Market sentiment and contrary opinion as measured by various indicators have been used by traders for many years. The theory of contrary opinion asserts that if a majority of traders agrees on the direction of a market move, then the odds are significant that prices will, in fact, move in the opposite direction. Various measures of market sentiment have been used over the years in attempts to apply contrary opinion effectively in the markets. Among these are odd lot short sales, options volatility, broker opinion surveys, and trader opinion surveys. The good news is that the theory of contrary opinion is correct; the bad news is that the traditional measures of contrary opinion either tend to be LATE or generally unreliable. Learn More
How to See Beyond Short-Term Stock Market Volatility to Predictable Trends and Major-Market Opportunities
Learn how to locate and take advantage of 'time window' investment opportunities. Learn More
Selected articles from Jake Bernstein's Weekly Newsletters / 2009-2010, reflecting Jake's most advanced research, insight, and market perspectives, especially compelling insights to help you navigate today's changing investment environment and market volatility. Learn More
I believe that the next huge currency moves will be up versus the US dollar and I believe further that my JBCC system can get you in the right position for these moves. While I can’t guarantee profitability into the future I can tell you that I have taken the utmost of care and caution in constructing a system that is not only valid, that is based on a three-day price pattern and also incorporates careful risk management and trailing stop methodology. Learn More
Contemporary Methods and Procedures
This magnum opus on cycles trading features:
An in-depth analytical look at price cycles and repetitive patterns in today’s futures market.
New and promising tools for determining when prices have established cyclic lows and highs.
A status report on the dominant repetitive patterns in futures and cash market data. Learn More