Showing posts with label Nodal Cycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nodal Cycle. Show all posts

Monday, April 13, 2026

The S&P 500 versus the Speed of the True Lunar Node

Financial markets correlate closely with the 4–14 day cycle of the retrograde–stationary–direct motion of the True Lunar Node (North Node). This cycle can be depicted best by charting the Speed of the True Lunar Node against the S&P 500 (where "speed" refers to the geocentric motion in degrees of longitude per day).

S&P 500 (daily candles) vs True and Mean Lunar Node Speed, December 2025 to June 2026.
On March 30, 2026 — the date of the major stock market low shown in the chart above — the True Lunar Node was positioned at approximately 3°–4° Pisces (retrograde) in the Buttonwood Agreement NYSE natal chart (May 17, 1792, 8:52 AM LMT, New York). Using the Placidus house system, it fell in the 11th house, the sector governing groups, large-scale public participation, collective sentiment, international alliances, and speculative market trends driven by the masses.
Expect potential short-term changes in trend when the True Lunar Nodal Speed (blue solid line in the chart above)

► equals the Mean Lunar Nodal Speed (red horizontal dashed line), or
► is at 0 (grey horizontal dashed line), or 
► reaches maximum and minimum extremes.
 
The absolute maximum of the True Lunar Nodal Speed is approximately +0.0015 degrees of geocentric longitude per day (brief direct motion); the absolute minimum is -0.1074 degrees per day (peak retrograde motion). Standstills (stations) of the True Lunar Node occur when its geocentric speed in longitude momentarily reaches zero, as it oscillates around its mean retrograde motion due to solar and planetary perturbations. 
 
 
The True Node is predominantly retrograde (negative speed, averaging –0.053°/day) but regularly slows, stations (speed = 0°/day), and briefly moves direct (positive speed, up to +0.0015°/day) for hours to days before resuming retrograde motion. These stations are most pronounced and prolonged near eclipse seasons (roughly every 173 days), when solar perturbations on the lunar orbit are strongest.

The S&P 500 versus the Speed of the True Lunar Node (solid blue line)
and the Speed of the Mean Lunar Node (blue dashed line), 2014 to 2016.
In addition to the phenomenon of eclipses, there is a period of approximately ±2 weeks around the equinoxes, when Earth crosses the ecliptic from south to north (spring) and vice versa (fall). During these intervals, geomagnetic activity tends to be relatively strong, though highly variable and unpredictable, as solar emissions impact both hemispheres in an unbalanced manner.
 The S&P 500 versus the Speed of the True Lunar Node (solid blue line), November 2015 to April 2016.
 
The S&P 500 versus the Speed of the True Lunar Node and Eclipse Crash Windows, October 2014 to December 2015. 
The physical wobbling and oscillation of the Moon in its orbit around Earth and the Sun are driven by square aspects and conjunctions in both longitude and declination relative to the Sun and Earth. Around solar and lunar eclipses, the lunar nodes undergo rapid transitions between direct motion (speed above zero), retrograde motion (below zero), and near-standstill phases (at or very close to zero), as indicated by the blue-shaded time frames in the charts above. During these periods, financial markets commonly exhibit sentiment extremes and elevated volatility.
Approximately every 86.5 days, a so-called Moon Wobble occurs when the Sun is conjunct, opposite, or square (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) to the True Lunar Node. The lunar node begins wobbling about two weeks before the exact event and remains unstable until roughly one week afterward. When coupled with solar or lunar eclipses, the wobble effect can be extended. As the Sun approaches conjunction or opposition to the lunar node, its motion is nearly blocked (as indicated by the bluish shaded areas). These periods are potential crash windows in financial markets. 
 
The S&P 500 versus the Sun conjunct, opposite, and square (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) to the True Lunar Node, 2011 to 2015. 
 
The Moon's Nodal Wobble refers primarily to the retrograde precession of the lunar orbital nodes—the points where the Moon's orbit intersects the ecliptic plane. This line of nodes completes a full 360° cycle westward (retrograde) relative to the vernal equinox in approximately 18.613 years, at a mean rate of about 19.35° per year or 0.053° per day.
 
This "wobble" or instability in nodal speed reflects heightened perturbations when the Sun's gravitational influence on the Moon's orbital plane is strongest. The True Node may exhibit rapid fluctuations in direction and speed (retrograde-stationary-direct), magnifying energetic or disruptive effects in observational contexts. Mean nodes remain steadily retrograde but also decelerate noticeably.
 
The Draconic Month—also known as the nodical or draconic lunar month—has a mean length of 27.212220 days (27 days, 5 hours, 5 minutes, and 35.8 seconds) and is one of the five distinct lunar orbital periods used in astronomy and astrology.
This Precession causes the Moon's maximum declination to vary between roughly ±18.3° (minor lunar standstill) and ±28.6° (major lunar standstill) over the cycle, influencing eclipse patterns, tidal extremes, and the apparent "wobble" in the Moon's orbital orientation as viewed from Earth. A secondary, shorter-term perturbation arises from solar gravitational effects, causing the True (osculating) Node to oscillate around the mean node by up to about ±1.5° with a dominant period of roughly 173 days.
The Moon's Extreme Declinations represent the annual instants of greatest northern (positive) and southern (negative) geocentric declination, which delineate the progression of the 18.613-year lunar standstill cycle. These events reach their peak values (±28.43°) during the major lunar standstill in 2025 and their minimum values (±18.33°) during the minor lunar standstill in 2034.
The Moon's Extreme Declinations and Standstill Cycle, 2025 to 2035.
These values reflect the combined effects of the Moon’s orbital inclination (≈5.15°) and the 18.613-year nodal precession relative to the ecliptic. During major standstill years the extremes approach the sum of the obliquity of the ecliptic (≈23.44°) plus the orbital inclination; during minor standstill years they approach the difference. The listed times mark the precise moments of zero declination rate of change (local extrema).
Eclipses occur when the Sun aligns closely with the lunar nodes (conjunction or opposition) near a new or full Moon, aligning the Sun, Earth, and Moon in three dimensions. Around these times—typically twice yearly in eclipse seasons separated by about 173 days—the True Node's geocentric motion slows markedly, often becoming stationary or briefly direct (positive speed) before resuming retrograde motion.
 
As observed from Earth, the Sun crosses both lunar nodes as it travels along the ecliptic. The interval between successive returns of the Sun to the same node is known as the draconic (or eclipse) year, approximately 346.6201 days. Hence, there are about 12.74 draconic months in one eclipse year, and 13.42 draconic months in one tropical (or solar) year. 

Equinoxes mark when the Sun crosses the celestial equator, aligning its apparent position with the intersection of the ecliptic and equator. The lunar nodes' alignment with equinox points modulates the Moon's Extreme Declinations and Standstill Cycles. When a node coincides near an equinox, it accentuates the 18.613-year nodal cycle's effects on lunar rising/setting azimuths and tidal variations. The True Node's oscillatory behavior can interact with these seasonal alignments, though without the pronounced speed reversal seen at eclipses. 
 
See also:

Monday, March 16, 2026

Louise McWhirter’s Forecasting Theory: The US Stock Market Through 2028

Louise McWhirter first presented her theory in her 1937 book "Astrology and Stock Market Forecasting." The model in the chart below demonstrates her claim that primary trends in business volume, finance, and stock prices are systematically delineated by the retrograde motion of the lunar North Node (NN) through the twelve signs of the zodiac. 

The draconic period of the true (osculating) lunar North Node is 18.612958 years (6,798.383 days). On average, 
each 30° zodiac sign is traversed in 566 days, or one year, six months, and nineteen days (1.55108 years).
 
The zodiac wheel is divided into four quadrants: "above normal," "normal," "below normal," and directional zones marked "prices up" (Leo through Libra) and "prices down" (Aquarius through Aries). Prominent arrows labeled "NODE TREND" and "TRANSITION PERIOD" indicate the clockwise retrograde flow, with gradual shifts occurring across defined transition zones near Scorpio–Sagittarius and Taurus–Gemini. Four pivotal turning points occur when the North Node enters the fixed signs, corresponding symbolically to the four heads of the cherubim in the Book of Ezekiel:
 
Aquarius represents the extreme low of business activity and the bottom of the cycle.
Leo signifies the extreme high of business activity and the top of the cycle.
Taurus marks the point at which business activity reaches a normal level while the overarching trend remains downward.
Scorpio indicates business activity reaching a normal level while the trend is upward.
 
The intervening signs provide precise transitional and amplifying effects:
 
► Aquarius: Extreme low of business activity, the bottom of the cycle.
► Pisces: Business activity approaches the bottom of the cycle.
► Aries: Business activity starts to fall below the normal level.
► Taurus: Business activity reaches a normal level, but the trend is going down.
► Gemini: Business continues to fall lower towards the normal level.
► Cancer: Business activity fades from the top.
► Leo: Extreme high of business activity, the top of the cycle.
► Virgo: Business activity goes even higher.
► Libra: Business activity starts to go above the normal level.
► Scorpio: Business activity reaches a normal level, and the trend is going up.
► Sagittarius: Business continues to go higher towards the normal level.
Capricorn: Business activity turns up from the bottom.
 
These phases are not instantaneous but unfold within the broader nodal transit and transition periods shown on the wheel. The following ingress dates, drawn directly from the established nodal cycle, demonstrate the theory’s practical application across recent and forthcoming years:
 
November 11, 2015: NN enters Libra. 
May 9, 2017: NN enters Virgo. 
November 6, 2018: NN enters Leo. 
May 5, 2020: NN enters Cancer. 
January 18, 2022: NN enters Gemini. 
July 17, 2023: NN enters Taurus. 
January 11, 2025: NN enters Aries.  
July 26, 2026: NN enters Pisces.
January 27, 2028: NN enters Aquarius
August 2, 2029: NN enters Capricorn. 
January 26, 2031: NN enters Sagittarius. 
October 2, 2032: NN enters Scorpio. 
April 2, 2034: NN enters Libra. 
October 25, 2035: NN enters Virgo. 
[The intervals reflect the variable motion of the true North Node, ranging from 542 to 623 days while averaging to the theoretical 566.532-day mean.] 
As of March 2026, the North Node resides in Aries, a phase in which business activity begins to fall below the normal level within the “prices down” quadrant. This downward pressure persists until July 26, 2026, when the Node enters Pisces. Throughout the remainder of 2026 and the entire year of 2027, the Pisces transit prevails, during which business activity steadily approaches the bottom of the cycle. The subsequent ingress into Aquarius on January 27, 2028 will mark the extreme low, completing the descent that commenced in Aries.
 
 
McWhirter’s model suggests subdued business volumes, contracting financial activity, and a prevailing downward bias in prices through 2027. While this part of her theory does not specify intra-sign turning points and acknowledges that secondary factors (such as other planetary cycles or policy interventions) may modify outcomes by up to 20%, it supplies a disciplined structural overlay that contextualises shorter-term technical, fundamental, and sentiment indicators. 
 
See also:

Friday, March 15, 2024

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Lunar Node Cycle │ March - April 2024

 
» I’m not trying to predict the future; I am trying to accurately and quickly depict the present. 
I’m not trying to predict what people will do, but rather identify what they are doing right now. «  
Chris Camillo, 2023
 

Monday, January 8, 2024

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Lunar Node Cycle │ January 2024

 
» The lunar node, quite abstractly speaking, is the point of intersection of the solar and the lunar orbits. There are, therefore, two nodes in opposite positions in the heavens: an ascending node or lunar north node, and a descending node - the lunar south node. The solar and the lunar orbits are not, in effect, in the same but in different planes, enclosing a certain angle. Thus there arise the two opposite points of intersection. The peculiarity of these two points of intersection is that they do not stand still but slowly move. The plane of the lunar path rotates in relation to the plane of the solar path; so the two nodes move a round. They move around the Zodiac in a contrary direction to the rotation of the planets, i.e., from Aries backward through Pisces, Aquarius, etc. A complete revolution of a lunar node takes place in 18 years and 7 months; after this time, therefore, the node — the ascending node, for example — is once again in the same position in the Zodiac as it was before. The ascending node is, thereby, the mathematical point that (at any given time and again after 18 years and 7 months [= 6,798.383 CD] the lunar orbit rises above the solar orbit, while at the opposite point the descending node sinks below it. «
Willi O. Sucher, 1937.
 

Thursday, December 21, 2023

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Lunar Node Cycle │ Projection into April 2024

 
Dec 21, 2023 (Thu) = May 10, 2005 (Tue)
 
 
 In bull markets, New Moons are bottoms, and Full Moons are tops. 

Jan 3 (Wed) 22:30 = 270°
= Last Quarter    
Jan 11 (Thu) 06:57 = 0° = New Moon    
Jan 17 (Wed) 22:52 = 90° = First Quarter    
Jan 25 (Thu) 12:53 = 180° = Full Moon    

Thursday, November 22, 2018

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Lunar Node Cycle | Nov 27 (Tue) Low

This 2000-2018 Analog projects some sort of a low on Nov 27 (Tue),
some sort of a rally into Dec 09 (Sun), another decline into
Dec 22 (Sat), a high on Dec 28 (Fri), and a low on Jan 05 (Sat).

Monday, August 27, 2018

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Nodal Cycle | Aug 27, 2018 = Jan 14, 2000

Jan 14, 2000 (Fri = Major High in DJIA) + 6,800 CD = Aug 27, 2018 (Mon)

A high should print around Aug 30 (Thu) ± 1 CD.
Aug 30 will be also
195 Solar Degrees of geocentric longitude from the Major Low on Feb 09 (Fri)
and 1,440 Lunar Degrees from the Low on May 03 (Thu).

Saturday, June 16, 2018

S&P 500 Index vs 18.61 Year Nodal Cycle

The Nutation Cycle is caused by a very slight elliptical nodding of the Earth's axis, which is super-
imposed on the precessional motion due to the pull of the Moon on the Earth. This shows up as the north
node’s retrograde (clockwise) movement around the ecliptic circle, taking 18.6133 tropical years to
complete one cycle of the ecliptic circle from spring equinox to spring equinox.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

The S&P 500 versus the True Lunar Node's Speed

 Market CITs are likely when the Lunar Node’s speed (degrees of longitude per day) is at a minimum, maximum, or near zero. The Eclipse Crash Window opens and closes approximately 21 days before and 21 days after solar and lunar eclipses.  The table on the left shows the nodal speed at its minimum, maximum, and near zero during the next 30 days. The Sun will conjunct the Lunar Node (North Node) on Sep 24 (Thu).

Sunday, June 21, 2015

The S&P 500 versus the Rhythm of the True Lunar Node

Financial markets correlate with the 4–14 day cycle of the retrograde–stationary–direct motion of the Lunar True Node (North Node). This cycle can be illustrated by charting the geocentric longitude and speed of the Node against, for example, the S&P 500 (where "speed" refers to geocentric motion in degrees of longitude per day).

 The blue dotted diagonal is the longitude of Lunar Mean Node.
The blueish verticals indicate the changes in the motion of the Lunar True Node.
 
Approximately every 86.5 days, a so-called “Moon Wobble” occurs when the Sun is conjunct, opposite, or square (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) to the Lunar Node. The Node begins to wobble about two weeks before the exact alignment and remains unstable until roughly one week afterward. When combined with solar and lunar eclipses, this wobble effect may be extended.

As the Sun approaches conjunction and opposition with the True Lunar Node, its motion appears to slow significantly (as indicated by the bluish shaded areas). This period is considered a potential crash window in financial markets. 
 
The plane in which the Moon orbits the Earth is inclined at 5°09′ to the plane of the ecliptic, and this plane rotates slowly over a period of 18.61 years. Over this 18.61-year nodal cycle, the amplitude of the lunar declination gradually increases.  The maximum monthly lunar declination north and south of the equator varies between 18°18′ and 28°36′. Maximum values of lunar declination occurred in 1969, 1987, 2006, 2025, and 2043, while minimum values occurred in 1978, 1997, September 2015, 2034, and 2053.

 
The plane of the lunar orbit precesses in space, completing one revolution in 6,798.3835 days, or 18.612958 years. The Lunar Node enters a new zodiac sign (30°) approximately every 1.551 years, or about 18.613 months. This corresponds to 1.55 years, 80.9 weeks, or 566.53 calendar days, which can be divided by eight to yield a 10.12-week cycle, equivalent to roughly 55 trading days.
 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

The S&P 500 versus the True Lunar Node's Speed

There is a notable correlation between the speed of the True Lunar Node (North Node, Rahu)—defined as its motion in degrees of geocentric longitude—and short-term changes in financial market trends. This relationship becomes particularly evident when:

the speed of the true lunar node approaches zero, and
the lunar node changes direction (i.e., at the minima and maxima of its oscillations).

 On June 4, 2012 — the date of the major stock market low shown in the chart above — the True North Node was positioned at approximately 18°54' Sagittarius (retrograde) in the Buttonwood NYSE natal chart (May 17, 1792, 8:52 AM LMT, New York). Using the Placidus house system, it fell in the 5th house, the sector governing speculation, risk-taking, short-term market movements, creativity, and public sentiment.
 
The result is a rapid cycle of approximately 2–7 days, during which short-term trend shifts may occur, sometimes aligning with larger market moves. This behavior corresponds to the lunar node’s retrograde, stationary, and direct phases, recognized in both astrology and astronomy.  During lunar and solar eclipses, the node exhibits a pronounced “wobble,” oscillating quickly between these phases. As the Sun approaches a 180° opposition to the node (e.g., late May 2012), the node’s motion slows to near standstill. This condition—often termed a lunar standstill—is regarded as a potential crash window in equity markets.
In financial astrology, the North Node's placement in a national or corporate horoscope (or its transits over key points) is interpreted as indicating areas where external or collective forces exert significant influence on markets, capital flows, and economic activity. It frequently highlights overseas or foreign involvement, as the nodes are inherently tied to international and cross-border themes due to their connection with eclipses and global cycles. In the quadrant-based and time-dependent Placidus House system interpretations in this context include:

7th House: Partnerships, alliances, and open enemies. The North Node here often points to foreign investors, international trade partners, or overseas corporations playing a major role in domestic markets or corporate deals.
9th House: Long-distance matters, foreign countries, international law, and higher finance. A North Node placement or transit here may signify foreign capital inflows, influence from international institutions, or global news affecting investor sentiment.
3rd House: Communication, media, short-distance travel, and local/international news flow. The North Node can indicate foreign news, rumors, or international reporting that drives market volatility or public reaction.
2nd House: National wealth, currency, and financial resources. Here, the North Node often denotes foreign capital, overseas investment into domestic assets, or influxes of money from abroad that strengthen or inflate values.
10th House: Government, national reputation, and authority figures. The North Node in this house may reflect foreign governments, international regulators, or global political influences affecting policy, trade agreements, or sovereign markets.
12th House, 6th House, or 8th House (the "loss" or hidden houses): These placements are generally more challenging. The North Node here can indicate foreign-related losses, hidden foreign influences causing outflows, scandals involving overseas entities, supply-chain disruptions (6th), debt or crisis involving foreign creditors (8th), or secretive international dealings leading to financial leakage (12th).
 
The Lunar Nodes precess rapidly along the ecliptic, completing a full revolution—known as the draconitic or nodal period (associated with nutation)—in about 18.6 years, distinct from the saros cycle. The Moon's orbit is inclined ~5° to the ecliptic, while the ecliptic is inclined ~23.4° to the celestial equator. Consequently, once per nodal cycle, when the ascending node aligns with the vernal equinox, the Moon reaches its maximum northern and southern declinations (the Lunar Node Declination Cycle). At these extremes, it also attains its widest rising and setting azimuths, its highest and lowest meridian altitudes, and may produce unusually delayed first visibilities of the New Moon.

The True Lunar Node Cycle (Draconic Cycle or Nodal Precession Cycle) has a mean period of 18.61296 solar years (approximately 18.613 years or 6,798.38 days). Its 4th harmonic is 4.65324 years (approximately 4.653 years or 1,699.595 days). Accordingly, the North Node (Mean Node) advances 30° — entering a new zodiac sign — every 1.551 years on average. This is equivalent to:

≈ 18.61 months
≈ 80.93 weeks
≈ 566.5 calendar days
≈ 10.12 weeks per 1/8 segment (45°)
≈ 55 trading days per 1/8 segment (assuming ≈252 trading days per year)

The term "Moon Wobble," coined by Carl Payne Tobey (1902–1980), described periods when the Sun is conjunct either node or forms a T-square to the nodal axis. Based on his study of major disasters—fires, severe weather, and loss of life—he found such configurations frequently coincide with heightened risk, especially near eclipses, though not exclusively. These periods are associated with pronounced declinational instability of the Moon and an increased likelihood of environmental and material disruption.