And here comes the first one...
Do you all here know what the
S&P 500 is, right?
S&P 500 is one of the most traditional stock market indexes in the world, that tracks the combined market value of the 500 largest companies in the USA.
As every stock market index, S&P 500 is measured in points. Every day, the index closes at a certain level in number of points. The change in the level of points compared to the level of the closing in the previous trading day is what says if the index was "up" or "down", and how many percent...
OK...
Now, here goes a very direct and specific question:
When the S&P 500 index
closed bellow the "mark" of
666 points for the last time in history?
Please, understand my question...
There was a date when the S&P 500
closed (at the end of the trading day) at a level of points bellow 666 points
for the last time in history (so far).
That means: after that day, the S&P 500 NEVER
closed any trading day bellow
666 points again...
I will give you the answer...
Check this link, please:
[
link to finance.yahoo.com]
Do you see that???
The date was
September 11th, 1996.
Do you think that' strange?
Well, THAT'S NOTHING compared to what I will tell you now...Go to
this link:
[link to timeanddate.com]
See that?
September 11th, 1996 was the last day of
Lunation cycle number 911Lunation cycle number 912 started on September 12th, 1996.
So, by an INCREBIDLE coincidence, Lunation cycle 911 included the date of September 11th...
Think about it... There was only
1/12th of probability of Lunation cycle 911 including the date of September 11th on it...
And not enough... That date of September 11th, 1996 was the last time ever (so far) when the S&P 500 index
closed (at the end of the trading day) at a level bellow 666 points. It never closed bellow 666 points again. It had an
intraday bottom of 666 points in early 2009, but it
closed above 666 in that day...