Subtropical Cyclone Alex (2016 - New Version)

NOTE: This prediction is not likely to come true, I just made it for fun.

Subtropical Storm Alex was the first named storm of the 2016 Atlantic hurricane season. It was very unusual due to the fact that it existed in January during a Very Strong El Nino event. It also was unusual due to the fact that it briefly acquired hurricane-force winds, becoming a very rare "subtropical hurricane".

Meteorological History
On January 7, the NHC began monitoring an extratropical cyclone located off the southeastern coast of the United States. The low pressure area took a northeastern track, but turned to the southeast on January 9. By now, forecasters gave the system a 60% chance of subtropical cyclogenesis. On January 10, the NHC issued its first advisory for Subtropical Storm Alex at 10:00 AM with maximum sustained winds of 60 mph. Intensification occurred thereafter, with Alex briefly acquriing hurricane-force winds on January 11. However, afterwards, Alex started to weaken due to cooler waters and increasing wind shear. On January 14, Alex became extratropical. Alex's remnants moved across much of the Atlantic for several days before completely dissipating on January 19.