When the stock market closed on Black Thursday, October 29, 1929, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 230.07.
When the stock market closed on July 8, 1932, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was 41.22. That would be the equivalent of if the DJIA falls in the next couple of years to about 1750. (Don't worry; that is not in the stars!) July 8, 1932 not only marked the stock market's lowest point during the Great Depression, it also marked the lowest point of the US stock market for the entire 20th century. It was never that low in the preceding 32 years or the following 78 years. That makes the day historic.
In our earlier lesson on heliocentric astrology, we provided you with the heliocentric chart for July 7, 1932, just one day before. (Please recall the 24-Hour Rule from our last lesson explaining that planetary alignments often have their strongest manifestations the day before or the day after the actual exactness of the alignments.) Below, we give you the geocentric chart for that day together with the heliocentric chart.
Because the day was historic, it is likely to have the Historic Aspect, which it did.
What should we learn from all of this? Our main point it that when you are using the stars to make forecasts about the stock markets, keep in mind that a truly historic crash is unlikely unless there is an Historic Aspect in either the geocentric or heliocentric skies.
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