9:35 a.m. New York time
What’s happening now. The S&P 500 E-mini futures opened with a significant downward gap. They closed on Friday at 6863.75, and when trading resumed Monday evening, fell in the first five minutes to an overnight low of 6770. They then retraced a portion of the decline, returning to the 6830s and 6840s as the opening bell sounded.
The move comes against a backdrop of failed U.S.-Iran negotiations and an announced U.S. plan to impose a blockade affecting Iranian oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
What does it mean? Elliott Wave Theory analysis interprets the fall and subsequent rise as a rapid repricing of risk rather than a confirmed shift in trend. The rebound has not moved beyond the previous peak within wave B{-6}, the rise that began on March 30. It remains a counter-trend subwave within the larger downward corrective wave C{-5}, itself part of the broader wave 4{-4} correction.
After confirmation that no agreement had been reached, oil prices rose by 9% to $104 per barrel before easing back to $101. The decline and partial recovery in S&P 500 futures coincided with these fluctuations in oil prices.
Decision Points. The immediate test lies between the overnight low at 6770 and the retracement zone in the 6820s–6830s. A sustained move above that upper band would suggest the counter-trend rally within B{-6} is extending, delaying confirmation of the larger C{-5} decline. Conversely, a break back below 6770 would strengthen the case that wave C{-5} is underway, with lower levels likely to follow. Until one of those boundaries gives way, the market remains in a repricing range rather than a confirmed directional move.

[S&P 500 E-mini futures at 9:35 p.m., 20-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}
- 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 13, 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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