FANGMAN Elliott Wave Review – Part 3: Amazon

 | Jun 26, 2020 04:22PM ET

Two days ago I started this mini-series of reviewing the seven most important stocks of the current market using Elliott Wave Theory: Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Netflix (NASDAQ:NFLX), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) and NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA). Why? Because the first six names, excluding Netflix, make up about 20% of the S&P 500 and a whopping 40% of the NASDAQ Composite Index. And they’re all trading at or close to all-time highs (ATHs). I started with Microsoft.

The next one down on the market-cap totem pole is Amazon at $1.370 trillion. The largest online retailer and cloud software provider in the world. In this update, I wanted to compare its long-term price chart to
that of two other big household name stocks. Both have lost significant value recently, and have strikingly similar price patterns going into their blow-off phase: Boeing (NYSE:BA) and Walt Disney Company (NYSE:DIS).

Amazon started trading in 1997, and like almost all tech stocks that were around back then, it peaked in 2000: blue wave-I. It bottomed in October 2001 at $5.51: blue wave-II. See Figure 1. Since then, it has
almost uninterruptedly rallied into its 2018 high of $2050.50 following a clean EWT impulse pattern (five waves up). A 370% increase (orang parabolic line). Since that high Amazon has been trading sideways
(triangular shaped) until March 23, 2020, low. Within that triangle, I can EWT count a wave-1 (leading diagonal) and a wave-2. Amazon has since that infamous low virtually gone straight up gaining just north of 70% in only three months. If the runup into 2018 wasn’t parabolic enough, then I can’t tell you what the current rally is. As you can see, this month’s price high reached the 1.618x Fibonacci-extension of wave-1, measured from wave-2 almost to the T ($2795 vs. $2801). This “straight-up” and Fib-extension is typical for a 3 rd wave. I, therefore, now expect a wave-4 retrace back to around the 100% extension ($2400 +/- 100) after which it should rally one final time for a wave-5 of V to new ATHs.

After that? I expect a 90% haircut. Call me crazy, but I will show two recent examples (there are many more) to make my case. But before I do that, please note the negative divergences building on the technical indicators, especially on the Money Flow Index. This mini-series shows, it is a recurring theme, most often foretelling of worse things to come.