Wedges usually appear during the final surge of a larger move, as a last gasp rally or decline before a reversal. Yesterday’s WEDGE was an exception, since it was pointing against the recent downtrend.Watching a Wedge

But all the identifying features were there. It made three touches of the bottom trendline and two of the top, creating converging lines. Each of the internal moves can be seen as a small A-B-C. The second major pullback doesn’t find support at the peak of the first wave (overlapping moves.) And volume declines throughout the pattern.

We broke out of the wedge at the open, had a pullback to the rising trendline for a potential entry, and made a relatively fast move to the wedge’s initial target — the very beginning of the pattern.

A wedge will usually reach target in half to three-quarters of the time it took to form. Normally that won’t be the end of the move, but there was a nice divergence (double bottom) warning that at least a strong bounce might occur over the lunch hour.

Like a triangle, a wedge will often reach its target (and sometimes reverse) at the same time the pattern lines cross. That’s certainly a place to take at least partial profits.

The afternoon trading was just a sideways move, perhaps caused by traders unsure of what would happen during the aftermarket rebalancing of the Russell 2000. That’s what caused the spike just after the market closed. It’s interesting that it went just high enough to complete an A-B-C=100% close to the week. Maybe there’s something to this Fibonacci stuff after all.

, , , , , ,