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Stock Market Seasonality: Sell in May, Santa Rally

Calendar anomalies in equities have been documented for decades — none large enough to be a strategy on its own, but all useful as context for the seasonal backdrop.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#market-cycles#seasonality
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Stock Market Seasonality: Sell in May, Santa Rally

"Sell in May and go away" is the oldest piece of stock market folklore. Like most folklore, it contains a kernel of truth — a kernel that has thinned as algorithms have arbitraged it. Stock seasonality is real, modest, and eroding. Use it to frame bias, not to bet the farm.

Calendar anomalies in equities have been documented for decades. None is large enough to be a strategy on its own; all are useful as context.

The major calendar effects

Effect Window Claimed bias
Sell in May / Halloween Nov–Apr vs May–Oct Winter months outperform
Santa Claus rally Last 5 days of year + first 2 of new year Positive drift
January effect First weeks of January Small caps outperform
Turn of the month Last 4 + first 3 trading days Positive bias
Monday effect Mondays (Historically negative; now weak)

Sell in May and go away

The Halloween/Sell-in-May effect: the period November through April has historically returned more than May through October, across most developed markets. The cause is debated — summer doldrums, vacation trading, harvest-related liquidity — but the pattern is robust in long-run data.

Real but modest. The summer drag averages a few percent, not a crash. Trading it means missing dividends and paying two round trips.

The Santa Claus rally

Coined by Yale Hirsch, the Santa Claus rally covers the last five trading days of December and the first two of January. Historically, this 7-day window has posted positive returns far more often than chance. If it fails, the Stock Trader's Almanac treats it as a warning for the coming year.

The January effect

The original January effect: small-cap stocks outperformed in early January, attributed to tax-loss selling pressure lifting in December. Decades of publication have mostly arbitraged it away in large caps, though it lingers in micro-caps and less-liquid markets.

The turn of the month

Stocks tend to rise around month-end and the first few days of the new month. Causes include payroll inflows into 401(k)/pension plans and month-end rebalancing. This is one of the more statistically robust effects, and the basis for "month-end flows" (covered later).

How to use seasonality

  1. As context, not signal: seasonality frames whether the calendar is a tailwind or headwind
  2. Combine with structure: seasonality + technical/seasonal confluence > seasonality alone
  3. Size to the strength: these effects are small; don't bet like they're certainties
  4. Watch erosion: published anomalies weaken as they're traded
  5. Beware transaction costs: two round trips can erase a modest seasonal edge

The statistical caveat

A 60% hit rate over 30 years can still be statistical noise if the average return is small relative to volatility. The articles that follow apply significance tests to seasonal claims. The short version: most calendar effects are real but economically small.

Practical steps

  1. Note the seasonal backdrop of your trade (winter vs summer months)
  2. Don't fight the Santa rally window without a strong catalyst
  3. Treat "Sell in May" as a bias, not a trade
  4. Expect month-end positive drift around the turn
  5. Always check that the seasonal edge exceeds transaction costs

Bottom line

Seasonality is a tailwind or a headwind, rarely a strategy. Treat it as one input among several — and remember that the strongest seasonal claim is "the market usually goes up over time."

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk