So let me just get this out of the way
before you read any further:
DISCLAIMER--This blog post is not intended as financial advice. Invest at your own risk. You alone are responsible for your investment outcomes. This blog post is for information purposes only, not financial or investment advice.
DISCLAIMER--This blog post is not intended as financial advice. Invest at your own risk. You alone are responsible for your investment outcomes. This blog post is for information purposes only, not financial or investment advice.
ALSO: If you don't have a fundamental
understanding of how the stock market works, horary isn't going to
help you. This means don't call your broker and say, "My
astrologer said I should buy XYZ." There is no substitue for
your own due diligence. Don't just try to fly with horary
alone—always use reality and critical thinking to correlate what's
happening in the horary chart to what's happening in the real world.
This helps curb wishful thinking in the chart, as in, you'd better
have a legitimate business reason for thinking that stock you're
looking at is going to reach an all-time high by the time the next
triple witching hour rolls around in a week, as the rest of the
market is plunging a hundred points a day. A single Moon trine isn't
going to cut it.
As mentioned in a previous post, stock market horary is one of my least favorite types of questions
for many reasons, primarily because people are not very savvy about
personal finance to begin with, let alone the undemocratic casino the
market has become due to all the deregulation over the last ten
years. But I do it because querents ask me to, particularly when the
markets go berserk, like the last few months when triple-digit swings
DURING A SINGLE SESSION were the norm.
Stock market horary is ridiculously
easy. It does not matter for horary's sake if you are a day or
options trader, or a buy-and-hold, long-run investor. The mechanics
are the same. There are three factors to consider:
1) Speed and Timing
2) Relevant Houses
3) Rulerships
1) Speed and Timing: Look at the chart
in two layers: a) The Inner Solar System (Sun through Mars &
Asteroids) for immediate purchase circumstances and b) The Outer
Solar System (Jupiter through the TNOs) for long or short positions
and cycles, as well as circumstances beyond the querent's control
affecting the markets (e.g. The Greece/Euro bailout that will
influence timing and market direction.). See example 2 below for a
very clearcut example.
2) Relevant Houses: First
House=Querent, 2nd house=querent's money, 4th house=outcome, 5th
house=Stock inquired about, 8th house=stock market, 10th house=QE 1,
2 and possibly 3 and other government prop-ups such as interest rate
announcements by the Fed.
3) Rulerships: Moon=Timing,
Venus=Money, assets and personal finance. More specifically, match
stock rulerships inquired about to the appropriate planet and sign.
For example, in 2011, the top six most profitable asset categories
were as follows:
- Utilities=Uranus/Aquarius
- Bonds=Saturn/Capricorn
- Consumer Staples=Venus/Taurus
- Health Care=Mercury/Virgo
- Gold=Sun/Leo (and to an extent, Silver=Moon/Cancer)
- Oil=Neptune/Pisces
So here's a few examples of the above
in action.
Question #1: Will the Querent Make
Money on the Currently Held Stock Positions?
Chart courtesy Matrix Software |
Querent was ultra-shorting the market
(Venus in Cap) in December 2011. Venus applying to semi-sextile the
Sun shows that a smaller profit (Cap) than hoped for (Sadge) is
possible, but there will be a complication, as the Moon is conjunct
the South Node in the 2nd house with both dispositing to a
detrimented Mercury. Moon is also applying to quincunx Venus. The Sun
disposits to Jupiter in the 12th house, retrograde, and at a critical
degree. All the Sadge influence suggests some form of irrational
exuberance. Moon is also applying to oppose the ruler of the 5th
(Sun). The outcome? Ten days after the TOQ, the positions were $300
in the black. The querent got greedy, thinking the shorts would go
higher, but by the end of the month, the low-volume Santa rally had
plunged the querent's investment $300 into the red-- a $600 swing.
The querent continued to hold (always dangerous with ultra-shorts),
expecting a New Year's plunge, but the market surged to new highs and
he lost another $300 for a $600 total loss. He still held on, way too
long, and eventually lost 20% of the investment. A big tip-off is the
applying T-square of the Moon-Node with Mars and the Sun, with the
outlet leg in the 11th house of hopes and wishes, with Neptune in the
11th conjunct Chiron, indicating a painful disappointment.
Example # 2 - A Stock Market Horary
Question from 2010 about a NASDAQ Darling: Should the Querent buy the
*** tech stock?
Chart courtesy of Matrix Software |
Ruler of the ASC intercepted in the 3rd
(missing information) and ruler of the 5th in the 5th in dignity with
the Moon in applying trine. So the answer is YES, BUT WAIT (Moon in
detriment in Cap and besieged between Saturn at a critical degree and
Pluto, Cap on 2nd house cusp, Pluto in Cap) until after the
Moon-Pluto conjunction interference, which occurs first before the
trine. Two stock market "flash crashes" happened 18 days
and again almost 1 month after the time of question. The desired
stock fell, the querent swooped in a couple months later and bought it well below its
moving average value, and made $155 profit (before comissions) PER
SHARE in less than six months. (Angular cardinal Moon and exalted
angular Sun in the 4th house of outcome=a quick profit).
There is no substitute for your own due
diligence and practicing via paper trading until you know what you
are doing horary-wise. Below are some resources to help you out.
RESOURCES:
Stockcharts.com -- For advanced stock
market aficionados (i.e. people who don't use a broker, but do their
own trading.) If you don't know what a Bollinger band or hollow red
candlestick is, skip this site and use Google Finance.
Google Finance -- A very easy-to-intuit
research tool that allows you to input portfolio data and compare
stock performance, screen historical data, screen stocks by specific
criteria (P/E ratio, dividends, etc.) and lots of other features. It
also has an options chain feature.
Trademonster.com -- Sign up for a free
paper-trade account until you know what the hell you are doing. If
it's too complicated/techy for you to use, then use Google Finance's
portfolio feature.
Optionsprofitcalculator.com -- A must
for options traders. Calculates time-loss values as well as built-in
profit/loss scenarios.
INFORMATION RESOURCES:
Zerohedge.com -- Basically a Ron Paul
echo chamber, but very well-written, entertaining and extremely
informative about the politics affecting markets worldwide. Lots of
analysis and Bloomberg charts. Use for information only; if you
follow their advice, you will lose money by the truckload since they
are gold bugs, perma-bears and believe in a currency return to the
gold standard.
Merriman on Money -- An astrological
analysis of the stock market. I am not a fan at all of his free
information--it's too vague and tends to be wrong. (e.g. "There's
a t-square this week, so the market may do this or it may do that.")
Always an interesting read, but like all other stock market
newsletters, for me, Merriman needs to prove his astrological trading
track record publicly before I'd consider his advice/subscribe to his
newsletter. Being astrologically informed and intelligent doesn't
necessarily translate into winning trades, as a retrograde at one
point in time might do something entirely different than a previous
cycle. I do like his modernist thinking, though.
Subscription Newsletters -- Avoid these
like the plague unless you want to lose money by the truckload again.
All of them hype and tout "30 Straight Winning Trades--You Can
Still Get In On It If You Act Now" to get you to buy, but when
you ask them to provide proof, unsurprisingly, it's not forthcoming.
(Actually, there was one newsletter that publicly published their
trade results, but I can't remember who it was now.) Your own due
diligence, research, continuing education, awareness and practice
will do you far better than these overpriced hype sheets.
Which brings me to the last stock
horary example:
Example #3: Should the Querent
Subscribe to the PCR Stock Newsletter?
Chart courtesy of Matrix Software |
This question is a 3rd house question,
not a 5th house question, because the question is about acquiring
information of a fleeting nature (that's why even though it's
published material, it's not 9th house, which is more about books and
magazines) rather than the stock market or a stock. This is affirmed
by Venus, ruler of the 3rd house, in the same sign as Mercury, ruler
of the 5th house, showing the information is stock
speculation-related/5th house. Mercury is co-ruler of the question
because it rules information.
Querent is Uranus, which is retrograde
and at a critical degree in the 1st house. Strike one. Venus is at a
dead degree and about to square Uranus. Strike two. Mercury is
retrograde and in detriment in Sadge, showing the information is
damaged, incorrect or misleading. Strike three, game over. Also, the
Moon and Venus' dispositor is retrograde Jupiter in the 2nd house,
and the house is ruled by angular and intercepted Mars in the 7th.
Mercury disposits Mars, affirming that the aggressively-hyped
information is not as thorough, critically thought through and
detail-oriented (Virgo) as marketed (Sadge). The outcome? The querent
noticed several typos and price discrepancies in the further
information she requested and received from the company. She wrote
them regarding these issues and they never responded to her. Oh, and
their "free" information predictions about immediate market
trends (imminent bear) turned out to be horribly wrong as the market
melted up to new highs. 'Nuff said.