Monday, July 31, 2017
SPX vs Jupiter – Saturn Cycle │ August 2017
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
Jupiter,
Jupiter - Saturn Cycle,
Saturn,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Sunday, July 30, 2017
S&P 500 Index vs Lunar Mystery Cycle │ The Infinite Divided By The Soul
The Lunar Mystery Cycle suggests that August 04 (Fri) ± 1 TD will be a low. |
- Divide the Number of the Infinite (= 1) by the Number of the Soul (= 7) = 0.1428571
- Float the decimals to the front by multiplying 0.1428571 by 100,000 = 14,285.71
- Assume this would be Degrees of Lunar Motion, and divide them by 360 Degrees = 39.68 Lunar Months of 29.53 Calendar Days (CD) = 39 Lunations + 20.15 CD ≈ 1,171.79 Calendar Days or divided by the length of the Mean Solar Year (365.24 Days) ≈ 3.21 Years.
Any pivot-date in the S&P500 plus approximately 1,172 CD will become another pivot, oftentimes even of the same polarity. However, this cycle cannot forecast the magnitude and importance of the projected highs and lows.
An ancient approximation to π (pi) is 22 divided by 7 = 3.142857. This has been associated with Jewish mysticism. Certain Kabbalists know the 22 characters of the Hebrew alphabet represent a complete circumference that, when divided by 7 = the sacred number of cycles, produces the Kabbalistic π, also known as the perfect π.
One divided by seven is 0.142857142857142857142857142857 ..., and if 142,857 is multiplied by 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6, the answer is a cyclic permutation of itself, and will correspond to the repeating digits of 2/7, 3/7, 4/7, 5/7, or 6/7, respectively:
An ancient approximation to π (pi) is 22 divided by 7 = 3.142857. This has been associated with Jewish mysticism. Certain Kabbalists know the 22 characters of the Hebrew alphabet represent a complete circumference that, when divided by 7 = the sacred number of cycles, produces the Kabbalistic π, also known as the perfect π.
One divided by seven is 0.142857142857142857142857142857 ..., and if 142,857 is multiplied by 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6, the answer is a cyclic permutation of itself, and will correspond to the repeating digits of 2/7, 3/7, 4/7, 5/7, or 6/7, respectively:
1 × 142,857 = 142,857Multiplying 142,857 by 2 one gets 285,714, which is the same digits, rotated 4 positions, by 3 one gets 428,571 (shifted 5 places), 142,857 times 7 is 999,999, the closest number to The Infinite. There is a lot more number-plays with 142,857 involved, e.g.
2 × 142,857 = 285,714
3 × 142,857 = 428,571
4 × 142,857 = 571,428
5 × 142,857 = 714,285
6 × 142,857 = 857,142
7 × 142,857 = 999,999 = closest to The Infinite
1 / 7 = 0 . 142857 142857 142857 14 ...See also HERE
2 / 7 = 0 . 285714 285714 285714 28 ...
3 / 7 = 0 . 428571 428571 428571 42 ...
4 / 7 = 0 . 571428 571428 571428 57 ...
5 / 7 = 0 . 714285 714285 714285 71 ...
6 / 7 = 0 . 857142 857142 857142 85 ...
7 / 7 = 0 . 999999 999999 999999 99 ...
8 / 7 = 1 . 142857 142857 142857 14 ...
9 / 7 = 1 . 285714 285714 285714 28 ...
Labels:
1172 Day Cycle,
142857,
3.21 Year Cycle,
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
George Gurdjieff,
Kabbala,
Lunar Cycle,
Lunar Mystery Cycle,
Numerology,
Olney H. Richmond,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Saturday, July 29, 2017
SPX vs True Lunar Node Speed │ August 2017
Upcoming Turn-Days: Aug 04 (Fri), Aug 12 (Sat), Aug 16 (Wed), Aug 19 (Sat), Aug 28 (Mon), Sep 02 (Sat). |
Lunar Eclipses (e.g. Aug 07, 2017) occur at Full Moon and Solar Eclipses (e.g. Aug 21, 2017) at New Moon only when their alignments occur in three dimensions. Relative to Earth's orbit, the plane of lunar orbit is inclined. Mean Inclination of Lunar Orbit equals 5.1454 degrees. Eclipses only occur near the Nodes of Lunar Orbit intersection with the Solar Orbital Plane. Earth's Mean Orbital Plane is termed the Ecliptic (synonymous with eclipse). There are two nodal crossings of the ecliptic per nodal period, the ascending node and the descending node. Half the nodal period is the shortest possible interval between two eclipses. Solar and Lunar Eclipses are very distinct: The Moon's shadow during a total Solar Eclipse is only a narrow band on the earth. The Earth's conic shadow at the Moon's mean distance is over 9,000 km wide, nearly three lunar diameters. Only a small percentage of people experience each Solar Eclipse while half the world can view each Lunar Eclipse.
Before and after Lunar and Solar Eclipses the True Lunar Node starts wobbling (e.g. on Jul 30, 2017), quickly moving back and forth, retrograde, stationary, direct. Financial markets correlate with this 4 to 14 Day Cycle of the Retrograde-Stationary-Direct motion of the Lunar True Node. About every 86.655 days a so called Moon Wobble (lunar libration) occurs when the Sun is conjunct (e.g. on Aug 16, 2017), opposite and square (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°) the Lunar Node (4 * 86.655 days = 1 Nodical Year or Eclipse Year = 346.62 days). The Node starts wobbling about two weeks before the exact event and remains unstable until about one week after. If coupled with Solar and Lunar Eclipses, the wobble-effect can be extended. And as the Sun approaches conjunction and opposition towards the Lunar Node, it's motion is almost blocked (speed at or near zero). Notably these periods go along with exuberant mood and frenzy, most of the times correlating with rallies or crashes in financial markets. More charts on the correlation of the markets with the Rhythm of the Node HERE + HERE
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
Lunar Eclipse,
Lunar Libration,
Mean Lunar Node,
Moon,
Moon Wobbles,
Solar Eclipse,
Speed,
SPX,
Sun,
True Lunar Node,
US-Stocks
SPX vs Declination of Mercury and Venus │ August 2017
Labels:
AstroFin,
Declination,
Financial Astrology,
Mercury,
Parallel of Declination,
SPX,
US-Stocks,
Venus
SPX vs Retrograde Cycle of Uranus │ August 02 (Wed)
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
Retrograde,
Retrograde-Direct Cycle,
SPX,
Timing Solution,
Uranus,
US-Stocks
SoLunar Map | August - September 2017
Upcoming SoLunar Turn-Days are:
Jul 31 (Mon), Aug 03 (Thu), Aug 07 (Mon) = Full Moon = Partial Lunar Eclipse (not visible in New York), Aug 11 (Fri), Aug 15 (Tue), Aug 18 (Fri), Aug 21 (Mon) = New Moon = Black Moon = Total Solar Eclipse, Aug 25 (Fri), Aug 29 (Tue), Sep 02 (Sat), Sep 05 (Tue), Sep 09 (Sat), Sep 13 (Wed), Sep 17 (Sun), Sep 20 (Wed), Sep 24 (Sun), Sep 28 (Thu), Oct 01 (Sun). Previous SoLunar
Maps HERE
These charts depict the SoLunar bias for short-term movements of stock indices two months ahead. The markets are certainly influenced also by other planetary forces - especially longer-term - but a 3-5 day short-term rhythm and pattern is governed by the SoLunar forces (= 4 highs and 4 lows per lunar month).
The SoLunar forces are a composite of Sun-Moon angles, orbital eccentricities, declinations and some long-term cycles. A Low in the SoLunar Map frequently is a High in the stock market and vice versa. Inversions occur, and if so, they should occur only once every 4 lunar months around a New Moon (max +/- 7 days).
The SoLunar Rhythm is frequently disturbed by (1.) the FED, and (2.) by sudden solar activity, altering the geomagnetic field, and hence the mass mood. This can result in the skip and/or inversion of pivots in the SoLunar Map. An increasing number of sunspots and flares have usually a negative influence on the stock market some 48 hours later, and vice versa (Ap values > 10 are usually short-term negative). A rising blue line in the SoLunar Map means the bias for the market is side-ways-to-up, and vice versa. Highs and lows in the SoLunar Map also may coincide with the start and termination of complex, side-ways correction patterns like zig-zags, triangles or flags.
SPX vs SoLunar Map | August 2017 | Review & Preview |
Labels:
19 Year Cycle,
4 Lunar Month Cycle,
4 Lunar Year Cycle,
Apogee,
AstroFin,
Declination,
Delta,
Financial Astrology,
Lunar Cycle,
Lunar Year Cycle,
Perigee,
SoLunar Map,
Sun,
Tides,
US-Stocks
Cosmic Cluster Days | August - September 2017
Upcoming Cosmic Cluster Days are: Jul 29 (Sat), Jul 30 (Sun), Aug 06 (Sun), Aug 26 (Sat), Aug 31 (Thu), Sep 05 (Tue), Oct 13 (Fri). Previous CCDs are HERE |
The assumption is that heliocentric and geocentric angles between planets are related to financial market movements. A signal is triggered when the composite line of all aspects breaks above or below the Cosmic Noise Channel.
Review: SPX vs Cosmic Cluster Days June - July 2017 | Preview: August 2017 |
Labels:
AstroFin,
Astronomy,
Cosmic Cluster Days,
declinations,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
heliocentric,
Planetary Composite Index,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Tuesday, July 18, 2017
SPX vs CBOE Equity Put / Call Ratio │ Extreme Greed
On Friday, July 14th the CBOE Equity Put / Call Ratio closed at 0.53, signalling extreme greed. On Monday, July 17th the SPX performed a narrow range inside day (IDnr 4 and IDnr7), and closed forming a neutral doji candle. However, on July 17th the CBOE Equity Put/Call Ratio closed at 0.63, and the 3-Day Moving Average (blue line) is about to turn up (down on the inverted scale).
Labels:
Candlestick Patterns,
CBOE Equity Put / Call Ratio,
Contrarianism,
Doji,
IDnr4,
IDnr7,
Sentiment,
SPX,
Toby Crabel,
US-Stocks
Wednesday, July 12, 2017
Wheat vs George Bayer Rule #14 │ July 14 or 17 Low (Fri or Mon)
VENUS MOVEMENTS IN GEOCENTRIC LONGITUDE USING A UNIT OF 1°9’13”
This rule was found by measuring from the high of March 31, 1937 in Wheat. It is rather complicated for practical use, since exact measurements must be made with degrees, minutes and second [...] We use the single unit 1°9’13” [1.153611 degrees], also five times this unit or 6°55’18” [6.92166 degrees] or [...] 25 times the original 1°9’18” unit which value is 34°36’30” [34.60833 degrees]. All the measurements are to be used for geocentric longitude only. How I arrived at this 1°9’13” value I do not recall [...] During the period a planet moves retrograde we have to DEDUCT our increment, i.e. the values we use. When the motion of the planet is forward we have to ADD them. Be sure not to fail on this else no results can be expected.
[George Bayer (1940): Stock and Commodity Traders´ Hand-Book of Trend Determination, p. 23 f., Carmel, California]
Update: July 18, 2017 07:02 AM: Wheat +1.78% |
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
George Bayer,
George Bayer Rule # 14,
Timing Solution,
Venus,
Wheat
Monday, July 10, 2017
History of US Bear & Bull Markets │ 1926 - 2017
Source: First Trust Advisors L.P., Morningstar. Returns from 1926 - 3/31/17.
Labels:
DJI,
First Trust Advisors L.P.,
NDX,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Saturday, July 8, 2017
Equities Expensive and Commodities Cheap?
Incrementum AG (Jun 1, 2017) - In a historical context, the relative valuation of commodities to equities seems extremely low. In relation to the S&P500, the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (GSCI) is currently trading at the lowest level in 50 years.
The chart outlines the valuation of the GSCI relative to the S&P500. The GSCI comprises 24 commodities from all commodity sectors and serves as a benchmark for investment in the commodity markets and as a measure of commodity performance over time. If the ratio is low (green circles), it means that commodities are cheap relative to shares. If the ratio is at a high level (red circles), like during the Gulf Crisis in 1990, the prices of raw materials are relatively expensive.
The current ratio is 0.87 while the median is at 4.1. A return to the median gives 371% potential, but in most cases a rally doesn't stop at the median. In absolute terms, the scene seems set for a new bull market for commodities. According to Ned Davis Research, commodities gained 217% on average over the period of a bull market.
The chart outlines the valuation of the GSCI relative to the S&P500. The GSCI comprises 24 commodities from all commodity sectors and serves as a benchmark for investment in the commodity markets and as a measure of commodity performance over time. If the ratio is low (green circles), it means that commodities are cheap relative to shares. If the ratio is at a high level (red circles), like during the Gulf Crisis in 1990, the prices of raw materials are relatively expensive.
The current ratio is 0.87 while the median is at 4.1. A return to the median gives 371% potential, but in most cases a rally doesn't stop at the median. In absolute terms, the scene seems set for a new bull market for commodities. According to Ned Davis Research, commodities gained 217% on average over the period of a bull market.
Labels:
Commodities,
Commodity Cycles,
Goldman Sachs Commodity Index,
GSCI,
Incrementum AG,
NDR,
Ned Davis Research,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Sunday, July 2, 2017
SPX vs Cosmic Cluster Days | July 2017
Upcoming Cosmic Cluster-Days:
Jul 07 (Fri), Jul 15 (Sat), Jul 26 (Wed), Jul 28 (Fri), Jul 29 (Sat), Jul 30 (Sun), Aug 06 (Sun).
Jul 07 (Fri), Jul 15 (Sat), Jul 26 (Wed), Jul 28 (Fri), Jul 29 (Sat), Jul 30 (Sun), Aug 06 (Sun).
Labels:
AstroFin,
Astronomy,
Cosmic Cluster Days,
declinations,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
heliocentric,
Planetary Composite Index,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Saturday, July 1, 2017
SPX vs Mercury and Venus Parallel of Declination | July 12 (Wed)
On
July 12 (Wed) Mercury and Venus will be parallel of declination at 19
degrees north (circled in red).
This usually entails a change in trend (+/- 1 CD).
A parallel aspect is formed between two planets with the same declination or distance north or south of the ecliptic. If the planets are both North or both South of the ecliptic, the parallel aspect is read as a conjunction. If they are the same declination but one is North and one is South, then the contra-parallel is read as a 180 degree opposition.
This usually entails a change in trend (+/- 1 CD).
A parallel aspect is formed between two planets with the same declination or distance north or south of the ecliptic. If the planets are both North or both South of the ecliptic, the parallel aspect is read as a conjunction. If they are the same declination but one is North and one is South, then the contra-parallel is read as a 180 degree opposition.
Labels:
AstroFin,
Declination,
Financial Astrology,
Mercury,
Parallel of Declination,
SPX,
US-Stocks,
Venus
SPX vs Jupiter – Saturn Cycle | July 2017
Upcoming Turn-Days:
Jul 04 (Tue), Jul 12 (Wed), Jul 21 (Fri), Jul 25 (Tue), Jul 31 (Mon), Aug 04 (Fri).
Jul 04 (Tue), Jul 12 (Wed), Jul 21 (Fri), Jul 25 (Tue), Jul 31 (Mon), Aug 04 (Fri).
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
Jupiter,
Jupiter - Saturn Cycle,
Saturn,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Wednesday, June 28, 2017
SPX vs Inverted 4 Lunar Month Cycle | July 5 (Wed) High
The Low on June 27 (Tue) corresponds to the High on March 1 (Wed).
If the inverted polarity in the current 118 Day Cycle remains active, the SPX should move sideways-to-up into
July 5 (Wed), down into July 11 (Tue), and up again into July 23 (Sun).
If the inverted polarity in the current 118 Day Cycle remains active, the SPX should move sideways-to-up into
July 5 (Wed), down into July 11 (Tue), and up again into July 23 (Sun).
Labels:
4 Lunar Month Cycle,
AstroFin,
Delta,
Financial Astrology,
Moon,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Saturday, June 17, 2017
SPX vs Mercury Speed @ MAX | June 20-21 (Tue-Wed)
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
heliocentric,
Mercury,
Speed,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Friday, June 16, 2017
SPX vs Sun - Mercury Speed Differential @ MIN | June 21 (Wed)
Jun 20 (Tue) Summer Solstice
Bradley CIT [geo]
SoLunar Turn Day
MER 120° VEN [helio]
MER 120° JUP [helio]
MER 180° SAT [helio]
MER 060° URA [helio]
VEN 120° JUP [helio]
Jun 21 (Wed) SUN - MER Speed Dif @ MIN
SUN 000° MER [geo] = MER 180° EAR [helio]
MER @ 088° [helio]
VEN 060° SAT [helio]
MAR 180° PLU [helio]
JUP - SAT Cycle Low
Jun 22 (Thu) Bradley CIT [helio]
Jun 23 (Fri) VEN Lat Cycle @ MIN
Bradley CIT [geo]
SoLunar Turn Day
MER 120° VEN [helio]
MER 120° JUP [helio]
MER 180° SAT [helio]
MER 060° URA [helio]
VEN 120° JUP [helio]
Jun 21 (Wed) SUN - MER Speed Dif @ MIN
SUN 000° MER [geo] = MER 180° EAR [helio]
MER @ 088° [helio]
VEN 060° SAT [helio]
MAR 180° PLU [helio]
JUP - SAT Cycle Low
Jun 22 (Thu) Bradley CIT [helio]
Jun 23 (Fri) VEN Lat Cycle @ MIN
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
heliocentric,
SPX,
Sun - Mercury Speed Differential,
US-Stocks
Sunday, June 11, 2017
Taxation of Average Income in OECD-Countries │ 2016
Data: OECD - Taxing Wages 2017 Database (SSC = Social Security Contribution). |
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) analyzes how 35 countries tax wage-earners, making it possible to compare tax burdens across the world’s biggest economies. Each year, the OECD measures what it calls the tax wedge, the gap between what a worker gets paid and what they actually spend or save. Included are income taxes, payroll taxes, and any tax credits or rebates that supplement worker income. Excluded are the countless other ways that governments levy taxes, such as sales and value-added taxes, property taxes, and taxes on investment income and gains.
The highest average tax wedges for childless single workers earning the average national wage were in Belgium (54.0%), Germany (49.4%) and Hungary (48.2%). The lowest were in Chile (7%), New Zealand (17.9%) and Mexico (20.1%). The United States are in the bottom third (31.7%) - considerably below the OECD-average (36.0%). A single worker earning an average wage in Belgium ends up paying a tax rate almost eight times higher than the average single worker in Chile.
The tax wedge for families with children is lower than that for single individuals without children in all OECD countries except in Chile and Mexico, where both family types face the same tax levels. No Personal Income Tax is payable at the average wage level in Chile and no tax provisions for families with children exist in Mexico. The differences are particularly large in Canada, the Czech Republic, Germany, Ireland, Luxembourg and Slovenia.
Major Power's Military Expenditure │ 1830 - 2007
Source: OurWorldinData. |
Max Roser and Mohamed Nagdy (2016) - There are two ways in which we might want to measure military spending; the first way is spending in real terms and the second is as a percentage of GDP. Military expenditure in real terms is important since the absolute level of expenditure matters for the outcome of war. The US spending 10% of its GDP fighting a war is likely to defeat a low or middle income country spending 50% or more of its GDP. Yet, military expenditure as a percentage of GDP allows us to get a handle on the priorities and ambitions of a country. The military expenditure of a country is largely determined by the whether it is at war or not. Outside of wartime, countries continue to spend substantial sums on maintaining their military capability. [Above] are two time series plots of military expenditure in real terms; the first is in thousands of 1900 UK pounds for the period 1830-1913, the second is in thousands of 2000 US dollars for the period 1914-2007.
The UK’s military spending as a percentage of GDP in peacetime fluctuates around 2.5%, in times of war however, military spending rises dramatically. At the height of the Second World War, the UK was spending around 53% of its GDP on its military. Such a dramatic rise is consistent with the existential danger faced by the UK during the Second World War.
Labels:
China,
Cycles of War,
France,
Germany,
Italy,
Japan,
Max Roser,
Mohamed Nagdy,
OurWorldinData,
Russia,
UK,
USA
Sunspot Cycle Length vs Temperature Anomaly │ Jasper Kirkby
Jasper Kirkby (1998) - The sunspot cycle length averages 11 years but has varied from 7 to 17 years, with shorter cycle lengths corresponding to a more magnetically-active Sun. A remarkably close agreement was found between the sunspot cycle length and the change in land temperature of the Northern Hemisphere in the period between 1861 and 1989 [update HERE]. The land temperature of the Northern Hemisphere was used to avoid the lag by several years of air temperatures over the oceans, due to their large heat capacity. This figure covers the period during which greenhouse gas emissions are presumed to have caused a global warming of about 0.6°C. Two features are of particular note: firstly the dip between 1945 and 1970, which cannot be explained by the steadily rising greenhouse gas emissions but seems well-matched to a decrease in the Sun's activity, and secondly the close correspondence between the two curves over this entire period, which would seem to leave little room for an additional greenhouse gas effect.
[...] The observation that warm weather seems to coincide with high sunspot counts and cool weather with low sunspot counts was made as long ago as two hundred years by the astronomer William Herschel who noticed that the price of wheat in England was lower when there were many sunspots, and higher when there were few. See also HERE
Data: SILSO Royal Observatory of Belgium. |
Labels:
Climate Change,
Climatology,
Jasper Kirkby,
Man Made Global Warming,
OT,
SILSO Royal Observatory of Belgium,
Solar Cycle,
Sunspot Cycle,
Wheat,
William Herschel
Thursday, June 1, 2017
SPX vs Venus Latitude Cycle @ MIN | June 23 (Fri)
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
Latitude,
SPX,
US-Stocks,
Venus,
Venus Latitude Cycle
SPX vs Jupiter – Saturn Cycle | June 2017
Upcoming Turn-Days:
May 31 (Wed), Jun 08 (Thu), Jun 17 (Sat), Jun 19 (Mon), Jun 21 (Wed), Jun 29 (Thu), Jul 04 (Tue).
Labels:
AstroFin,
Financial Astrology,
Jupiter,
Jupiter - Saturn Cycle,
Saturn,
SPX,
US-Stocks
Cosmic Cluster Days | June — July 2017
Upcoming Cosmic Cluster Days are:
Jun 01 (Thu), Jun 10 (Sat), Jun 14 (Wed), Jun 15 (Thu), Jun 27
(Tue), Jul 01 (Sat),
Jul 07 (Fri), Jul 15 (Sat), Jul 26 (Wed), Jul 28 (Fri), Jul 29
(Sat), Jul 30 (Sun), Aug 06 (Sun).
Previous CCDs are HERE
The basic assumption
here is that heliocentric and geocentric angles between planets are related to
financial market movements. A signal is triggered when the composite line of all aspects breaks above or below the Average Cosmic Noise Channel.
Review: SPX vs Cosmic Cluster Days April - May 2017 | Preview: June 2017. |
Labels:
AstroFin,
Astronomy,
Cosmic Cluster Days,
declinations,
Financial Astrology,
geocentric,
heliocentric,
Planetary Composite Index,
SPX,
US-Stocks
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