Bradley Model 2004 Update
by Howard Arrington
An article about the Bradley Stock Market Model was
published in the
November 2002 issue of Trading Tips newsletter. Now
that 18 months have gone by, it is time for a follow up
article to document the correlation of the Bradley model
with the stock market.
The Bradley model is a forecast of the market based on
astrological relationships. Because astrological
relationships can be defined with mathematics, the Bradley
forecasts can be made decades in advance.
The correlation has been excellent for the
past several months. The timing of the bottom turn in
November 2003 was great, as was the timing for tops in
February and April 2004. The following chart shows the
Bradley model for the balance of 2004, which is basically a
downtrend to a turn in January 2005. The model suggests a
rally from Labor Day through Election day.
It needs to be emphasized that the Bradley
model does not give price levels. It denotes patterns,
trends and the timing of swing tops and bottoms. The
Bradley data are numbers ranging from -200 to 200. This
data is rescaled and repositioned vertically on the Dow
Jones Industrial chart to create the examples.
Update:
Ensign Internet Symbol Universe
by Howard Arrington
The Ensign Internet version will download daily, weekly,
and monthly data from the Internet for stocks, futures, and
indices on the following exchanges. The stock data for some
symbols goes back several decades. For example, the daily,
weekly and monthly data for IBM is from January 1962.
Stock Exchanges: AMEX, Amsterdam, Australia,
Barcelona, Berlin, Bern, Bilbao, Bombay, Brussel, Buenos
Aires, Calcutta, Caracas, Copenhagen, Dusseldorf, EBX,
Frankfort, Hamburg, Hanover, Hong Kong, India NSE, Ireland,
Jakarta, Karachi, Kosdaq, Korea, Kuala Lumpur, London,
Lisbon, Madrid, Mexico, Milan, Munich, NASDAQ, New Zealand,
NYSE, Oslo, OTC BB, Paris, PCX, PHLX, Pink Sheets, Shanghai,
Shenzhen, Singapore, Stockholm, Stuttgart, Taiwan, Tel Aviv,
Toronto, Thailand, Vancouver, Vienna, Xetra.
Futures Exchanges: CBOT (including eCBOT), CME
(including GLOBEX), COMEX, EUREX, EuroNext, IPE, KBOT, LME,
LIFFE, MGE, NYBOT, NYMEX, SGX, WCE.
Ensign Internet can also download tick data for today and
intra-day data for the last 4 months for the Futures
exchanges, Indices, and for the AMEX, NYSE, NASDAQ, and
Canadian stock exchanges. The tick data can be used to
maintain constant tick charts,
Momentum bars (constant range), and constant volume bar
charts. The intra-day data can be in any minute interval.
This same capability to obtain data from the Internet is
available in Ensign Windows for the Interactive Brokers data
feed. Thus, IB users will be able to refresh (backfill)
constant tick, Momentum, constant volume, intra-day, daily,
weekly, and monthly charts for most of the popular futures
and index symbols, including ES, NQ, ER2, YM, ZB, ZN, CHF,
JPY, EUR, DAX, ESTX50, $INDU, $COMP, and $NDX.
Trading Tip:
Momentum Bars
by Jay West
'Just wanted to drop you a note about the new constant
Volume and Range Bar (Momentum Bars) setups. I have tried
both on different trading vehicles and at different
settings. I find both to be superior to the normal interval
bars that I used in the past. I personally enjoy the Range
bars best. I like the fact that there is a new bar when the
range of the current bar is exceeded and I can set that
range any way I want. I can tailor the action to the
trading vehicle and personality of the market. It makes the
bars smoother and gives improved entries. I also noticed
that they tend to make the indicators work better.
One of the hardest things a trader must deal with in my
opinion is the length of the bars on a 3 or 5 min chart. I
recently saw a 15 point opening bar in the ER2 using a 3 min
chart and there are many times that I see 3 and 4 point
bars. I had an R75 chart up at the time of the 15 point bar
on the three minute chart and it was too rapid to trade but
it got my attention. When I run a 3 minute chart and an R75
chart side by side I often see the 3-min chart produce a
single 3 point bar. The R75 gives me three bars. There is
a large difference between interval bars and the new Range
bars. Now when I get a 3-point bar on the 3-minute chart
that would be untradable for me, I can now trade it because
I will get several bars using a Range bar setup that phases
me into the trade. It gives time for the indicator to react
and provide a signal. The Volume bars also tend to make
things smoother and I am still looking at ways to use these
to improve the trading. Being able to control the volume in
each bar is very helpful.
The first chart depicts the ES R100 (100 point range bar)
and the 2nd chart is a 3-minute chart. The R100 chart is
much smoother and more tradable than the 3-minute chart.
Thanks for the great Ensign program. It is the best
trading program I have ever used. |