Elliott Wave - made scientific. Glenn Neely's rule-based refinement of wave theory replaces guesswork with a rigorous, step-by-step framework for reading market structure.
Definition
NeoWave - written NEoWave to reflect its full name, Neely Extensions of Wave Theory - is an advanced, scientific refinement of R.N. Elliott's original Wave Principle, developed by American financial analyst Glenn Neely from the early 1980s onward.
Where traditional Elliott Wave analysis leaves significant room for interpretation, NeoWave systematises the process. It adds more than fifteen additional structural rules for defining patterns, introduces entirely new wave formations, and demands that any proposed pattern be self-confirming - meaning subsequent price behaviour must validate it before the count is accepted.
The result is a methodology that is genuinely more objective than its predecessor. Analysts applying NeoWave approach market structure the way a scientist approaches data: sequentially, with defined criteria at every step, and without the pattern-fitting that plagues conventional wave analysis.
Glenn Neely first published his framework in 1988 as Elliott Waves in Motion, then substantially revised it in 1990 as Mastering Elliott Wave: Presenting the Neely Method - a book that remains the foundational text of the discipline.
Schematic - illustrative only, not a trading signal
Background
To understand NeoWave, it helps to start with what it builds on. In the 1930s, accountant Ralph Nelson Elliott observed that financial markets do not move randomly - they pulse in repeating, hierarchical patterns driven by collective human psychology.
Elliott identified five-wave impulse structures in the direction of trend, followed by three-wave corrections. He connected these patterns to Fibonacci ratios and proposed that every wave is itself composed of smaller waves, creating a fractal-like structure across all timeframes.
It was a brilliant insight - but the rules were incomplete. Different analysts reading the same chart could arrive at radically different wave counts, each one technically defensible. Subjectivity was built into the method.
Glenn Neely's contribution was to make the process sequential, verifiable, and falsifiable. NeoWave tells an analyst not just what patterns look like, but how to confirm them, when to discard a count, and what additional structural criteria must be met before a pattern is valid.
Timeline
1930s
R.N. Elliott publishes his Wave Principle, identifying repeating impulse and corrective patterns in market data.
1982
Glenn Neely encounters Elliott Wave theory while working as an analyst for an oil company. He begins years of exhaustive testing and refinement.
1983
Neely founds Elliott Wave Institute, later renamed NEoWave, Inc., to formalise his growing body of research.
1988
His first self-published work, Elliott Waves in Motion, begins circulating. Neely publicly forecasts the Dow Jones reaching 100,000 within 72 years.
1990
Mastering Elliott Wave (Windsor Books) is published - the first scientific, step-by-step approach to wave forecasting. Still considered the discipline's core text.
2000s onward
Neely develops Neely River Trading Technology, extending the framework from forecasting into practical trade execution and capital preservation.
Comparison
Both methods are grounded in the same underlying observation that markets move in patterned waves. The differences are in rigour, specificity, and how each handles ambiguity.
| Attribute | Elliott Wave | NEoWave |
|---|---|---|
| Objectivity | Relatively few rules; significant interpretive freedom | 15+ rules per pattern; ambiguity is systematically reduced |
| Pattern library | Classic impulse and corrective wave types | Extends the library - Diametric, Neutral Triangle, and others |
| Self-confirmation | Not required; count is valid if rules are met | ✓ Required - post-pattern price action must validate the count |
| Data plotting | Standard bar or candlestick charts | Uses Wave charts built from cash (non-expiring) data with specific scaling rules |
| Time constraints | Fibonacci time ratios often cited | Time is considered but does not dictate strict trading rules |
| Learning curve | Moderate - core concepts accessible relatively quickly | Steeper - the structured approach requires methodical study |
| Application | Broad across markets | Particularly effective in commodity markets with closed consumption cycles |
Core framework
NeoWave introduces several structural concepts not present in orthodox Elliott Wave analysis. Understanding these is essential to reading market structure using the Neely method.
The most fundamental unit in NeoWave. A monowave is the simplest directional price movement - a single, uninterrupted move in one direction. All higher-level patterns are built from monowaves, making accurate identification the essential first step in any NEoWave analysis.
A polywave is a NeoWave pattern made up of a series of connected monowaves - or smaller polywaves. These nested structures reflect the patterns identified by both Elliott and Neely, and their correct construction is the primary focus of practical NeoWave analysis.
One of NeoWave's most significant contributions to wave theory. The Diametric is a complex corrective structure not found in orthodox Elliott Wave. It plays a critical role in identifying the end of complex corrective phases - transitions that orthodox analysts frequently misread.
Perhaps the most important structural discipline in NeoWave. A wave count is only accepted after subsequent market movement meets minimum post-pattern criteria. This single requirement eliminates a large proportion of the false counts that undermine orthodox wave analysis.
Another new pattern introduced by Neely and not present in classical wave theory. Neutral Triangles appear in specific corrective contexts and have defined structural and ratio requirements that distinguish them from conventional contracting or expanding triangles.
NeoWave specifies not only how to count waves but how to plot them. Cash (non-expiring) data is used rather than futures, and a specific approach to scaling ensures that the chart reflects genuine market structure rather than artefacts of the instrument or timeframe chosen.
What makes it different
The core complaint about traditional Elliott Wave is that its rules are too few. With only three main rules governing a five-wave impulse, the theory generates too many valid interpretations. Analysts can - and regularly do - count the same chart in completely different ways.
NeoWave addresses this by expanding the rule set dramatically. For an impulse pattern alone, Neely defines more than fifteen structural requirements. These do not override Elliott's original rules - they add a layer of objective criteria on top of them, narrowing the range of valid interpretations.
The methodology is also applied sequentially: you do not jump to identifying complex structures until simpler ones have been correctly identified, confirmed, and logged. This is what Neely means when he describes NeoWave as a step-by-step process.
Selected NeoWave impulse rules
Common questions
NEoWave stands for Neely Extensions of Elliott Wave Theory. The capitalisation is deliberate: N and E are capitalised because they are the initials of the creator's name (Neely) and the word Extensions. Glenn Neely adopted the name approximately 20 years after writing his original book, based on public feedback about what to call the methodology. The lowercase letters in the middle spell "eo" - which together with the surrounding capitals creates the word "NEoWave."
It is better understood as a structured extension than a replacement. NeoWave accepts Elliott's foundational observations - that markets move in patterned waves governed by crowd psychology, Fibonacci ratios, and fractal self-similarity. What it adds is a rigorous, sequential rule set that makes the application of those observations far more objective. The two are compatible but NeoWave is considerably more demanding to apply correctly.
NeoWave can be applied to any market with accurate, consistent price data. Glenn Neely has noted that it works particularly well in commodity markets with closed consumption cycles and stable underlying demand - such as crude oil, gold, and base metals - where progressive wave patterns are most clearly observable. It is also widely applied to equity indices, currencies, and fixed income.
NeoWave has a steeper learning curve than conventional Elliott Wave. The sequential, rule-based nature of the methodology means that errors made early in the analytical process propagate through to the final count. Neely's book Mastering Elliott Wave is the standard starting point, and it is structured so that each chapter builds directly on the one before. Most serious students spend several months studying the text before applying it in real-time conditions.
NeoWave is primarily a forecasting methodology - it tells you where a market is likely to go by identifying its current position within a larger wave structure. Neely River Theory, developed later, is a trading methodology that addresses the practical problem of execution: how to enter and exit positions, how to protect capital, and how to manage trades without being guided solely by forecasts. The two are complementary. Neely River uses the metaphor that markets behave like a flowing river - and that the trader's role is to navigate the current rather than predict its course.
As of the time of writing, no software program has been able to replicate the full NeoWave analytical process. Glenn Neely has addressed this question directly on multiple occasions, noting that the contextual, sequential nature of the methodology - particularly the self-confirmation requirements - makes automation extremely difficult. Neely River Trading software exists as a tool to support trade management, but the wave analysis itself remains a skilled, human-led process.