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September The Worst Month for Stocks Here in Annapolis summer’s fever has broken. Deep azure vaults high overhead… and refrigerating wafts steal in from the Chesapeake Bay. All is peace. Many analysts consider September a month of market peace. Look to October, they say. October is when the gales blow in. The Panic of 1907, the Crash of 1929, “Black Monday” 1987 — all came barreling through in October. October’s reputation is so villainous… so felonious… it has even earned a title: The “October effect.” Yet is it true? Has October truly earned its blackened reputation? Today we haul the accused into the dock, interrogate its record… and pronounce verdict. Wrongfully Convicted October’s bankrupt reputation likely owes to a sour string of luck. And its conviction was based heavily upon hearsay and circumstantial evidence. October has received a very poor legal representation. Affirms Stephen Williamson, former vice president of the Federal Reserve’s St. Louis district court:
The gentlemen and ladies of Yardeni Research further vindicate October of crimes against stocks. The average S&P October return is not negative in the least, they inform us. It is, in fact, a positive 0.4%. It is a slender gain — yet it is a gain. Meantime, Investopedia informs us that more bear markets ended in October than began in October. Swoons in 1987, 1990, 2001 and 2002 swung around in the year’s 10th month. The facts are the facts. Justice, Finally Thus the presiding judge unseals the jury’s verdict… “Not guilty,” it reads. And so he dismisses all criminal charges against the month of October — with prejudice. In conclusion: An innocent man has been pitched into infamy and packed off to prison on wrongful charges. Let us then — in the highest spirit of justice — clear his blackened name. Does another month take its place in the gallery of evil? Is there a month truly deserving of October’s label? The record argues that yes, another month is a menace greater than October. Which month? That month is September — the month presently underweigh. The Market’s Worst MonthMarket Watch:
Nor do one or two roguish and renegade Septembers explain it, says Hulbert:
Meantime, Fisher Investments claims September is the lone month to average a negative return since 1925. The “September Effect” The facts confirm it. September is the great thief of investor money, not October. Next to September, we must conclude, October is nearly a month of nectar, a month of honey. And so today we correct a cruel and libelous wrong. It is time to replace the “October effect” with the infinitely more deserving “September effect.” Thus we gird for heavy weather. Here CFRA chief investment strategist Sam Stovall posts an advisory:
Here is the evidence — the red-handed evidence — exculpatory of October and inculpatory of September: And: Why September?What explains September’s slumps? Investopedia:
Just so. Yet we must file a caveat — the Federal Reserve is expected to lower its target rate this month. Thus Wall Street’s cherished “pivot” is upon us. Perhaps it will fill September’s sails with fresh wind. This is also an election year. And as Investopedia explains:
Thus the current and the cross-current may negate each other. Mark Twain’s Trading Advice Do we hazard a prediction of September doom? No we do not. We have posted too many false advisories in times past. That is, we have been forced to munch crow many times in the past — without salt, without butter, without lubricating beverages to help it down. We harbor little appetite for another dose. Yet if history is a reliable barometer… which we believe it is… September is perhaps the most dangerous month to speculate in stocks. Along with, as the great scalawag Mark Twain noted… July, January, April, November, May, March, October, June, December, August — and February.
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