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20 Questions with Robert Prechter: Long Decline Ahead
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20 Questions with Robert Prechter: Devaluation Won't Work
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The Case Against Diversification
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Signs Point to Deflation
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'Slope of Hope'
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The Bear Market and Depression
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Deflation: How To Survive It
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The Federal Reserve Does NOT Control the Market
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What Becomes of a Broken Stock Market?
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Video: The Real-Time Power of Elliott Wave Analysis
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The "Stunning Long-Term Elliott Wave Picture"
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Quadrillion Dollar Debt: 'Day of Reckoning' Looms
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Technicals vs. Fundamentals:
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Stress Test: How to Find the Safest Banks in the U.S. and Abroad
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The Economic Crisis No One Saw Coming: A Convenient Untruth
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7 Ways to Become an Unsuccessful Trader
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Deflation: First Step, Understand It
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Slicing the Neckline: A Classic Technical Pattern Agrees with the Elliott Wave Count
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Efficient Market Hypothesis: R.I.P.
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The Hindenburg Omen -- Omen-ous or Not?
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3 Reasons Now is Not the Time to Speculate in Stocks
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How to Forecast Markets Using Technical Analysis
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Gold: What Is The Economy Usually Doing When It Goes Up?
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TrendLines
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What Most People Don't Realize About The Fed's Superpowers
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How a Simple Line Can Improve Your Trading Success
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Understanding the Federal Reserve Bank
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Earnings Drive Stock Prices? See This Chart Before You Answer
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Is Your Bank on the "100 Safest" List? Maybe You Should Find Out
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Keep Ahead of the Herd in 2011
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What Really Moves the Markets: News? The Fed? The Real Answers Will Surprise You
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Long-Term Bonds: The Best Possible Investment? Think Again
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Parachutes vs. Pillows: Why Diversification Doesn't Work
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New Report: It's Dangerous to Diversify -- Find Out Why
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How a "Dull" Investment Can Be a Great Investment
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United STRAITS of America: The Muni Bond Crisis Is Here
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Robert Prechter Explains The Fed
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The Next Major Disaster Developing for Bond Holders
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"Market Manipulation" Is Not Why Most Traders Lose
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The Fed and "Plunge Protection Team": Are They Manipulating Stocks?
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When You FEEL the Elliott Waves, Your Eyes Become Wide Open
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Breaking News Bulletin: News Is NOT the Main Driver of Stock Market Trends
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Big Advantages of Trading with the Wave Principle
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Top 100 Safest U.S. Banks
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Evaporation of Wealth on a Vast Scale
Understanding Robert Prechter's 'Slope of Hope'
By Elliott Wave InternationalAlmost everybody who follows financial markets has heard about climbing the "wall of worry": the time when prices head up bullishly, but no one quite believes in the rally, so there's more worry about a fall than a rise. What's the opposite condition in the market? Equity Index Annuities Bob Prechter named it the "slope of hope," meaning that as prices head down, no one wants to believe the market really has turned bearish, so there's more hope for a rise than fear of a fall. Want to Know How to Prosper in a Deflationary Depression?If you haven't yet given Robert Prechter's deflation argument your full attention, you should know now that yesterday was the best time to do so. Download Prechter's 60-Page Guide to Understanding Deflation here. The market has been rising recently, following a bearish decline from late April through the end of June, which makes now the perfect time to learn more about the slope of hope. * * * * * Excerpted from The Elliott Wave Theorist by Robert Prechter, published June 18, 2010 According to polls, economists are virtually unanimous in the view that the “Great Recession” is over and a recovery is in progress, even though “full employment will take time,” etc. Yet mortgage writing has just plunged to a new low for the cycle (see Figure 1), and housing starts and permits just had their biggest percentage monthly drop since January 1991, which was at the end of a Primary-degree recession. But the latest “recession” supposedly ended a year ago. How can housing activity make new lows this far into a recovery? The answer is in the subtitle to Conquer the Crash, which includes the word depression. The subtleties in economic performance continue to suggest that it “was” not a “recession.” It is a depression, moving forward, in punctuated fashion, slowly but inexorably. Despite this outlook, keep in mind what The Elliott Wave Theorist said last month: “Even though the market is about to begin its greatest decline ever, the era of hope is not quite finished.” For as long as another year and a half, there will be rallies, fixes, hopes and reasons to believe in recovery. Our name for this phase of a bear market is the Slope of Hope. This portion of the decline lasts until the center of the wave, where investors stop estimating upside potential and start being concerned with downside potential. Economists in the aggregate will probably not recognize that a depression is in force until 2012 or perhaps beyond. That’s the year the 7.5-year cycle is due to roll over (see April 2010 issue). Stock prices should be much lower by then, but optimism will still dominate, and it will show up in the form of big rallies and repeated calls of a bottom. Want to Know How to Prosper in a Deflationary Depression?If you haven't yet given Robert Prechter's deflation argument your full attention, you should know now that yesterday was the best time to do so. Download Prechter's 60-Page Guide to Understanding Deflation here. AnnuityDefinition.com |