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Thank you for visiting CrystalBull.com, an educational website designed to provide information
about the US economy, the stock market, stock market timing, and other considerations prior
to investing.
We wanted to provide this short video to better explain how to use the information and services
on the site, how to read the charts, some frequently asked questions, and some of the
hidden features that you might otherwise miss. Thank you for taking a few minutes to watch
this screencast, which we hope you will find informative.
First, some housekeeping... It is important to explain what we are, and, more importantly,
what we are not. We are not investment advisors or broker-dealers. We are not advising, recommending,
or soliciting any users to buy or sell any securities. Nothing in this site is to be
considered investment advice, but is provided as information for users to discuss with their
own investment advisor(s).
You will see such disclaimers throughout the site. We just want it made crystal clear that
we are not investment advisors, not providing investment advice, and that you are solely
responsible for your own investment decisions. Frankly, we strongly encourage you to heed
such warnings for all information you receive pertaining to investing, from all sources,
including from registered investment advisors. The financial and investment information world
is full of sharks, and most registered investment advisors get paid by selling you investment
products with high commission rates, which, many times, are not necessarily the best products
for your situation. You should question the expertise of all sources of advice you receive.
And, this is important, most investment advisors fail to beat the market, contrary to the "expertise"
they imply. Anyway, you are using the information on this site at your own risk. For a more
complete disclaimer, please refer to the Important Notice, and the Terms of Use link at the bottom
of every page.
Now, if we haven't yet scared you away, let me explain what we are, and what we are trying
to accomplish...
We are a small group of programmers with mathematics and economics backgrounds, who saw the need
for better public access to economic data, and an easier method of correlating that data
to the broader economy and the stock market in general. Each of us is bombarded every
day, at the top and bottom of every hour, with news reporters making questionable correlations
of economic data to the stock market, such as, "The market is up 25 points, on news that
GDP rose last quarter". Is it really that easy? After years of research and study, we
can say, emphatically, "No! It is NOT that easy." There is a lot of noise in the data,
and reactions can be fleeting.
Many so-called stock market "experts" have proclaimed that stock market timing is impossible.
Impossible? Well, that sounded like a challenge to us. If market timing is impossible, then
why do all the big firms have thousands of people each studying 6 simultaneous screens,
trying to beat the market with new data? In fact, if market timing is not possible, then
why bother monitoring economic data at all? Technology has advanced greatly in the last
2 decades, when many of these experts made these proclamations. Now, with better access
to data, super-fast computers, and advanced algorithms, can we not analyze the data to
find true correlations? That is our objective. Thus, our tag line, "Seeking to build the
world's most accurate stock market timing model". It may take many decades to perfect
such a model, but, in our opinion, we are about as close as we can get using current
data. Of course, there are no guarantees, and there is risk inherent in following any
model. But, we will do our best, and believe we are on the right track.
At the top-right of every screen, you will see historical returns listed. These returns
are based on back-testing of our current model, which we update roughly twice per year. The
current model has not been published for this entire time period, so these are not actual
real-world returns obtained. Yes, we are well-aware of the problems inherent in backtesting of
models, and trying to project results. Any fool can create a model that says, "If it
rains on a Tuesday in Minneapolis after the market rises 28 points, then sell." False
correlations, such as the Super Bowl winner or skirt lengths, abound. But, really, back-testing
is all anyone really has. Anything else is just guessing, which is what we want to avoid.
We have taken great care to make sure that the correlation of the data used in the model
makes sense. It is our opinion that we have done just that. We are not trying to sell
subscriptions based on a model that earned incredible returns. Besides, we have all heard
the disclaimer, "Past performance is no indication of future results", which is absolutely true
of any model. But what we want to present is a way to study the current model, that
says, "IF the current model, which is based on what we believe to be correlating data,
were in place over the last X years, then these are the results that it would have obtained."
In trying to build the world's most accurate stock market timing model, we believe this
is the best approach, and the proper representation. Clicking on this box brings up a chart showing
the indicator itself, along with the returns going back to 1996.
We'll get to reading the charts here in just a second. First, let's go over the site design
briefly. The first thing you'll notice is that when you go directly to CrystalBull.com,
you come straight to the dashboard. We wanted you to get quick access to the data, without
having to read text, marketing language, or puffery. If, at any time you wish to return
to the dashboard, simply click the dashboard link at the top.
Clicking on the 'Home' link, or any logo at the top of the page brings you to our Home
page. We encourage you to read the information presented there.
We also have a Commentary page, where we periodically post information which we think is relevant,
but perhaps missed by other media sources.
The How-To link brings you to this video.
There is also an 'Extras' link, which allows you to access some other valuable information,
which may be outside the scope of market timing, such as discussions on tax policy and Social
Security, a mortgage true-cost calculator, a retirement calculator, with more to come.
Next is an important 'Share' link, which we encourage you to use to spread the word about
our site. We believe that the information on our site is valuable, and not properly
dispersed by other media sources. Please use these links to tell your social media friends
about the data presented. Feel free to link to our charts to make your point in blogs
and discussion groups, whenever relevant.
Last is the 'Subscribe' link. The purpose of your subscription is simply to help support
our work. It does not imply any advisor/client relationship. Subscribers get live readings
of the CrystalBull Trading and Trend indicators, with email and text alerts of any significant
change in information on the site, such as new commentary, or when the model enters or
exits the market. Consider this a subscription to an economic newsletter updated on a regular
basis, throughout the day.
Subscriptions are user maintained. Clicking on your username at the top right of any screen
takes you to your account information, where you can easily turn on or off the auto-renew
feature, change your subscription term, update your password, contact, or credit card details,
or enter an address to receive SMS (or text) alerts. Simple.
Now, let's get to the dashboard, which is a comprehensive set of current economic data,
updated regularly. Gauges are grouped into various segments, such as inflation, money
supply, housing, etc., with our proprietary indicators, the CrystalBull Trading and Trend
Indicators at the top. On many gauges, you will see more than one needle. In those cases,
the names on the gauges are color-coded to explain the needles. For example, the Put/Call
Ratio gauge has 3 needles: the gold is the current reading, the blue needle is the 60
day moving average, and the red needle is the 10 day moving average. On others, like
Personal Income, you will see both the year-over-year and month-over-month values. The red, yellow,
and green segments are meant to show favorable or unfavorable readings. As you can see, there
are a lot of conflicting data at any time. So, how do you make sense of all this? It
should be noted that many of these data indicators are not reliable for timing the market. Some,
despite pundit blatherings to the contrary, are simply not correlated. Others, such as
GDP, come out long after their sampling periods have ended, and are subject to many revisions,
months, or even years later. Yes, we have our work cut out for us, but that is why we
are here.
...which brings us to the good part, the CrystalBull Trading and Trend Indicators. At the culmination
of our studies of all available economic data, we have derived two separate and distinct
indicators. The CrystalBull Trend Indicator is updated monthly, and is intended as a modified
buy-and-hold strategy. The intention is to remain in the market, except for periods when
a downward trend is detected. This has resulted in trades roughly every few years. We have
studied other indicators with this strategy, such as MACD (which stands for Moving Average
Convergence / Divergence), and found them to have lost their accuracy in recent years.
As you can see, this indicator has done a decent job of exiting the market during recent
bear markets.
The CrystalBull Trading Indicator represents our primary model, which is the basis for
the historical returns discussed earlier. After studying all available data, this is
what we believe to be our best indicator. The Trading Indicator is updated every 5 minutes
during the trading day, and attempts to detect overbought (bearish) or oversold (bullish)
conditions. It has proven to be a contrarian indicator, which, when you think about it,
is exactly the intention of the adage, "buy low and sell high". In order to buy low, you
need to buy when others are selling, at lower price levels. You then need to sell when others
are buying, at higher levels. The human brain, in an attempt to survive, has evolved to detect
trends, and, unfortunately, to project their continuation and to follow them. This explains
why you hear all the pundits predicting Dow 50,000 after a price runup, and predicting
Dow 5000 after a selloff. They are almost always wrong. For many, it is difficult to
be a contrarian. It is difficult to buy when others are selling, and when the pundits are
predicting a crash. It is just as stressful to sell when the market appears to be going
to the moon. The CrystalBull Trading Indicator attempts to take the emotion out of trading.
Emotional responses in this market are just guesses, projecting the trend, and, usually,
wrong. To buy low and sell high requires being a contrarian.
Before we get to reading the chart for the Trading Indicator, let's take a look at a
different chart, with multiple series, so we can better explain the hidden functions
of the charts.
Clicking on any gauge pulls up a chart of its recent activity, with a corresponding
chart of the S&P 500 index above, so you can test for correlation between the data and
the market.
The S&P 500 chart has a log/lin link, which allows you to switch between logarithmic and
linear representation of the series. Every chart has a Help link, which pulls up a box
explaining some of the details that I'll go through here.
The first hidden feature is Balloons, which pulls up a balloon representation for each
data point along the series. Clicking on the series locks the balloon to that date. You
can then use the left and right arrow keys to switch day-to-day-to-day along the series.
As you can see, the values also update at the top right of every chart. The up and down
arrow keys then switch from series to series to series. Let's go ahead and toggle B alloons
off.
The next feature is the Legend, which we can reposition. This particular chart has some
hidden series. The chart was busy enough that we decided to turn a few of the data series
off. Here we'll go ahead and click to turn CPI on. We'll go ahead and turn the 3 Month
Treasury and the 30 Year Treasury off. Now, I have to ask, "Where else are you getting
this data?" We'll go ahead and toggle the Legend back off.
Next is the Show/Hide link. Click to hide the chart. A hidden feature is that when you
click again, the chart displays at a larger size, for closer study of the data. We'll
go ahead and turn the Help box off. As you can see when you move the mouse along the
series, every data value updates at the top-right of every chart. The red line corresponds the
data from chart-to-chart. You can zoom in on any date range by clicking and dragging
left right. While zoomed in, you can hold down the Alt or Option key and drag left or
right to change the date range. Double-click on any chart zooms all the way back out.
Now, let's get to the part we've all been waiting for... Reading the CrystalBull Trading
Indicator chart. Clicking on the gauge takes us to the recent chart. Indicators are shown
in standard technical analysis format, with an upper threshold, here it's +50 and red,
and a lower threshold, here -50 and green. A reading above the upper threshold indicates
a possibly overbought condition, while a reading below the loser threshold represents a possibly
oversold condition. Overbought and oversold conditions are, by definition, unsustainable,
and therefore indicate a possible trend reversal. An oversold condition is bullish, and an overbought
condition is bearish.
Let's zoom in to take a closer look.
While the Trading Indicator is updated every 5 minutes during the trading day, the official
model enters or exits the market based only on the closing value at the end of each day.
This chart represents the closing value each day. The model is long-only. It enters the
market at a reading below -50, and remains in the market until a closing value above
+50. It then remains out of the market, in cash, until the next close below -50, where
it re-enters.
For example, here the model entered the market on June 1st, with a reading of -51.9, and
an S&P 500 value of 1278.04. It exited the market on June 8th, with a Trading Indicator
reading of +51.89, and 1325.66 on the S&P. It remained out of the market until the next
close below -50, on June 20th, with the S&P 500 at 1355.69. It remained in the market
until today, where it exited the market at S&P 1390.92. You can see that the indicator
picked up some other oversold conditions in July. Since it was already in the market,
no actions were taken. But, it should be noted that the markets "appeared" to be in free
fall on those dates, with many pundits predicting a crash. The CrystalBull Trading Indicator
recognized those as oversold conditions, and reversals occurred.
From where else are you getting such readings? Trend followers bought at higher levels, and
were scared out of the market at lower levels. It is easy to buy high and sell low. It is
much harder to buy low and sell high.
For further details on the structure of the model, please refer to the How To Use section
at the bottom of this page.
Before we go, we want to point out a few more hidden gems within the site accessible only
from the Site Map link at the bottom of each page. The first are the individual gauges.
These links make it easy to add the gauges to your smart phone. No downloading of apps
at an app store is necessary. Simply click the link, and add to your home screen on your
phone. Now, you have the gauges with you where ever you go.
There are some other links there, such as how to import live readings into your spreadsheets,
or, hey, here is a copy of the original 1935 pamphlet explaining Social Security.
Thank you for taking the time to watch this screencast. We did not expect it to run this
long, but we hope it was informative. Please feel free to email us with your comments or
questions.
Happy Trading!