January, Interrupted

  • SumoMe

Well, I guess I should apologize.  Sometimes I forget my own Super Powers. 

Take yesterday for instance.  Immediately after the second Mahomes interception I said out loud “Wow, it looks like KC is toast.”  Sorry about that, SF fans (although in the end, Andy Reid got a ring and I got beer and pizza, so at least for a day all was right with the world, but I digress).  The point is, I assuredly suggested one thing and the Cosmos delivered something else.

This kind of thing has happened before.  Like last April for example.  I said “well, there’s no way it’s going to snow anymore”, so I moved my snowblower out of the garage and put it back in the shed.  It snowed each of the next two weekends.  To this day I blame myself.

And of course, last Friday in the early AM, I just had to go and do it.  In my last missive I somewhat flippantly noted that the S&P 500 merely had to hold above 3,230.78 to complete the historically bullish Stock Trader’s Almanac “January Trifecta” (and I quote, “so anything better than a daily decline of -52.88 SPX points will do the trick”).

-58.84 points in one trading session later, it was all over.  Sorry about that folks.  Like I said, sometimes I forget my own strength.

The Implication

The “good news” in all of this is as follows:

*Historically, a bullish January has in fact typically been followed by a bullish Feb through Dec.  So, it is reasonable to label an “Up” January in the stock market as “bullish” 

*On the other hand, when January is NOT up, it is NOT accurate to label it as “bearish”.  Rather, it is essentially “meaningless”  

For the record, in the past 7 decades, the record is as follows:

Feb-Dec Performance If Jan is UP If Jan is DOWN
# times Feb-Dec UP 38 16
# times Fe-Dec DOWN 6 11
% times Feb-Dec UP 86% 59%
% times Feb-Dec DOWN 14% 41%
Average Feb-Dec % +(-) +11.8% +1.2%

Figure 1 – S&P 500 Feb-Dec price performance depending on whether S&P 500 Index showed a gain or loss during January; 1949-2019

The key things to note is that:

*An UP January has overall portended favorable market results going forward

*A DOWN January has not necessarily been a harbinger of doom (the overall results just haven’t been nearly as good as when January shows a gain)

Summary

Now typically at this point I would say something reassuring about the prospects for the stock market in the months ahead.  But given the damage I have already done with my own words (not to mention this ominous seasonal oddity), I think the less I say right now the better.

Trust me. It’s better this way…

Jay Kaeppel

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