July 13th, 2019, 6:38 am
1 1 Oct 2012 8:10 AM
[justify]2 16 Oct 2012 8:19 PM [/justify]
[justify]3 23 Oct 2012 5:19 AM [/justify]
[justify]4 11 March 2014 11:08 PM [/justify]
[justify]5 14 March 2014 12:35 PM [/justify]
[justify]6 24 March 2014 11:25 PM [/justify]
[justify]7 14 May 2014 6:57 PM [/justify]
[justify]8 22 May 2014 4:52 PM [/justify]
[justify]9 23 May 2014 7:28 PM [/justify]
[justify]10 12 Aug 2014 11:33 AM [/justify]
[justify]11 16 Aug 2014 8:45 PM [/justify]
[justify]12 29 Aug 2014 6:08 AM 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 12 X[/justify]
[justify]13 31 Aug 2014 5:44 PM [/justify]
[justify]14 2 Apr 2016 5:14 PM [/justify]
[justify]15 13 Apr 2016 9:17 AM [/justify]
[justify]16 25 Apr 2016 12:20 AM [/justify]
[justify]17 8 Nov 2016 2:08 PM [/justify]
[justify]18 15 Nov 2016 7:47 PM [/justify]
[justify]19 28 Nov 2016 11:41 AM 11, 12, 14, 15, 17, 19 Y[/justify]
[justify]20 2 Dec 2016 8:12 AM [/justify]
[justify]21 12 Feb 2017 10:08 AM [/justify]
[justify]22 22 Feb 2017 8:15 AM [/justify]
[justify]23 01 March 2017 4:09 PM [/justify]
[justify]24 10 March 2017 4:06 PM [/justify]
[justify]25 14 March 2017 7:02 AM [/justify]
[justify]26 26 March 2017 8:05 PM 1, 2, 21, 22, 24, 26 Y[/justify]
27 12 Apr 2017 5:41 PM
You see a diagram above. Column A has the date and B has the hours (New York time). The numbers in C are the row numbers of the dates to be used. In D, each row has the standard code. All dates in column A represent a cycle, and three rows with values in C are equivalent cycles.
[justify]We define the price changes in the rows written in Column C. Let's calculate row 4: the date on row 4 is 11 March 2014 at 11:08 pm. The date on row 5 is March 14, 2014 at 12:35 pm. If the value on the 5th row is higher for the instrument X, we define the 4th row as “Up”. If row 5 is lower, we define row 4 as “Down”. So we will always compare it to the next row. In C, we find the equivalent of all the rows written in this way.[/justify]
[justify]In C, we determine the type of groups written on all three rows. If the distribution of up and down is 3 ’to 3 or 5’ to 1, the type is odd. If the distribution of up and down is 2 to 4 or 6 to 0, the type is even.[/justify]
[justify]Column D is the X and Y indicator. The rule is that if row 12 and row 19 differ type, then row 26 and row 19 will be the same type.[/justify]
[justify]Now we do not know the price change in the period from 26 March to 12 April and we will predict. The situation in C is: “a d a a d?”. “?” located on 26 March. Let's say the type in row 19 is odd. As a rule, type 26 in row C will be odd. “a d a a d ?” What should “?” be for odd? Answer: “d” (so down). So there will be a downtrend in the period of March 26.[/justify]
[justify]I just gave the formula of the March 26 period above. More than 80% accurate results for all conceivable instruments. There is only one requirement: all price changes written in column C (except March 26) must be at least 0.4%. Based on the latest price seen during off-session or holidays. In fact, 0.4% change is not essential. Sometimes horizontal calculations require detailed calculation. I didn't write how to do this, so I put a 0.4% requirement.[/justify]
I told you I hid my formula. I did not decipher where I found these dates, how I selected dates in C, and how I determined the values in D. The above dates come from infinity to infinity and are calculated according to a formula. This is a template and you can test it on all the instruments that come to mind. I don't make up the formula according to the data like everyone else. I have one template formula and everything is based on this template. There is no second person in the world who can achieve this and no methodology. Please review and test.