TIMING INDICATOR
The array of blue vertical lines intersects the price chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The early part is linked to a predecessor
index. The slim, single, horizontal red line touches the top of each blue line at the 180 level. When that happens, the DJI price curve is turning down or about to turn town for a period lasting several years. The most recent current intersection forecasts an expected turn down shortly lasting one to several years into the future.
This chart is too lucy-goosey to use, but it alerts you to what to expect with strong precedents at the similar180 levels in the past. Note how the timing-indicator poles rise into the future, then break and start all over again. Thus, by raising the red line to 210 across the board, you can see what to expect when the next 210 level arrives.
Part 2 of this article will reveal precise actions on specific dates and clear rules for the future. Best of all, you will be able to construct your own personal decision chart identical to the one you will see in the next article one or two weeks from now.
IF YOU ARE YOUNG ENOUGH
This is a sales pitch. I have long advocated private ownership of retirement assets. That means government social-security programs, too. This is not politics. It is a proven machinery that can maintain and increase future standards of living after retirement. It can also create a profit center for the government.
It is also guaranteed by the government. Believe it--with proof links in the next 'Tips' article.
But first, the message here in the chart above, as preamble to proof, is embarrassingly simple. Look again now, or click on the chat to open and position it as a separate moveable screen on your monitor. The price curve contains 1,200 forty-year periods. Forty years is of keenest interest to us. It is the expected work-years life of the average U.S. worker. Each singe forty-year period has its own profit or loss. In the 1,200-periods sample universe, there are no loss periods.
The single worst-case total return was from the September 3rd price peak of 1929 before the Great Crash to the closing price of September 3, 1969, 40 years later. The total return was 220%, earning 5.5% per year compounded. All other 1,199 total returns were considerably higher, some gloriously so. The highest total return was 5.500%, 10.5% compounded annually. Worst and best. With a minimum floor guaranteed.
More in the next article.
To be continued.
Posted
1/2/2011 10:37 p.m. ET
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