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- 2003-3-27

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PRICE AND TIME CHART-CYCLE OF 0 DEGREES TO 360
TIME PERIODS 15 DAYS EQUALS DEGREES - 24 CYCLES 24 PRICE FOR
DAILY TIME CYCLES
This chart is entirely different to the Master Square Chart and is to be used for grains
and wool. It can also be used for stocks. The outer circle starts on the right marked
"E" for East. March 20, [blank]. This is the seasonal yearly time periods and
because the earth revolves on its axis in 24 hours, we use 15 degrees of longitude,
which is 1 hour of time or approximately 15 days. From March 20, when spring
begins to May 6, is 45 degrees, or 3 hours of longitude and from March 20 to June 21,
is ¼ of the year, 90 degrees or 6 hours of longitude. July 23 is 1/3 of a year or 120
degrees from March 20. This is 8 hours of longitude.
September 23rd is 180 degrees of longitude from March 20, or 12 hours of time. This
is the annual revolution of the earth around the sun and the time periods are the same
as the outer circle. One complete circle is 12 months of time or 365¼ days. For the
monthly time periods, 360 months complete the circle, and for the weekly time
periods, 360 weeks complete the circle, but 364 weeks is 7 times 52 or 7 years.
The price also moves around the 360 degree circle. The price of 44¢ for May
soybeans is 1¢ below the 45 degree angle at the date of May 5, and the price of 405 is
the same degree because it is 45 added to 360. A price of 67 extreme low on May
beans is at 67½ degrees or ½ between 60 degrees and 75 degrees. The price 470-3/4
is at 76 degrees 45 minutes because it is one complete circle of 360 and 76-3/4 over.
You will note the inner circles and price and time periods begin with one at zero and
end at 24 at 360, making a complete cycle or equal to one revolution of the earth upon
its axis. These are to be used as prices for the daily fluctuation and these cycles as
follows; 24, 48, 72, 98, 120, 144, 165, 192, 216, 240, 264, 288, 312, 330, 360, 384,
408, 432, 466, 480, 504, 528, 552, and 576 which is the square of 24. This means
when these prices are reached that they are on the 24th hour in longitude and have
completed the circle of 360 degrees.
Starting with 1 or 0, 3¢ a bushel equal 45 degrees. 6¢ per bushel equals 90 degrees or
¼ of the circle. 9¢ per bushel equals 135 degrees and 12¢ per bushel equals 180
degrees or ½ of the circle. 15¢ equals 225 degrees or 5/8 of a circle. 18 equals 270
degrees or 3/4 of a circle. 21¢ equals 315 degrees or 7/8 of a circle. 24 in price
equals 360 degrees or the complete circle, and so on around. I have drawn a green
circle around the extreme high prices for May beans and a red circle around the low
prices, in order that you can see when price reaches 45 degrees, 90 degrees, 120
degrees, 135 degrees, 180 degrees, 225 degrees, 240, 270, 315, and 360 from any
high or low.
THE W.D. GANN MASTER COMMODITIES COURSE
Page 370
A complete circle or round trip of 24¢ is important for a change in trend. 48¢ is next
important and 3 times around or 72¢ is of still greater importance.
Example: May soybeans low 239½. Note that 240 is the end of the 10th cycle and if
we add 72 to this we get 311¼. Therefore when May Soybeans reach 311¼ they had
made complete cycles and this was a strong resistance and selling level. When they
declined from 311¼ to 296 a decline of 15¢ they had moved down 225 degrees or 5/8
of a circle making this a resistance level. Note that 296 in price is of 120 degrees and
the time period is July 23, close to July 17, and 296 is 2 cycles down from 344, the
last extreme high. Follow this angle across at 180 degrees and you will see that 296
is opposite 44, 65 and 144. You will also note that 295 is 180 degrees or opposite 67.
The extreme low price, and when the price declines 294, it is below this angle and
also below the natural 90 degree angle. Next you would watch 287 which is a
complete cycle of 24¢ down from 311, and if the price went below this level you
would watch 284 which is the same cycle 44, 68, and 164 and 285 is the same cycle
as 67. When the price advanced from the low of 201½ to 344½ it lacked just 1½¢ of
being 6 complete cycles up from the low, but the price stopped at 344½ because it
was against July 7th bottom and 180 degrees from 44 and 68 low.
Note that 436 was against the angle of 60 degrees on the date May 20th. This was
150 degrees from 67 low and approximately the same from 44 low as they were only
15 degrees apart. When price was at 436 it was up 369 cents. Note that 369 is
against the 45 degree angle at 135 date August 8. A natural resistance angle and 180
from 44 low.
When the price declined from 436-3/4 to 301½ it was down 135¼ points and 135 is a
45 degree angle on the great circle and 202 is at 150 degrees or against August 23rd,
and this was against the cycle at 154 and also opposite 311 the cent high price. 311
from 344½ gives 33 down. Look at 33 in price and you find it is against the 45
degree angle or 135 degrees, note Aug. 3. Another confirmation of the resistance.
From 201½ to 311½ is 110. Look at 110 and you find it is at 210 degrees and
opposite a price of 314, an old top. The date for 210 is October 23. The price
reached the high of 311¼ on 2, which was at the date March 8 angle 345. This was
ahead of time and being up 72¢ a reaction was due. When the price dropped back to
305. It was below the time period which was December 7, angle 255 degrees.
Prices are governed by time and time causes prices to change and the time angles are
the resistance to price. These are measured in hours of longitude, which are basic
geometric angles and determine the changes in trend. By checking over past records
you see how accurate this works out.
Example: Feb. 15, 1920 high 435. This price was against the 45 degree angle at 315
date Feb. 5 and you would watch for a change in trend because it was at the correct
annual time period and the price was 45 degrees above 360 and 45 degrees below 360
in the 24 circle cycle which determines the daily fluctuations and the fast moves up
and down. First you look to the weekly and monthly and see the position and next
you look to the daily position and watch daily chart for resistance and on Dec. 2, the
daily high and low chart gave the first indication of a change in trend and showed a
time turn. Because it was the completion of 3 twenty-four price cycles from the low
THE W.D. GANN MASTER COMMODITIES COURSE
Page 371
of 239½. Why was 240 a support point? One reason was because 240 is 2/3 of a
circle and from the high of 436-3/4 to the low of 44 gives the main half way point of
240-3/8. The next important halfway point is 218-3/8 or 1/2 of 436-3/4. Note that
219 is against the 45 degree angle date May 6, and 219 on the great circle is half way
between 210 and 225 from 67 low to 436-3/4 high gives the half way point 251. Note
the 252 on the 24 circle is at 180 degrees date Sept. 25 making this a resistance level
of great importance and when the price advanced above this level it continued on up
to 311 and never reached below 249 after it crossed 252. Suppose May beans should
decline to 276. They will be at 180 degrees or 1 cycle up from the halfway point of
252.
Analyze price of the grains in the same way but use separate charts of this kind to
make the high and low prices and the dates so the angles will come out.
1955 W. D. Gann
THE W.D. GANN MASTER COMMODITIES COURSE
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