Best and Worst Months for the Stock Market - Seasonal Patterns - Trade That Swing (2024)

Learn the seasonal patterns of the stock market, including which months perform best and worst, whether to buy before or after holidays, and other patterns. See the best and worth months for stocks over the last 10 and 20 years.

June has historically been a month where indices tend to decline; it is one of the weaker months of the year historically. Across the indices, average gains/losses for the month are -0.3% up to +0.1%, with the various indexes only moving up between 45% and 60% of the time.

Stock market seasonal patterns are the directional tendencies of stock indices based on the time of the year. Certain times of the year tend to be more bullish (go up) for stocks, while other times during the year are more bearish (go down).

Seasonality is essentially an average, based on history, of how the stock market tends to perform throughout the year. Averages are a guide, a tool, but don’t forecast with accuracy what will happen this year. That said, some investors and traders may use seasonal tendencies to build strategies or enhance existing ones.

For example, if we know September tends to be a poor month for stocks, a trader who primarily takes long positions may opt to take this month off, or exit their positions quicker than usual if they start to decline during September. A trader could buy stock index ETFs (such as SPY or IVV) during seasonally strong months if the ETFs start rising. An investor may buy in and then sell out at certain times of the year (if feasible to do so with commissions). Buy-and-hold investors may wish to invest during seasonally weak months to take advantage of lower prices.

Seasonality can be used in many ways. Individual stocks, commodities, and currencies also tend to have seasonal tendencies.

So let’s jump into the seasonal patterns of the stock market.

Seasonal Patterns – Best and Worst Months for the Stock Market, Summary Table (20-year averages)

Up MonthsWeak MonthsBest 3 MonthsWorst Months
NYSE CompositeMarch, April, July, October, November, DecemberJanuary, February, May, June, August, SeptemberApril, July, NovemberJune, August, September
S&P 500February March, April, May, July, August, October, November, DecemberJanuary, June, September April, July, NovemberJune, September
Nasdaq 100January, March, April, May, July, August, October, November, DecemberFebruary, June, September April, July, October/NovemberFebruary, June, September

A full breakdown with monthly average gains and the percentage of time the month has moved higher is provided below.

Prefer video? The following video goes through all the data on the best and worst months for the stock market based on three different indices.

Stock Market Seasonal Patterns

This is how the stock market has performed in each of the months over the last 10 and 20 years.

The number at the top of the column is the percentage of time the stock index has risen. If it says 70, that means the stock index went up in that month 14 years out of 20 (70%).

The number at the bottom of the column is the average percentage gain or loss in that month over the 10 or 20 years.

To give you a better idea of the best and worst months of the year, we will look at three major stock indices, the NYSE Composite, the S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100.

The NYSE Composite is all the stocks listed on the New York Stock Exchange so it’s a very diverse stock index. The S&P 500 includes only the largest companies in the US, and the Nasdaq 100 includes large companies that are primarily technology-based.

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NYSE Composite Seasonal Patterns

Here is a summary of the NYSE Composite’s best and worst months over the last 20 years (2004-2023)

  • Best Months: April, July, October, November, and December
  • Worst Months: January, February, June, August, September


Seasonal charts courtesy of StockCharts.com.

The above chart looks at 20 years of data. If we only look at the last 10 years (below), things change a little bit.

NYSE Composite best and worst months over the last 10 years (2014-2023)

  • Best Months: April, June, July, October, November, and December
  • Worst Months: January, February, March, August, and September are weaker periods.

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S&P 500 Seasonal Patterns

Here is how the S&P 500 index has done. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) was used to generate the seasonality figures.

S&P 500 best and worst months over the last 20 years (2004-2023)

  • Best Months: March, April, May, July, October, November, and December
  • Worst Months: January, June, and September


Over the 10 years, not much changed except that the market is pretty much strong from February through to the end of August. September is weaker, and then the end of the year tends to be strong.

S&P 500 best and worst months over the last 10 years (2014-2023)

  • Best Months: March, April, May, June, July, August, October, November, December
  • Worst Months: January, September


For a different look, and to see how some actual years have played out, here are the yearly charts of the S&P 500 (SPY) from 2014 to 2023. They are overlaid on top of each other for each viewing.

Nasdaq 100 Seasonal Patterns

Here is how the Nasdaq 100 index has done. The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) was used to generate the seasonality figures.

Nasdaq 100 best and worst months over the last 20 years (2004-2023)

  • Best Months: January, March, April, May, July, August, October, November, and December
  • Worst Months: February, June, and September


Below is what it looks like over the last 10 years. Not much changes except December has been weaker.

Most months are pretty good.

Nasdaq 100 best and worst months over the last 10 years (2014-2023)

  • Best Months: January, March, April, May, June, July, August, October, November
  • Worst Months: February, September, December


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Stock Market Seasonality Considerations

Think of seasonality as a tool, not a crystal ball. It shows historical tendencies, not what will happen this year.

If the market tends to rise 80% of the time in April, that means it went up in April 16 years of out the last 20, but it may not go up this year.

The average monthly return numbers can also be skewed by an extremely large fall or rise in a particular year. So a 1% average return could be the result of a couple big drops of 10% in certain years and big rallies of 10% in others. The average is near zero, but investors should be aware that the average doesn’t tell the whole story.

Even during months that have a high probability of rising, stop losses and risk control should be used, because if the price drops, we don’t know how far it will drop.

The US stock market has an overall upward bias over the long term.

The S&P 500 has produced 10.6% yearly returns over the last 100 years.

The Nasdaq 100 has produced returns of 14.5% per year over the last 20 years.

The Russell 2000 has produced an average yearly return of 8%.

Therefore, investors may consider using the weak months as entry points if looking to take long-term positions.

Additional Stock Market Seasonal Patterns

There are a number of specific seasonal patterns in stocks that people have noticed and tested. These tend to be shorter-term patterns.

Pre-Holiday Rally Pattern

It’s been noted that there’s a positive expectancy for buying stocks one to two days before a long weekend/holidays and then selling one to two days after. Trading volume tends to be lower heading into long weekends which may help explain prices drifting up (there’s a long-term upward bias to the stock market). Or possibly people are feeling good about a long weekend and buy some stock.

Short-term traders would buy one or two days prior to the holiday, and then sell one to two days after the holiday. Longer-term traders can also take advantage and use the one or two days prior to a holiday to pick up some stocks they were eyeing.

Actual testing reveals that most holidays don’t produce a big pop in stocks, but a few are more reliable and tend to produce positive returns over time according to QuantifiedStrategies:

  • July 4th
  • Thanksgiving
  • Christmas (discussed more below)

At least according to history, these are better holidays than others for deploying the pre-holiday rally strategy.

Post-Holiday Rally Pattern

Buying on the close the day after the holiday and then selling on the next close has also shown a steadily rising equity curve (according to QuantifiedStrategies).

Santa Claus Rally Pattern

This one is highly documented and generally quite profitable, yielding an average of about 1.1% per trade in an index like the S&P 500. The strategy requires holding for the last 4 to 5 days of the year and then selling two to three days into the new year. The exact number of days can vary based on weekends and market closures. So utilize the closest number of days you can.

According to Quantified Strategies, buying on the third Friday of December (before options expiration) and selling on the close of the third trading day of January bumped the average return up to 1.79% per trade.

Intraday Patterns

There are also intraday repeating patterns that play out, which are useful for short-term traders and day traders.

Stock Market Seasonal Patterns Conclusion

Seasonal patterns can be useful, but they can also be traps if we blindly follow them. Risk management must always be used to control losses, yet that may also mean getting out of some trades that would have otherwise been profitable if the favorable seasonal statistics played out.

Most season patterns are not statistically significant, meaning they are not based on enough data or haven’t accounted for other factors. They are essentially ideas with some evidence.

Before putting your capital to work based on seasonal patterns you may wish to do more thorough research.

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By Cory Mitchell, CMT

Disclaimer: Nothing in this article is personal investment advice, or advice to buy or sell anything. Trading is risky and can result in substantial losses, even more than deposited if using leverage.

Related

Best and Worst Months for the Stock Market - Seasonal Patterns - Trade That Swing (2024)

FAQs

Best and Worst Months for the Stock Market - Seasonal Patterns - Trade That Swing? ›

According to Reuters, since 1945, April and December are tied as the best-performing months of the year for stocks, with an average return of 1.6%. (September is notoriously the worst, with an average loss of -0.6%.) During recessions, April's positive performances can be even more pronounced.

What is the strongest month for the stock market? ›

According to Reuters, since 1945, April and December are tied as the best-performing months of the year for stocks, with an average return of 1.6%. (September is notoriously the worst, with an average loss of -0.6%.) During recessions, April's positive performances can be even more pronounced.

What are the most volatile trading months? ›

Forex trading tends to be more volatile during the months of September to December, as major financial statements are released and many fiscal years end during this period.

What is the 3-5-7 rule in trading? ›

The 3–5–7 rule in trading is a risk management principle that suggests allocating a certain percentage of your trading capital to different trades based on their risk levels. Here's how it typically works: 3% Rule: This suggests risking no more than 3% of your trading capital on any single trade.

What is the most common month for stock market crashes? ›

Key Takeaways
  • The October effect refers to the psychological anticipation that financial declines and stock market crashes are more likely to occur during this month than any other month.
  • The Bank Panic of 1907, the Stock Market Crash of 1929, and Black Monday 1987 all happened during the month of October.

What is the 11am rule in trading? ›

It is not a hard and fast rule, but rather a guideline that has been observed by many traders over the years. The logic behind this rule is that if the market has not reversed by 11 am EST, it is less likely to experience a significant trend reversal during the remainder of the trading day.

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