What Are Fractals?


Fractals are mathematical expressions of a hidden order invisible to the naked eye and traditional statistical analysis. They look random, but their hidden order makes them predictable when analyzed correctly. Even more interesting, they adapt based on feedback from their environment, just as markets do. Natural shapes like the snow flake, lightning, blood vessels, and mountain ranges are examples of fractals.

The term “fractal” was coined by mathematician Mandelbrot in 1975, but fractals per se were discovered in the 12th century by Leonardo Pisano.

Revealing The Hidden Order In The Markets

Why was The Geiger Index able to pinpoint these trades at just the right moment when the rest of the market was looking the other way?

Think of it this way: Galileo famously wrote that “nature speaks the language of mathematics.” That’s why scientists use math to describe and predict nature’s workings.

What I discovered was… the financial markets “speak” the language of fractals.

That’s why The Geiger Index, using fractals, can predict market movements precisely as far out as two years.

The Geiger Index reveals the market’s “hidden order” …an order invisible to traditional analytical methods or normal investing methods.

This foreknowledge gives me the ability me to pinpoint high-probability trades in any market around the world.

What kind of probability? My predictions have up to a 95% confidence level.

A 95% Edge… Makes and Saves Fortunes

Every Loss Costs $2.1 Billion

With $2.1 billion at stake every time the B-2 takes off, the fractal-based flight surface technology MUST work EVERY time. Not losing money is just as important to your financial welfare. The Geiger Index’s accuracy rating (up to 95%) makes that possible.

In the current choppy market, this foreknowledge has been the key to my perfect 20 out of 20 winning record – an unheard of scorecard for one full year.

But avoiding all losses for an entire year has been just as important, if not more so.  It’s saved my subscribers untold sums… and put us in a position to make serious money.

While the vast majority of investors are now busy making back money they lost, Geiger readers are focused on making more money than they had before the crash.  They don’t have to spend time (or risk more) making up lost ground.  They’re moving forward.

That’s why I say that saving a fortune and making a fortune are just about the same thing.

Just take a look at the chart titled “Saving 50% = 100% Gain”.

Any trader worth his salt wakes up every morning asking, “How can I avoid losing money today?” Most investors are “gains chasers.” But the real money comes when you avoid the losses.

The only difference is, The Geiger Index lets me nail it down to the day and penny!

Saving 50% = Gaining 100%

Here’s the bottom line: It’s much easier to make money than to make back money. As you can see, it takes a 100% gain to make back a 50% loss. And here’s the other thing: avoiding a loss involves none of the risk of trying to make a 100% gain.

For example, back in 2007, when the rest of the world was “long” the S&P 500, The Geiger Index said, “go short.” So I recommended a bear fund which, predictably, shot up 52.43% in very short order.

Moving to 2008, here are examples you might recognize…

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