Econocasts

Saturday, September 19, 2015

2015.09.18 DJIA Cycle Model Chart

2015.09.18 DJIA Cycle Model Chart

















The DJIA cycle model continues to suggest downward pressure on the index going into the end of 2015. A previous iteration of the model is shown below and on the blog.


2015.06.12 DJIA Cycle Model Chart

Sunday, September 13, 2015

2015.09.11 Silver Cycle Model Chart

2015.09.11 Silver Cycle Model Chart


















The silver cycle model suggests strong upward pressure on prices going into October, given the Z-score > 2. As seen below, the model has undergone a phase shift, and the previous prediction of an October high of ~ 2100 has been pushed to ~1700. The same model output can be seen on the blog here.



2015.08.03 Silver Cycle Model Chart

Friday, September 4, 2015

2015.09.04 DJIA Cycle Model Chart

2015.09.04 DJIA Cycle Model Chart

















I usually don't perform weekly updates on the models, but I thought readers might be curious about the DJIA model. I am! Strong decadal, yearly, seasonal and monthly cycles are all headed lower at this juncture and the DJIA seems, for now, to be following the script. The model predicted a close of 16746.10 and the DJIA closed at 16102.38. The Z-score at the close, which is hard to see above, is 0.579.  Please note that I have updated the time axis. The first published iteration of the model is shown below and here on the blog.


2015.06.12 DJIA Cycle Model Chart




2015.09.04 Gold Cycle Model Chart

2015.09.04 Gold Cycle Model Chart

















The gold cycle model shows that over the past month, a long-term cycle extension has pushed the predictive model curve forward, but not enough to break the model, at least as of now. Please note I have changed the scale of the price.  The high Z-score from the previous iteration, as shown below, was associated with a rise in price level, though not enough to go return back into 'neutral zone' around the +/- 1 Z-score.  The previous iteration is shown below and here on the blog.

On a macro level, I was pondering how gold might rise in an environment where the received wisdom of the markets is that there will be a rate increase which will push up the dollar, thereby putting downward pressure on prices. However, one data point I noted was that during the recent equity market declines, capital did not appear to flow into 'safe' treasuries at the historically expected rate, which was explained by Asia selling USTs to support their currency, as they experience capital flows out of the respective countries.  For hedgers trying to front-run the Fed, this was a disaster.  Even if the Fed does raise rates, I wonder if that might have the opposite of the intended effect, since that would put even more pressure on countries holding a high level of US debt, and the response may be to sell the debt to support the currencies. I'm not an economist so take the musings with a grain of salt or two!



2015.07.17 Gold Cycle Model Chart