How to Win Against the Dangerous “Herding Impulse”
We all love a bargain… Except when it comes to stocks.
We all love a bargain… Except when it comes to stocks.
The Timing of Attacks on Successful Corporations.
The insight that Elliott waves unfold in collective behavior has significant implications for the ability of sociologists.
Robert Prechter explains that the human unconscious is thus disposed toward patterns of behavior that reflect the Wave Principle.
In one of our most-read articles, Elliott Wave International and Socionomics Institute founder Robert Prechter, Jr. uses the Beatles as a case study of how social mood drives the popularity (and unpopularity) of public figures.
Given the state of the economy, by any historical standard, Barack Obama should be 15 points behind Mitt Romney. Why is he tied?
Why would financial reporters’ expressions resemble each other more when positive mood was increasing and less when negative mood was increasing?
Conventional wisdom says, “It’s the economy, stupid.” But socionomic theory predicts that the stock market would be a better register of social mood than the economy.
Watch Robert Prechter’s interview with Yahoo! Finance Breakout host Jeff Macke.