Ending Diagonal
Wedge Pattern of Trend Exhaustion — Wave 5 & Wave C
An ending diagonal is a 5-wave exhaustion structure that forms at the very end of a trend. It appears in Wave 5 or Wave C position and is characterised by overlapping, 3-wave subdivisions that signal declining momentum. When complete, the market typically reverses sharply — often retracing the entire diagonal in a fraction of the time it took to form.
What is an Ending Diagonal?
An ending diagonal is a motive pattern that appears in the Wave 5 or Wave C position, signalling the final exhaustion of a trend. It forms a wedge shape with overlapping waves, each subdividing into 3-wave structures (3-3-3-3-3 internal structure). After an ending diagonal completes, the market typically reverses sharply and swiftly — often retracing the entire diagonal in a fraction of the time it took to form.
Ending Diagonal Structure: Wave-by-Wave Breakdown
| Wave | Structure | Direction | Characteristic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 | 3-wave (a-b-c) | With trend | First push — smaller than prior Wave 3; sets upper trendline anchor |
| Wave 2 | 3-wave (a-b-c) | Against trend | Deep retrace — typically 66–79.6% of Wave 1 |
| Wave 3 | 3-wave (a-b-c) | With trend | Must exceed Wave 1 end but be shorter than Wave 1 |
| Wave 4 | 3-wave (a-b-c) | Against trend | MUST overlap with Wave 1 price territory — key rule |
| Wave 5 | 3-wave (a-b-c) | With trend | Shortest wave — barely exceeds Wave 3; reaches trendline apex |
The Unbreakable Rules of Ending Diagonals
Rule 1: All Waves Subdivide into 3 Waves
✓ Every internal wave (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) MUST be a 3-wave structure
✗ No wave can be a 5-wave impulse
✗ If you find a 5-wave sub-wave, it is a leading diagonal or impulse — not ending
Rule 2: Wave 4 MUST Overlap Wave 1
✓ Wave 4 MUST retrace into Wave 1 price territory
✓ This is the KEY distinguishing feature from an impulse wave
✗ If Wave 4 does NOT overlap Wave 1, it is a standard impulse (not a diagonal)
Rule 3: Wave 3 Cannot Be the Shortest
✓ Wave 3 must be longer than Wave 5
✓ Wave 1 must be longer than Wave 3
✗ Waves must progressively shorten: Wave 1 > Wave 3 > Wave 5 (contracting type)
✗ If Wave 3 or 5 is the longest, it is an expanding diagonal — different rules apply
Rule 4: Both Trendlines Must Converge
✓ Upper trendline connects Wave 1 and Wave 3 peaks
✓ Lower trendline connects Wave 2 and Wave 4 lows
✓ Both lines must slope in the direction of the trend AND converge toward an apex
✗ If trendlines are parallel or diverge, it is NOT an ending diagonal
Rule 5: Position in Larger Structure
✓ Ending diagonals ONLY appear in Wave 5 or Wave C positions
✓ They are the FINAL wave of a motive or corrective sequence
✗ If the structure is in Wave 1, 3, or any position other than Wave 5 or C, it is NOT an ending diagonal
Fibonacci Relationships
Wave Relationships Within the Diagonal
| Wave | Fib Relationship | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 2 of Wave 1 | 66–79.6% retrace of Wave 1 | 70% | Deeper than typical impulse Wave 2 |
| Wave 3 of Wave 1 | 61.8–79.6% of Wave 1 | 65% | Shorter than Wave 1 — key rule check |
| Wave 4 of Wave 3 | 66–79.6% retrace of Wave 3 | 70% | Overlaps Wave 1 — confirms diagonal |
| Wave 5 of Wave 3 | 61.8% of Wave 3 | 65% | Shortest wave — barely exceeds Wave 3 high |
Post-Diagonal Reversal Targets
| Target Level | Description | Frequency | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Start of Ending Diagonal (Wave 1 origin) | Full diagonal retrace | 80% | Primary reversal target — always check this first |
| 38.2% of entire preceding trend | Shallow reversal | 10% | When diagonal is in large Wave 5 of a multi-year trend |
| 61.8% of entire preceding trend | Deeper reversal | 10% | When diagonal is in Wave C of a major correction |
Contracting vs Expanding Ending Diagonal
Contracting Ending Diagonal (~90%)
Shape: Wedge narrowing toward apex
Wave sequence: Wave 1 > Wave 3 > Wave 5 (progressively shorter)
Trendlines: Both converge toward apex
Signal: Classic exhaustion — grinding, overlapping final push
Expanding Ending Diagonal (~10%)
Shape: Inverted wedge — broadening toward end
Wave sequence: Wave 1 < Wave 3 < Wave 5 (progressively longer)
Trendlines: Both diverge away from trend origin
Signal: Increasingly volatile and erratic behaviour
Trading Ending Diagonal Patterns
Setup 1: Fade Wave 5 at Trendline (Highest Probability)
When Wave 5 approaches the upper trendline of the wedge with momentum divergence, fade the final push for a high-probability reversal trade.
| Entry Signal | Wave 5 touches upper trendline + RSI/MACD bearish divergence |
| Entry | On break of Wave 4 low (confirms Wave 5 completed) |
| Target 1 | Start of Wave 4 (quick partial take-profit) |
| Target 2 | Start of Wave 1 of the diagonal (full diagonal retrace) |
| Stop | Above Wave 5 high of the diagonal |
Setup 2: Enter on Trendline Break
For confirmation-based traders, wait for a decisive break of the lower trendline before entering the post-diagonal reversal trade.
| Entry Signal | Decisive close below the 1-3 upper trendline (bullish diagonal) or above 2-4 trendline (bearish diagonal) |
| Entry | On the candle close that breaks the trendline |
| Target | Wave 1 origin of the diagonal |
| Stop | Above Wave 5 high (re-entry into diagonal = setup failed) |
Key Momentum Signals to Watch
Ending diagonals typically display these momentum characteristics that confirm exhaustion:
- RSI divergence — price makes new high but RSI makes lower high (bearish divergence)
- MACD histogram declining while price continues higher in Wave 5
- Volume declining through Waves 3 and 5 of the diagonal
- Widening bid-ask spreads in Wave 5 — market maker activity
- Wave 5 struggles to exceed Wave 3 high — barely makes a new high
Ending Diagonal Identification Checklist
- Is the pattern in Wave 5 or Wave C position of the larger structure?
- Do all 5 sub-waves subdivide into 3-wave structures?
- Does Wave 4 clearly overlap Wave 1 price territory?
- Are the two trendlines converging (contracting) toward an apex?
- Is Wave 1 longer than Wave 3, and Wave 3 longer than Wave 5?
- Is Wave 2 deeper than a typical impulse Wave 2 (66%+)?
- Is there bearish (or bullish) momentum divergence on Wave 5?
- Does Wave 5 barely exceed Wave 3 — showing declining momentum?
- After completion, does price reverse sharply below the lower trendline?
- Does the reversal target the start of the diagonal (Wave 1 origin)?
Common Ending Diagonal Mistakes to Avoid
✗ Mistake 1: Labelling a standard impulse as an ending diagonal because of wave overlap.
✓ Fix: Check every sub-wave. In a true ending diagonal, ALL waves must be 3-wave structures. A single 5-wave sub-wave disqualifies it.
✗ Mistake 2: Placing an ending diagonal in Wave 1, 3, or B positions.
✓ Fix: Ending diagonals are ONLY valid in Wave 5 or Wave C. Any other position is either a leading diagonal or an incorrect count.
✗ Mistake 3: Entering the reversal trade before Wave 5 completes.
✓ Fix: Always wait for a break of the 2-4 trendline before entering. Wave 5 can extend further than expected.
✗ Mistake 4: Setting the reversal target at only 38.2% retrace.
✓ Fix: The minimum target is the Wave 1 origin of the diagonal (full diagonal retrace). This is achieved 80% of the time.
✗ Mistake 5: Forgetting trendlines must both converge.
✓ Fix: If the trendlines diverge, it is an expanding diagonal or a channel — different pattern, different rules.
Real Example: XAUUSD Ending Diagonal (Wave 5)
Gold completes a major Wave 4 triangle at 3,000, then forms an ending diagonal as Wave 5 exhausts.
| Wave | Structure | Price Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wave 1 of ED | 3-wave (a-b-c) | 3,000 → 3,240 (240 pts) | Initiates the wedge |
| Wave 2 of ED | 3-wave retrace | 3,240 → 3,050 (190 pts) | 79.2% of Wave 1 ✓ Deep retrace ✓ |
| Wave 3 of ED | 3-wave (a-b-c) | 3,050 → 3,260 (210 pts) | 87.5% of Wave 1 (shorter) ✓ |
| Wave 4 of ED | 3-wave retrace | 3,260 → 3,100 (160 pts) | Overlaps Wave 1 territory (below 3,240) ✓ |
| Wave 5 of ED | 3-wave (a-b-c) | 3,100 → 3,245 (145 pts) | Shortest wave (60.4% of W3) ✓ RSI divergence ✓ |
Trade Plan — Post-Diagonal Reversal
1. SELL at 3,220 (on break of Wave 4 low at 3,100 — entered at re-test of the broken trendline)
2. Target 1: 3,100 (Wave 4 low of diagonal — quick partial)
3. Target 2: 3,000 (Wave 1 origin of diagonal — full retrace target)
4. Stop: Above 3,250 (Wave 5 high of diagonal)
5. R/R on Target 2: 220 pts / 30 pts = 7.3:1 ✓
Ending vs Leading Diagonal: Key Differences
| Feature | Ending Diagonal | Leading Diagonal |
|---|---|---|
| Position | Wave 5 or Wave C ONLY | Wave 1 or Wave A ONLY |
| Internal structure | 3-3-3-3-3 | 5-3-5-3-5 (most common) |
| Wave 4 overlap | ALWAYS overlaps Wave 1 | Overlaps Wave 1 (allowed) |
| After completion | Sharp reversal — full diagonal retraced | Deep correction, then new trend direction |
| Momentum | Declining — divergence signals | Building — trend initiation |
| Trade opportunity | Fade the trend — reversal trade | Buy/sell the Wave 2 correction — continuation trade |
Quick Reference: Ending Diagonal Essentials
- Position: Wave 5 or Wave C ONLY — the final wave of a motive or corrective sequence
- Structure: 5 waves, all subdividing into 3-wave structures (3-3-3-3-3)
- Overlap: Wave 4 MUST overlap Wave 1 price territory — the key diagnostic rule
- Shape: Converging wedge — both trendlines slope in the trend direction but converge
- Sequence: Wave 1 > Wave 3 > Wave 5 (each wave shorter than the last)
- Reversal Target: Start of Wave 1 of the diagonal (full retrace, 80% frequency)
- Signal: Momentum divergence + barely-new-high in Wave 5 + trendline break