Welcome to JYE Financial, the parent company of BullishMoney.com and the BullishMoney YouTube channel!
We specialize in advanced business analytics to provide you with cutting-edge investment research previously only available from so-called "quant funds" or elitist Wall Street institutions. Additionally, we provide truly independent insights into social and political infrastructures that so often affects the broader economy, and in turn, our everyday lives.
BullishMoney.com | Business Media for the 21st Century
We specialize in advanced business analytics to provide you with cutting-edge investment research previously only available from so-called "quant funds" or elitist Wall Street institutions. Additionally, we provide truly independent insights into social and political infrastructures that so often affects the broader economy, and in turn, our everyday lives.
BullishMoney.com | Business Media for the 21st Century
How Important is the Dow Jones Death Cross?
The history of the Dow Jones illustrates that we ignore 'death cross' signals at our own financial peril

Brian Sullivan of CNBC fame is clearly not a believer.
In his Power Lunch segment, the usually agreeable on-air personality mockingly referred to the dreaded death cross in the Dow Jones Industrial Average as a “life cross” instead.
I wouldn’t be so quick to agree.
From a pure numbers perspective, a death cross occurs when the index’s shorter-term, 50-day moving average drops below its longer-term equivalent, the 200-day MA. Theoretically, the Dow Jones death cross forewarns volatility, but to Mr. Sullivan’s point, the harbinger was denied the last two times the cross was flashed.
To be fair, the CNBC anchor was only looking at data going back to 2010 — hardly enough information to establish statistical accuracy considering that the Dow Jones death cross is in fact a very rare phenomenon. Since Sept. 9, 1901, until the most recent occurrence on Aug. 11 of this year, the 50-day MA crossed below the 200-day a total of only 81 times.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
In his Power Lunch segment, the usually agreeable on-air personality mockingly referred to the dreaded death cross in the Dow Jones Industrial Average as a “life cross” instead.
I wouldn’t be so quick to agree.
From a pure numbers perspective, a death cross occurs when the index’s shorter-term, 50-day moving average drops below its longer-term equivalent, the 200-day MA. Theoretically, the Dow Jones death cross forewarns volatility, but to Mr. Sullivan’s point, the harbinger was denied the last two times the cross was flashed.
To be fair, the CNBC anchor was only looking at data going back to 2010 — hardly enough information to establish statistical accuracy considering that the Dow Jones death cross is in fact a very rare phenomenon. Since Sept. 9, 1901, until the most recent occurrence on Aug. 11 of this year, the 50-day MA crossed below the 200-day a total of only 81 times.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
Top 5 Reasons To Fear A Stock Market Collapse
Don't wait before it's too late to take defensive action against a possible stock market collapse!
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#BullishMoney #MarketCollapse
With poor results from the September 2015 Jobs Report, investors are fundamentally concerned about a potential stock market crash in the Dow Jones. Here are my top 5 reasons why the stock market could collapse soon -- see if you agree/disagree, and please share this important and relevant video with those you care about! |
Exposed: Gold Market Dynamics
Revealing info on gold prices and equity valuations
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Gold prices have generally declined against equity markets, leaving many investors confused -- gold prices typically trade inverse to stocks. However, there is a missing piece in the gold prices puzzle that answers this critical question!
A MUST WATCH video for anyone interested in gold prices and the gold market! |
Why You Should Still Fear the Dow’s Unprecedented Death Cross
Don't be fooled by Tuesday's action: this is no mere market correction

How do you like the death cross “voodoo” now? Just a week prior to the current market correction, Wall Street analysts were dismissing the bearish implications of the death cross harbinger — a technical condition where the Dow Jones Industrial Average‘s nearer-term cumulative average dips below the longer-term average — as pure nonsense.
At first, there was very little evidence of a market correction. But as traders began absorbing incoming economic data, what started off as a minor selloff exploded into a full-blown pandemic.
Unfortunately, the blood bath in the global markets appears to have caused brain damage among financial media outlets.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
At first, there was very little evidence of a market correction. But as traders began absorbing incoming economic data, what started off as a minor selloff exploded into a full-blown pandemic.
Unfortunately, the blood bath in the global markets appears to have caused brain damage among financial media outlets.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
21st Century Fox: An Unfantastic Summer Spells Doom for FOXA
Fantastic Four's poor debut could be the needle that breaks Fox's back

For some, summer is all about the three “B’s” — booze, bikinis and blockbusters. While the former pair were on full display across America’s sandy beaches, 21st Century Fox (FOXA) forgot to bring blockbusters to the party.
The ballyhooed Fantastic Four reboot (essentially 21st Century Fox’s answer to Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation) fell flat on its opening weekend against both revenue forecasts and critical reception.
Fantastic Four was supposed to bring in $40 million on its opening weekend, but instead had to settle for $26.2 million, ranking it among the lowest debuts for a major studio superhero production.
Widely blasted by critics, 21st Century Fox also suffered the ignominy of a grass-roots campaign urging the sale of the franchise back to Disney’s (DIS) Marvel. Rumors have Fox potentially scrapping a sequel.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
The ballyhooed Fantastic Four reboot (essentially 21st Century Fox’s answer to Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation) fell flat on its opening weekend against both revenue forecasts and critical reception.
Fantastic Four was supposed to bring in $40 million on its opening weekend, but instead had to settle for $26.2 million, ranking it among the lowest debuts for a major studio superhero production.
Widely blasted by critics, 21st Century Fox also suffered the ignominy of a grass-roots campaign urging the sale of the franchise back to Disney’s (DIS) Marvel. Rumors have Fox potentially scrapping a sequel.
Read more at InvestorPlace.com!
Ghosts of 1937
Lessons from the Dow Jones' Long Lost Era
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Critical lessons from 1937 that apply to the present Dow Jones Death Cross collapse. While often overlooked as a historical barometer in favor of paradigm shattering events like Black Tuesday of 1929, the year of 1937 most closely aligns with what we are experiencing in the Dow Jones today.
A MUST WATCH video! |
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