The Record — Case Study
He called the 2025 crash low — one day early, on camera.
On 6 April 2025, with the market in free-fall and every headline screaming tariffs, the bottom was forecast for the 7th — not by reading the news, but by counting time. The next day the Dow printed its lowest tick of the entire crash and turned. Here is the call, the timestamp, and the price — checked against the record.
The setup
Early April 2025. The “Liberation Day” tariffs had detonated the market. The Dow had fallen roughly 15% from its late-March high, the S&P more than 17%, and the mood was capitulation — the kind of selling where nobody wants to name a bottom.
The day before the low, a video went up. It made no appeal to the news. It pointed at a date.
“We have the seventh turn date coming up basically tomorrow… if we’re going to get any form of bounce, tomorrow is where I’d be expecting it.”
— “POP! Markets Tank”, published 6 April 2025That is the whole method in one sentence: a turn date, named in advance, arrived at by counting time rather than guessing direction. The video also held a bias — still primarily bullish, expecting the bounce while the crowd sold.
What the market did
Daily OHLC bars, Dow Jones Industrial Average (close prices, Yahoo Finance). Dashed lines mark dates that were called on public video before they occurred: the 25–26 March top, the 31 March reversal, and the 7 April crash low.
Three calls, in a row, each made in advance
The April low did not come out of nowhere. It was the third of three consecutive turn dates, each published before the fact:
| Called on video (in advance) | What the Dow actually did | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Top, 25–26 March | Highest close on 25 Mar (42,588); highest intraday on 26 Mar (42,822), then rolled over. | LANDED |
| Reversal, 31 March | 31 Mar fell to 41,148 then reversed hard to close at 42,002 — a textbook reversal day. | LANDED |
| Crash low, the 7th (said on the 6th) |
7 Apr printed the crash’s lowest tick (36,612) and closed up off its low; the historic +9.5% day followed on the 9th. | LANDED |
The first two dates were published in an earlier video (“Warning! Bear Market Crash — But I’m Still Bullish”). The third was published the day before it happened. Anyone can pull up the upload dates and the price history and check every line of this table.
Why this one is worth your attention
The rally was triggered by news — the 90-day tariff pause announced on 9 April. But the turn was forecast for the 7th before that news existed. That is the entire point of the method, and the one thing a news-watcher can never do: it marks the date of the turn, not its cause.
It also ran against the fear. While the tape said “sell,” the call said “a bounce is due here, and I’m still leaning up.” The market agreed within twenty-four hours.
So the record can be judged fairly: the lowest intraday print was the 7th, and that day reversed off its low; the lowest close was the 8th; the launch was the 9th. The call was a turn date hit within a day — not “the exact closing low to the dollar.”
One sequence of calls is evidence, not proof. The full archive keeps the misses on the page beside the hits, on purpose. Judge the body of work, not a single week.
The same turn-date method — time counted from planetary positions, not headlines — runs every day on Gold and the Dow on the Live Forecasts page. The full construction, from the ground up, is the course.