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The following is an explanation recently published in the Moore Research Center Report which
explains the use of our correlation charts. Any questions regarding these charts can be
directed to Research Director Nick Colley or
Editor-in-Chief Jerry Toepke.
The charts published on the Internet illustrate the results of running regression analyses to
determine the behavior of which past contracts that of the current contract most closely
resembles. This pattern correlation is just that. A comparison of the price pattern in the
current contract to patterns exhibited by that contract historically.
The theory underlying this analysis of analogous years, or analogous contracts, is that a market
which closely follows the trading pattern of a previous year(s) may continue (to one degree or
another) to do so because similar fundamental conditions may exist. Thus, the analysis, which
is a refinement of seasonal analysis, becomes a search for results with a predictive quality.
This type of analysis lends itself to various applications. For instance, one can compare
previous years in which crops were short or those in which the stock market was lower in
February than in January.
For each market past contracts whose trading patterns correlate at a minimum of 80% with the
current contract are listed in the title with their respective rates. The chart itself consists
of the current market (solid-line) overlaid on the composite (dotted-line) of past years listed.
The n-day correlation window is the time segment compared.
Can contracts with similar supply/demand fundamentals exhibit similar price behavior? If so,
can that pattern project future direction?
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