This is the third book in the course and continues the material presented in Four-Dimensional Stock Market Structures And Cycles by applying non-linear techniques and extending them to commodities markets. The material in these books is designed to demonstrate unique and accurate market modeling techniques that have never before been made available to the public.
"Numbered squares" is a term familiar to many market traders. These numbers are used to project the progression of financial market growth spirals, consequently defining the extent and duration of price movements. One of the most important numbered squares is the square of twelve, 144. Market Science - Volume I - Square Of Twelve shows how to identify and use the square of twelve in the soybean market. After reading this work, it will be clear why W. D. Gann wrote in his Master Courses, "The MASTER CHART is the square of 12."
The two lessons in Square Of Twelve are:
Lesson XI - Square of Twelve
Readers familiar with Lesson I of Four-Dimensional Stock Market Structures And Cycles are aware that the stock market moves within the confines of a fundamental unit of measurement.Market Science - Square Of Twelve clearly shows that the elemental building block of the soybean market is defined by the square of twelve. Proof is provided with a detailed analysis of this market, since data was first recorded in 1913.
Lesson XII - Vectorial Partitioning
This lesson shows that applications of Isaac Newton's First Law Of Motion, also known as "Galileo's Law Of Inertia," extend to financial markets where price-time movements can be considered points of force in motion.
Just a few of the topics addressed in this book include: use of the horizontal (price) and vertical (time) angles and how the "Price-Time Radius VectorTM(PTVTM)" defines their location, how price-time measurements made in the early stages of a growth spiral define the extent of movements decades later, how to use different data sources and time units to simultaneously arrive at an indication of trend change, celestial correlations with the square of twelve, ten clear signals the soybean market gave in 5/1994 that a major top had just been hit (the drop after this top was the largest in five years).