|
|
Articles | Go Fund Me | All-Species List | Hot Spots | Go Fund Me | |
|
|
Web Epoch NJ Web Design | (c) Copyright 2016 StocksandNews.com, LLC. |
01/09/2009
The January Barometer
Time for our yearly look at the old saying, “As January goes (specifically, the S&P), so goes the year.” According to the Stock Trader’s Almanac, since 1950 the January indicator has only five major errors for a 91.4% accuracy rate. “Vietnam affected 1966 and 1968; 1982 saw the start of a major bull market in August; two January rate cuts and 9/11 affected 2001; and the anticipation of military action in Iraq held down the market in January 2003.”
If you include the ten flat years, which the Almanac defines as less than +/- 5% for the S&P for the entire year (not including dividends), the barometer’s accuracy ratio is 74%; the more common measurement.
So I thought we’d take a look at the past nine years, including two of the major mistakes (’01, ’03).
January 2004 +1.7% [+10.9%]
January 2006 +2.5% [+15.8%]
January 2007 +1.4% [+5.5%]
*For the yearly return, I include dividends. Stock Trader’s Almanac does not. I’m still including 2007 as a ‘flat’ year, based on their methodology; the S&P being up 3.5% before dividends.
The January barometer is but another tool, albeit an important one particularly when the geopolitical scene is sanguine. However, I think you would agree the global environment today is far from being so.
**Another indicator involves the first five days of the year, and after the first five of 2009, the S&P was at 909, up 0.7%. According to the Stock Trader’s Almanac, “The last 36 up First Five Days were followed by full-year gains 31 times for an 86.1% accuracy ratio and a 13.7% average gain in all 36 years.” [In 2008, the first five days the S&P was down 5.3%. Yup, that was a pretty good indicator of trouble to come.]
Sources: “2009 Stock Trader’s Almanac,” Jeffrey A. Hirsch & Yale Hirsch; StocksandNews.com database.