The Psychic Eye, Vol. 5 No. 27, 2nd Quarter '77
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The Psychic Eye, Vol. 5 No. 27, 2nd Quarter '77
California is buying all things blue.
New York is eating $1 slices, i knew
Krispy Kreme jelly can cue
the red heads value to be the focus of review.
Ms. Tree Quarterly, was a mystery anthology that published four times a year. The first issue had a summer ( july) 1990 cover date. In the first issue, the titular character appeared in the first segment (Gift of Death). The second segment (Night Kills), Midnight (Robert Mason) was introduced. He was created by Ed Gorman and Graham Nolan. He was based on Dave Clark who was a Golden Age character from Quality Comics. The final segment (The Name) was a Batman text story that was illustrated. ("Ms Tree: Gift of Death" "Midnight: Night Kills" "Batman: The Name" Ms Tree Quarterly 1, DC Comic Event)
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When Was the Last Time You Read a Magazine and Meant It?
new concept design for my dimentio??? (Bombs go off)
lament au friends - this also affects the pit of 100 trials plot line . Like a lot . Luigi to the rescue.
In tags on a pretty straightforward post with like one word with more than two syllables.
They’re not dumb! But this is a really awful approach to anything, really. First off: generally people post for people who understand the subject matter, every single post is not necessarily going to be an introduction to the basic ideas. People will want to have those more complex discussions and might be communicating with others who are similarly involved with the subject. (I’m not going to walk into a graduate seminar in chemistry and demand a rehash of what I learned in high school before they can continue.). People also choose their words precisely, for their specific meanings because that’s actually important in getting a message across. But also like, it’s just weirdly disrespectful to, with the ability to instantly look up whatever is being talked about, sit there going “umm, in English, please???”, like it’s such an immediate sign of poor faith and a refusal to engage with challenging concepts.
Project Shop My Shelves
As I was perusing my bookshelves the other day, I realized that I have a problem: I buy too many books. Well, not exactly. Over the past few years, I have reined in my book shopping habit, but what I didn’t account for is that I never truly get ahead of what I have on my shelves, so the books stack up. I have books on my shelves that I have been “dying to read” since 2016 when I was in grad…
September Quarterly Options Expiration Week Dodgy, Week After Dreadful
Since the S&P index futures began trading on April 21, 1982, stock options, index options as well as index futures all expire at the same time four times each year in March, June, September, and December. September’s quarterly option expiration week has been up 54.8% of the time for S&P 500 since 1982. DJIA and NASDAQ have slightly weaker track records with gains 52.4% of the time and 52.4% respectively.
However, the week has suffered several sizable losses. The worst loss followed the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001. In the last twenty-one years, S&P 500 and NASDAQ are tied for best record during September’s quarterly option expiration week, up thirteen times, but NASDAQ has been down the last six straight. Friday had been firm with all three indices advancing every year 2004 to 2011, but S&P 500 has been down 11 of the last 12 and NASDAQ has been down 10 of the last 12 since.
S&P 500 Down 27 of 34 Week After September Quarterly Options Expiration, Average Loss 1.06%
The week after September options expiration week, has a dreadful history of declines most notably since 1990. The week after September quarterly options expiration week has been a nearly constant source of pain with only a few meaningful exceptions over the past 34 years. Substantial and across the board gains have occurred just four times: 1998, 2001, 2010 and 2016 while many more weeks were hit with sizable losses. In 2022 DJIA and S&P 500 declined over 4% while NASDAQ fell 5.07%.
Full stats are the sea-of-red in the tables here. Average losses since 1990 are even worse; DJIA –1.09%, S&P 500 –1.06%, NASDAQ –1.06%. End-of-Q3 portfolio restructuring is the most likely explanation for this trend as managers trim summer holdings and position for the fourth quarter.