AI Research TSLA

TSLA next-day behavior after 3+ day streaks (up vs down) — last ~3 years

TSLA’s short-term “hot hand” looks more like noise than a rule. We measured next-session returns after runs of three or more consecutive up or down daily closes over the last ~3 years, classifying each following day as continuation or reversal. After 3+ up-runs the next session continued only about 47.8% of the time, and the difference versus the unconditional next-day return carries a high p-value (≈0.78), consistent with sampling noise rather than a dependable edge.

Long down-streaks show a larger average bounce, but event counts are modest and some exact-length buckets are small, so apparent edges are fragile. The full analysis below provides the exact counts, means, t-tests and charts supporting these conclusions.

The research question

For TSLA over the past ~3 years, after a run of three or more consecutive up (or down) days, does the next session continue the streak or reverse it? Thesis: long streaks mean-revert — next-day returns fade to flat-to-negative after extended up-runs while long down-runs see above-baseline bounces — so the short-term 'hot hand' is an illusion and chasing the streak doesn't pay.

How this was measured

Resampled TSLA minute bars to daily closes, computed close-to-close returns, and identified consecutive up and down streaks (strictly >0 or <0 daily returns; zero-return days break streaks). For each day where the current streak length was ≥3, recorded the FOLLOWING session’s return and classified it as continuation (same sign as the streak) or reversal (opposite sign). Summarized continuation/reversal rates and mean next-day returns for 3+ up-runs and 3+ down-runs, compared each to the unconditional next-day baseline via Welch’s t-test. Also reported exact-length buckets (3, 4, 5+) for both directions.

The key numbers

Window start
1685491200s
2023-05-31 to 2026-05-29
Baseline mean next-day return
0.1697%
N=751 days
Up-run 3+ events
90
Up-run 3+ continuation rate
47.7778%
Up-run 3+ reversal rate
52.2222%
Up-run 3+ mean next-day return
0.2836%
Welch t (Up 3+ vs baseline)
0.280
p-value (Up 3+ vs baseline)
0.7800
p=0.7800 ≥ 0.05 → no statistically-clear difference
Down-run 3+ events
78
Down-run 3+ continuation rate
46.1538%
Down-run 3+ reversal (bounce) rate
53.8462%
Down-run 3+ mean next-day return
0.6325%
Welch t (Down 3+ vs baseline)
0.948
p-value (Down 3+ vs baseline)
0.3458
p=0.3458 ≥ 0.05 → no statistically-clear difference

Reading the numbers

Baseline next-day return was about 0.1697% (N=751). After runs of 3+ days, up-runs (N=90) averaged ≈0.2836% but p=0.7800 → no statistically-clear difference; down-runs (N=78) averaged ≈0.6325%, a bigger bounce on average.

The charts

Continuation vs reversal rate after 3+ day streaks
What this chart says

This bar chart lines up continuation versus reversal after 3+ day streaks. The reversal bars are slightly taller for both cases — up-runs reverse 52.22% of the time versus 47.78% continuation, and down-runs reverse (bounce) 53.85% versus 46.15% continuation. That signals a mild tendency to flip the next day after long streaks, but the rates are close to 50/50, so any streak-following edge is weak.

Next-day returns after 3+ UP-day runs
What this chart says

The histogram of next-day returns after 3+ up-day runs (n=90) shows a mean next-day return of 0.002836 (0.2836%) with values spread from a minimum of -0.0913 (-9.13%) to a maximum of 0.109 (10.9%). A lot of the mass sits near zero with both gains and losses, and given the reported p=0.7800 versus baseline, this small positive mean is not statistically-clear evidence of a persistent hot hand after long up-runs.

Next-day returns after 3+ DOWN-day runs
What this chart says

The histogram after 3+ down-day runs (n=78) has a mean next-day return of 0.006325 (0.6325%) and ranges from -0.0637 (-6.37%) to 0.1591 (15.91%). Compared with the up-run histogram, this distribution shows more positive next-day outcomes on average, consistent with a bounce following long down-streaks, though the sample size is modest so the result should be viewed as suggestive rather than definitive.

Next-day outcomes by streak direction and length

directionrun_lenNmean_next_retcontinuation_ratereversal_rate
Up3470.00050.44680.5532
Up4210.00920.52380.4762
Up5+220.00170.50.5
Down3420.00360.50.5
Down421-0.00080.42860.5714
Down5+150.0240.40.6

The takeaway

No — there is no reliable short-term "hot hand" in TSLA after 3+ day runs; the next session does not consistently continue streaks. After 3+ up-runs (N=90) the continuation rate is about 47.8% vs a 52.2% reversal rate, with mean next-day return 0.2836% compared with the unconditional 0.1697% baseline (Welch p = 0.7800). After 3+ down-runs (N=78) the next day reverses (bounces) about 53.8% of the time, with mean next-day return 0.6325% vs the same 0.1697% baseline (Welch p = 0.3458). Put plainly, the p-values correspond to roughly a 78-in-100 and a 35-in-100 chance, respectively, that those differences are just noise — not a statistically-clear signal. Event counts are modest and some exact-length buckets are small (e.g., 21 events for 4-day up-runs), so any apparent edges are fragile. Practical takeaway: don’t count on multi-day TSLA streaks as a reliable next-day trade; you might see a mild bounce after long down-streaks, but the evidence is too noisy to trade confidently.

The fine print