Reading Jiseki Signals
1) What is Jiseki?
2) What are different kinds of Jiseki cycle time frames?
3) Different ways of reading Jiseki?
4) What does the color code suggest?
5) Which Index does the latest ALPHA cover a running short?
6) What are the stocks covered in the report?
6) When does Jiseki generate a SELL signal?
7) What is the average holding period for the illustrated trade?
8 ) What are the average gains?
We will be publishing other Jiseki cases, interpretations, more active signals and soon provide you a live system to appraise Jiseki yourself.
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Our Jiseki Time cycles are seasonal patterns of strength or weakness in assets. They are derived from percentile rankings from 1 to 100. The higher the percentile more the chance for an asset to weaken and worst the ranking, better the chance for the respective asset to outperform. 100 is top relative performance and 1 is worst performance. The idea is that performance is cyclical. A top performer will underperform in future and vice versa. A top relative performer is also the worst value pick and the top relative underperformer is the best value pick. Jiseki is another name for Performance cycles, time triads and time fractals. The signals are illustrated as a running portfolio and as Jiseki Indices. These signals can be used by fund managers for relative allocations, traders for leverage bets and high net worth clients for selective trades.
Jiseki Interpretation. Signals are interpreted as crossovers between various Jiseki Cycles. All three Jiseki cycles (Jiseki 1,2 and 3) depict different time frames. Example: An asset is ranked above 80 percentile and all the three Jiseki cycles are pointing lower, this suggests a running SHORT SIGNAL. Our Jiseki Indices use different kind of exits based on price and Jiseki Cycles. We have color coded the (Jiseki 1>Jiseki 2) SHORT zones with brown sandy (burlywood) and grey (Jiseki 1>Jiseki2) for LONG SIGNALS.