Many planetary cycles align with Fibonacci sequences and harmonic numbers. For example, the 90-day Mercury cycle, the 360-day Earth cycle (what is a year?), and 12-year Jupiter cycle all factor into Gann’s time squares. You don’t need to believe in "astrology" to use these mathematical cycles.
Use of the Golden Mean and Fibonacci Sequence to identify price targets and retracement levels.
Because I cannot provide direct download links due to copyright and security restrictions, here is how to find legitimate, valuable PDFs on this topic:
Searching for is not an act of superstition but of pattern-seeking. The markets are, after all, a collective human reflection. And humans are, whether we like it or not, born under the same sky, swayed by the same tides, and hypnotized by the same spinning dials of the night.
The foundational belief of financial astrology is succinctly captured in the Hermetic maxim: "As above, so below." Proponents argue that financial markets are not independent, random mechanisms but reflections of collective human psychology. Since human behavior is cyclical and emotional, and astrology posits that planetary cycles influence human emotions, it follows that planetary cycles should correlate with market cycles.
No discussion of the Cosmic Clock is complete without mentioning (1878–1955), a legendary trader who allegedly turned $10 into $1.6 million using esoteric timing methods. Gann traveled to Egypt and India, studied the Bible as a metaphor for cyclical mathematics, and built a trading system based on "vibrations" and planetary angles. His most famous tool, the Square of 9 , is a geometric calculator that aligns price and time using the Earth’s rotation relative to the Sun.
A quality typically breaks down market timing into several repeatable events. Here are the most widely monitored:
Whether you use the Cosmic Clock as a serious backtesting framework or as a thought-provoking alternative lens, one thing is certain: time, as measured by the planets, never stops. And neither does the market.
In the 1930s, Louise McWhirter applied these principles specifically to the stock market. She utilized the North Node of the Moon to predict major bull and bear markets. Her work is often cited in PDF documents circulating in trading communities as essential reading for understanding long-term economic trends.
Many planetary cycles align with Fibonacci sequences and harmonic numbers. For example, the 90-day Mercury cycle, the 360-day Earth cycle (what is a year?), and 12-year Jupiter cycle all factor into Gann’s time squares. You don’t need to believe in "astrology" to use these mathematical cycles.
Use of the Golden Mean and Fibonacci Sequence to identify price targets and retracement levels.
Because I cannot provide direct download links due to copyright and security restrictions, here is how to find legitimate, valuable PDFs on this topic:
Searching for is not an act of superstition but of pattern-seeking. The markets are, after all, a collective human reflection. And humans are, whether we like it or not, born under the same sky, swayed by the same tides, and hypnotized by the same spinning dials of the night.
The foundational belief of financial astrology is succinctly captured in the Hermetic maxim: "As above, so below." Proponents argue that financial markets are not independent, random mechanisms but reflections of collective human psychology. Since human behavior is cyclical and emotional, and astrology posits that planetary cycles influence human emotions, it follows that planetary cycles should correlate with market cycles.
No discussion of the Cosmic Clock is complete without mentioning (1878–1955), a legendary trader who allegedly turned $10 into $1.6 million using esoteric timing methods. Gann traveled to Egypt and India, studied the Bible as a metaphor for cyclical mathematics, and built a trading system based on "vibrations" and planetary angles. His most famous tool, the Square of 9 , is a geometric calculator that aligns price and time using the Earth’s rotation relative to the Sun.
A quality typically breaks down market timing into several repeatable events. Here are the most widely monitored:
Whether you use the Cosmic Clock as a serious backtesting framework or as a thought-provoking alternative lens, one thing is certain: time, as measured by the planets, never stops. And neither does the market.
In the 1930s, Louise McWhirter applied these principles specifically to the stock market. She utilized the North Node of the Moon to predict major bull and bear markets. Her work is often cited in PDF documents circulating in trading communities as essential reading for understanding long-term economic trends.