right, but it really is the answer"?
Robert Prechter: Well, let me begin my answer with a quote from a national
financial magazine dated October 1977. "Over the last few years, the Wave Principle
has gathered too much of a following and, therefore, it has less value today.
Almost invariably, you can write off a technique when it gets too much of a
following." How does this statement look in light of the decade that followed
it? "Elliott" had one of its greatest successes. Like the Energizer Bunny,
it keeps going and going. And I believe its next success will be its biggest
ever. The Principle itself is undoubtedly on an upward spiral of acceptance:
three steps forward and two steps back.
Now let's suppose that a large number of educated people accepted the Wave
Principle, which is not an impossible idea for, say, a thousand years from
now. There would still be room for differences of opinion on the market and
the future. And there are countless other factors. Even people who practice
the craft don't necessarily take action when they get a signal. Unconscious
doubt and worry often foil people's actions. Very few traders have the emotional
strength to turn even good analysis into profits.
Q: The Wave Principle is intrinsically contrarian. Does it have some
built-in defense against becoming the consensus?
RP: I think so. The Wave Principle is a description of natural human
behavior. This is what human beings are; this is part of their nature -- how
they behave. In order for markets to continue to go through these stages, a
part of human nature must be to believe that such theories of mass psychology
are incapable of being true -- that is, something not worth examining. They
must be primed to accept bullish arguments at tops and bearish arguments at
bottoms. That means they have to be ever open to bogus theories of market behavior.
How else will they create the patterns that fear, greed and hope produce?
Q: How big is the pool of analysts who rely on the Wave Principle?
RP: I think there are quite a few people who are proficient in applying
Elliott to past and present markets, say, perhaps 1% of all technical analysts,
which is a pretty good number of people, I suppose. A lot of those are my subscribers,
and they learned it through studying the Theorist. However, as far as
the number of people proficient at applying the Wave Principle for forecasting market
turns, which is significantly more difficult than applying it in real time,
I think there are very few.
Q: This has been the basis of some criticism. To quote one critic, "relying
on arcane methods does have one advantage. Interpreting the linear squiggles
is left in the hands of the major heir to Elliott's work." How do you respond
to those who contend that the complexity of the theory is a cover that
allows you to retain the Wave Principle as your personal theory?
RP: With regard to any supposed self-serving secrecy, not only did
I co-author a book on how to apply the Wave Principle, as well as reprint Elliott's
writings against protest from practitioners, but also I continually go into
great -- some might say excruciating -- detail in each issue of The Elliott
Wave Theorist explaining exactly what I think the market has done and will
do, and why I think it. If there is any market letter that has educated potential
competitors, it is mine. The reason is that the study of markets is more important
to me than exclusivity, secrecy or power.
Q: Another common approach critics take when they try to dismiss Elliott
as bunk is to refer to you as a mystic or a numerologist.
RP: A mystic believe in things for which there is no evidence, only
desire. I do not consider myself to be a mystic at all. My approach is objective.
The empirical basis of Elliott's discovery speaks to that fact. So do the results
of the trading competition [Editor's note: Bob Prechter won the Trading
Championship in options in 1984 with a stunning 444% gain. The next closest
competitor showed an 84% gain.] Not once during any month since the independent
rating services have been following market timers has a timer using a numerological
approach such as "Gann" analysis ever placed in the top 10 rankings. Just as
would be expected, such methods don't work!
The true mystics are those who believe, for instance, that current economic
performance is a basis upon which to predict stock market prices. There is
no evidence for it. They just feel comfortable with the idea, so they espouse
it.
Q: So you say that the challenge to validity is on the other side?
RP: You're darn right, it is. I am no longer at the point where I feel
that I have to justify the objectivity of the Wave Principle. I think the results
have done that. Technical analysis is entirely rational and has proved itself.
If someone goes back and looks at the record of Elliott wave writers over the
decades, he will find a track record of forecasting success that is well beyond
a random result of chance. If you can do that, the ball is in the other guy's
court. It's up to him to show that this is luck or something. What's more,
the only challenge to a theory is a better theory, and I haven't seen a contender
yet.
Q: You don't feel that you have been effectively challenged by any fundamental
approaches?
RP: I think there's a place for fundamental analysis of individual
companies, but I am firmly convinced that you can make a very rational argument
showing that fundamental analysis applied to overall market timing is like
reading the entrails of goats. In fact, I presented such a critique in The
Wave Principle of Human Social Behavior. If you think my ideas as presented
here are controversial, just read Chapter 19 of that book.
Learn
the Wave Principle and Other Forms of Technical Analysis. Elliott
Wave International has just released The Ultimate Technical Analysis Handbook.
This FREE 50-page ebook is dedicated solely to teaching reformed fundamentals
followers to incorporate technical analysis into their own investing decisions. Learn
more and download your free copy here.
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