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To: John Soileau who wrote (46503)1/1/2000 9:57:00 PM
From: Robert J Mullenbach  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 117010
 
<Geez, the catastrophe calendar is pretty full for 2000!>

Here is some more good reading, lots of fun time ahead.!!!

stockmarketcycles.com

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Since 1900, 7 of the 10 years ending in zero have seen tops of varying importance occur within the first two trading days of the
zero year. Some of the January zero year tops were secondary tops i.e. more important tops had already been seen, but all of
the 7 noted years headed down within the first 2 trading days of the year. Here are the results:

1900? Top on January 2 (1st trading day of the year) was the highest close of the next 10 months, except for February 5
which closed 0.3% higher

1910? Top on January 3 (1st trading day) was the highest close of the next 5 years and 7 months

1920? January 3, 1920 (2nd trading day) was the highest close of the next 5 years

1940? January 3 (2nd trading day) was the highest close of the next 5 years

1960? January 4 (2nd trading day) was the highest close of the next 16 months

1970? January 5 (2nd trading day) was the highest close of the next 11 months

1990? January 2 (1st trading day) was the highest close of the next 4 months

2000? ?????

Since 1920, the market in the first 2 market days of January of the zero year has tipped us off whether the pattern would work
that year or not. If the Dow close on either the first or second trading day of the New Year is higher than the highest close in
the preceding month (December), then the pattern is scheduled to work i.e. a top of some significance should be marked by
the high close of the first two trading days. In the only three zero years that have not seen the pattern work this century (1930,
1950, and 1980), the first two trading days of the zero year did not see a close which exceeded the prior month's (December)
high close.

Happy New Year. Y2k ready.!!!