WD Gann's Trading Records as evidenced by Dow
The following
article appeared in the December 1909
issue of The Ticker & Investment*Digest.
Some time ago the attention of this
magazine was attracted by certain long
pull Stock Market predictions which were
being made by William D. Gann. In a
large number of cases Mr Gann gave us,
in advance, the exact points at which
certain stocks and commodities would
sell, together with prices close to the
then prevailing figures which would not
be touched.
For instance, when the New York
Central was 131 he predicted that it
would sell at 145 before 129. So
repeatedly did his figures prove to be
accurate, and so different did his work
appear from that of any expert whose
methods we had examined, that we set
about to investigate Mr Gann and his way
of figuring out these predictions, as
well as the particular use which he was
making of them in the market.
The results of this investigation are
remarkable in many ways. It appears to
be a fact that Mr Gann has developed an
entirely new idea as to the principles
governing stock market movements. He
bases his operations upon certain
natural laws which, though existing
since the world began, have only in
recent years been subjected to the will
of man and added to the list of
so-called modern discoveries.
We have asked Mr Gann for an outline
of his work, and have secured some
remarkable evidence as to the results
obtained there from. We submit this in
full recognition of the fact that in
Wall Street a man with a new idea, an
idea which violates the traditions and
encourages a scientific view of the
Proposition, is not usually welcomed by
the majority, for the reason that he
stimulates thought and research. These
activities the said majority abhors.
Mr Gann's description of his
experience and methods is given
herewith. It should be read with
recognition of the established fact that
Mr Gann's predictions have proved
correct in a large majority of
instances.
"For the past ten years I have
devoted my entire time and attention to
the speculative markets. Like many
others, I lost thousands of dollars and
experienced the usual ups and downs
incidental to the novice who enters the
market without preparatory knowledge of
the subject.
"I soon began to realise that all
successful men, whether Lawyers, Doctors
or Scientists, devoted years of time to
the study and investigation of their
particular pursuit or profession before
attempting to make any money out of it.
"Being in the Brokerage business
myself and handling large accounts, I
had opportunities seldom afforded the
ordinary man for studying the cause of
success and failure in the speculations
of others. I found that over ninety
percent of the traders who go into the
market without knowledge or study
usually lose in the end.
"I soon began to note the periodical
recurrence of the rise and fall in
stocks and commodities. This led me to
conclude that natural law was the basis
of market movements. I then decided to
devote ten years of my life to the study
of natural law as applicable to the
speculative markets and to devote my
best energies toward making speculation
a profitable profession. After
exhaustive researches and investigations
of the known sciences, I discovered that
the law of vibration enabled me to
accurately determine the exact points at
which stocks or commodities should rise
and fall within a given time. The
working out of this law determines the
cause and predicts the effect long
before the street is aware of either.
Most speculators can testify to the fact
that it is looking at the effect and
ignoring the cause that has produced
their losses.
"It is impossible here to give an
adequate idea of the law of vibrations
as I apply it to the markets. However,
the layman may be able to grasp some of
the principles when I state that the law
of vibration is the fundamental law upon
which wireless telegraphy, wireless
telephone and phonographs are based.
Without the existence of this law the
above inventions would have been
impossible.
"In order to test the efficiency of
my idea I have not only put in years of
labour in the regular way, but I spent
nine months working night and day in the
Astor Library in New York and in the
British Museum of London, going over the
records of stock transactions as far
back as 1820. I have incidentally
examined the manipulations of Jay Gould,
Daniel Drew, Commodore Vanderbilt & all
other important manipulators from that
time to the present day. I have examined
every quotation of Union Pacific prior
to & from the time of E.H. Harriman, Mr
Harriman's was the most masterly. The
figures show that, whether unconsciously
or not, Mr Harriman worked strictly in
accordance with natural law.
"In going over the history of markets
and the great mass of related
statistics, it soon becomes apparent
that certain laws govern the changes and
variations in the value of stocks, and
that there exists a periodic or cyclic
law which is at the back of all these
movements. Observation has shown that
there are regular periods of intense
activity on the Exchange followed by
periods of inactivity. Mr Henry Hall in
his recent book devoted much space to '
Cycles of Prosperity and Depression',
which he found recurring at regular
intervals of time. The law which I have
applied will not only give these long
cycles or swings, but the daily and even
hourly movements of stocks. By knowing
the exact vibration of each
individual*stock I am able to determine
at what point each will receive support
and at what point the greatest
resistance is to be met.
"Those in close touch with the market
have noticed the phenomena of ebb and
flow, or rise and fall, in the value of
stocks. At certain times a*stock will
become intensely active, large
transactions being made in it; at other
times this same stock will become
practically stationary or inactive with
a very small volume of sales. I have
found that the law of vibration governs
and controls these conditions. I have
also found that certain phases of this
law govern the rise in a stock and an
entirely different rule operates on the
decline.
"While Union Pacific and other
railroad stocks which made their high
prices in August were declining, United
States Steel Common was steadily
advancing. The law of vibration was at
work, sending a particular stock on the
upward trend whilst others were trending
downward. "I have found that in the
stock itself exists its harmonic or
inharmonious relationship to the driving
power or force behind it. The secret of
all its activity is therefore apparent.
By my method I can determine the
vibration of each stock and also, by
taking certain time values into
consideration, I can, in the majority of
cases, tell exactly what the stock will
do under given conditions.
"The power to determine the trend of
the market is due to my knowledge of the
characteristics of each individual stock
and a certain grouping of different
stocks under their proper rates of
vibration. Stocks are like electrons,
atoms and molecules, which hold
persistently to their own individuality
in response to the fundamental law of
vibration. Science teaches that 'an
original impulse of any kind finally
resolves itself into a periodic or
rhythmical motion; also, just as the
pendulum returns again in its swing,
just as the moon returns in its orbit,
just as the advancing year over brings
the rose of spring, so do the properties
of the elements periodically recur as
the weight of the atoms rises.'
"From my extensive investigations,
studies and applied tests, I find that
not only do the various stocks vibrate,
but that the driving forces controlling
the stocks are also in a state of
vibration. These vibratory forces can
only be known by the movements they
generate on the stocks and their values
in the market. Since all great swings or
movements of the market are cyclic, they
act in accordance with periodic law.
"Science has laid down the principle
that 'the properties of an element are a
periodic function of its atomic weight'.
A famous scientist has stated that 'we
are brought to the conviction that
diversity in phenomenal nature in its
different kingdoms is most intimately
associated with numerical relationship.
The numbers are not intermixed
accidentally but are subject to regular
periodicity. The changes and
developments are seen to be in many
cases undulatory.' Thus, I affirm every
class of phenomena, whether in nature or
on the*stock*market, must be subject to
the universal law of causation and
harmony. Every effect must have an
adequate cause.
"If we wish to avert failure in
speculation we must deal with causes.
Everything in existence is based on
exact proportion and perfect
relationship. There is no chance in
nature, because mathematical principles
of the highest order lie at the
foundation of all things. Faraday said,
'There is nothing in the universe but
mathematical points of force'.
"Vibration is fundamental : nothing
is exempt from this law. It is
universal, therefore applicable to every
class of phenomena on the globe. Through
the law of vibration every stock in the
market moves in its own distinctive
sphere of activities, as to intensity,
volume and direction; all the essential
qualities of its evolution are
characterised in its own rate of
vibration. Stock, like atoms, are really
centres of energy; therefore, they are
controlled mathematically. Stocks create
their own field of action and power:
power to attract and repel, which
principle explains why certain stocks at
times lead the market and 'turn dead' at
other times. Thus, to speculate
scientifically it is absolutely
necessary to follow natural law. "After
years of patient study I have proven to
my entire satisfaction, as well as
demonstrated to others, that vibration
explains every possible phase and
condition of the market."
In order to substantiate Mr Gann's
claims as to what he has been able to do
under his method, we called upon Mr
William E. Gilley, an Inspector of
Imports, 16 Beaver Street, New York. Mr
Gilley is well known in the downtown
district. He himself has studied
stock*market movements for twenty-five
years, during which time he has examined
every piece of market literature that
has been issued & procurable in Wall
Street. It was he who encouraged Mr Gann
to study the scientific and mathematical
possibilities of the subject. When asked
what had been the most impressive of Mr
Gann's work and predictions, he replied
as follows :
"It is very difficult for me to
remember all the predictions and
operations of Mr Gann which may be
classed as phenomenal, but the following
are a few.
"In 1908 when the Union Pacific was
168-1/8, he told me it would not touch
169 before it had a good break. We sold
it short all the way down to 152-5/8,
covering on the weak spots and putting
it out again on the rallies, securing
twenty-three points profit out of an
eighteen point wave.
"He came to me when United States
Steel was selling around 50, and said,
'This steel will run up to 58 but it
will not sell at 59. From there it
should break 16 points.' We sold it
short around 58 with a stop at 59. The
highest it went was 58. From there it
declined to 41-17 points.
"At another time, wheat was selling
at about 89c. He predicted that the May
option would sell at $1.35. We bought it
and made large profits on the way up. It
actually touched $1.35.
"When Union Pacific was 172, he said
it would go to 184-7/8 but not an eighth
higher until it had a good break. It
went to 184-7/8 and came back from there
eight or nine times. We sold it short
repeatedly, with a stop at 185, and were
never caught. It eventually came back to
17.
"Mr Gann's calculations are based on
natural law. I have followed his work
closely for years. I know that he has a
firm grasp of the basic principles which
govern stock market movements, and I do
not believe any other man can duplicate
the idea or his method at the present
time.
"Early this year, he figured that the
top of the advance would fall on a
certain day in August and calculated the
prices at which the Dow Jones Averages
would then stand. The market culminated
on the exact day and within four-tenths
of one percent of the figures
predicted."
"You and Mr Gann must have cleaned up
considerable money on all these
operations", was suggested.
"Yes, we have made a great deal of
money. He has taken half a million
dollars out of the market in the past
few years. I once saw him take $130, &
in less than one month run it up to over
£12,000. He can compound money faster
than any man I have ever met."
"One of the most astonishing
calculations made by Mr Gann was during
last summer [1909] when he predicted
that September Wheat would sell at
$1.20. This meant that it must touch
that figure before the end of the month
of September. At twelve o'clock, Chicago
time, on September 30th (the last day)
the option was selling below $1.08, and
it looked as though his prediction would
not be fulfilled.
Mr Gann said, 'If it does not touch
$1.20 by the close of the market it will
prove that there is something wrong with
my whole method of calculation. I do not
care what the price is now, it must go
there.' It is common history that
September Wheat surprised the whole
country by selling at $1.20 and no
higher in the very last hour of trading,
closing at that figure."
So much for what Mr Gann has said and
done as evidenced by himself & others.
Now as to what demonstrations have taken
place before our representative :
During the month of October, 1909, in
twenty-five market days, Mr Gann made,
in the presence of our representative,
two hundred and eighty-six transactions
in various stocks, on both the long and
short side of the market. Two hundred
and sixty-four of these transactions
resulted in profits ; twenty-two in
losses.
The capital with which he operated
was doubled ten times, so that at the
end of the month he had one thousand
percent of his original margin. In our
presence Mr Gann sold Steel Common at
86, saying that it would not go to 86.
The lowest it sold was 86-1/8.
We have seen him give in one day
sixteen successive orders in the same
stock, eight of which turned out to be
at either the top or the bottom eighth
of that particular swing. The above we
can positively verify.
Such performances as these, coupled
with the foregoing, are probably
unparalleled in the history of the
Street.
James R. Koene has said, "The man who
is right six times out of ten will make
a fortune." He is a trader who, without
any attempt to make a showing, for he
did not know the results were to be
published, established a record of over
ninety-two percent profitable trades.
Mr Gann has refused to disclose his
method at any price, but to those
scientifically inclined he has
unquestionably added to the stock of
Wall Street knowledge and pointed out
infinite possibilities.
We have requested Mr Gann to figure
out for the readers of the Ticker a few
of the most striking indications which
appear in his calculations. In
presenting these we wish it understood
that no man, in or out of Wall Street,
is infallible.
Mr Gann's figures at present indicate
that the trend of the stock market
should, barring the usual rallies, be
toward the lower prices until March or
April 1910. He calculates that May
Wheat, which is now selling at $1.02,
should not sell below 99c, and should
sell at $1.45 next spring. On Cotton,
which is now at about 15c level, he
estimates that after a good reaction
from these prices the commodity should
reach 18c in the spring of 1910. He
looks for a corner in the March or May
option.
Whether these figures prove correct
or not will in no way detract from the
record which Mr Gann has already
established.
Mr Gann was born in Lufkin, Texas,
and is thirty-one years of age. He is a
gifted mathematician, has an
extraordinary memory for figures, and is
an expert Tape Reader. Take away his
science and he would beat the market on
his intuitive tape reading alone.
Endowed as he is with such qualities,
we have no hesitation in predicting
that, within a comparatively few years,
William D. Gann will receive recognition
as one of Wall Street's leading
operators.
Article Ends
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