It's theirs. In the 1990's I invented my own proprietary sentiment indicator and have religiously updated it every week for which the data was available. Luckily, the data source I used remained stable over that time, so no changes were required to the formulas or to the data sets used. Here is what the weekly data show in the chart below.
Elliott_Trader
A Focus on Counting the Elliott Wave
Sunday, January 18, 2026
It's Not My Fault ...
Thursday, January 15, 2026
A Couple of Wedges
As we have shown over the last several days, the ES futures currently appear to be wedging in an up trend. It is difficult to say that a wedge is over until key lengths are exceeded lower.
GOLD (futures GC) have been wedging on the two-hour chart, and the wedge was recently broken lower. Key lengths need to be monitored here, too. A GC 2-hr chart is below.
Have an excellent start to the day.
TraderJoe
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Lots of Things
A lot of things are going on the ES daily chart which are worth pointing out. The first is that the daily slow stochastic has (at least temporarily) lost its embedded status. Along with this, price has struck the 18-day SMA, as below.
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| ES Futures - Daily - Line in the Sand Hit |
Another observation is that the swing line indicator with today's lower low has turned lower. Two items to confirm are 1) whether the close remains below the 18-day SMA, and 2) whether the daily slow stochastic remains below the 80 level or not.
A further item to note is that the daily Bollinger Bands are curling in and beginning to wrap around price.
From an Elliott Wave perspective, can the diagonal be over? Yes. But can it also form a diagonal with deeper legs - like 62% or more - as we pointed out earlier? This is also possible with currently about equal odds.
Have an excellent start to the day.
TraderJoe
Sunday, January 11, 2026
A Rare Bird
The chart below, the daily chart of the ES futures (roll-over contract) shows where one old Wall $treet adage comes from. That adage is, "IF the bears have Thanksgiving... then the bulls will eat Christmas dinner." As you can see from the chart, prices declined before the typical third week in November (although Thanksgiving was a little later this year on the 27th instead of the more typical 23 - 25th). Then, they rallied into Christmas.
And prices continued on with the Santa Claus rally into the New Year. Hopefully, the turkey was not undercooked, or half-baked! Keep in mind, it is pretty rare to get an eight-month rally without so much as a 38% retracement.
But now, the Christmas ornaments (the red & green fractals) can outline some of the risks involved in this up wave. Yes, the wedge can get wedgier. But, the down (red) fractals can break, too.
Have an excellent start to the evening,
TraderJoe
Wednesday, January 7, 2026
The Risks are Piling Up
The OHLC version of the chart in the prior post for the weekly ES futures is below. Yes, there are ways that higher highs can be made. But the risks are piling up. Even a 38% retrace shown is almost 1,000 ES points from here. And deeper retraces are certainly possible.
Besides retrace risk, there is also the risk that the entire upward movement is over. If the up wave sequence is an A,B,C instead of the five waves shown, then there is a (likely lesser) risk that Intermediate wave (4) could be undercut.
For the short term, it is suggested to pay close attention to the 18-day SMA, and whether price closes above it or below it on a daily basis.
Have an excellent start to the evening,
TraderJoe
Saturday, January 3, 2026
Mikey Likes It!
Hey Mikey. With all apologies to the Life cereal commercial from the 1980's, we noted in the prior post we were not a huge fan of indicators like the RSI, or PPO - which are implying a decline - for counting waves. There are several other factors that currently say, "well if a decline does happen, it may still not be the onset of the bear market". One of those factors is the NYSE Advance/Decline Line ($NYAD). Readers of this blog should look up the cumulative value of the indicator if they are interested, but it has recently reached a new high in the last couple of weeks. I have written several times before that major bear markets have rarely started with such little divergence indicated. With that in mind, we must still allow this count of the extended first wave in Minor A. The count is shown below in the weekly closing chart of the New York Composite Index (NYA).
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| NY Composite Index - Weekly - Minor A |
In the extended first wave count, the third wave is shorter than the first, minute ⓘ. So, as long as the fifth wave, minute ⓥ, stays less than the third wave, this count can be valid. We will note that while the Sep - Nov period brought some level of decline, it was quite meager. It could be, but just doesn't seem like, a Minor B wave that really causes significant market vexations, like, say, a long in time Minor B triangle. So, maybe that decline is just a fourth wave. Cautionary note: while this down wave does not have closing overlap, it does have a tad bit of intraday overlap.
None of this completely discounts what the RSI and PPO are saying. There may be a significant decline ahead soon. Sentiment is still fairly overheated. And, for example, if Minor B should turn out to be a triangle, a three-wave ⓐ wave lower could be the most dramatic of the lot. It's just that this up wave count may not be the final one of the bunch. Perhaps a Minor B wave will provide the necessary $NYAD deterioration to create a significant divergence.
So, we remain flexible, calm and patient going into the New Year. We remain on notice for significant declines, and nothing to the downside will surprise us. If a triangle does occur, it might turn out to be a great range-trading opportunity. We shall see.
This is the second post since Wednesday. Have an excellent rest of the weekend and start to the New Year.
TraderJoe
Thursday, January 1, 2026
They Don't Like It
I'm talking about two indicators. I'm not a real big fan of indicators but do use the Elliott Wave Oscillator as a guide in wave counting. In this post, I'm primarily referring to two indicators - the RSI or Relative Strength Index, and the PPO or Percentage Price Oscillator, although the price is shown using the Zigzag indicator just for clarity and accurate terminal points. The first chart clearly shows that the RSI does not like this up wave. It is currently diverging.
The second chart below shows what the same chart provides in terms of the PPO oscillator. It is also diverging at this time.











