A major signal of a top is when Wave 5 fails to move significantly beyond the peak of Wave 3, indicating severe trend exhaustion. Expert Advice for Users

| Step | Standard Analyst | Marat Method | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Looks at 4H chart only. | Zooms out to Weekly: Sees a 3-wave move, not 5. | | Internal Structure | Sees 5 green candles. | Checks Daily: Wave 3 is the shortest leg (Invalid). | | Divergence | Ignores momentum. | Checks RSI on 1H: Lower high on price, lower high on RSI. | | Verdict | “We are going higher.” | “This is a corrective Zigzag, not a new impulse. Look for a sharp reversal.” |

Impulse waves are characterized by a strong, directional move in the market price, typically consisting of five sub-waves. These waves are labeled as 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, with waves 1, 3, and 5 being the impulsive waves and waves 2 and 4 being corrective waves. Corrective waves, on the other hand, are complex and often irregular, consisting of three sub-waves labeled A, B, and C.

Based on community feedback and reviews, Marat's approach has distinct strengths and limitations that traders should understand.

: Analysis frequently features MARA (Marathon Digital Holdings) , where recent forecasts tracked potential reversal structures like ending diagonals in Wave C or bullish "one-two" setups aiming for fresh rallies.

is a technical analyst who operates the Elliott Wave Count service, specializing in price action forecasting using the Elliott Wave Principle. His analysis often focuses on identifying high-probability trade setups, such as the , and provides technical reviews across major asset classes including Forex, Commodities, and Stocks. Service Review Summary