January effect
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The January effect (sometimes called "year-end effect") is a calendar effect wherein stocks, especially small-cap stocks, have historically tended to rise markedly in price during the period starting on the last day of December and ending on the fifth trading day of January. This effect is owed to year-end selling to create tax losses, recognize capital gains, effect portfolio window dressing, or raise holiday cash. Because such selling depresses the stocks but has nothing to do with their fundamental worth, bargain hunters quickly buy in, causing the January rally. The Incredible January Effect by Robert Haugen in an authoritative text describing the January effect.
The strength of the effect varies depending on company size and other factors.
In the last couple of years, after the January effect became widely known to the public, it has become less pronounced and has started shifting to December causing a rise in stock prices, known as a Santa Claus rally and the December Effect.
[edit] See also
Stock market | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Types of Stocks | ||||
stock | Common stock | Preferred stock | Treasury stock | ||||
Trading Stock | ||||
Terms dealing with trading: | Market maker | specialist | |||
Exchanges: | Stock exchange | List of stock exchanges | New York Stock Exchange | SEAQ | NASDAQ | American Stock Exchange | London Stock Exchange | Frankfurt Stock Exchange | Euronext | |||
Stock valuation | ||||
Trading Theories: | Dow Theory | Elliott Wave Theory | Fundamental analysis | Technical analysis | Mark Twain effect |
January effect | Efficient market hypothesis |
|||
Stock Pricing: | Dividend yield |Gordon model | Income per share | Book value | Financial ratio | PE ratio | PEG ratio | Price/sales ratio | P/B ratio | Earnings yield | Beta coefficient | |||
Stock Related Terms | ||||
Dividend | Stock split | Growth stock |