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The real Santa Claus rally is yet to come
Category: Economics
The only stock-market rally that deserves the name “Santa Claus” doesn’t arrive until Christmas — just like the man himself.
To be sure, the market’s rally in recent weeks has been impressive, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average
DJIA, +0.35%[1]
more than 5% higher than where it started the fourth quarter and the S&P 500
SPX, +0.36%[2]
more than 7% higher.
But just because the market has rallied doesn’t make it a Santa Claus rally. As I’ve pointed out before, there is no statistical basis [3]for claiming that the weeks before Christmas have significant seasonal strength — notwithstanding every Tom, Dick or Harry using Santa’s good name in vain every time the stock market blips upward.
No pattern
In some years, like this one, the before-Christmas period will be particularly strong. But in other years, such as last year, when the Dow lost 14.7% from the first of the month through Christmas Eve, the market will be quite weak. There is no greater probability the market will rally in those pre-Christmas weeks than at any other time of the year.
This situation changes on Christmas Day, however....
The stock market tends to rise more than usual in the six trading days after Christmas.
Consider the Dow Industrials’ behavior from Christmas until the second trading day of the subsequent year. In defining the Santa Claus rally as encompassing this trading period, I follow the lead of the Stock Trader’s Almanac. Since 1896, when the Dow was created, it over this period has risen 76% of the time. That compares to a 55% probability of rising across all other six-trading-day periods. (See accompanying chart.) These differences are significant at the 95% confidence level that statisticians often use when concluding if a pattern is genuine.Market borrows gainsYou might nevertheless wonder if the odds are less favorable this year, since the market has been so strong up until now. Might it be that the market has “borrowed” some of the gains otherwise seen after Christmas?To test for that possibility, I segregated all Santa Claus rallies since 1896 into two groups, depending on whether the Dow’s before-Christmas December returns were positive or negative. And, as you can also see from the accompanying chart, the odds of a Santa Claus rally do go down when the stock market has risen in the days leading up to Christmas. But notice carefully that, while somewhat diminished, the market’s odds of rising in the days after Christmas are still significantly better than average.Why would the stock market have an upward bias immediately after Christmas?Money flowsOne reason,