Showing posts with label Bradley Index. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bradley Index. Show all posts

Monday, December 11, 2023

The Geocentric Bradley Barometer │ Turning Points 2024


2023 Nov 13 (Mon) = High
2023 Dec 17 (Sun) = Low
2023 Dec 22 (Fri) = High
2024 Jan 04 (Thu) = Low
2024 Jan 13 (Sat) = High
2024 Jan 22 (Mon) = Low
2024 Jan 29 (Mon) = High
2024 Feb 09 (Fri) = Low
2024 Feb 13 (Tue) = High
2024 Feb 25 (Sun) = Low
2024 May 26 (Sun) = High
2024 Jun 11 (Tue) = Low
2024 Jun 29 (Sat) = High
2024 Aug 19 (Mon) = Low
2024 Aug 29 (Thu) = High
2024 Sep 07 (Sat) = Low
2024 Sep 14 (Sat) = High
2024 Sep 19 (Thu) = Low
2024 Sep 27 (Fri) = High
2024 Oct 01 (Tue) = Low
2024 Oct 05 (Sat) = High
2024 Oct 27 (Sun) = Low
2024 Nov 02 (Sat) = High
2024 Nov 13 (Wed) = Low
2024 Nov 25 (Mon) = High
2024 Dec 08 (Sun) = Low
2024 Dec 18 (Wed) = High
2024 Dec 26 (Thu) = Low

[ calculated and charted for New York City (EST / EDT) with Timing Solution ]

The very well‐known financial astrology indicator known as the Bradley Barometer [or Bradley Siderograph] was created by Donald Bradley in 1947. The theory was that what is happening up in the sky affects human behavior on earth, so Bradley created a barometer that was a combination of transits. By assigning positive values to positive transits and negative values to negative transits he created a weighted net sum oscillator graph. The Bradley also includes the declination of planets. The higher in the sky that a planet appears above the horizon, the more positive the value. The lower in the sky that a planet appears below the horizon, the more negative the value. This Bradley Barometer graph correlated well to the markets even though there was no known physical correlation. The Bradley does very well in forecasting the headwinds or tailwinds of long‐term market moves that can occur over many months […] In recent years, it has shown quite a number of failures. This may be due to a variety of factors. If the Bradley Barometer measures the natural organic flow of the market, then there are certainly external artificial influences that can diminish its effectiveness. Some of these factors may include high‐frequency trading and/or government interference through central bank stimulus. Artificial inflation will cause a market to rise regardless of transits. The market will still oscillate, but with an upward bias. Another important angle to consider about the Bradley is that it designed to be taken in the context of what is happening in the market. The Bradley Barometer is an oscillator. We all know that the market does not oscillate back and forth all the time.

Over the past century, the market has trended higher. However, in between, there are cyclical bull markets and bear markets and sometimes there are consolidation periods. Everything forecast must be taken in its relative context to current market conditions. In a bull market, the down periods in the Bradley may simply mark sideways consolidation periods. It is useful to think of negative planetary transits in the face of a bull market as being nothing more than headwinds that are just a pause in the uptrend. It also follows that in a bull market the periods of the Bradley may mark the largest bull runs. In bear markets, the positive runs in the Bradley model serve as just pauses in the selling. The negative drops in the Bradley mark periods of intense selling in the market. In neutral markets, the Bradley tends to mirror market movement like an oscillator. nevertheless, the Bradley is a very popular model to this day, and many financial astrologers still use it as a backbone to get an overall picture of what the market is doing or what it made do in the future.

 
ooo0ooo
 
Also consider:
New Moons typically mark beginnings of cycles, and Full Moons mark completions. 
In bull markets, New Moons are bottoms, and Full Moons are tops. 
In bear markets, New Moons are tops, and Full Moons are bottoms. 
More often than not, stocks will rise from around the 7th to around the 14th calendar day of a month, 
fall from the 14th to the 20th, and rise from the 20th to the 25th.
Major Red News Releases (NFP, CPI, PPI, PMI, FOMC etc.) and Options Expiration Dates (especially Quad and Triple Witching)
may delay or cancel typical cyclical market behavior and astro signals.

Friday, September 8, 2023

Cycles Write World History | Donald A. Bradley

Research embracing many fields of scientific pursuit and all available historical records proves that the climate of the earth as a whole goes through long cycles. World-climate shifts from cold to warm periods and from wet to dry periods with amazing regularity. Dry periods accompanied by colder weather take place about every 170 years, every third such “cold drought” being severe in its effects.

"The turning points between old and new civilizations occur when 
cold-dry times reach their maximum severity."

Professor Raymond H. Wheeler, eminent psychologist of the University of Kansas, heads this study project which finds an important correlation between world climate and political history. Dr. Wheeler's analysis of an immense accumulation of data shows that great international changes occur on these shifts from warm to cold and vice versa. Nations deteriorate on the shift from warm to cold, the study reveals. What is probably most fascinating among the findings is that totalitarianism is representative of world-wide political sentiment during warm periods. Democracy is vivified and sought after by men during cold periods. Intervals of cold droughts usually coincide with eras of civil wars. International wars are fought, for the most part, during warmer times. The Wheeler project has identified basic mass-psychological patterns with every climatic condition found in the global weather cycle. Public attitudes and popular ideas are directly colored by the general nature of the world-climate prevailing at any time.
 
Raymond H. Wheeler and his 'big book'.
 
Astrology offers a logical explanation for this 170-year rhythm in world activities. It is hardly a coincidence that every cold-drought is synchronized with one of the solar system's major planetary configurations. Called a great mutation in astrological parlance, a conjunction of the planets Uranus and Neptune occurs every 171 years, on the average. These conjunctions are within effective orb for 15 years before and after their central date of coming-together in the sky. This Uranus-Neptune cycle leaves a continuous impression on the unwinding scroll of world history in inciting those conditions in human and natural affairs described.

Central conjunctions of Uranus and Neptune took place in the A.D. years of 
110, 281, 453, 624, 796, 967, 1139, 1310, 1481, 1653 and 1824 [1906-10, 1993, 2078-81, 2165]

[The years cited mark the general centers of the 30-year influence at work. They are computed for the conjunctions in mean heliocentric longitude, and not for the apparent (geocentric) times of occurrence. The time-margin allowed for this difference is nearly a whole decade.]

Each of these epochs is at or near the dead center of a period of serious cold drought recorded in the annals of history and science. It is no surprise to the astrologer that lowered mean temperature, lack of much rainfall, political stress and civil war itself should be typical of our earth’s response to these vibrations. Uranian influences alone have long been recognized as revolutionary in action. Neptune is peculiarly associated with meteorological matters, and also with canons of idealistic thought. Astrologers are generally agreed that Neptune is the planet of “isms” and ideologies which provoke national and international changes of attitude. Uranus is disruptive in action and progressive in the long run. Neptune, on the other hand, is said to determine world sentiments which have an emotional base. Conjunctions of these divergent forces bring about the years of famine and civil strife which make and break the great economic and political structures we call nations.

The primary precipitation-and-temperature cycle is obviously connected with a particular interplanetary periodicity. There are dozens if not hundreds of other cycles in man’s social and natural environment which can be traced to similar causes. Relations of two or more planets to each other as viewed from the earth are called aspects. The positions of any moving heavenly body across the great star-sprangled backdrop of the sky are called transits. In astrology, we make use of the term transit to mean the location of a planet by the sign of the zodiac it occupies. Aspects and sign-transits of the various planets are the fundamental causes of cycles on earth. Although not actually zodiacal factors, the declinations of certain planets and changes in the elements of planetary orbits are found to be strong components in the astrological theory of world cycles.

Above and beyond true physical phenomena is the strange tendency of world affairs toward cycles which reflect the general connotations of successive zodiacal signs. This is apparent if one reconsiders the famous historical analyses of Oswald Spengler in the light of astrology. Spengler’s anthropomorphic outlines of spiritual, cultural and political “contemporary epochs” seem to follow a fascinating zodiac of characteristics, commencing each broad swing in mankind’s affairs with typical Aries qualities, and culminating it, after ten more eras, with Piscean attributes. The reason for this inclination is inexplicable, at the present, as no astronomical connection has been discovered.

Mention of such interesting matters lays the groundwork for our immediate subject — that of applying astrology as a calculable gauge of contemporary economic conditions.

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices │ Turning Points 2022

 

 
 2021 Dec 10 (Fri) = Low (geo) + High (helio)
2021 Dec 20 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2021 Dec 24 (Fri) = High (geo)
2021 Dec 31 (Fri) = Major High (helio)
2022 Jan 06 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2022 Jan 10 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Jan 16 (Sun) = Major Low (geo) +  Low (helio)
2022 Jan 19 (Wed) = High (helio)
2022 Jan 30 (Sun) = Major Low (helio)
2022 Feb 07 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Feb 11 (Fri) = Low (helio)
2022 Feb 12 (Sat) = High (geo)

2022 Feb 20 (Sun) = High (helio)
2022 Feb 26 (Sat) = Low (geo)
2022 Mar 04 (Fri) = Low (helio)
2022 Mar 06 (Sun) = High (geo)

2022 Mar 10 (Thu) = Low (geo)+ High (helio)
2022 Mar 18 (Fri) = Low (helio)
2022 Mar 20 (Sun) = Major High (geo)

2022 Mar 28 (Mon) = Major High (helio)
2022 Mar 29 (Tue) = Major Low (geo)

2022 Apr 04 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2022 Apr 08 (Fri) = High (helio)
2022 Apr 13 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2022 Apr 17 (Sun) = High (helio)
2022 Apr 20 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2022 Apr 27 (Wed) = High (helio)
2022 Apr 28 (Thu) = High (geo)

2022 May 10 (Tue) = Low (geo)
2022 May 14 (Sat) = Major Low (helio)
2022 May 20 (Fri) = Major High (geo) +  High (helio)
2022 May 28 (Sat) = Low (helio)

2022 Jun 02 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2022 Jun 07 (Tue) = High (helio)
2022 Jun 16 (Thu) = High (geo) + Low (helio)
2022 Jun 24 (Fri) = High (helio)
2022 Jun 28 (Tue) = Low (helio)
2022 Jul 05 (Tue) = High (helio)
2022 Jul 06 (Wed) = Low (geo)

2022 Jul 10 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2022 Jul 13 (Wed) = High (geo)
2022 Jul 15 (Fri) = Major High (helio)
2022 Jul 27 (Wed) = Major Low (geo)
2022 Jul 28 (Thu) = Low (helio)

2022 Aug 01 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Aug 04 (Thu) = High (geo)
2022 Aug 09 (Tue) = Low (geo)
2022 Aug 11 (Thu) = Major Low (helio)
2022 Aug 18 (Thu) = Major High (geo)
2022 Aug 22 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Aug 27 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2022 Aug 28 (Sun) = Low (geo)

2022 Sep 01 (Thu) = High (helio)
2022 Sep 11 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2022 Sep 12 (Mon) = High (geo)

2022 Sep 18 (Sun) = Low (geo)
2022 Sep 21 (Wed) = Major High (helio)
2022 Sep 22 (Thu) = High (geo)
2022 Sep 28 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2022 Oct 01 (Sat) = Low (geo)
2022 Oct 03 (Mon) = High (helio)

2022 Oct 08 (Sat) = Major Low (helio)
2022 Oct 12 (Wed) = High (geo)
2022 Oct 13 (Thu) = High (helio)
2022 Oct 16 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2022 Oct 17 (Mon) = Low (geo)

2022 Oct 18 (Tue) = High (geo)
2022 Oct 22 (Sat) = High (helio)
2022 Oct 27 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2022 Oct 30 (Sun) = High (helio)
2022 Nov 04 (Fri) = Major Low (geo)
2022 Nov 05 (Sat) = Low (helio)

2022 Nov 15 (Tue) = Major High (geo)
2022 Nov 16 (Wed) = Major High (helio)
2022 Nov 26 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2022 Nov 29 (Tue) = High (helio)
2022 Dec 03 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2022 Dec 04 (Sun) = Major Low (geo)

2022 Dec 07 (Wed) = High (helio)
2022 Dec 10 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2022 Dec 19 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Dec 30 (Fri) = Major Low (helio)
2023 Jan 05 (Thu) = Major High (geo)
2023 Jan 17 (Tue) = Major Low (geo)


[calculated for New York City: EST / EDT │ Geo-Helio-Clusters]

Some background on the Bradley Indices
and previous turning points HERE

Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices │ Turning Points 2021

 
2020 Nov 30 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2020 Dec 06 (Sun) = High (helio)
2020 Dec 17 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2021 Jan 01 (Fri) = High (helio)
2021 Jan 09 (Sat) = Low (geo + helio)
2021 Jan 13 (Wed) = High (helio)
2021 Jan 20 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2021 Jan 26 (Tue) = High (helio)
2021 Jan 28 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2021 Feb 01 (Mon) = High (helio)
2021 Feb 04 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2021 Feb 08 (Mon) = High (helio)
2021 Feb 14 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2021 Feb 19 (Fri) = High (helio)
2021 Feb 27 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2021 Mar 04 (Thu) = High (helio)
2021 Mar 15-16 (Mon-Tue) = Low (helio + geo)
2021 Mar 20-21 (Sat-Sun) = Low + High (geo + helio)
2021 Mar 28 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2021 Apr 01 (Thu) = High (geo + helio)
2021 Apr 07 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2021 Apr 09 (Fri) = Low (geo)
2021 Apr 11 (Sun) = High (helio)
2021 Apr 18 (Sun) = High (geo + helio)
2021 Apr 23 (Fri) = High (helio)
2021 Apr 25 (Sun) = Low (geo)
2021 Apr 27 (Tue) = Low (helio)
2021 Apr 29-30 (Thu-Fri) = High (geo + helio)
2021 May 04 (Tue) = Low (geo + helio)
2021 May 14 (Fri) = High (geo)
2021 May 18 (Tue) = High (helio)
2021 May 26-27 (Wed-Thu) = Low (geo + helio)
2021 Jun 02-04 (Wed-Fri) = High (helio + geo)
2021 Jun 14 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2021 Jun 19 (Sat) = High (helio)
2021 Jun 24 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2021 Jul 06 (Tue) = Low-High (geo + helio)
2021 Jul 14-15 (Wed-Thu) = Low-High (helio + geo)
2021 Jul 18 (Sun) = High (helio)
2021 Jul 25-27 (Sun-Tue) = Low-High (helio + geo)
2021 Jul 31 - Aug 02 (Sat-Mon) = Low (helio + geo)
2021 Aug 07 (Sat) = High (geo)
2021 Aug 11 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2021 Aug 14 (Sat) = High (helio)
2021 Aug 20-22 (Fri-Sun) = High-Low (geo + helio)
2021 Aug 25 (Wed-Fri) = Low-High (geo + helio)
2021 Aug 31 (Tue) = High (geo)
2021 Sep 04 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2021 Sep 16-18 (Thu-Sat) = High-Low (helio + geo)
2021 Sep 29 (Wed) = High (geo)
2021 Oct 01-03 (Fri-Sun) = Low-High (helio)
2021 Oct 09 (Sat) = Low (geo)
2021 Oct 12 (Tue) = High (geo)
2021 Oct 13-14 (Wed-Thu) = Low-High (helio)
2021 Oct 16 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2021 Oct 22 (Fri) = High (helio)
2021 Oct 27 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2021 Oct 30 (Sat) = High (helio)
2021 Nov 06-07 (Sat-Sun) = Low (helio + geo)
2021 Nov 10 (Wed) = High (helio)
2021 Nov 19 (Fri) = Low (helio)
2021 Nov 23 (Tue) = High (helio)
2021 Nov 27-28 (Sat-Sun) = Low-High (helio + geo)
2021 Dec 10 (Fri) = Low-High (geo + helio)
2021 Dec 20 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2021 Dec 24 (Fri) = High (geo)
2021 Dec 31 (Fri) = High (helio)
2022 Jan 06 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2022 Jan 10 (Mon) = High (helio)
2022 Jan 16 (Sun) = Low (geo + helio)
2022 Jan 19 (Wed) = High (helio)
2022 Jan 30 (Sun) = Low (helio)

[calculated for New York City]

Some background on the Bradley Indices
and previous turning points HERE

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices │ Turning Points 2020


2019 Nov 10 (Sun) = High (geo + helio)
2019 Nov 17-18 (Sun-Mon) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Nov 29-30 (Fri-Sat) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Dec 19 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2019 Dec 21 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2019 Dec 29 (Sun) = High (geo)
2020 Jan 08 (Wed) = High (helio)
2020 Jan 15 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2020 Jan 20 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2020 Feb 01 (Sat) = High (geo)
2020 Feb 08 (Sat) = Low (geo)
2020 Feb 16 (Sun) = High (geo)
2020 Mar 02 (Mon) = Low (geo)
2020 Mar 17 (Tue) = High (geo)
2020 Mar 20 (Fri) = High (helio)
2020 Mar 28 (Sat) = Low (geo)
2020 Apr 05 (Sun) = High (geo)
2020 Apr 24 (Fri) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 May 09 (Sat) = High (geo+helio)
2020 May 25-26 (Mon-Tue) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 Jun 28-29 (Sun-Mon) = High (geo+helio)
2020 Jul 15+16 (Wed-Thu) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 Jul 22 (Wed) = High (helio)
2020 Jul 23 (Thu) = High (geo)
2020 Jul 30 (Thu) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 Aug 17 (Mon) = High (helio)
2020 Aug 19 (Wed) = High (geo)
2020 Sep 21-22 (Mon-Tue) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 Sep 25-26 (Fri-Sat) = High (geo+helio)
2020 Oct 19 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2020 Oct 23 (Fri) = High (helio)
2020 Nov 18 (Wed) = Low (geo+helio)
2020 Nov 24-25 (Tue-Wed) = High (geo+helio)

[calculated for New York City]

Some background on the Bradley Indices
and previous turning points HERE

Saturday, December 1, 2018

Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices │ Turning Points 2019


2018 Dec 03 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2018 Dec 18 (Tue) = High (geo+helio)

2019 Jan 17 (Thu) = Low (geo)

2019 Jan 21 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2019 Feb 07 (Thu) = High (geo)
2019 Feb 10 (Sun) = Low (geo)
2019 Feb 19 (Tue) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Feb 27 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2019 Feb 28 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2019 Mar 17 (Sun) = High (helio)
2019 Mar 18 (Mon) = High (geo)
2019 Mar 31 (Sun) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Apr 11 (Thu) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Apr 19 (Fri) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Apr 22 (Mon) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Apr 28 (Sun) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 May 16 (Thu) = High (geo+helio)
2019 May 30 (Thu) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Jun 02 (Sun) = High (geo)
2019 Jun 03 (Mon) = High (helio)
2019 Jun 16 (Sun) = Low (geo)
2019 Jun 16 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2019 Jul 04 (Thu) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Jul 11 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2019 Jul 15 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2019 Jul 23 (Tue) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Jul 29 (Mon) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Aug 07 (Wed) = High (geo)
2019 Aug 09 (Fri) = High (helio)
2019 Aug 15 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2019 Aug 16 (Fri) = Low (geo)
2019 Aug 22 (Thu) = High (geo)
2019 Aug 29 (Thu) = High (helio)
2019 Oct 07 (Mon) = Low (geo+helio)
2019 Oct 18 (Fri) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Oct 29 (Tue) = Low (helio)
2019 Oct 30 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2019 Nov 10 (Sun) = High (geo+helio)
2019 Nov 17 (Sun) = Low (helio)
2019 Nov 18 (Mon) = Low (geo)
2019 Nov 29 (Fri) = High (geo)
2019 Nov 30 (Sat) = High (helio)
2019 Dec 19 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2019 Dec 21 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2019 Dec 29 (Sun) = High (geo)
2020 Jan 08 (Wed) = High (helio)
2020 Jan 15 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2020 Jan 20 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2020 Feb 01 (Sat) = High (geo)

[calculated for New York City

Some background on the Bradley Indices
and previous turning points HERE

Donald A. Bradley (1950) - Stock Market Prediction (HERE)

Sunday, January 28, 2018

Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices │ Turning Points 2018


2017 Dec 18 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2018 Jan 03 (Wed) = High (geo)
2018 Jan 04 (Thu) = Major High (helio)
2018 Jan 28 (Sun) = Major Low (geo)
2018 Feb 01 (Thu) = Major Low (helio)
2018 Feb 25 (Sun) = High (geo)
2018 Feb 28 (Wed) = High (helio)
2018 Mar 08 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2018 Mar 10 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2018 Mar 15 (Thu) = High (geo)
2018 Mar 22 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2018 Apr 25 (Wed) = High (geo)
2018 Apr 25 (Wed) = High (helio)
2018 May 03 (Thu) = Low (geo)
2018 May 04 (Fri) = Low (helio)
2018 May 17 (Thu) = Major High (helio)
2018 May 18 (Fri) = Major High (geo)
2018 May 23 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2018 May 24 (Thu) = Low (helio)
2018 May 28 (Mon) = High (helio)
2018 May 29 (Tue) = High (geo)
2018 Jun 27 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2018 Jun 27 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2018 Jul 10 (Tue) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Aug 01 (Wed) = Low (geo + helio)
2018 Aug 05 (Sun) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Aug 11 (Sat) = Low (helio)
2018 Aug 12 (Sun) = Low (geo)
2018 Aug 22 (Wed) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Aug 29 (Wed) = Low (geo + helio)
2018 Sep 05 (Wed) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Sep 12 (Wed) = Low (geo + helio)
2018 Sep 15 (Sat) = High (helio)
2018 Sep 16 (Sun) = High (geo)
2018 Oct 09 (Tue) = Low (geo + helio)
2018 Oct 24 (Wed) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Nov 21 (Wed) = Low (helio)
2018 Nov 24 (Sat) @ 0 (geo)
2018 Nov 27 (Tue) = High (helio)
2018 Dec 03 (Mon) = Low (helio)
2018 Dec 05 (Wed) = Low (geo)
2018 Dec 14 (Fri) @ 0 (geo)
2018 Dec 18 (Tue) = High (geo + helio)
2018 Dec 21 (Fri) @ 0 (geo)
2019 Jan 17 (Thu) = Major Low (geo)
2019 Jan 21 (Mon) = Major Low (helio)

[all times calculated for New York City =  EST / EDT

Some background on the Bradley Indices
and turning points of previous years HERE

Thursday, November 24, 2016

Bradley Indices | Geocentric + Heliocentric | 2017

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The above Bradley Indices were created by combining all geocentric and heliocentric planetary aspects and declinations in numerical values for each day. Sometimes the changes in trend in these indices will fit incredibly with the market behavior. The direction of the indices aren't as important as the concrete trend change. Find more information on the Bradley Indices in Donald Bradley's original "Stock Market Prediction" and HERE.

Turn Days in the Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices 2017:

2016 Nov 25 (Fri) = High [geo]
2016 Nov 28 (Mon) = Low [geo] 

2016 Dec 09 (Fri) = High [geo]
2016 Dec 14 (Wed) = Low [geo] 

2016 Dec 28 (Wed) = High [geo]
2017 Jan 07 (Sat) = Low [geo]
2017 Jan 16 (Mon) = Low [helio]
 

2017 Jan 20 (Fri) = High [geo]
2017 Jan 23 (Mon) = High [helio]
2017 Jan 28 (Sat) = Low [geo + helio] 

2017 Feb 11 (Sat) = High [geo]
2017 Feb 19 (Sun) = High [helio]
2017 Feb 27 (Mon) = Low [geo + helio] 

2017 Mar 04 (Sat) = High [helio]
2017 Mar 06 (Mon) = High [geo]
2017 Mar 12 (Sun) = Low [geo]
2017 Mar 13 (Mon) = Low [helio]
 

2017 Mar 16 (Thu) = High [geo + helio]
2017 Mar 21 (Tue) = Low [geo+ helio] 

2017 Mar 28 (Tue) = High [geo+ helio]
2017 Apr 02 (Sun) = Low [geo+ helio] 

2017 Apr 19 (Wed) = High [geo + helio]
2017 Apr 26 (Wed) = Low [geo + helio] 

2017 May 11 (Thu) = High [geo+ helio]
2017 May 19 (Fri) = Low [geo + helio] 

2017 Jun 01 (Thu) = High [geo + helio]
2017 Jun 09 (Fri) = Low [geo + helio] 

2017 Jun 20 (Tue) = High [geo]
2017 Jun 22 (Thu) = High [helio]
2017 Jul 03 (Mon) = Low [geo]
2017 Jul 05 (Wed) = Low [helio]
 

2017 Aug 07 (Mon) = High [helio]
2017 Aug 09 (Wed) = High [geo]
2017 Aug 19 (Sat) = Low [geo]
2017 Aug 20 (Sun) = Low [helio]
 

2017 Aug 25 (Fri) = High [geo]
2017 Aug 29 (Tue) = High [helio]
2017 Oct 07 (Sat) = Low [geo]
2017 Oct 08 (Sun) = Low [helio]
 

2017 Nov 14 (Tue) = High [geo]
2017 Nov 19 (Sun) = High [helio]
2017 Dec 03 (Sun) = Low [helio]
2017 Dec 04 (Mon) = Low [geo]
 

2017 Dec 13 (Wed) = High [geo]
2017 Dec 14 (Thu) = High [helio]
2017 Dec 18 (Mon) = Low [helio]
2017 Dec 23 (Sat) = Low [geo]

 2018 Jan 03 (Wed) = High [geo]
2018 Jan 04 (Thu) = High [helio]
2018 Jan 28 (Sun) = Low [geo]
2018 Feb 01 (Thu) = Low [helio]

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Bradley Indices | Geocentric + Heliocentric | 2016

Arch Crawford & Larry Pesavento (2002) - The Bradley model, described by Donald Bradley in his 1948 booklet ‘Stock Market Predictions’, has gained quite a bit of notoriety in recent years because of its incredible accuracy. Although the forecasts repeat with stunning regularity, it should not be construed as the “Holy Grail”. Long-term studies emphasize that it is a probability not a certainty. With that caveat, we will examine Bradley’s sidereal potential line as it takes into consideration every on of the classical Ptolemic harmonic angles between any 2 planet pairs.

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Its strength and its weakness is that some years, it will precisely point up Highs, Lows and Turning dates for the Major Stock Market Indices, and other years will seem a random mishmash of useless squiggles. The Turning Dates are the most reliable portion of the Bradley, Direction, somewhat less so, and Amount of Move, least reliable. Sometimes a calculated High will, in reality, come about at a Low in stock prices and vice versa. In other words, it’s something we should keep our eyes on, but not something to Bet the Farm on, especially in a vacuum as in the absence of other technical confirmation from real-time data generated by the actual movements of prices on Wall Street. As Bradley so aptly described the model: “At no time must the reader gain the impression that a siderograph, as such, is a prediction of what the stock market will actually do. Nevertheless, observation proves that basic reversals in collective attitudes, clearly predicted by the line, are inevitably mirrored in stock averages. A limitation of the siderograph is that it cannot be construed as a forecast of secular trend. In statistical terminology, “lines of regression” fitted to the market course and to the potential should not be expected to completely agree, for reasons obvious to everybody with keen business sense or commercial training. The siderograph may be depended upon, though, to reward its analyst with foreknowledge of coming conditions in general, so that the non-psychological factors may be evaluated accordingly. By this we mean that the potential will afford one with clues as to how the mass mind will “take” the other mechanical or governmental vicissitudes affecting high finance.”

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Not included in Bradley’s work are Syzgies (New & Full Moons) and their special cases, the Eclipses, Declination Factors (North - South positions, except for Mars & Venus), Heliocentric alignments and Large Configurations composed of Multiple Harmonic Interactions among several planets, simultaneously. When the Force is extra-ordinarily perturbed by any of these other factors, the Bradley projection can go totally away (see also HERE).

Turn days in the Geocentric and Heliocentric Bradley Indices 2016:


2015-11-25 (Wed)
Low (geo)
2015-11-06 (Fri)
High (helio)
2015-12-07 (Mon)
Low (helio)
2015-12-11 (Fri)
High (geo)
2015-12-12 (Sat)
High (helio)
2015-12-20 (Sun)
Low (geo)
2015-12-25 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-01-04 (Mon)
Low (helio)
2016-01-06 (Wed)
Low (geo)
2016-01-13 (Wed)
High (geo + helio)
2016-01-18 (Mon)
Low (geo)
2016-01-19 (Tue)
Low (helio)
2016-02-03 (Wed)
High (helio)
2016-02-05 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-02-17 (Wed)
Low (helio)
2016-02-19 (Fri)
Low (geo)
2016-02-24 (Wed)
High (geo)
2016-02-25 (Thu)
High (helio)
2016-03-10 (Thu)
Low (geo)
2016-03-12 (Sat)
Low (helio)
2016-03-25 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-03-26 (Sat)
High (helio)
2016-04-04 (Mon)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-04-13 (Wed)
High (geo + helio)
2016-04-22 (Fri)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-05-10 (Tue)
High (geo + helio)
2016-06-02 (Thu)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-06-14 (Tue)
High (geo + helio)
2016-06-18 (Sat)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-07-05 (Tue)
High (geo + helio)
2016-07-11 (Mon)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-07-18 (Mon)
High (geo + helio)
2016-08-08 (Mon)
Low (helio)
2016-08-10 (Wed)
Low (geo)
2016-08-18 (Thu)
High (geo + helio)
2016-09-06 (Tue)
Low (geo)
2016-09-09 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-09-18 (Sun)
Low (geo + helio)
2016-09-29 (Thu)
High (geo)
2016-09-30 (Fri)
High (helio)
2016-10-17 (Mon)
Low (helio)
2016-10-18 (Tue)
Low (geo)
2016-11-01 (Tue)
High (helio)
2016-11-03 (Thu)
High (geo)
2016-11-13 (Sun)
Low (helio)
2016-11-15 (Tue)
Low (geo)
2016-11-24 (Thu)
High (helio)
2016-11-25 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-11-28 (Mon)
Low (geo)
2016-11-29 (Tue)
Low (helio)
2016-12-09 (Fri)
High (geo)
2016-12-10 (Sat)
High (helio)
2016-12-14 (Wed)
Low (geo)
2016-12-15 (Thu)
Low (helio)
2016-12-28 (Wed)
High (geo + helio)
2017-01-07 (Sat)
Low (geo)
2017-01-16 (Mon)
Low (helio)
2017-01-20 (Fri)
High (geo)
2017-01-23 (Mon)
High (helio)
2017-01-28 (Sat)
Low (geo + helio)