Nonlinear Thinking: FAA Approves First Flying Car

Alef Aeronautics’ flying car has been given a special airworthiness certification from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), meaning the company will be allowed to road/air test the car, the company said in a news release. 

The fully electric vehicle (with a hydrogen option for a higher price) is a low-speed vehicle that can be driven up to 200 miles on public roads and fits into a regular garage, but it can also launch vertically into the air with a flying range of 110 miles, according to Alef’s website.

The company’s “Model A” car “can fly forward above the obstacles until a desired destination is reached,” the San Mateo-based company says. “The driver and the cabin are stabilized by a unique gimbaled rotating cabin design.” – Fox Business 

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Global Markets’ First-Half Performance

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Why People Aren’t Happy | Big Think

“In the United States, around 40 percent of college students report being to depressed to function on most days.”

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COTD: How COVID Changed Day-of-Week Spending

COTD = Chart of the Day

 

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Month In Review With Charts – June 2023

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Apple and Samsung’s China Diversification Strategies

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Global Risk Monitor: Week In Review – June 16

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Follow Your Passion? “What Utter Bullshit!” | Prof G

If you happened to miss it, I highly recommend watching this insightful interview conducted by Michael Smerconish with NYU Professor Scott Galloway. Professor Galloway is an exceptionally intelligent and wise individual, offering up some valuable advice for recent graduates. Smerconish is no less impressive himself.

Click here to view the full interview (9 minutes). 

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U.S. Budget Deficit Nearing 8% Of GDP

The U.S. budget deficit keeps climbing, approaching 8 percent of GDP as the 12-month trailing shortfall reached $2.1 trillion in May.  Budget receipts in May were down 20 percent year-on-year, most likely due to lower tax receipts from a slowing economy, falling capital gains receipts, and some technical factors. 

Financing all this without the central banks or a spike in real interest rates will be challenging.  Stay tuned. 

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Seasonal Greetings: Sell Monday, Buy Thursday

Chat GPT, a very efficient code debugger, has already greatly enhanced our coding (R) productivity, making it easier to manipulate data and crunch numbers.  We have put together some interesting tables on the seasonality of daily, monthly, and annual returns for the S&P500 since 1950.  The data do not include dividends. 

It Doesn’t Take A Genius To Be A Bull

The data show that the S&P500 closes positive 72 percent annually, 60 percent monthly, 57 percent weekly, and 53 percent of the time daily.   The average daily return over the past 70 years is 3 basis points.  Clearly, the data are tough on long-term bears and why so few own Park Avenue penthouses

Manic Mondays

Mondays, on average, are the only day of the week to generate a negative daily return, close down more than 50 percent of the time, and are, by far, the most volatile. Note the max/min moves took place on a Monday.  We did check the Monday daily return by excluding the outlier Black Monday, October 1987 20 percent crash, which had little effect on the results.    

So far this year, the Manic Monday data does not hold. 

In fact, quite the opposite, which we discuss below. 

Monthly Seasonality:  Buy Santa Claus   

November, April, and December generate the highest returns.  We find it quite stunning the S&P500 closes up daily 74 percent of the time in December, a day trader’s dream.

2023 – Buy Wednesday Close, Sell Monday Close  

Mondays are acting quite differently in 2023 than the 70-year averages, have closed higher 70 percent of the time, and returned  0.4 percent on average.  Today’s close validated the data.   

Note also the horrendous performance of Tuesdays and Wednesdays this year, closing lower 65 percent of the time and generating negative returns.  Our good friend, Harry The K., points out all the CPI releases this year have taken place on a Tuesday or Wednesday except for the January release. The inflation data is squarely on the market’s radar.  In addition, the FOMC announcements generally take place on Tuesday or Wednesday, and the Fed has been far from market friendly in 2023.  

The data suggest selling Monday at the close and buying the Wednesday close — that is, staying out of the S&P on Tuesdays and Wednesdays — has generated excess returns.  Hindsight is always golden. 

We have calculated the relative return in 2023 of a strategy of selling the S&P500 at the Monday close and buying at the Wednesday close.  The relative performance is significant and illustrated below. 

Is Past Prologue? 

Maybe, maybe not.  It’s not entirely out of the realm of possibilities machine learning algos have already picked up the pattern and are now reinforcing it.  The pattern will continue until it won’t. 

The Wednesday/Monday strategy shall be tested with tomorrow’s CPI release.  

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