Wednesday, December 13, 2023

The 41-Month Kitchin Cycle In Stocks │ Edward R. Dewey

Another cycle that has done all in its power to keep cycle scientists humble is one averaging 40.68 months in length. It has been present in industrial common-stock prices since 1871 and was discovered in 1912 by a New York group of investors. These gentlemen had learned that the Rothschilds had analyzed British consols (government obligations) and had broken up the price fluctuations into a series of repeating curves that had been combined and used for forecasting. The New York group hired a mathematician to discover the secret formula of the Rothschilds, and working with the Dow-Jones Railroad Averages, he discovered a forty-one-month cycle, plus three others, which his employers used to help them invest in the market. Apparently they were very successful around World War I.
 
Figure 38: The 41-Month Rhythm in Stock Prices, 1868-1945.
 
Some ten years after the original discovery, Professor W. L. Crum, of Harvard, noted a cycle of "39, 40, or 41 months" in monthly commercial-paper rates in New York. Almost simultaneously, Professor Joseph Kitchin, also of Harvard, discovered a cycle that he called forty months in six economic time series, bank clearings, commodity prices, and interest rates in both Great Britain and the United States from 1890 to 1922. As far as I know, it was not until 1935, twenty-three years after the original discovery, that this cycle was again noticed in the stock market. Our old friend Chapin Hoskins, who knew nothing of the earlier work, discovered this cycle in many series of price and production figures, including common-stock prices. Early in 1938 he made an extensive study of this cycle for one of the large investment-trust services.

Figure 38 shows the forty-one-month cycle (now refined to 40.68 months) from 1868 through 1945. As you can see, while its waves are not identical to an ideal 40.68 wave, which is represented by the broken zigzag, there is an amazing correspondence between them. This cycle persisted through wars and peace, good times and depressions.

Then, in 1946, something strange happened to our cycle. Almost as if some giant hand had reached down and pushed it, the cycle stumbled, and by the time it had regained its equilibrium it was marching completely out of step from the ideal cadence it had maintained for so many years. As you can see in Figure 39, it has regained the approximate beat of forty-one months or so, as before, but its behavior now appears upside down on our graph.
 
Figure 39: The 41-Month Rhythm, Upside Down, 1946-1957.
 
Scores of explanations and reams of paper have been expended to explain this behavior. We are familiar with most of the possibilities, such as distortion by random behavior, two or more other cycles of near lengths, and even a general public knowledge of this particular cycle, which may have had a distorting effect on its timing. But, in truth, no one can positively explain what happened in 1946 any more than they can explain the regularity of the rhythm for all the years that preceded it.

 
42-Month Cycle in the DJIA (weekly bars), March 2020 - October 2023.

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

The Cyclic Theory Of Stock Transaction Timing │ J.M. Hurst

In the 1970’s an American engineer called J.M. Hurst published a theory about why financial markets move in the way they do. The theory was the result of many years of research on powerful mainframe computers, and it became known as Hurst’s Cyclic Theory. Hurst claimed a 90% success rate trading on the basis of his theory, and yet the theory has remained largely undiscovered and often misunderstood.
 

Hurst published two seminal works: a book called The Profit Magic of Stock Transaction Timing, followed a few years later by a workshop-style course which was called the Cyclitec Cycles Course (now available as J.M. Hurst’s Cycles Course). There are a number of very enthusiastic advocates, prominent traders and writers who proclaim Hurst as the “father of cyclic analysis” and confirm the efficacy of the theory (including the late Brian Millard who wrote several books about Hurst’s theory), but why is it that the theory isn’t better known and more widely used by technical analysts? There are, in my opinion, two reasons:

Firstly, Hurst’s Cyclic Theory is not “easy”. While it is beautifully simple and elegant in its essence, it is not a simple theory to understand or to apply. The Cycles Course is over 1,500 pages long, and most people take several months to work through it. 
Secondly, although the theory presented in both the Profit Magic book and the Cycles Course is the same, there is a vitally important distinction between the analysis processes presented in the two. Hurst claimed his success on the basis of the process presented in the Cycles Course, whereas many people read the Profit Magic book and go no further, with the consequence that they never discover the more effective process presented in the Cycles Course
 
Hurst defined eight principles which like the axioms of a mathematical theory provide the definition of his cyclic theory. The eight Principles of Hurst’s Cyclic Theory are:
  1. The Principle of Commonality – All equity (or forex or commodity) price movements have many elements in common (in other words similar classes of tradable instruments have price movements with much in common). 
  2. The Principle of Cyclicality – Price movements consist of a combination of specific waves and therefore exhibit cyclic characteristics.
  3. The Principle of Summation – Price waves which combine to produce the price movement do so by a process of simple addition.
  4. The Principle of Harmonicity – The wavelengths of neighbouring waves in the collection of cycles contributing to price movement are related by a small integer value.
  5. The Principle of Synchronicity – Waves in price movement are phased so as to cause simultaneous troughs wherever possible
  6. The Principle of Proportionality – Waves in price movement have an amplitude that is proportional to their wavelength.
  7. The Principle of Nominality – A specific, nominal collection of harmonically related waves is common to all price movements.
  8. The Principle of Variation – The previous four principles represent strong tendencies, from which variation is to be expected.
In essence these principles define a theory which describes the movement of a financial market as the combination of an infinite number of 'cycles'. These cycles are all harmonically related to one another (their wavelengths are related by small integer values) and their troughs are synchronized where possible, as opposed to their peaks. The principles define exactly how cycles combine to produce a resultant price movement (with an allowance for some randomness and fundamental interaction).

Name of Cycle (nominal) Av. Wavelength (Days) Av. Wavelength Harmonic Ratio
       
972 year * 353,548.8 968.22 years 3 x 1
324 year * 117,849.6 322.74 years 2 x 1
162 year * 58,924.8 161.37 years 3 x 1
54 year * 19,641.6 53.79 years 3 x 1
18 year 6,547.2 17.93 years 2 x 1
9 year 3,273.6 8.96 years 2 x 1
54 month 1,636.8 53.77 months 2 x 1
18 month 545.6 17.93 months 3 x 1
40 week 272.8 38.97 weeks 2 x 1
20 week 136.4 19.48 weeks 2 x 1
80 day 68.2 68.2 days 2 x 1
40 day 34.1 34.1 days 2 x 1
20 day 17 17 days 2 x 1
10 day 8.5 8.5 days 2 x 1
5 day 4.3 4.3 days 2 x 1
2 day 2.2 2.2 days 2 x 1
1 day 1.11 26.67 hours 2 x 1
5 hour 0.22 5.3 hours 5 x 1
160 minute 0.11 160 minutes 2 x 1
1 hour 0.037 53.3 minutes 3 x 1
30 minute 0.018 26.67 minutes 2 x 1
15 minute 0.009 13.3 minutes 2 x 1
7 minute 0.0045 6.6 minutes 2 x 1
3 minute 0.0023 3.3 minutes 2 x 1
       
* Ahmed Farghaly, 2015 (eg.linkedin.com/in/ahmed-farghaly-a5825637)  
 
These eight simple rules distinguish Hurst’s theory from any other cyclic theory. For instance most cyclic theories consider cycles in isolation from each other, and cycles are often seem to 'disappear'. By contrast cycles never disappear according to Hurst’s theory, but they may be less apparent because of the way in which cycles combine. It is the fact that Hurst’s theory stipulates that there are an infinite number of cycles that makes it particularly different, and also begins to explain why it is impossible to forecast price movement with 100% accuracy. Just as it is impossible to conceive of the sum of two infinite numbers, it is impossible to define the result of combining an infinite number of cycles.
 
Reference:
 

Sensitive Degrees of the Sun for the NYSE in 2024 | Jack Gillen


 
Date Sun's Longitude Position Effect on US Stock Indexes
     
2023 12 08 (Fri) = SUN @ 16 SAG = 256 degrees negative = low
2023 12 12 (Tue) = SUN @ 20 SAG = 260 degrees negative
2023 12 16 (Sat) = SUN @ 24 SAG = 264 degrees positive = high
2023 12 28 (Thu) = SUN @ 6 CAP = 276 degrees positive
2024 01 02 (Tue) = SUN @ 11 CAP = 281 degrees positive
2024 01 06 (Sat) = SUN @ 16 CAP = 286 degrees negative
2024 01 19 (Fri) = SUN @ 29 CAP = 299 degrees negative
2024 01 30 (Tue) = SUN @ 10 AQU = 310 degrees positive
2024 02 03 (Sat) = SUN @ 14 AQU = 314 degrees positive
2024 02 06 (Tue) = SUN @ 17 AQU = 317 degrees negative
2024 02 18 (Sun) = SUN @ 29 AQU = 329 degrees negative
2024 02 23 (Fri) = SUN @ 4 PIS = 334 degrees negative
2024 02 24 (Sat) = SUN @ 5 PIS = 335 degrees negative
2024 03 03 (Sun) = SUN @ 13 PIS = 343 degrees positive
2024 03 11 (Mon) = SUN @ 21 PIS = 351 degrees positive
2024 03 24 (Sun) = SUN @ 4 ARI = 4 degrees positive
2024 03 31 (Sun) = SUN @ 11 ARI = 11 degrees positive
2024 04 07 (Sun) = SUN @ 18 ARI = 18 degrees negative
2024 04 13 (Sat) = SUN @ 24 ARI = 24 degrees negative
2024 04 26 (Fri) = SUN @ 6 TAU = 36 degrees negative
2024 05 01 (Wed) = SUN @ 12 TAU = 42 degrees neutral
2024 05 08 (Wed) = SUN @ 18 TAU = 48 degrees negative
2024 05 19 (Sun) = SUN @ 19 TAU = 59 degrees neutral
2024 05 25 (Sat) = SUN @ 5 GEM = 65 degrees negative
2024 06 06 (Thu) = SUN @ 16 GEM = 76 degrees neutral
2024 06 07 (Fri) = SUN @ 17 GEM = 77 degrees negative
2024 06 08 (Sat) = SUN @ 18 GEM = 78 degrees neutral
2024 06 29 (Sat) = SUN @ 8 CAN = 98 degrees positive
2024 07 04 (Thu) = SUN @ 13 CAN = 103 degrees negative
2024 07 07 (Sun) = SUN @ 16 CAN = 106 degrees positive
2024 07 10 (Wed) = SUN @ 18 CAN = 108 degrees negative
2024 07 24 (Wed) = SUN @ 2 LEO = 122 degrees negative
2024 07 29 (Mon) = SUN @ 6 LEO = 126 degrees positive
2024 08 09 (Fri) = SUN @ 17 LEO = 137 degrees negative
2024 08 10 (Sat) = SUN @ 18 LEO = 138 degrees positive
2024 09 02 (Mon) = SUN @ 10 VIR = 160 degrees negative
2024 09 04 (Wed) = SUN @ 12 VIR = 162 degrees positive
2024 09 05 (Thu) = SUN @ 13 VIR = 163 degrees negative
2024 09 20 (Fri) = SUN @ 28 VIR = 178 degrees positive
2024 09 24 (Tue) = SUN @ 2 LIB = 182 degrees negative
2024 10 07 (Mon) = SUN @ 14 LIB = 194 degrees negative
2024 10 14 (Mon) = SUN @ 21 LIB = 201 degrees positive
2024 10 22 (Tue) = SUN @ 29 LIB = 209 degrees positive
2024 10 25 (Fri) = SUN @ 2 SCO = 212 degrees negative
2024 10 27 (Sun) = SUN @ 4 SCO = 214 degrees negative
2024 11 03 (Sun) = SUN @ 11 SCO = 221 degrees positive
2024 11 21 (Thu) = SUN @ 29 SCO = 239 degrees positive
2024 11 25 (Mon) = SUN @ 3 SAG = 243 degrees positive
2024 12 08 (Sun) = SUN @ 16 SAG = 256 degrees negative
2024 12 12 (Thu) = SUN @ 20 SAG = 260 degrees negative
2024 12 15 (Sun) = SUN @ 24 SAG = 264 degrees positive
2024 12 27 (Fri) = SUN @ 6 CAP = 276 degrees positive
2025 01 01 (Wed) = SUN @ 11 CAP = 281 degrees positive
2025 01 06 (Mon) = SUN @ 16 CAP = 286 degrees negative
2025 01 19 (Sun) = SUN @ 29 CAP = 299 degrees negative
2025 01 30 (Thu) = SUN @ 10 AQU = 310 degrees positive
2025 02 03 (Mon) = SUN @ 14 AQU = 314 degrees positive
 
 
» The Sun's position by itself in relation to the stock market can show you trends that are more or less active for each year,
as the sun degrees are generally fixed. They fall on about the same date every year. 
So this is why some periods of the year would be more of a pattern. «
 
Quoted from:
 Solar Ephemeris.

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.

Saturday, December 9, 2023

The Grinch Barometer | Wayne Whaley

Define the Grinch Barometer as the S&Ps performa over the 3 trading days before and after Xmas (6 days). Stay tuned for Grinch spottings.
 
 
 
Since 1950, a negative Grinch has been followed by a positive January in 16 of those 19 years (average month = +4.3%) and a positive calendar year in 18 of those 19 cases (average year = +19.4%). To the contraire, eleven of the 12 S&P double digit loss years since 1950 followed positive Grinch’s.
 
 
On Dec 08 (Fri) the
VIX printed a new yearly low at 12.35.

S&P 500 McClellan Summation Index - the long-term version of the McClellan Oscillator  - 
kept steadily rising for six week and closed at 858 last Friday. No reversal.
 
The High Low Logic Index (last Friday = 1.467) indicates no reversal and that the NASDAQ is nowhere near a major top yet. Every major high since 2000 happened only after the logic index had reached 1.92 or higher prior to the top: 2000 = 1.92; 2007 = 2.01; 2015 = 2.18; 2018 = 2.05; 2019 (2020 crash) = 2.17; 2021 = 2.09. 
 
Dow Jones Industrial Average (daily bars)
However, the DJIA now closed the sixth week / the 27th trading day above the 9-day moving average a.k.a. the market maker re-balance level within all different weekly range templates. Not sure when this happened last time. All the shallow consolidations during the past four weeks occurred around the 3-day moving average only. Spectacular. Meanwhile the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ consolidated last week around the 9 DMA into Thursday before taking out the previous weeks high once again - but by some points only. Nasdaq actually printed lower weekly lows and closed on a lower high. What goes up will come down again to 50%+ levels - sooner or later. Next Monday, December 11, the DJIA will open the seventh week / the 28th trading day above the 9 DMA. Impressive outside fourth quarter range on a new 2023 high. The S&P 500 touched the July 27 yearly high to the pip but did not break to the upside. Lagging behind the other two major indexes by at least a single pip. Quite fantastic. Monday, December 10, will be 45 solar longitude degrees away from the November 27 major low. Tuesday, December 12 looks like a New Moon and 'Sensitive Solar Degree' December high. Saturday-Sunday, December 16-17 is a turn day in the geocentric Bradley Siderograph and should mark a low in US stocks. 

Friday, December 8, 2023

Jack Gillen's Sensitive Degrees of the Sun | December 2023

 
» The Sun's position by itself in relation to the stock market can show you trends that are more or less active for each year,
as the sun degrees are generally fixed. They fall on about the same date every year. 
So this is why some periods of the year would be more of a pattern. «
 
Quoted from:
 
2023 12 08 (Fri) = SUN @ 16° SAG
2023 12 12 (Tue) = SUN @ 20° SAG = New Moon
2023 12 16 (Sat) = SUN @ 24° SAG
2023 12 28 (Thu) = SUN @ 06° CAP
2024 01 02 (Tue) = Sun @ 11° CAP 

 Solar Ephemeris.

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

The Three Day Cycle & Parabolic Trade Setups | Stacey Burke

There are only three things price can do:
1. Breakout from a Range and Trend.
2. Breakout from a Range and Reverse.
3. Trading Range between Highs and Lows
.
 
 1. Structure / Pattern
  •  Do we have any larger geometrical patterns?
  •  Head and Shoulders / Sell (Reverse Head and Shoulders / Buy)
  • Descending Triangle (Sell) Ascending Triangle (Buy)
  • Double Bottoms (Buy), Double Tops (Sell)
  • Rectangles (Continuation / Reversal)
  • Helps us identify geometric patterns for potential measured move profit targets for asymmetrical risk / reward.
I am mainly focused on horizontal ranges no matter what the geometrical pattern is. (The high and the low of the structure, typically this will be numbered “boxes” of 25-50-100 pips.) Numbers are horizontal. I DON’T TRADE DIAGONAL TREND LINE BREAKS.

2. High of the Day (HOD) / Low of the Day (LOD)
 
Where is the high, where is the low? There is a high and a low that the market is trading inside of. The market is either in a consolidation or a break out. The current HOD and LOD may be inside of a larger rectangle.

3. Timings
 
My focus is on the 3 hour window. 1 hour before the equity markets open, the hour of the equity markets open, and the hour after the equity markets open. Hence 12 - 15 minute candles.
  • ASIA 8-11 pm NY EST
  • EUR / LONDON 2-5 am NY EST
  • NEW YORK 8-11 am NY EST
This allows me to have laser-like focus for some simple recurring setups that occur frequently enough for selling, buying or trend trading setups. This repeatable cycle is recurring in all three 12 candle windows. Whether or not the range, the pattern and a good risk / reward trade setup is in each window is unpredictable.

4. Round Numbers
 
Typically these trades will come off of round numbers, specifically 00’s and 50’s. The quarter levels, 25 and 75 will often be a “stop hunt” extension of a 50 or 00 trading box.

5. Price Behaviour for Trade Setups
 
I look for engulfments and pin hammers. These can be “with trend” trades, or reversals, for stop hunts or in a trading range.I look to ENTER the majority of my trades “AT OR NEAR” number, i.e. 25, 50, 75, 00. Sometimes I may limit order these trades, others I may just get filled at market.

• “M” PATTERNS - TYPE 1,2,3
• “W” PATTERNS - TYPE 1,2,3

6. Risk Management / Profit Targets
 
My average STOP LOSS is 1 ATR. For most of the pairs it will be 20 pips. The GBPAUD, GBPNZD may be 25. Depending on the level of volatility on the day, on the pair, it may be a bit more or less give or take. Typically though, I am looking for a 1 bar stop. Position sizing can depend on the type of setup, and the size of stop loss.

The minimum PROFIT TARGET is usually 50 pips. Sometimes a market may hit a previous day’s high or low, or the current day’s high or low, OR SIGNIFICANT ROUND NUMBERS, 00, 50, and the market may stop there. I may only be up 40 pips. When those levels are prominent, it may be necessary to adjust that target on the day, based on HOW PRICE BEHAVES when it gets to those levels. Other trades (Measured Moves) may be in the area of 50-75 or a 100 or more pips. Again, depending on the setup and how that pair is trading on the day.

7. Trade Management / Self Management
 
Once I am in the trade, I will fight every urge that I have to interfere with it. I review the trade setup and thesis that I have for the trade. I monitor the behaviour initially based on my thesis. I will typically leave the screen, or watch, and monitor myself, self talk, do meditation, and possibly review the other pairs to identify any other setups.
 
I will normally NOT ADJUST my stop loss to BREAK EVEN UNTIL, the market has broken a high or low boundary, ( I wait for the 15 min candle to close) OR it has CLOSED 30 pips or more, breaking into the next quarterly range. At 40 pips, depending on if the market has moved (fast or creeping) I will potentially look to LOCK IN 40 pips if the market has “two-sided” trading occurring near my profit target. So, to clarify, if it has spent 30 minutes near my target without hitting it, I will be watching closely to “LOCK IN” profits, in case the market is preparing to reverse. When you are up 40 pips, YOU NEED TO GET PAID.
 
Quoted from:
 
 Dump & Pump Pattern.

 Pump & Dump Pattern.
 
Reference:
 
Stacey Burke - Three Day Trading Setups.
 
Aksel Kibar - Type 1 Breakout: Breakout NOT followed by Pullback.
 
Aksel Kibar - Type 2 Breakout: Breakout followed by Pullback.

Aksel Kibar - Type 3 Breakout: Breakout followed by hard Re-Test of Pattern Boundary.
And then there is the so called 'Failed Breakout' when price fails to continue
moving in the breakout's direction and instead reverses course.