Welcome.  The stock market game plays at Moody Field.
The field hosts tags representing groups of stocks. Tags run around between zero and one hundred, changing trend as they go. There are thirty-one unique and free-moving tags on the field.
The aggregated and individual positions and trends of the tags provide insight into current market sentiment conditions.
Analysts today study charts, economic surveys, analogs to similar assets, and comparison with earlier times. Links to the best analysts are at the bottom of this page.
An addition to the community, Moody Field has a new way to observe what is happening. The field illustrates investor sentiment by recording changes in supply and demand for stocks as indicated by changing prices. The field shows a distribution of tags representing groups of stocks. Tag positions are calculated from price changes of their stocks. The tags turn red and green, and move left and right. The field shows sentiment conditions now, and a history of how sentiment is changing over time.
This website is made as succinct as possible, while explaining the subject in detail. It is like reading a short book. It may take you an hour or so to read thru and grasp the story framework, and some time to review recent activity.
 
Website information
Daily reports what just happened. A panel shows movements and a commentary highlights changes. Click the panel to see the zoomable Moody Field.Blog is updated on the weekend. The blog summarizes the week, and discusses the implications of current field positions and directions. Blog and Daily are cross-linked.
Tech describes the structure and moving parts at Moody Field. The tech page describes the layout of the field, the make-up of components, calculation methods and statistical summaries.
Samples shows you the state of the field at market turning points last year. It is educational. The samples demonstrate how the field works.
Contact includes my coordinates and a brief bio.
Links takes you to this page, with information sources below.
 
Outside information
These are my favorite websites for stock market sentiment numbers.AAII members vote weekly about where they expect stocks six months from now. Tom McClellan has a creative new analog each week, and a history to read. StockCharts graphs all the data, and offers a technical analysis school. CNN includes the VIX, the put-to-call ratio, and five other indicators combined into a single number. Shiller shows a set of charts with 100-year perspective. The US Fed impacts sentiment by adjusting interest rates and the balance sheet.
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