Here are some of the posts that caught my eye recently. Hope you find something interesting.
- MIT Professors Sound Alarm on US Falling Behind on AI. (CA)
- Doomsday Clock Moves to 100 Seconds to Midnight - Closest Point to Nuclear Annihilation Since Cold War. (FoxNews)
- The Bill Belichick Trade Turns 20 on Monday. (ProFootballTalk)
- Incentive Competitions and the Challenge of Space Exploration. (Interesting Engineering)
- How Time-Travel Works in Fiction: a Concise Breakdown of How Time Travel Functions in Popular Movies, Books & TV Shows. (OpenCulture)
- Peter Diamandis: in the next 10 Years, We'll Reinvent Every Industry'. (TheGuardian)
- 5,000 Years of Interest Rates. (DailyReckoning)
- Will We Ever Stop Talking about the VIX? (RCM Alternatives)
- How to Make a Billion Dollars on Horse Racing. (Bloomberg)
- Tesla is More Valuable Than GM, Ford CombinedDespite Selling 98% Fewer Cars. (Observer)
Events & The Stock Exchange (1990 - 2018)
We all understand that events affect the stock market. Predicting what events will affect the stock market is an entirely different beast.
Christian Spreafico put together an infographic website that tracks one key event per month, and that events effect on the monthly closure of the major stock exchanges.
Events are split into categories: Politics, War, Terrorism, Calamity, Economy, Sports.
At the top of the infographic, you can see the indexes' performance. Below, you can see the effect of the categories over time.
The infographic starts with the US invasion of Panama, and ends with the beginning of the Yellow Vests Movement (a political movement for economic justice in France.
It's fun to look through month-by-month and track the movement.
An interesting inflection point I found started in July of 2010. At this point, the effect of politics on the global indices was negative. Issues with the European Union and Obama's election both caused drops. Since 2010, the effect of politics on the economy has been staggeringly positive (excluding the December 2015 UN Climate Change Conference).
That includes a massive spike in the NYSE, NASDAQ, and TOKYO when Occupy Wall Street started in September of 2011.
Interest aside, I struggle with sharing this infographic because it's a gross oversimplification of the various driving factors of both our economy and markets. The biggest event isn't the only event and we don't know on which metric Christian decided which event was the biggest. In other words, correlation doesn't prove causation.
Nonetheless, if you don't take this too seriously, it's an interesting look back through time.
What caught your eye?
Posted at 02:46 PM in Business, Current Affairs, Market Commentary, Trading, Trading Tools, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (1)
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