W-X-Y combinations
This is the one the site is named after. When a single zigzag, flat or triangle isn’t enough to fully correct a move, the market strings them together — and the result is a W-X-Y combination. Understanding it is the difference between patiently riding out a complex correction and rage-counting a phantom impulse into it.
When one correction isn’t enough
Sometimes a correction needs more time or distance than a single A-B-C can give. So the market does two (or three) corrections back to back. To keep them labelled cleanly, Elliott Wave names the first correction W, the second Y — and the small counter-move that links them X.
The X wave is the connector
That’s the key insight: X is just the bridge. It’s a counter-trend bounce that separates the two real corrections (W and Y). Don’t mistake the X-wave rally for a fresh trend — it’s a pause inside a larger correction. W and Y are each their own zigzag, flat or triangle from the last lesson; X simply joins them.
Double and triple threes
A W-X-Y is called a double three — two corrective “threes” combined. Occasionally the market goes further: W-X-Y-X-Z, a triple three. These are the long, choppy, sideways grinds that frustrate everyone — and they’re exactly the conditions where traders without this framework keep getting chopped up trying to call a bottom.
When one correction isn’t enough, the market combines them: correction W, a connecting X wave, then correction Y — a “double three.” The X is only a bridge, not a new trend, and recognising W-X-Y keeps you from forcing an impulse onto a complex, sideways correction.
Two separate corrections joined by a connecting wave form a…
In a W-X-Y, the X wave is…
Educational content only — nothing here is financial advice. Trading carries risk; never risk money you cannot afford to lose.
