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Pastimes : Astrological Influences: Financial and Global Trends -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Raja who wrote (483)3/18/2001 11:18:34 AM
From: Richnorth  Respond to of 538
 
From the end portion of Crocco's article at

wallstreetconjunct.com

Looking to the astros for a clue to market direction this week.

The indication is that investor conviction and trends will change for the better on Monday and Tuesday but rally attempts can then fail and again drop prices later in the week.

Pluto aspects both Mercury (in the early A.M.) and Venus (in the early evening), with Venus also forming a trine to Mars earlier in the morning on Monday, at 12:30 A.M. Taken in combination this grouping can have a beneficial and possibly significant influence on investor’s psychology Monday, easing and changing minds. We’re likely to see oversees markets move higher early Monday morning. If that is the case then Wall Street should also head higher at the open on Monday. A Moon sextile Sun exacting at 9:40 A.M. E.T. should help. Investors may hold off or begin selling again from around 11:30 A.M. to 1 P.M. as the Moon moves into Aquarius and semisquares both Pluto and Mars in that time frame. Late afternoon should see prices moving higher again.

Tuesday has the Sun moving into Aries. And with that transition comes a good chance markets will begin seeing an underlining change take shape having prices moving higher.

But with Uranus conjuncting the Moon Wednesday morning at 10:24 A.M. prices aren’t expected to continue their expanse near the opening bell or in early morning trading, as Uranus conjunctions usually threaten advances. Later in the day, at 2:41 P.M., Mercury squares Jupiter. This aspect can move markets higher or lower. It’s really hard to tell how markets will perform with a negative Jupiter aspect. It may be that investors embrace a greater than justified optimism and push prices to the upside. Expect transports to be effected.

Early on Thursday, at 12:28 A.M., the Moon moves into Pisces. If you’re a regular visitor to this web site you know what a Pisces Moon can mean! It’s been a real negative for the markets. And with Mercury also in Pisces now, investor’s outlook can turn glum, having prices fall in early morning trading. Watch the 3:00 o’clock hour for pessimism to be at its strongest.

With the Moon still in Pisces on Friday markets aren’t likely to pick up much upside steam. But a Mercury semisextile Neptune exacting early Friday morning, at 5:14 A.M., may positively influence stock prices of companies connected with oil, chemical, drug, beverage and hospitals on Thursday and/or in overnight trading, with its influence possibly extending into early Friday morning. The remaining aspects on Friday are largely negative, so don’t expect to see much upside action. With a New Moon hitting us on Saturday the 24th it appears markets are headed for New Moon lows this month.

Recapping: The early part of this week (Monday and Tuesday) is likely to turn out to be the best performing portion with the remainder being mixed to negative for the indexes. By the end of the week we should see a retest of last October’s Dow low.



To: Raja who wrote (483)3/18/2001 11:51:56 AM
From: Richnorth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 538
 
Is the Fate of the Markets Written in the Stars?

Mar 18 9:09am ET
Reuters

By Hament Bulsara

LONDON (Reuters) - Finding it difficult to forecast financial markets in their current state of flux? Maybe it's time to ditch your economic model and start looking to the heavens.

Some investors are turning to astroeconomics, the art of using astrological cycles to predict financial asset prices, in deciding where to put their money -- and other people's money.

"Astroeconomics is like technical analysis 30 years ago. People were using it and nobody talked about it," says Henry Weingarten, a financial astrologer turned money manager. "It's a fairly open secret that a certain segment of fund managers, traders and investors use financial astrology, and eventually it will become mainstream."

Financial astrology involves using correlations between past market events and the alignment of the planets, sun and moon to predict market movements. Some astrologers, including Weingarten, also draw up horoscopes for companies, currencies and national stock indices based on their first date of trading.

Widely quoted for his predictions, Weingarten is the director of the New York-based Astro fund under which he manages around $5 million worth of assets on behalf of clients.

He combines astrological forecasting with traditional fundamental and technical analysis to form his investment and trading strategy. "Around 50 percent of what I do is astrology," he said.

Technical analysis, where forecasters use graphs of previous market trends to predict future movements, was once frowned upon but is now a recognized tool for mapping the markets.

STARGAZING

According to Weingarten, he is not alone in star-gazing to make a profit. "Ten to 15 percent of professional fund managers use astrology as a secondary or confirmation tool to trade the markets," he told Reuters.

Weingarten says his predictions include the 1990 Tokyo stock market crash and the 1997 Asian financial crisis. But is his success due to good luck or can planetary cycles really affect the markets?

David Simpson, a technical analyst at a stockbroking firm who has been analyzing the financial markets for 40 years, insists there is an effect.

"The Earth is subject to magnetic influences around the clock. The moon and the sun have the power to move the oceans across many thousands of miles," he said.

"The average human body is made up of at least 87 percent water and is subject to the same tidal flows. These magnetic attractions cause a chemical and neurological reaction within the body which changes peoples' perception of black and white."

Astrology, says Simpson, holds the key to irrational behavior by investors. "Company results don't often bear any relationships to share price movements," he said.

"People think the share is cheap one day and expensive the next, even though the price is the same. There's something else going on out there which is difficult to fathom, but I think I've got fairly close to it."

There's no doubt financial markets sometimes behave differently from what economic theory says. Asset prices are supposed to be driven by fundamentals, but that didn't prevent the bubble in technology stocks in 2000.

Simpson says he foresaw the frantic peak of the Nasdaq stock market in March 2000 six months in advance. He warns there could be further trouble ahead for stock markets around March 21, the date of the spring equinox.

"I think we are heading for a real nasty crunch and we could see a massive sell off," he said.

But is there any evidence for astrological effects on the markets? Academic research in the area is hard to find but one investment bank did examine the subject.

Goldman Sachs published a paper on the impact of eclipses on the financial markets in August 1999. Using regression analysis, a statistical tool that measures relationships between data, the bank found a statistical link between eclipses and the Japanese equity market and U.S. bond yields. But the authors also found similar correlations using purely random data and so dismissed the results as spurious.

Even if no evidence of a connection exists, astrology could still have some effect. This is because, as Weingarten points out, expectations can often become self-fulfilling.

"Whether or not you believe in astrology, it influences the markets," he said. "There are very big fund managers in India, Hong Kong, the U.S. and Europe that follow astrology and, therefore, it's a factor in the market place."

MUMBO JUMBO?

But not all market watchers are convinced of incorporating celestial movements into their analysis. "There are obvious seasonalities and cycles in markets but to correlate these with planetary alignments and to establish cause and effect is hard to do," said one technical analyst working for a major international bank in London. "I don't see how you can apply a planet to forecast a market."

For Simpson, the more skeptics the better. "Most people think it's mumbo jumbo and I'm quite happy they should continue in their ignorance. I've got a lead on the markets and that's what counts."

One academic at a British university who specializes in financial forecasting said the use of astrology is more prevalent in London than most people think.

"There are a lot of traders that use certain aspects of astrology than would care to admit," he said.

He said people who trash astrology don't understand it.

"It does not involve straightforward concepts but is more complex. The idea that a certain positioning of the planets causes the market to crash is definitely not true. It just means that the probability of something happening is higher."

Proving a link between planetary cycles and the markets is difficult, but that problem applies to all types of empirical research.

"Before we start criticizing astrology, we should look at weakness in traditional quantitative forecasting. Lots of qualitative interpretation goes into forecasts," he said. "We are not dealing with an exact science, whether it's modeling astrological data or economic data."

Whether astroeconomics starts attracting more followers remains to be seen. Maybe the answer is in the stars.



To: Raja who wrote (483)5/10/2001 12:58:40 PM
From: Richnorth  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 538
 
Although Pluto does not seem to have any connection with hi-tech or gold according to the astrology textbooks, it would appear that Pluto does indeed have something to do with hi-tech stocks and gold in the light of happenings and developments in the stock markets of late. Perhaps the difficult or evil opposition aspect occuring at a time when the stock markets are hit so hard was just sheer coincidence. However, to be sure, research in this regard is required.
-------------

The article below was taken from Richard Nolle's astropro.com where you will also be able to see the astrological charts used by him.

I have posted the article sometime back. But I guess it doesn't hurt to read it a second time as a matter of review. Richard Nolle has been quite accurate in his predictions about the stock markets.

YEAR 2001 FORECAST HIGHLIGHTS
©2001 by Richard Nolle
last revised UT 21:20 JAN 1, 2001

Years have personalities as much as people do, if you're sensitive to that kind of thing. The year 2000, the last one in the second millennium of the common era (CE), was as predicted a time of harvest:

If Jupiter and Saturn meet,
What a crop of mummy wheat!
(W. B. Yeats, Supernatural Songs, 1935)

Jupiter and Saturn did indeed meet, as they aligned in the sign Taurus and pulled the rug out from some of the world's formerly most lucrative financial markets.

It was harvest time in the dot-com world, as I warned it would be.

If you did as I suggested and ran for the cover of quality blue chips (and selected quality computer and communications and Internet infrastructure builders), you should have dodged the reaper last year.

After all, 2000 was a year of Jupiter-Pluto oppositions, a time when the hi-tech high fliers ended up getting finely ground through the mill.

It's not over yet, what with a couple more appearances of the Jupiter-Pluto alignment - one heliocentric, one geocentric - but the lion's share is behind us now.

This year's Saturn-Pluto opposition spreads the harvest from the speculative bubbles that everyone knew would burst, out into the quality blue chips that everyone normally thinks of as a safe haven.

Get defensive, get financials after March and medicals anytime, get decent PE ratios: get quality, and get 'em fast.

Be ready for practically everything else to crack up as a kind of rolling correction hits first one sector and then another, deflating equity markets to a more realistic value.

Mid-February (the heliocentric Jupiter-Pluto opposition) and early May (Jupiter's third and final geocentric opposition to Pluto) plus August and November (the first two geocentric Saturn oppositions to Pluto) look like panic times in major markets.

And we're not out of the woods until the spring of 2002, when the third geocentric Saturn-Pluto opposition as well as the heliocentric alignment of these two planets will occur.

After such a horrible 2000, this year can't help but look better in comparison at first: an economic slowdown in the US yes, but not a genuine crash.

While there are bound to be a few good stocks that will preserve your capital and yield a decent return in the year ahead, the best advice for 2001 is to own quality with an eye toward the long term.

If you need your cash this year, you shouldn't be in stocks anyway.

A major theme of 2000 was the fixed signs of the zodiac, particularly Taurus (where the Jupiter-Saturn conjunction took place) and Aquarius (home to the other two major outer planets, Uranus and Neptune).

No longer so solid and stable under the aegis of these celestial patterns, the old structures that everyone assumed would have to work instead just fell apart, from hopes like peace in Palestine and dot-com invincibility to the US electoral system.

Somehow - barring an uncharacteristic piece of bad luck for him between now and Inauguration Day - Bill Clinton dodged a bullet from Tecumseh's Curse in the process, shattering another historical pattern and proving this astrologer fallible - in case you didn't already know, which you should have. Has the Grand Chronocrator earth sign cycle been broken, or merely postponed to zero in on George W. Bush? I suspect the former, being now of the opinion that the cycle effectively ended with the last of the uninterrupted earth sign Chronocrators (1961). The 1980-81 air sign Chronocrator broke the pattern, evidently - fortunately for Bill Clinton as well as for George Bush. (The latter's election, you will recall, was another thing I got right in my forecast for 2000.)

There's still some focus on the dissolution (if not outright shattering) of things solid and stable this year, what with Saturn remaining in Taurus into April and Uranus together with Neptune in Aquarius for years to come. But this is a fading theme, in comparison to a new emphasis on the mutable Gemini-Sagittarius axis in space. This is where many of the year's major alignments take place, from the Jupiter and Saturn oppositions to Pluto to the stations of all three planets.

Most especially, it's the middle degrees of the Gemini-Sagittarius axis that are the focus here: the very same degrees so strongly emphasized in the US Declaration of Independence as well as Washington Inaugural horoscopes.

But the later degrees of this same polarity get more and more emphasis as the year unfolds, what with the Sagittarius solar eclipse in December foreshadowing a change in the eclipse zones.

This augurs adaptation as a primary theme for the coming year: compromise, communication, deal-making. However this will not always come with ease, judging from the Mars and Venus retrogrades that take hold in spring and summer.

In fact, especially in the latter period, conflict and confrontation will result from the failure to strike a bargain. And I don't mean only hurt feelings: on the geopolitical scale, we're talking terrorism, insurrection and war - only local outbreaks, mind you, but that's small comfort if your locale is affected. Which it will be of course in the Middle East (not just Palestine) . . . however Americans and American interests are global targets of opportunity under this kind of activation - and this includes the home front, where garden variety thuggery is on the upswing and computer infrastructure assaults are growing ever more costly.

All in all, the 2001 Mars alignments combine with other cosmic factors to suggest that this will be a year when man's inhumanity to man far exceeds last year's toll. From senseless mass shootings to military clashes to air and road rage, you'll see it all. The Red Planet alignments with Sun, Saturn and Jupiter are in some sense peak points in this cycle, which means that February through June - especially June - should see the worst of it all. But other strong Mars action is scattered off an on throughout the year . . .

Every year has its weather and seismic danger zones. Those for 2001 tend to cluster within plus or minus a week of the June 21 and December 14 solar eclipses, as well as within plus or minus three days of the January 9 and July 5 lunar eclipses and the remaining SuperMoon alignments for the year: February 8, July 20, August 19 and September 17.
These are some of the year's greatest risk windows, when headlines will be made by severe storms and flooding, plus moderate to severe seismic activity (Richter 5 or greater earthquakes and volcanic eruptions).

If you live in or plan to visit a place at risk from such natural phenomena during these times, it's a good idea to take sensible precautions as much as possible. Because the celestial signals which serve to time risk windows of this sort are planetary in scale, the whole of Planet Earth is 'under the gun' during these limited intervals. However, astro-mapping sometimes helps pin down some of the areas most at risk.

In the case of the January 9 SuperMoon total lunar eclipse, for example, the areas most at risk during the January 6-12 interval include an arc that runs along the Pacific coast of the US and Canada; also the Great Lakes and Ohio River basin, central Mexico (along a northwest to southeast arc that runs very near the capital); as well as central India and western China plus the south China coast and southern New Zealand.

Western Europe, south-central China, the Pacific coast of the US and Canada, the Rocky Mountain and New England states, south-central Mexico and the whole of New Zealand are the apparent targets of the June 21 total solar eclipse, in effect from the 14th through the 28th of that month.

Central China down through the Indochina peninsula is one of the prime target zones for the July 5 partial lunar eclipse, in effect from the 2nd through the 8th. The US Atlantic seaboard and the Caribbean basin are also an area of special vulnerability, along with southern Mexico and the entire Middle East.

The December 14 solar eclipse has several target zones. One zeroes in on eastern China, Indonesia and western Australia. Another runs through the Middle East and East Africa up into eastern Russia. Last but hardly least is a risk sector that sweeps across the length of Japan, across the Bering Strait and then down Alaska to the Pacific coast of Canada. In effect from the 7th through the 21st, this eclipse shows signs of being one of the year's very most potent seismic and meteorological threat periods.

The December 30 lunar eclipse rounds out the year, and it's pretty much all over the world map - so much so that it's hard to single out specific target zones. Even so, the Mississippi River - a shipping accident makes news - and Great Lakes region as well as Alaska look suspiciously vulnerable in North America, while Great Britain and the eastern Mediterranean area are likewise suspect in Europe. In effect from December 27 to January 2, this is a period when strong coastal storms are bound to make headlines.

I've only just scratched the surface as far as the major geocosmic risk windows for the year, having neglected the four SuperMoons of 2001 that don't happen to coincide with an eclipse: February 8, July 20, August 19 and September 17. (These mark periods of notable meteorological and seismic vulnerability, plus or minus three days. For details, see my online monthly forecasts as they're published; or get the full illustrated print copy of the year 2000 highlights by mail.) Suffice it to say that 2001 appears to be a bigger year in this regard than 2000: earthquakes and other seismic outbursts this powerful and numerous were last seen in 1999. These same factors tend to point to mass emotional disturbances as well - panics and the like, for example. Be prepared, be calm, don't get caught up in the stampede.