Seasonality May Be Especially Important This Year!
Editors: You are welcome to quote from this article, or use
it in its entirety, in your publication or on your website, as long as the
credit at the end of the article is also included. Readers are also welcome to
e-mail, or print and snail-mail it to friends.
It is now also available as an automatic RSS feed, assuring that future articles will be sent to you automatically if you subscribe to the
automatic feed (it's free). You can subscribe to our RSS feed at: http://www.streetsmartreport.com/RSS or copy the URL to your feed reader.
BEING STREET SMART
by Sy Harding
Seasonality May Be
Especially Important This Year! April 8, 2011.
It’s that time of year again when I always remind you of the market’s
seasonality, its proven tendency to make most of its gains between November and
May, and experience most of its losses in the opposite period.
I get a kick out of people who dismiss it as an interesting theory that doesn’t
always work. It’s not theory. It’s proven fact. In spite of the few years when
it has not worked, investing over the long-term based on the market’s
seasonality significantly outperforms the market, and with much less risk.
Don’t take my word for it. Academic studies provide clear evidence.
For instance, a 27-page study published in the prestigious American Economic
Review in 2002 concludes, “We found that
this inherited wisdom of Sell in May to be true in 36 of 37 developed and
emerging markets” It went on to say that,
“A trading strategy based on this anomaly
would be highly profitable in many countries. The annual risk-adjusted
outperformance ranges between 1.5% and 8.9% annually depending on the country
being considered. The effect is robust over time, economically significant,
unlikely to be caused by data-mining, and not related to taking excess risk.”
Another study in 2008 at the New Zealand Institute of Advanced Study, which
focused solely on the U.S. stock market, concluded that
“All U.S. stock market sectors, and 48 out
of 49 U.S. industry sectors performed better during the winter months than
summer months in our sampling from 1926-2006.”
Let’s put the fact that it doesn’t work every year in context.
To begin with, no strategy, particularly buy and hold, works every year. And
that is also true of seasonality. For instance, it underperformed in 2003 and
2009. In those years the market made gains in the winter months, and then,
fueled by massive government stimulus programs, continued still higher during
the summer months when a seasonal investor would have been invested in something
other than stocks.
But the seasonal investor did not lose
money by being out of the market in the unfavorable season in those years. He or
she merely missed further gains. But when an investor is in the market in
unfavorable seasons in which the market experiences the serious declines that
most often take place in unfavorable seasons, that investor actually
loses money. Those losses can be substantial, with investors giving
back much, if not all of the gains made in the previous favorable season. For
instance, from May 1st to its low during the summer months, the S&P
500 lost 22% of its value in 2001, 24% in 2002, 38% in 2008, and even 16% in the
early summer correction in the positive year last year. Those are the
experiences that created the ‘lost decade’ that buy and hold investors
experienced but which seasonal investors avoided.
Why might seasonality be even more important this year than in other years?
Negatives are piled up against the economy and market to a degree not seen in a
number of years. They include rising inflation; global central banks raising
interest rates to ward off inflation, which is also likely to slow their
economic growth; signs of the U.S. economy slowing again (sharp declines in home
sales, durable goods orders, and consumer confidence); the coming end of the
Federal Reserve’s QE2 stimulus efforts in June; and the austerity measures
Congress will be forcing on the country in efforts to bring the record budget
deficit under control.
Then there is the high level of investor bullishness usually seen near market
tops. For instance, the Investors Intelligence Sentiment survey shows
bullishness has jumped up to 57%, while bearishness has fallen to just 15.7%.
That spread of 41.6% is considered to be in a danger zone. The last time it
reached 40% was in October, 2007, as the market topped out into the 2007-2009
bear market.
So, fair warning. Seasonality is liable to be even more important this year than
in most years.
The traditional seasonality maxim, ‘Sell in May and Go Away’, calls for buying
November 1 and selling on May 1 of the following year. Those dates were the
basis for the academic studies mentioned earlier.
But obviously a positive market move does not begin and end on the same day each
year. So in my 1999 book Riding the Bear –
How to Prosper in the Coming Bear Market, I introduced my
Seasonal Timing Strategy. It uses a technical indicator that tracks
market momentum reversals to better identify the entries and exits. Over the
last 40 years, its exit signals have been as early as April 20, and as late as
June 20.
The modification significantly improved the already impressive performance of
the basic ‘Sell in May and Go Away’ seasonal strategy. In a recent article on
MarketWatch, Mark Hulbert wrote that the Hulbert Financial Digest has only been
tracking the performance since mid-2002, and since then “Harding’s modification
of the Sell In May and Go Away indicator produced an 8.2% annualized return . .
. with 37% less risk.” That significantly beat the performance of the S&P 500.
In
the interest of full disclosure, I and my subscribers have the portion of assets
following our seasonal strategy 100% invested in the 30-stock Dow until the next
exit signal is generated.
Sy Harding is
president of Asset Management Research Corp, and editor of
www.StreetSmartReport.com,
and the
free market blog,
www.streetsmartpost.com.
These reports reflect
our opinions and are based on our best judgment, but no warranty is given or
implied as to their accuracy. Past performance does not guarantee future
performance.
Back
to the Top Home Subscribe to RSS Feed
Copyright © 2011
Asset Management Research Corp. -- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.