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RE: LeoThread 2025-09-22 11:20

in LeoFinance20 days ago

I first saw this chart about 24 months ago and unfortunately couldn't find it again. Now I stumbled across it by chance and did a little research.

Importantly, this chart was first published in 1875.

I find the idea really interesting and am amazed that even the 2017 bull run is more or less visible. The first time I saw it, I thought to myself, cool, there could be a bull run in 2025/2026, and that's how it will be. Of course, I need to look into it a bit more because I think it will be important for the future. When to buy and when to sell.

How do you interpret this chart? Have you seen it before?

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first published in 1875

This is proof that the chart was not created to fit the existing events. The timing is imperfect; but incredible for a 150 year old chart. Be ready for 2026.

!vote

I would be really interested to know how much knowledge about the last 10,000 years has been lost. The fact that such a chart was created by a farmer is incredible in itself.

You are thinking too small. Modern humans have been around for 300,000 years according to the mainstream. Those are people very comparable to you and me. This is a

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I just screenshot the image and will study it. Have also been looking for a similar chart that I read in one book I unfortunately don't remember the name anymore

I found the book "Beener's prophecies" but couldn't find this exact chart in it.

PS.: The author of this chart is Samuel Benner.

There was a similar study done by a Wall Street money manager who looked at the number of days when Tesla shareholders made money.

A greater than 2% swing in either direction was, relatively speaking, rare.

The big moves came on a few days, most were within narrow trading ranges.

Absolutely, I have also read several studies that state that only a few days a year influence the main return. Nevertheless, I would like to find out when it is best to buy and sell in the future. There are so many indicators, and if you combine them correctly, you can discern a pattern to solve this “puzzle.”

Or simply adhere to the "time in market is better than timing market" adage.

It is an old one but old adages are old for a reason.