Summary
Phil Anderson reviews the Dow Jones chart from October 2020 to February 2021, showing how PSE’s monthly Gann dates marked the January high and low. He then projects forward using seasonal dates and a 90-degree sun-time count from the 29 January low to identify potential turning points in late March and late April/early May 2021.
Key Claims
- The PSE monthly Gann dates marked both the high and the low for January 2021 on the Dow — confidence: medium
- Mid-season volatility arrived slightly early in the cycle, consistent with the signal given by the October 30 2020 solid low — confidence: medium
- The 2021 Yearly Roadmap suggested mid-season dates (rather than seasonal points) would mark the year’s major highs and lows, and early price action was confirming this — confidence: medium
- 21 March is the next key seasonal date; a Dow high at that date could represent the price midpoint between the 29 Jan low and an early May top — confidence: low
- 29 Jan low sits at 9° 30’ Aquarius; projecting 90 degrees forward (sun-time, using the zodiac as measure) lands on approximately 29–30 April as a price-and-time setup date — confidence: medium
- The year’s high is projected to fall in the first week of May 2021, or thereabouts — confidence: low
Mex Pete References
None.
Stock Picks / Signals
None.
Predictions / Forecasts
- 21 March 2021 — Next key seasonal date; watch for Dow reaction; possible mid-point price level between 29 Jan low and early May high
- 29–30 April 2021 — 90 degrees sun-time from the 29 Jan low; potential price-and-time setup (turning point)
- First week of May 2021 — Roadmap projection for the 2021 Dow yearly high
Notable Quotes
“Your Roadmap suggested this year the mid-season times might mark the highs and lows for the year, rather than the seasonal points for 2021. It is shaping up this way so far.”
“Using a Surveyor’s Almanac, 29 Jan was 9 degrees 30 minutes into Aquarius, we’re just counting 90 degrees forward as the earth moves relative to the sun, using the zodiac as a backdrop to measure it.”