Risk Management for Technical Traders [Interview Excerpt]

by ForexCycle.com | January 15, 2013 03:05
By Elliott Wave International If you trade with Elliott wave analysis, your trading decisions are all about the difference between where the market is vs. where it will be. According to Jeffrey Kennedy, editor of our Elliott...

How the Federal Reserve is Showing Financial Fear

by ForexCycle.com | January 5, 2013 03:17
By Elliott Wave International Think about one of those movie scenes when the leading man does all he can to defeat the big, bad enemy — punches, kicks, slams, stabs, shoots — but the bad guy just...

Forex Trading: Why You Need to Look Past "Fiscal Cliffs"

by ForexCycle.com | January 4, 2013 02:48
By Elliott Wave International First, a word on how we all are conditioned to think that, "momentum will remain constant unless acted on by an outside force." Read this excerpt from Robert Prechter’s May 2004 Elliott Wave...

Learn to Label Elliott Waves More Accurately

by ForexCycle.com | January 1, 2013 06:52
By Elliott Wave International Are you looking for an easy way to improve your confidence as you analyze the charts you trade? Take a quick look at this chart (adapted from Jeffrey Kennedy’s December 26 Elliott Wave...

Free Report: 5 Hidden Market Opportunities for 2013

by ForexCycle.com | December 21, 2012 04:15
Our friends at Elliott Wave International have just released a new free report, 5 Hidden Market Opportunities for 2013. It gives you a new U.S. dollar forecast for 2013 — a forecast that would astonish most mainstream...

Chart Example – How to Identify High Confidence Reversal Zones

by ForexCycle.com | December 20, 2012 00:45
By Elliott Wave International "Price gaps, wave relationships and Fibonacci retracements act as support or resistance for countertrend price moves. When combined, these characteristics help identify high-probability reversal zones." -Jeffrey Kennedy

Two Signs That Deflation is Far From Over

by ForexCycle.com | December 20, 2012 00:43
By Elliott Wave International The federal government defines the Producer Price Index (PPI) as "the average change over time in the selling prices received by domestic producers for their output."