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The 'January Effect' could be the market's big hope for a bounce


Despite Wednesday’s record-breaking rally, U.S. stocks are still on track for their worst December since the Great Depression. While much of the blame has been cast on the Federal Reserve, President Donald Trump’s tweets and the trade war, one overlooked explanation for the bleeding is tax selling.

Although the year-end tax selling intensified December’s stock rout, it will likely yield to a bounce in January, which is the logic behind the Wall Street’s “January effect,” a theory that there is a seasonal rally in stocks during the first month of the year, according to Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research.

“The idea is that beaten up small cap stocks tend to trade higher in January as tax loss selling abates and more normal buy-sell balances reassert themselves,” Colas said in a note to investors.

When money managers get hit by a sharp reversal in stock prices, not only do they sell the winners from early in the year to reap the gains, they also tend to sell some losers to minimize the tax bill from the capital increases — the so-called tax selling, which is very much at play in December, according to Colas.

Case in point, the biggest losers in the S&P 500 index this year — General Electric, Mohawk, Newfield, Affiliated Managers, Invesco,Western Digital, L Brands, Alcoa, Unum, Brighthouse Financial and IPG Photonics — drastically underperformed the broad market in the first three weeks of December even when they didn’t suddenly show worse fundamentals.

Shares of the 11 companies lost 21.1 percent on average from the last day of November to Dec. 24, while the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 bled 14.8 percent and 17.4 percent respectively. However, 10 of the 11 names turned around on Wednesday, outperforming the S&P 500 and posting with an average gain of 6.8 percent.

“With tax loss selling likely near the tail end or done, this makes sense,” Colas said in a note to investors. “Tax loss selling made December much sloppier than it otherwise might have been. It depressed many stocks that were already on track for sizeable losses. And it made the lives of active mutual fund managers very difficult as they sold holdings to keep up with redemptions.”

January also features one of Wall Street’s favorite seasonal gauges — the January Barometer. History has shown that since 1950 every down January on the S&P 500 preceded a new or extended bear market, a flat market, or at least a 10 percent correction. So if January turns out to be positive, the historically accurate January Barometer could rescue stocks from a bear market.



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