As TCPhoenix says in posing his question, the effective axial stiffness of a wire rope depends on a heap of things. It is best to get the value from the manufacturer. This is what CanuckMiner has done with the effective E values he cites, values which reflect twist effects, void ratios, strand interplay, etc.
Then, before putting the wire rope to work, apply a proof load to it so that what CanuckMiner refers to as the "constructional or permanent stretch" is taken out to as great an extent as possible.
The formula might be simple and basic, 40818, but not the values you feed into that formula.