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The "Arab Spring": Was It Predictable? Yes, With Socionomics
Article excerpt from Mark Galasiewski

By Clifford Smith
9/14/2012 11:15:00 AM

Learn how socionomics predicted the current Middle Eastern violence -- over two years ago.

Filed Under: Bear market, Elliott wave, social mood, socionomics, terrorist attacks, The Socionomist, volatility

Category: Socionomics


The Stock Market Is Not Physics: Part III

By Editorial Staff
12/20/2011 10:45:00 AM

We have already seen that economic performance, earnings and inflation do not necessarily coincide with movements in apparently related financial markets. Is there any evidence that dramatic news events that make headlines, such as terrorist attacks, political events, wars, crises or any such events are causal to stock market movement?

Filed Under: Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), Elliott wave, Elliott Wave Principle, investment decisions, investor psychology, market forecasts, market myths, Robert Prechter, social mood, stock indexes, technical analysis, terrorist attacks

Category: Classic Prechter


Basic? Or Bizarre? Baby Monikers and Bear/Bull Markets
The Socionomist reveals that a rise in unique baby names correlates with rising social mood

By Nico Isaac
8/30/2011 5:00:00 PM

Ever notice how some celebrities give their human babies even wackier monikers than they do their pets. “Blanket” vs. “Bubbles,” for example. The first one is a boy, the second a chimpanzee. But while the trend toward bizarre baby names seems fueled by the eccentricities of the uber-famous, in truth it reflects collective human psychology at its most basic.

Filed Under: Bear market, bull market, Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), social mood, socionomics, The Socionomist, terrorist attacks

Category: Socionomics


When Are Terrorist Attacks Likely To Occur?
Is it possible that turns and trends in a stock index would anticipate terror attacks?

By Andrea Dibben
8/29/2011 11:00:00 AM

The event that came to mind first was 9/11 -- al-Qaeda's notorious attack on the United States on September 11, 2001. Could it be that al-Qaeda's most ambitious attack on a U.S. target also marked the end of this negative social mood period as expressed by this stock index?

Filed Under: socionomics, The Socionomist, terrorist attacks

Category: Socionomics


Asian-Pacific Stocks: Not Immune to Debt Crises Shock Waves, Yet Following Their Own Path
Inside EWI's August Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast...

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
8/5/2011 7:00:00 PM

Most investors erroneously assume that global markets all move in unison. Consider the facts...

Filed Under: BRIC, Chinese markets, Elliott Wave trading, Nikkei, SENSEX, sentiment, Shanghai Composite Index, Shanghai Composite Index, terrorist attacks

Category: Asian Markets


Asian-Pacific Markets: Average Peak Gain +182%
(Since EWI Turned Bullish on the Region on March 23, 2009)

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
5/10/2011 4:45:00 PM

Here's what EWI's Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast Interim Report told subscribers on March 23, 2009: "In the March 2009 issue of The Asian-Pacific Financial Forecast, we showed how pattern, price, time and sentiment considerations were pointing to the end of multi-month, five-wave declines in most major Asian-Pacific indexes by late March. In most cases, those lows have likely been achieved." Since then Asian-Pacific stocks have had a very good run indeed...

Filed Under: ASX All Ordinaries, BRIC, bull market, Chinese markets, Elliott wave, Nikkei, SENSEX, Shanghai Composite Index, Shanghai Composite Index, Taiwan index, technical indicators, terrorist attacks

Category: Asian Markets


Robert Prechter Dispels 10 Popular Investment Myths: Conclusion
Interest rates, oil prices, trade balance, earnings, GDP, wars, terrorist attacks, inflation, monetary policy, fiscal policy, etc. -- NONE have a reliable effect on the stock market

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
1/10/2011 12:30:00 PM

This is the conclusion of the series "Robert Prechter Dispels 10 Popular Investment Myths," where EWI president explains why traditional financial models failed in 2007-2009 -- and why they are doomed to fail again (and again). Missed this important series? Start with Part I now.

Filed Under: 1929 Stock Market Crash, Ben Bernanke, bull market, crude oil, deficit, earnings, economic depression, great depression, inflation, market crash, monetary policy, terrorist attacks, U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed), unemployment

Category: Stocks


Robert Prechter Dispels 10 Popular Investment Myths, Part IX
The world's foremost Elliott wave practitioner tests economists' "Claim #8: 'Terrorist attacks would cause the stock market to drop'” -- and brings you another surprising conclusion

By Vadim Pokhlebkin
12/30/2010 12:00:00 PM

This is Part IX of the series "Robert Prechter Dispels 10 Popular Investment Myths," where EWI president tests economists' "Claim #8: 'Terrorist attacks would cause the stock market to drop'” -- and brings you another surprising conclusion.

Filed Under: Bear market, bull market, Elliott Wave Principle, market forecasts, Robert Prechter, technical analysis, terrorist attacks

Category: Stocks


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