Three-day Market Weekend. U.S. markets will be closed on Monday for Memorial Day, which honors U.S. military personnel who died in service. The S&P 500 futures will resume trading Monday evening.
3:30 p.m. New York time
Half an hour before the closing bell. The S&P 500 futures continued rising during the session, reaching 7524. The session high stands 16 points below 7540, the peak of the rise that began on March 30.
Elliott Wave Theory: Rising wave D{-5} continues. If the futures exceed 7540, that would confirm that the May 14 peak was not the end of D{-5}, and that D{-5} remains the current subwave within wave 4{-4}, a corrective wave that began in October 2025.
That confirmation would not mean D{-5} has much farther to rise. This late in the structure, any new high can become the final high of D{-5}, followed by the beginning of declining wave E{-5}.
Decision Points. A move above 7540 would remove the May 14 peak as a possible completed D{-5} high and would keep the immediate count pointed upward.
A failure below 7540, followed by a decline back through 7500 and then the 7480s, would preserve the ambiguity and suggest that the futures may still be forming a topping structure.
A decline below today’s session low, 7466.75, would weaken the D{-5}-continues case. A move below the 7410s, and especially into the 7350s, would strengthen the alternate count that declining wave E{-5} has begun.
Until price either exceeds 7540 or falls with more force, the working count remains: D{-5} continues, but it is late enough that every high must be treated as potentially terminal.
9:35 a.m. New York time
What’s happening now? The S&P 500 E-mini futures continued to rise overnight, reaching slightly above 7500 for the first time since May 14. The price remains below the 7540 peak of the rise that began on March 30 from 6353.25.
What does it mean? When Elliott Wave Theory is applied, the case for rising wave D{-5} still being underway has been strengthened. For days there has been ambiguity over the status of the D wave: Had it ended on May 14, with declining wave E{-5} beginning, or was the D-wave rise continuing?
The alternative reading, that wave E{-5} has been underway since May 14, remains possible but has become less likely.
Decision Points. A move above 7540 would produce a new high within the rise from March 30 and would strongly support the view that wave D{-5} is still underway. It would not, by itself, prove that D has much farther to rise; this late in the structure, any new high can also become the final high of D.
A failure below 7540, followed by a decline back through the 7460s and then the 7410s, would restore the ambiguity and reopen the case that wave E{-5} may have begun at or near the May 14 high.
A decline into or below the 7350s would strengthen the wave E{-5} argument. Until that sort of downside follow-through appears, the better working count is that wave D{-5} remains active.

[S&P 500 E-mini futures 3:30 p.m., 330 minute 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}
- D{-5} Micro, 3/30/2026, 6353.25 (up}
- C{-6} Submicro, 4/2/2026, 6503.75 (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, May 22, 2026
Disclaimer
Tim Bovee, Private Trader tracks the analysis and trades of a private trader managing his own accounts. The content reflects my interpretation of market structure, including Elliott Wave Theory and related tools.
Nothing in this blog constitutes a recommendation to buy or sell stocks, options, or any other financial instrument, or to pursue any particular strategy. The purpose of this blog is education and entertainment.
No trader is ever 100 percent successful. Trading in stock and options markets involves risk and uncertainty. Each trader must make decisions for his or her own account and accept full responsibility for the outcomes.
Charts and tools are used to support my personal analysis. Any data displayed is illustrative of that analytical process and is not presented as a source of market data for redistribution.
All content on Tim Bovee, Private Trader by Timothy K. Bovee is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
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Based on work at www.timbovee.com









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