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Hmmm, my ThinkorSwim $VOLD chart certainly is not pretty, but looking at daily or hourly chart there are lots of longer red bars in the past. June 11 was more redBullBear52x wrote:look at AD line
$VOLD on TOS (if you have them) one of my my favorite internals. the ugliest print in months if not years.....
I meant today's intraday's print, straight out red bars only. all dal, I use 15min.K447 wrote:Hmmm, my ThinkorSwim $VOLD chart certainly is not pretty, but looking at daily or hourly chart there are lots of longer red bars in the past. June 11 was more redBullBear52x wrote:look at AD line
$VOLD on TOS (if you have them) one of my my favorite internals. the ugliest print in months if not years.....
Am I looking at it wrong?
Even on 15 minute chart June 11 was more red.BullBear52x wrote:I meant today's intraday's print, straight out red bars only. all dal, I use 15min.K447 wrote:Hmmm, my ThinkorSwim $VOLD chart certainly is not pretty, but looking at daily or hourly chart there are lots of longer red bars in the past. June 11 was more redBullBear52x wrote:look at AD line
$VOLD on TOS (if you have them) one of my my favorite internals. the ugliest print in months if not years.....
Am I looking at it wrong?
Keep in mind that deaths lag behind infections by two weeks to four weeks. In effect people who die today were first reported as cases 2 to 4 weeks ago (roughly).MrMiyagi wrote:I spent some time compiling this using WaybackMachine to get backdata.
Period covered is March 6th – current (prior to that it was just China).
Pre-June has gas in dates because I just wanted to get a general feel, therefore that part of the chart is smoother. I’ll fill in as my sanity permits. June is every day.
Recovery to Death ratio is now at 10.51 to 1 (not charted).
...
My friend... look at the frikking chart... You see the red line all the way at the bottom? You see the blue line at the top? Do you see anywhere when the red goes up to meet to parallel the blue?K447 wrote:Keep in mind that deaths lag behind infections by two weeks to four weeks. In effect people who die today were first reported as cases 2 to 4 weeks ago (roughly).
Shift the deaths line to the left by 2 to 4 weeks to align cases with resultant mortality.
Said another way, the people who have recently been reported as new cases, have not yet died.
Active cases and recent deaths are the trends that matter, with new cases front running deaths.MrMiyagi wrote:My friend... look at the frikking chart... You see the red line all the way at the bottom? You see the blue line at the top? Do you see anywhere when the red goes up to meet to parallel the blue?K447 wrote:Keep in mind that deaths lag behind infections by two weeks to four weeks. In effect people who die today were first reported as cases 2 to 4 weeks ago (roughly).
Shift the deaths line to the left by 2 to 4 weeks to align cases with resultant mortality.
Said another way, the people who have recently been reported as new cases, have not yet died.
Yeah, me neither
What I see though is the GREEN line moving higher, outpacing deaths every day - sure, there may be a temporary shift where it slows down, but eventually it continues higher while deaths diminish.
... reality.
Recoveries are ABSOLUTELY useful because they show that progressively less are dying as the propagation progresses and virus (most likely) is mutating to a weaker version.K447 wrote:Active cases and recent deaths are the trends that matter, with new cases front running deaths.
If these are trending up, then the virus spread is not decelerating.
I was speaking to the time relationship between active cases and deaths.
Recoveries are nice to see, but not useful for forecasting the forward progression of the pandemic.
Same for total cases, number reflects testing and spread (to a degree) but newly active cases are the front line.
I did look at your chart.MrMiyagi wrote:... look at the chart. ...
People keep parading this chart around - US IS A HUGE COUNTRY WHILE EU IS A BUNCH OF SMALL COUNTRIES AND EASIER TO GOVERN CLOSURES.Pauthi wrote:US lifted lockdowns too early.
1) As mentioned earlier, early data has gapsK447 wrote:I did look at your chart.
My first thought was I would prefer to see the data as a bar chart rather than a cumulative line chart.
Active cases not shown?MrMiyagi wrote:...
2) Wasn't sure which you meant, daily or cumulative so here you go, you got both
3) In the Daily chart, the Deaths are hard to see because they are tiny bars relative to new & recovered.
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