The Elliott wave structure of a key commodity ETF provides a clue
By Elliott Wave International
Consumers around the globe are wondering when they will finally see some relief from rising prices at the gas pump and grocery store.
It’s difficult for these consumers to get a handle on what to expect from reading recent headlines because some are conflicting.
For example, this April 27 headline says (Nasdaq.com):
Commodities Prices to Remain Sky High Throughout 2024
On the other hand, a May 27 Washington Post column is titled:
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Commodities Will Be the Next Market to Succumb
Of course, that headline references the drop in prices for stocks, bonds and other financial markets and says commodity prices are the next in line for a reversal.
Elliott Wave International suggests that you look to the Elliott wave model for insights into commodity prices. It has served our subscribers well.
Here’s what I mean: Back in October 2020, commodity prices had already completed their initial leg up and had slipped into a relatively shallow pullback.
Here’s what the October 2020 Global Market Perspective, a monthly Elliott Wave International publication which covers 50-plus worldwide financial markets, said as this chart was shown:
The [Invesco DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund] has recently begun [a] second-wave correction.
Students of Elliott wave analysis know that a “second-wave correction” means that the next wave will be the strongest part of the price advance, i.e., the third wave.
Indeed, the January 2021 Global Market Perspective stated:
The Invesco DB Commodity Index tracking fund (NYSE: DBC) has probably begun [another wave] up, having ended its correction in December.
As you know, in the months that followed, food and fuel costs skyrocketed.
By June 4, 2021, there’s this headline (BBC):
UN: Cost of food rises at fastest pace in over a decade
And, on Oct. 6, 2021, a CNBC headline said:
Americans are paying the most for gas in seven years
In 2022, the Global Market Perspective has continued to update subscribers on the Elliott wave structure of the Invesco DB Commodity Index Tracking Fund, as it has moved closer and closer to the pattern’s completion.
Keep in mind that the Elliott wave method does not guarantee an exact path for future prices of a given financial market, yet Elliott Wave International knows of no other method which surpasses its usefulness.
As Frost & Prechter’s Elliott Wave Principle: Key to Market Behavior says:
Without Elliott, there appear to be an infinite number of possibilities for market action. What the Wave Principle provides is a means of first limiting the possibilities and then ordering the relative probabilities of possible future market paths. Elliott’s highly specific rules reduce the number of valid alternatives to a minimum. Among those, the best interpretation, sometimes called the “preferred count,” is the one that satisfies the largest number of guidelines. Other interpretations are ordered accordingly.
If you’d like to read the entire online version of this Wall Street classic, you may do so for free once you join Club EWI, the world’s largest Elliott wave educational community.
A Club EWI membership is free and opens the door to free access to a wealth of Elliott wave resources on investing and trading.
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This article was syndicated by Elliott Wave International and was originally published under the headline Food and Gas Prices: Is the Rising Trend (Finally) Ending?. EWI is the world’s largest market forecasting firm. Its staff of full-time analysts led by Chartered Market Technician Robert Prechter provides 24-hour-a-day market analysis to institutional and private investors around the world.
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