WD Gann was one of the more famous investors whose work at first seemed to be centred on numerology. Looking into his books further, such as The Tunnel Thru the Air or The Magic Word, it becomes apparent that planetary cycles and relationships form the basis of his work.

Before computers, this research would have taken hundreds if not thousands of hours - a life time! In modern times computer software has aided the task, although this cannot only be prohibitively expensive, for many, but also complex to use. 

With computer software, stockmarket data is also required. Again, at considerable expense, from a data provider or requiring the skill and time to prepare from other online sources.

Using our Aspectarian files, which can be viewed in a browser or downloaded into a secure app for PC or mobile (iOS and android) and many other platforms you can instantly look through decades of data - in fact 130 years!

As they say, a picture paints a thousand words - you can instantly see important planetary relationships considered negative (45, 90 or 180 degrees) colour coded in shades of red, or those considered positive (30, 60 or 120 degrees) in shades of green. Conjunctions are shown in cream.

Either scroll through the Aspectarian files to find important relationships and then look to stock market charts. Or, look for important dates in the stock market (highs, lows etc), and look up the dates in the Aspectarian files to see if any significant planetary relationships had occurred around that time.

For individuals not familiar with reading Ephemeris files, this time consuming and complex work has become available to everyone.

Understanding that some people will want to research back further than others, and indeed not all data is available back to 1900, we have broken the Aspectarian files into approximately 30 year periods for older data. More recent data is in approximately 10 year files.

Geocentric planet relationships (looking from the earth) which are most often used in this type of research, go back to 1900.

Heliocentric planet relationships (looking from the Sun) are in our 2020-2030 Aspectarian file.