Hamilton's E-Wave Analysis

BHP, Billiton update

bhp aug 30 2011

This is an old blog from August 8, 2011, nearly four years ago. Today we are not at all sure that the B-wave as indicated in the chart is actually a B wave and not a 5th wave. Fortunately, for the immediate direction of the stock it does not make a lot of difference, except that if there was a B then we are now in a C that must subdivide as a 5-wave structure. If this was a 5th wave all we need is a big correction that can take a number of different shapes. In BOTH cases the ultimate target is at the 4th wave of previous degree at about $25 or below. We have redone this chart as per below, showing the top in 2011;

The nice thing about using a longer term chart is that things that appear quite improbable with shorter term charts, al of a sudden become quite plausible. Here we have drawn a band that has contained the stock from inception when it was an Anglo-Dutch mining conglomerate. Here again you can see that the stock only jumped the tracks in 2004 and increased 5-fold in just 4 or 7 years, a relatively short period of time in the context of the history of this company. The lift-off seems to coincide, with about a three year lag, with Fed. easing around 2000 as a result of Y2K and the tech bubble crash.

If the real top was indeed the second top, we could have a zig-zag correction which would take the form of two down legs with some sort of intermission (an a-b-c or triangle) in the middle. That is shown in purple using the 1-2-3 annotation just in case this develops into a 5-wave affair. That should bring us to the 4th of previous degree. It will not take all that much to push the stock back into the band. Another write-off, this time for a paltry 2 bln has already been announced making lower stock prices all the more plausible.