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Financial philosopher P.Q. Wall was born July 22, 1931 in Sioux Falls, South Dakota where his father was District Attorney for six years and Circuit Court Judge for eighteen. By the time P.Q. left for college in September 1949 he was already absorbed "in the humorous and ironic aspect of cycles, by which nature rules society in ways deemed impossible by scientific dogma."
After graduating from New York University he stayed in New York for seventeen years, at the end of which he was running a small life insurance company (Zurich Life) and had also steeped himself in philosophy, searching for what he calls "the roots of world motive."

While P.Q. cannot find enough good words to say for thinkers like Aristotle, Berkeley, Confucius, Hegel, Kant, Lao Tse, and Schopenhauer, he feels that Heraclitus, Nietzsche and Spengler had the deepest grasp. Of economic philosophers in this century only Kondratieff, with Schumpeter and some others of the Austrian school, are valid in P.Q.'s eyes. "Since philosophic depth is an art rather than a science, it is ever for the few. Beyond Heraclitus there can be no progress, only difference, just as poetry cannot surpass but at best equal Shakespeare."
Seeking new horizons he brought his now extensive family to Denver where his notions of destiny led him to look for patterns of "world motive" in the market.

In 1980 P.Q. married Denver beauty Ellen Toppel, by whom he had the last two of his nine sons, and with her massive encouragement he began his early market letters.
These early letters were metaphysical extravaganzas in which he heaped ridicule on the "linear, literal minds of the B.B.F.'s (bullishly biased fundamentalists)." He insisted that "world wide supply and demand is a six hundred pound gorilla who sleeps wherever he wants to, after suitable snacks on pipe-puffing econ. profs. I track his rhythmic exertions while others follow the pious announcements of solemn human figureheads, as fraudulent as they are impotent."
The eccentric letter had scant commercial value for all of its market genius, but it did lead to the post of Chief Technical Analyst with a N.Y.S.E. firm, which gamely continued his letter.
After this, a strange twist of fate brought the unexpected—sudden, total blindness. The market letter was abandoned during a series of drastic operations, failures early on, but later restoring his vision dramatically to 20/20. As "Ellie" stuck by him through thick and thin he took this idle time to investigate and ponder quantum physics, Sheldrake's "morphogenetic fields" in biology and other neglected scientific corners that shed light on the preponderance of "world motive" in human affairs.

Subsequently invited to co-manage fifty-five million dollars by a sympathetic local money manager, P.Q. used all his spare time to set down his ideas. Eventually a highly qualified economist and trained econometric forecaster, Father James Richard, Ph.D. of Regis College, Denver, was intrigued enough to meet P.Q. and check out these unbelievable documented forecasts. "Father Jim" eventually took a six months' sabbatical from his duties just to study with P.Q. His initial skepticism turned to deep friendship, praise of the ability, and defense of the reality of P.Q.'s predictive power.

In 1987 the questions put to P.Q. by Kurt Holzkamp, a brilliant student interning with him, gave rise to a book, Magic is Real. That which underlies history and economics is explored, twelve unconscious contraries expressed by the ancient Europeans as the runes. This book is one of P.Q.'s two major works. The other, Destiny is Real, was completed in 1998.
Still seeking a publisher, the book with its corollary video are available directly from P.Q. for $59.

In the fall of 1988 Ellen persuaded her husband to begin a new, more clearly written letter in which to set forth his well known forecasting, the P.Q. Wall Forecast. With the accuracy of his cycle studies now overwhelmingly apparent, P.Q. and "Ellie" stepped at last into the public limelight.

Is there a secret to market timing?

"Nobody sees the future," sees P.Q., "but some professional forecasters are better guessers because they are better assessors of probabilities. They practice an art, not a science, hence only a handful do valid work.

"Technical tools are not as reliable as scientific theorems. Their chief value is that when all are used together the reconciliation may open doors and windows into the problems so that one's right-brained intuition may enter and grasp the essence."


As for the judgement of well-known market professionals, P.Q.'s first big ad quoted quite a number of them (see ad back page).

P.Q. taught investment analysis at both Regis and Metro State College in Denver, both at the senior and the M.B.A. level. This was probably the only course offered in the United States in which nature, not man, was represented as controlling history and economics. The course was overwhelmingly popular, and in great demand.

In 1992 P.Q. moved to New Orleans, succumbing to a lifelong yearning for Dixieland jazz and the Southern life-style and because "New Orleans has more sheer poetry than any other place in this country." He is currently at work on his third book, "Motive is Real: A Theory of Self-Organizing Forms.*


The Mystery Lies Within.....

The mystery arises when orderly patterns like channels, domes, bowls, sideways triangles and so forth not only appear on financial charts but often persist stubbornly until the moving price breaks out of them. On long term charts this persistence can mean years or decades.

In short, the market does not appear as a random reaction to news although the academic world believes it must be. Trends in public emotion rule, quite obviously bending and warping fluctuations in an emotional field resembling a gravitational field, electromagnetic field, etc. At any given time persistent patterns can display wild deviations from financial reality.

How nature secretly rules the human race through emotional time waves (cycles) and emotional price compartments (trading boxes) is a study of tides in world emotion, the deeper forces behind probabilities that allow the possessor of exceptional pattern recognition to trade profitably or to predict far better than chance. These patterns do not repeat rigidly like material waves, but vary from precise repetition in the manner of living, organic forms.

This mystery arises from mysteries deeper yet as reading further will inform you.

-P.Q. Wall