Review
As outlined in last week’s column, market volatility certainly did NOT let up this week. Markets that were particularly volatile were the stock market and metals. Both stocks and Gold rallied strongly on Monday and Tuesday before falling sharply on Wednesday following a hotter-than-anticipated CPI number. However, by the end of the day, both were back to nearly unchanged. The difference is how they ended the week. Stocks continued to build on Wednesday’s recovery and rallied right into Friday’s close. On the other hand, gold crashed and burned, falling over $74 from its early Friday morning high. Silver was even more dramatic, climbing over 4.5% on Friday to a new multi-month high, only to give it all back and settle lower on the day. Even Copper put in a massive bearish outside daily reversal lower.
Across the pond, the German DAX and London FTSE made new all-time highs again, but they were still unconfirmed by the Amsterdam AEX. In Asia, the Hang Seng and Shanghai SSE continued their bullish trends with the Nikkei also having a positive week. The NIFTY was the holdout with a lower weekly close.
In other markets, Bitcoin and Ethereum were range bound not providing much insight on direction. Crude Oil dropped a new weekly low of 70.22. This is now the 4th week of decline off of the January 15 top and into the time band for a possible low. The real winner of this volatile and chaotic week might be the Wheat market. Wheat posted over a 4% gain on Friday alone. It also closed back above the $6 level for the first time since October of last year. After being in a bear market for over two years, the grains might just be returning to vogue.
Short-term geocosmics
The skies are relatively quiet this upcoming week after a volatile week involving Mercury and a Full Moon in T-squares to Uranus. That is until next weekend, when the first leg of this “retrograde chaos” period comes to an end, with Mars turning back direct on February 23. But the marathon continues with the baton quickly being passed to Venus, who starts her retrograde motion on March 1. One market I will be paying close attention to is Gold during this time. Depending on whether last week was a primary cycle crest or not in Gold, we could be making an important high or low in this time period. However, Gold isn’t the only market that could have a reversal. Venus affects many markets, including financials, currencies, and soybeans. Any of these markets are candidates for a reversal within 10 days of March 1.
Long-term geocosmics
Clearly, if Elon Musk really cuts US$2tn from the federal budget, that will reduce funding pressures considerably. The initial market impact would likely be a big rally in Treasury bonds and a rally in the US dollar. But there also would be a severe deflationary shock for the real economy, which, in the first instance, would surely be negative for equities.
—Chris Wood, “Why The Failure of DOGE Is Our Base Case,”, The Grizzle Research and Quant Report, [email protected], February 11, 2025.
The Department of Government Efficiency, or “DOGE” for short, has become a hot topic in recent weeks. Elon Musk and his team have been unearthing frivolous, wasteful, and corrupt spending in various departments of the US government. Some of the line items being reported are indeed quite shocking. However, it wasn’t until Musk and his team invaded the US Treasury that the gloves started to come off. Personally, I find what Musk and DOGE are doing to be refreshing and, quite frankly, necessary. Why shouldn’t a government with the power to audit its citizens not be held to the same standard? Having said that, I can appreciate the concerns and arguments being put forth over how it is being done and by whom.
This theme of government accountability, waste, and corruption seems to take hold in certain Western economies, starting with Argentina’s Milei and his “chainsaw” and now the United States with DOGE. This is happening as Neptune moves ever closer to leaving its ruling sign of Pisces and into a conjunction with Saturn at 0 degrees Aries in February 2026 (they will come within a degree of exactness this summer). The time surrounding this event has been referred to as the “Aries Vortex” by this column’s regular author, Ray Merriman. As an admitted “armchair astrologer,” this makes sense to me on a very basic level. Neptune can be deceptive, secretive, hidden, and filled with propaganda. Saturn is all about accountability and responsibility, a disciplined taskmaster, and a purveyor of justice. It seems Neptune’s veil of deceptive secrets is being lifted as it leaves Pisces, and Saturn’s “rubber meets the road” characteristics are taking over.
However, as Jupiter enters the fray by forming a square with both Saturn and Neptune this summer, we have to be able to accept the potential consequences of this proverbial “squaring up of the financial books.” The government is the largest employer in the United States. Making it more “efficient” likely means a lot of public sector workers could find themselves out of a job. In fact, layoffs and employee buyouts are already transpiring in certain government departments. Also, unless these expenditures deemed “wasteful” or “unnecessary” by DOGE are redirected to meaningful uses in the economy, they could become a strong deflationary force to be reckoned with. How will the stock market respond to rising unemployment and potentially less liquidity in the financial system? We may have our answer to this soon as we are due for a sharp decline to a three-year low in the stock market this year. This possibility is something Ray will be covering in this weekend’s Annual Forecast Webinar (see below).
The coming Saturn/Neptune conjunction also has a strong correlation to droughts over major grain-producing regions of the world. Needless to say, a severe supply-reducing event like a drought can have a very positive influence on grain prices. This script may be playing out now that long-term lows for the grain markets look to have formed back in August 2024.
Disclaimer and statement of purpose: The purpose of this column is not to predict the future movement of various financial markets. However, that is the purpose of the MMA (Merriman Market Analyst) subscription services. This column is not a subscription service. It is a free service, except in those cases where a fee may be assessed to cover the cost of translating this column from English into a non-English language. This weekly report is written with the intent to educate the reader on the relationship between astrological factors and collective human activities as they are happening. In this regard, this report will oftentimes report what happened in various stock and financial markets throughout the world in the past week, and discuss that movement in light of the geocosmic signatures that were in effect. It will then identify the geocosmic factors that will be in effect in the next week, or even month, or even years, and the author’s understanding of how these signatures will likely affect human activity in the times to come. The author (Merriman) will do this from a perspective of a cycles’ analyst looking at the military, political, economic, and even financial markets of the world. It is possible that some forecasts will be made based on these factors. However, the primary goal is to both educate and alert the reader as to the psychological climate we are in, from an astrological perspective. The hope is that it will help the reader understand the psychological dynamics that underlie (or coincide with) the news events and hence financial markets of the day. No guarantee as to the accuracy of this report is being made here. Any decisions in financial markets are solely the responsibility of the reader, and neither the author nor the publishers assume any responsibility at all for those individual decisions. Reader should understand that futures and options trading are considered high risk.
Recommended Content
Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD stays defensive below 1.0500 amid light trading
EUR/USD struggles to capitalize on recent upside and oscillates in a narrow range below 1.0500 in European trading on Monday. However, the pair's downside remains cushioned by persistent US Dollar weakness and an upbeat mood. Focus shifts to central bank talks.

GBP/USD ranges near 1.2600 as US Dollar steadies
GBP/USD keeps its range near 1.2600 in the early European session on Monday. The pair stays support amid a subdued US Dollar price action following Friday's disappoining US Retail Sales data. Thin trading is likely to extend as US markets are closed in observance of Presidents' Day.

Gold: Bulls have the upper hand near $2,900 amid trade war fears and weaker USD
Gold regained positive traction on Monday amid sustained USD weakness. Concerns about Trump’s tariffs further benefit the safe-haven XAU/USD pair. The fundamental and technical setup underpin prospects for additional gains.

Five fundamentals for the week: Peace talks, Fed minutes and German election stand out Premium
US President Donald Trump remains prominent, especially in a week when high-level peace talks kick off. Nevertheless, the Commander-in-Chief competes with the world's most powerful central bank, and other events are of interest as well.

Tariffs likely to impart a modest stagflationary hit to the economy this year
The economic policies of the Trump administration are starting to take shape. President Trump has already announced the imposition of tariffs on some of America's trading partners, and we assume there will be more levies, which will be matched by foreign retaliation, in the coming quarters.

The Best Brokers of the Year
SPONSORED Explore top-quality choices worldwide and locally. Compare key features like spreads, leverage, and platforms. Find the right broker for your needs, whether trading CFDs, Forex pairs like EUR/USD, or commodities like Gold.