Friday holiday. U.S. stock, options and futures markets will be closed on Friday, April 3, for Good Friday, a Christian holiday. Bonds will close early, at noon New York time. Trading will resume on Monday, April 6. The Employment Situation Report will be published on Friday, and Monday will be the first session to produce a reaction, if any.
9:35 a.m. New York time
What’s happening now.
The S&P 500 E-mini futures continued to fall overnight, extending the decline from Wednesday’s high at 6653.75.
The price rose modestly ahead of President Trump’s national address on the Iran War, then sold off sharply as the speech began, driving the market down to an overnight low of 6503.75 before a partial rebound.
Initial jobless claims, released at 8:30 a.m. ET, showed continued labor market stability, with claims falling to 202,000, a decrease of 9,000 from the prior week.
What does it mean? In Elliott Wave Theory terms, the decline is now testing the structure of rising wave B{-6}. The drop from 6653.75 to 6503.75 is sharp and has retraced roughly half of the wave’s advance, raising a legitimate question as to whether B{-6} has already ended and wave C{-6} has begun.
The decline creates a case for wave C, but it remains too limited in structure and follow-through to confirm that interpretation. The price action so far appears more consistent with a volatile internal correction than with the start of a sustained impulsive decline.
For the moment, I am maintaining the working assumption that wave B{-6} remains underway. Within the larger structure, B{-6} is a subwave of declining wave C{-5}, which in turn is part of wave 4{-4}, a downward correction taking the form of an expanding triangle.
Decision Points. Above 6560–6580, the corrective interpretation remains intact and B{-6} can resume higher. A break above 6653.75 would confirm that extension.
Between 6500 and 6560, the structure remains unresolved and likely to produce continued volatility.
Below 6500, the probability increases that B{-6} ended at Wednesday’s high. Acceleration below 6480 would confirm that wave C{-6} is underway.
Likelihood favors B{-6} still unfolding, while a sustained break below 6500 would shift the count to a developing C{-6} decline.

[S&P 500 E-mini futures at 9:35 a.m., 4-hour bars with volume]
Waves Now Underway
These are the waves currently in progress under my principal analysis. Each line on the list shows the wave number, with the subscript in curly brackets, the traditional degree name, the starting date, the starting price of the S&P 500 E-mini futures, and the direction of the wave.
- S&P 500 Index:
- 5{+3} Supercycle, 7/8/1932, 4.40 (up)
- 5{+2} Cycle, 12/9/1974, 60.96 (up)
- 5{+1} Primary, 3/6/2009, 666.79 (up)
- 5{0} Intermediate, 2/11/2016, 1810.10 (up)
- 3{-1} Minor, 3/23/2020, 2191.36 (up)
- 1{-2} Minute, 7/31/2025, 6468.50 (down)
- S&P 500 E-mini futures
- 5{-3} Minuette 8/1/2025, 6239.50 (up}
- 4{-4} Subminutte 10/29/2025, 6953.75 (down}
- C{-5} Micro, 1/27/2026, 7043 (down}
- B{-6} (none), 3/30/2026, 6353.25 (up}
Reading the chart. Price movements — waves – – in Elliott Wave Theory analysis are labeled with numbers within trending waves and letters with corrective waves. The subscripts — numbers in curly brackets — designate the wave’s degree, which, in Elliott Wave analysis, means the relative position of a wave within the larger and smaller structures that make up the chart. R.N. Elliott, who in the 1930s developed the form of analysis that bears his name, viewed the chart as a complex structure of smaller waves nested within larger waves, which in turn are nested within still larger waves. In mathematics it’s called a fractal structure, where at every scale the pattern is similar to the others.
Learning and other resources. Elliott Wave analysis provides context, not prophecy. As the 20th century semanticist Alfred Korzybski put it in his book Science and Sanity (1933), “The map is not the territory … The only usefulness of a map depends on similarity of structure between the empirical world and the map.” And I would add, in the ever-changing markets, we can judge that similarity of structure only after the fact.
See the menu page Analytical Methods for a rundown on where to go for information on Elliott Wave analysis.
By Tim Bovee, Portland, Oregon, April 2, 2026
Disclaimer
Tim Bovee, Private Trader tracks the analysis and trades of a private trader for his own accounts. Nothing in this blog constitutes a recommendation to buy or sell stocks, options or any other financial instrument. The only purpose of this blog is to provide education and entertainment.
No trader is ever 100 percent successful in his or her trades. Trading in the stock and option markets is risky and uncertain. Each trader must make trading decisions for his or her own account, and take responsibility for the consequences.
All content on Tim Bovee, Private Trader by Timothy K. Bovee is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Based on work at www.timbovee.com









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