Ripples
in Time:
Cycle Analysis of the S&P 500
by Ron Griess
Proprietor, The
Chart Store
www.thechartstore.com
February 15, 2005
This
analysis was originally published by The Chart Store
on January 9, 2005.
The
charts have been updated through February 11, 2005.
Among
the many books/papers in our investment library is a collection of
writings by George Lindsay. One
of Mr. Lindsay’s techniques was to look for mirror patterns in
price action. In this
Observation we apply that technique to the unfolding time cycles of
the S&P 500.
We
begin with a simple weekly bar chart of the S&P 500.

Our
first step is to find some important pivot points which we have
circled in the following chart.

We
apply some labels to the process.

Now
the fun part begins. If
we count time intervals with the week of the pivot point being 0, an
interesting pattern develops.

Chart
Notes:
- Focus
on the bottom the week of March 14, 2003 (labeled point #5). Go backwards to the high the week of March 22, 2002
(point #4). The time
interval is 51 weeks. Now
come forward to the high the week of March 5, 2004 (point #4). Again 51 weeks.
- Repeating
a similar process, we find the distance between points 3 and 4
both directions is 43 weeks.
The point #3 dates are May 25, 2001 and December 31,
2004.
- Fibonacci
number advocates might notice that the time differences between
the 38 week cycle and 43 week cycle is 5 weeks while the
difference between the 43 week cycle and the 51 week cycle is 8
weeks.
- Beginning
point #1 date is March 24, 2000 and beginning point #2 date is
September 1, 2000.
One
pattern that many market technicians have been talking about is an
inverted head and shoulders pattern. We have added lines to the following chart which represent
our interpretation of that possibility.

To
complete the picture, we have added two ovals to our last chart to
point out where we are in relationship to the overall pattern. If the market is “reflecting” the past, a correction of
several weeks is in order. Points
2 and 1 looking forward are September 25, 2005 and March 10, 2006,
respectively.

Summary
Points:
- The
price and time action of the S&P 500 seems to be displaying
“symmetry in motion.”
- The
mirror pattern outlined above suggests that the S&P has room
to go higher into early 2006.
- Does
history always repeat? No,
but it often rhymes. Or
in this case, it just might “reflect.”

© 2005 Ron Griess
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