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Thursday, 11/20/2014 12:27:43 AM

Thursday, November 20, 2014 12:27:43 AM

Post# of 47078
Hi Gang, Stumbled on an interesting paper at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=76248

Here is the abstract.

We document the existence of a strong seasonal effect in stock returns based on the popular market saying 'Sell in May and go away', also known as the 'Halloween indicator'. According to these words of market wisdom, stock market returns should be higher in the November-April period than those in the May-October period. Surprisingly, we find this inherited wisdom to be true in 36 of the 37 developed and emerging markets studied in our sample. The ‘Sell in May’ effect tends to be particularly strong in European countries and is robust over time. Sample evidence, for instance, shows that in the UK the effect has been noticeable since 1694. While we have examined a number of possible explanations, none of these appears to convincingly explain the puzzle.

I've noticed that we have more posts about buys/sells in the fall than the summer. Haven't checked the winter and spring to see if those also follow the same pattern.

Warmest regards,

Allen

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