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CONDITIONAL
FORMATTING AND ITS APPLICATION TO TECHNICAL ANALYSIS
(Amex
Gold BUGS Index as an Example)
by David Petch
www.treasurechests.info
October 24, 2007
Carl
Swenlin stated “Technical analysis is a wind sock, not a crystal
ball”. This is probably one of the most eloquent and precise
definitions I have ever seen because it goes deeper than the sentence
itself. Provided the wind is blowing from the north, the windsock will
indicate that until the wind changes direction. When the wind direction
changes, individuals can note this and be confident that the wind
hitting their house is coming from a direction specified by the
windsock. The further one moves from their house, the variability of the
wind pattern changes, but can be tracked using satellites to provide a
somewhat accurate idea about the bigger picture for determining where
the cloud system/ wind system is traveling. Think of the individual home
with the windsock as a lower Degree in the placement of the weather
system and the satellite images being many Degrees higher in the big
picture. Weather forecasters can zoom to different Degrees of resolution
to get a closer picture of the weather system at any location or simply
pull out again. Relating this to stochastics, having short-term to
longer-term settings provide a similar view to lower Degree and larger
Degree “views” of the market. Keep the definition about “Degree”
in mind because it will be tied together with other presented concepts
at the end of the article.
Conditional
formatting (CF) is the basis for very simple computer programming.
Statements such as “If”, “and”, “or”, “then” are the
basic commands which can be linked through a series of different strings
in order to provide an instruction map for what route to go to if
certain commands are true or false. The commands are noted to be
positive with a “1” and negative with a “0”, depending upon the
defined term. Trading programs have simple CF commands, which link
complex algorithm outputs to become triggered if certain defined
variables are true or false.
CF has
its application in Elliott
Wave with respect to preferred and alternate counts. A preferred
count is a count the market technician feels has that most of the rules
and principles are being followed. The alternate count becomes activated
“if” the preferred count is invalidated. For anyone who does not
have a copy of “Mastering Elliott Wave” by Glenn Neely, I would
strongly recommend it, since it is one of the most important books on
the subject. There is an article I wrote last year titled “The
Technical Palette” describing the methodologies that I follow.
Whenever major rules are broken e.g. upside price objectives, trend line
breaks etc., a count that becomes invalid should have an alternate count
in place to keep the defined trend flowing. Nothing in life is 100%
certain and lies within the realm of statistical probabilities. Just
like a storm front may carry rain, chances are it will miss some
locations due to influences from some local land structures or pressure
differentials. As with the market, defined trends can easily be seen,
but the lower Degree nuances that happen are based upon the culmination
of news and how it influences people.
The
news today is rapidly disseminated to practically anyone that has a
computer. This automatically can cause a rapid shift in market sentiment
therefore attributing the wild swings seen on a daily basis. Over 70% of
stocks are traded on black box models, so Elliott Wave structures as
most market moves appear to be stretched to nearly the maximum upside or
downside targets. A state of disregard or panic can be mathematically
triggered, which then cascades all the way to the whites of people’s
eyes. As such, navigating in today’s market place is a totally
different beast than it was even 20 years ago.
To
summarize the above thoughts, I thought it would be appropriate to use
the AMEX Gold BUGS Index (HUI) as an example. I was hoping to use a
different index I cover (S&P 500 Index, AMEX Oil Index, US Dollar
Index, 10 Year US Treasury Index) but none of them had a conclusion yet
to illustrate the failure of a preferred count. Figure 1 below shows the
preferred count I had from a few weeks back. The wave structure at the
time suggested there was one further leg up in wave 5.(1) before topping
out; the caveat for the preferred count being correct was that the
height of wave 5 could not exceed wave 3, since wave 1 was the extended
wave of the pattern (time and complexity). The HUI continued to rise
above 413, thereby invalidating the wave structure and required
re-analysis. The trend was long in the tooth and traders would not have
affected their trading stance, aside from not adding to any positions.
Investors who average into positions were advised to wait until a
decline to 390-400 occurred before entering any new longer-term
positions.
Figure
1

The
revised count from last week is shown below. The preferred count is
shown in colour and the alternate count is shown in grey. The alternate
count is nearly identical to last week’s chart, except the termination
point of wave 4 was higher, thereby raising the maximum allowable height
of wave to 427.5. The preferred count differed from the alternate with
the thought a potential running correction formed. For the running
correction scenario to be correct, the HUI could not close beneath 400;
it would have broken the alternate count trend line indicating it was in
fact the correct pattern. The HUI would have made a rocket move to
600-700 with the preferred count before the end of January, whereas the
alternate count required the HUI to remain below 427.5. Either pattern
could have been valid, but the short-term market forces changed
direction thereby altering the count. Wave (1) took approximately 6
weeks, so wave (2) in theory should take an equivalent period of time or
slightly longer. By having a preferred count and alternate count side by
side, it allows the reader to see what trend is likely to develop in the
event of a change in. It is important to know all the possibilities any
particular index will take because it helps to minimize losses and
define appropriate entry/exit points.
Figure
2

I have
had numerous requests of late to provide a daily service for tracking
the S&P 500 Index. I am too busy tracking 5 indices and a number of
stocks, so I have to pass since that in itself would be a full time
endeavor.
Writing a piece on
technical analysis is slightly different than what I usually present,
but occasionally a thought comes to mind that requires defining
And of course if you
have any questions, comments, or criticisms regarding the above, please
feel free to drop
us a line. We very much enjoy hearing from you on these
David
Petch

© 2007 David Petch
Editorial Archive
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David Petch
TreasureChests.info
Email
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