Market Direction: BULLISH alert
issued 9/21/2017
Analyzing the best days of the week to buy and sell (SPY) stocks...
We cannot stress enough the need for a discipline investment strategy. Most investors have probably been caught by surprise with the volatility in the stock market. The reality is no one can guess the exact tops or bottoms. Our proprietary model is our guide for direction. Monitor any open positions closely, exercise proper money management strategies and follow us at $tockMarketDirection for any change in the current market direction. Share with a friend… The stock market remains under pressure.
Worries about the next Fed rate hike have already started! Or something. We get The Really Big News, rally a little, sell off a little, go to sleep, and then Wham. I'm old enough to remember when we declined hard because the dollar was too strong -- now we decline hard because it's too weak. Either that or it's not really related -- I totally lost track.
Worries about the next Fed rate hike have already started! Or something. We get The Really Big News, rally a little, sell off a little, go to sleep, and then Wham. I'm old enough to remember when we declined hard because the dollar was too strong -- now we decline hard because it's too weak. Either that or it's not really related -- I totally lost track.
Here's one thing I did
notice: Fridays just
seem to act awful. It feels like we spend an inordinate
amount of time worrying what could possibly go wrong over the weekend. On Aug. 21,
those fears proved pretty founded. But most every other time, it's a non-event.
Anyway, I wanted to quantify it a
bit. Are Fridays really that weak, or am I imagining it? Here's the average and
median returns of each day of the week this year in the SPDR
S&P 500 ETF (SPY). Prices are adjusted for the quarterly
dividends.
Friday has indeed been the
ugliest day of the week in 2015, but we're only talking an average return of
negative 0.21%. Monday is negative 0.10%, but that's a bit skewed thanks
to the Aug. 24
implosion. If we look at median, its just negative 0.01%.
SPY itself is down 3.75% this year, so it all goes into the context of that.
But how about a little fun with
numbers? Let's say at the end of last year you started five separate
Day-of-the-Week Funds. The fund buys the previous day's close, and sells that
day's close. That is, the Monday Fund buys the Friday close, and then sells the
Monday close; the Tuesday Fund buys the Monday close, and sells the Tuesday
close; et. al. How did the Day-of-the-Week Funds do this year?
Ah, the wonders of compounding,
both good and bad. Monday is pretty close to in line with overall market
returns, Tuesday is a bit worse, and Friday… ugh. On the other hand, if you
owned the Wednesday or Thursday Fund, you've had a terrific year.
Now, obviously these funds don't
actually exist (well, as far as we know). But if you knew this in advance, you
would simply go long on Tuesday's close and then close out on Thursday's close.
As a matter of fact, if you
simply went long every Tuesday close and sold it back every Thursday close, you
would be up 13.07% this year. Conversely, if you went long the Thursday close
and sold back out on Tuesday's close, you would be down 13.37%.
Now, all this is interesting from
a trivia standpoint, but not sure it's all that tradeable going forward.
There's no long-term history of any significant Day of Week bias. What's more,
a lot of that outperformance is thanks to the timing of the late August drop.
From early January into mid-May, the two trades were very close to even. Perhaps in shaky markets there's something to be said for avoiding longs around weekends, while in better markets it's a lesser version of the reverse. Otherwise, though, it's an oddity that's worth paying attention to, but not something I'd go crazy about.
The all-time highs since our initial
recommendation to go LONG
this market. Here is how the markets have performed:
Stock Market
Direction Recommendation (9/21/2017)
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Dow
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up 4,257.48 points a 19.04% gain
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1/26/18
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Nasdaq
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up 1,083.08 points a 16.86% gain
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1/26/18
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S&P 500
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up 372.27 points a 14.84% gain
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1/26/18
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Related Link: http://www.stockmarket-direction.com/

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