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Elliott Wave Analysis Of The NSE 20
Rank: Elder Joined: 10/11/2006 Posts: 2,304
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Spikes wrote:mnandii wrote:heri wrote:mnandii wrote: Safaricom. Circle wave ((iii)) ended at about 30.00. Expecting a correction for circle wave ((iv)) to level targets 24.80s and 23.00s . Thereafter a move above 30.00s to complete circle wave ((v)). Can you do one for NIC Bank please Will look into it, though from my previous investigation only Safcom and the NSE 20 Share index were showing clear Elliott Wave patterns. @ Mnandii how can you explain the assertion by @ Angelina-Ann that Safaricom for the last six years has never obeyed charts (Elliot Wave) The structure of ALL financial markets follow the Elliott Waves. Elliott Waves can explain fundamentals but not the other way round. Conventional thinkers waste time building shelters when they are unnecessary and then have no shelters when they need them the most. Socionomists do the opposite.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/11/2006 Posts: 2,304
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mnandii wrote: Safaricom. Circle wave ((iii)) ended at about 30.00. Expecting a correction for circle wave ((iv)) to level targets 24.80s and 23.00s . Thereafter a move above 30.00s to complete circle wave ((v)). Quote:The Safaricom share that has recently hit highs of Sh30 at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) retains a double-digit percentage upside on the back of expected revenue growth from mobile money and data, analysts at ABC Capital say in a new note.
The investment bank estimates a forward fair value price of up to Sh35 for the stock, which at a price of Sh29 last week would represent a premium of 20.7 per cent.
ABC estimates that by 2020, M-Pesa could rise above voice to be the largest source of revenue for the telco, whose net profit for the six months ended September 2017 grew by 9.5 per cent to Sh26.2 billion. BD LINKThese out of the world projections always come near the end of major bull markets. Strong projections for Safcom are now happening just when it is about to face a major bear market since its listing. Conventional thinkers waste time building shelters when they are unnecessary and then have no shelters when they need them the most. Socionomists do the opposite.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/11/2006 Posts: 2,304
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mnandii wrote: Pp 164 Quote:... Monopoly priviledges stifle innovation, so when monopoly power is removed, an industry is allowed to develop. In contrast, upon every single antitrust action against successful non-monopoly corporations (read Safaricom), innovation did (does) not immediately burst forth. The reason is that each of these successful companies, in a climate of free competition, was precisely the one responsible for the immense innovation (e.g. Mpesa, introduction of High Speed Mobile internet) that had already occurred. These disparate results confirm the difference between the two types of entities.
We can now see that the principle behind the government's actions with respect to these disparate entities is the same: At tops, the government initiates force to stifle free competition and success ( attacks on Safaricom on alleged dominance); at bottoms, it removes force that has stifled free competition and success. This latter impetus takes two forms: withdrawing antitrust actions against successful non-monopoly companies and dissolving actual monopolies. With this knowledge, we again have the ability to do some limited probabilistic forecasting both in terms of predicting actions against monopolies and predicting major social mood changes when those actions occur Thus, if Safaricom survives the bear market, we should expect governmental attacks against it to reduce as social mood once again turns positive (i.e when the NSE 20 Share Index bottoms and starts the leg up, and if by then it will not have been broken up as intended by the gov., then the impetus to break it up will dissolve). On the other hand as the bear market probes a bottom, we should expect monopolies such as Posta and Kenya Power to be broken up and new entrants to compete directly with them. Post #1034 October 2015. Conventional thinkers waste time building shelters when they are unnecessary and then have no shelters when they need them the most. Socionomists do the opposite.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/4/2009 Posts: 10,808 Location: NAIROBI
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mnandii wrote:mnandii wrote: Safaricom. Circle wave ((iii)) ended at about 30.00. Expecting a correction for circle wave ((iv)) to level targets 24.80s and 23.00s . Thereafter a move above 30.00s to complete circle wave ((v)). Quote:The Safaricom share that has recently hit highs of Sh30 at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) retains a double-digit percentage upside on the back of expected revenue growth from mobile money and data, analysts at ABC Capital say in a new note.
The investment bank estimates a forward fair value price of up to Sh35 for the stock, which at a price of Sh29 last week would represent a premium of 20.7 per cent.
ABC estimates that by 2020, M-Pesa could rise above voice to be the largest source of revenue for the telco, whose net profit for the six months ended September 2017 grew by 9.5 per cent to Sh26.2 billion. BD LINKThese out of the world projections always come near the end of major bull markets. Strong projections for Safcom are now happening just when it is about to face a major bear market since its listing. Someone is being paid to prop up the share price Wealth is built through a relatively simple equation Wealth=Income + Investments - Lifestyle
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/4/2009 Posts: 10,808 Location: NAIROBI
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mnandii wrote:mnandii wrote: Pp 164 Quote:... Monopoly priviledges stifle innovation, so when monopoly power is removed, an industry is allowed to develop. In contrast, upon every single antitrust action against successful non-monopoly corporations (read Safaricom), innovation did (does) not immediately burst forth. The reason is that each of these successful companies, in a climate of free competition, was precisely the one responsible for the immense innovation (e.g. Mpesa, introduction of High Speed Mobile internet) that had already occurred. These disparate results confirm the difference between the two types of entities.
We can now see that the principle behind the government's actions with respect to these disparate entities is the same: At tops, the government initiates force to stifle free competition and success ( attacks on Safaricom on alleged dominance); at bottoms, it removes force that has stifled free competition and success. This latter impetus takes two forms: withdrawing antitrust actions against successful non-monopoly companies and dissolving actual monopolies. With this knowledge, we again have the ability to do some limited probabilistic forecasting both in terms of predicting actions against monopolies and predicting major social mood changes when those actions occur Thus, if Safaricom survives the bear market, we should expect governmental attacks against it to reduce as social mood once again turns positive (i.e when the NSE 20 Share Index bottoms and starts the leg up, and if by then it will not have been broken up as intended by the gov., then the impetus to break it up will dissolve). On the other hand as the bear market probes a bottom, we should expect monopolies such as Posta and Kenya Power to be broken up and new entrants to compete directly with them. Kenya power can't be broken up under Arap Mashamba's watch Post #1034 October 2015. Wealth is built through a relatively simple equation Wealth=Income + Investments - Lifestyle
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Rank: Member Joined: 4/21/2015 Posts: 151
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Ericsson wrote:mnandii wrote:mnandii wrote: Safaricom. Circle wave ((iii)) ended at about 30.00. Expecting a correction for circle wave ((iv)) to level targets 24.80s and 23.00s . Thereafter a move above 30.00s to complete circle wave ((v)). Quote:The Safaricom share that has recently hit highs of Sh30 at the Nairobi Securities Exchange (NSE) retains a double-digit percentage upside on the back of expected revenue growth from mobile money and data, analysts at ABC Capital say in a new note.
The investment bank estimates a forward fair value price of up to Sh35 for the stock, which at a price of Sh29 last week would represent a premium of 20.7 per cent.
ABC estimates that by 2020, M-Pesa could rise above voice to be the largest source of revenue for the telco, whose net profit for the six months ended September 2017 grew by 9.5 per cent to Sh26.2 billion. BD LINKThese out of the world projections always come near the end of major bull markets. Strong projections for Safcom are now happening just when it is about to face a major bear market since its listing. Someone is being paid to prop up the share price If that is true, i hope they do a great job. I too would like to be paid
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/21/2010 Posts: 6,194 Location: nairobi
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Banks helped pulling down the index,should the cap be halted I forsee the same banks lifting the index I don't know whether this theories factor this unforseen happenings...so far bank shares are warming up to a rally "Don't let the fear of losing be greater than the excitement of winning."
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/11/2006 Posts: 2,304
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Stocks & Sex: People Conceive Fewer Children Before Economy ContractsQuote:You might expect that the crunch of a recession would lead people to put off having kids. It sounds obvious, and conventional wisdom would be on your side. But you’d be wrong.
The truth is that people begin to conceive fewer children before major economic contractions. That relationship is counterintuitive, yet it is exactly what my colleague Robert Prechter suspected he would find 19 years ago when he charted data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and Dow Jones & Co. going all the way back to 1908.
Prechter observed that conceptions tended to rise and fall with the stock market. Like the stock market, they are a leading economic indicator, sounding the alarm well before the economy contracts.
Like the NBER team, Prechter recognized the economic implications of his research, writing in 1999, “the trends of the economy lag trends in both the stock market and procreation.” But why is that the case? Prechter’s socionomic theory, which motivated his research, provides an answer.
The theory proposes that trends in social mood regulate trends in social behavior, including those in conceptions, the stock market and economic growth. A positive mood prompts feelings of friskiness, daring and confidence, inspiring people in the aggregate to have more children, to send stock prices higher and to become more productive economically. A negative mood prompts feelings of somberness, defensiveness and fear, inspiring people in the aggregate to have fewer children, to send stock prices lower and to become less productive economically. Because people generally can express their friskiness in their trading accounts and in bed sooner than they can expand or contract business, trends in stocks and conceptions tend to lead trends in the economy.
Stocks And SEXConventional thinkers waste time building shelters when they are unnecessary and then have no shelters when they need them the most. Socionomists do the opposite.
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/11/2012 Posts: 5,222
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mnandii wrote:Stocks & Sex: People Conceive Fewer Children Before Economy ContractsQuote:You might expect that the crunch of a recession would lead people to put off having kids. It sounds obvious, and conventional wisdom would be on your side. But you’d be wrong.
The truth is that people begin to conceive fewer children before major economic contractions. That relationship is counterintuitive, yet it is exactly what my colleague Robert Prechter suspected he would find 19 years ago when he charted data from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and Dow Jones & Co. going all the way back to 1908.
Prechter observed that conceptions tended to rise and fall with the stock market. Like the stock market, they are a leading economic indicator, sounding the alarm well before the economy contracts.
Like the NBER team, Prechter recognized the economic implications of his research, writing in 1999, “the trends of the economy lag trends in both the stock market and procreation.” But why is that the case? Prechter’s socionomic theory, which motivated his research, provides an answer.
The theory proposes that trends in social mood regulate trends in social behavior, including those in conceptions, the stock market and economic growth. A positive mood prompts feelings of friskiness, daring and confidence, inspiring people in the aggregate to have more children, to send stock prices higher and to become more productive economically. A negative mood prompts feelings of somberness, defensiveness and fear, inspiring people in the aggregate to have fewer children, to send stock prices lower and to become less productive economically. Because people generally can express their friskiness in their trading accounts and in bed sooner than they can expand or contract business, trends in stocks and conceptions tend to lead trends in the economy.
Stocks And SEX On a Sunday?  We can only begin to guess what you've been upto today
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Rank: Elder Joined: 10/11/2006 Posts: 2,304
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mnandii wrote:Markets crash not because people think it will do so but because they become certain that it will not. Conventional thinkers waste time building shelters when they are unnecessary and then have no shelters when they need them the most. Socionomists do the opposite.
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Elliott Wave Analysis Of The NSE 20
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