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What is the best time of year to buy and sell stocks?

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 private private,

 Friday, October 24, 2014

I found that the best time to buy a stock was from August to December and the best time to sell stretched from January to May. The best individual month to buy was September and to sell was March. To read the full article, see: http://thepatternsite.com/Seasonality.html


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5 comments on article "What is the best time of year to buy and sell stocks? "

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 Jim Witkam, Owner Altreva, agent-based forecasting models

 Thursday, October 30, 2014



Interesting findings. But what kind of stocks did you buy? That might explain why your conclusions are somewhat different than those for US stock market index returns (September has lowest return, best is to buy end of September; see this article which also deals with 'turn of the month' and 'weekday' effects: http://www.investopedia.com/articles/05/seasonaltrends.asp)


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 Serge Blain, ISeries/RPG Developer

 Monday, November 3, 2014



Mr Bulowski has several books published and had done a great deal of analysis about patterns and all things equities. I believe he is suggesting he has found statistical evidence for these months from years of research.


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 Vasily Nekrasov, Risk analyst and model developer at Total Energie Gas GmbH

 Wednesday, November 5, 2014



I have found (both for German and US Markets) that the rule "sell in May and go away" is good. A complete rule "sell in May and go away but remember to by IN THE END of September".


More on this in my book: http://www.amazon.com/dp/3000465200/



Program code in R can be downloaded from my website for free: http://www.yetanotherquant.com


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 Jose Azevedo, Teacher at ISCAP

 Wednesday, November 5, 2014



How many years you use for this conclusion?


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 Vasily Nekrasov, Risk analyst and model developer at Total Energie Gas GmbH

 Thursday, November 6, 2014



24 years: from 1990 till now (older data are hardly available from yahoo.finance)

Interestingly, the seasonality pattern in more recent years is less prominent (but still persists)

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