May Almanac: Challenging Month in Pre-Election Years
By: Jeffrey A. Hirsch & Christopher Mistal
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April 18, 2019
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May officially marks the beginning of the “Worst Six Months” for the DJIA and S&P. To wit: “Sell in May and go away.” Our “Best Six Months Switching Strategy,” created in 1986, proves that there is merit to this old trader’s tale. A hypothetical $10,000 investment in the DJIA compounded to a gain of $1,008,721 for November-April in 68 years compared to just $1,031 for May-October. The same hypothetical $10,000 investment in the S&P 500 compounded to $757,335 for November-April in 68 years compared to a gain of just $9,079 for May-October.
 
May has been a tricky month over the years, a well-deserved reputation following the May 6, 2010 “flash crash”. It used to be part of what we called the “May/June disaster area.” From 1965 to 1984 the S&P 500 was down during May fifteen out of twenty times. Then from 1985 through 1997 May was the best month, gaining ground every single year (13 straight gains) on the S&P, up 3.3% on average with the DJIA falling once and two NASDAQ losses. 
 
In the years since 1997, May’s performance has been erratic; DJIA up ten times in the past twenty years (three of the years had gains in excess of 4%). NASDAQ suffered five May losses in a row from 1998-2001, down – 11.9% in 2000, followed by eleven sizable gains in excess of 2.5% and four losses, the worst of which was 8.3% in 2010. Since 1950, pre-election-year Mays rank poorly, #10 DJIA and S&P 500, #7 NASDAQ, #6 Russell 1000 and #5 Russell 2000.
 
[Pre-Election May Performance Table]
 
Based upon the S&P 500, Monday before May option expiration is much stronger than expiration day itself albeit weaker for small caps. Big caps have registered only seven losses in the last thirty-one years on Monday. Expiration day is a loser nearly across the board; Russell 2000 posts a marginal average gain. The full week had a bullish bias that is fading in recent years. The week after options expiration week now favors tech and small caps. DJIA has fallen in eleven of the last twenty weeks after.
 
On Friday before Mother’s Day the DJIA has gained ground sixteen of the last twenty-four years and on the Monday after (the first day of options expiration this year), the blue-chip average has also risen in sixteen of those years.
 
The first two days of May trade higher frequently and the S&P 500 has been up 21 of the last 29 first trading days. A bout of weakness often appears on the third, fourth and around the fifteenth trading day for large cap stocks. Generally, the first half of the month is better than the second half.
 
May (1950-2018)
  DJI SP500 NASDAQ Russell 1K Russell 2K
Rank 9 8 5 6 6
# Up 37 41 30 28 26
# Down 32 28 18 12 14
Average % -.001   0.3   1.1   1.0   1.4
4-Year Presidential Election Cycle Performance by %
Post-Election 1.3   1.7   3.4   3.0   3.9
Mid-Term -0.6 -0.7 -0.7 0.1 -1.1
Pre-Election 0.1 0.2 1.9 1.2 2.7
Election -0.7 -0.1 -0.3 -0.3 0.1
Best & Worst May by %
Best 1990 8.3 1990 9.2 1997 11.1 1990 8.9 1997 11.0
Worst 2010 -7.9 1962 -8.6 2000 -11.9 2010 -8.1 2010 -7.7
May Weeks by %
Best 5/29/70 5.8 5/2/97 6.2 5/17/02 8.8 5/2/97 6.4 5/14/10 6.3
Worst 5/25/62 -6.0 5/25/62 -6.8 5/7/2010 -8.0 5/7/10 -6.6 5/7/10 -8.9
May Days by %
Best 5/27/70 5.1 5/27/70 5.0 5/30/00 7.9 5/10/10 4.4 5/10/10 5.6
Worst 5/28/62 -5.7 5/28/62 -6.7 5/23/00 -5.9 50/20/10 -3.9 5/20/10 -5.1
First Trading Day of Expiration Week: 1990-2018
#Up-#Down   22-7   22-7   19-10   21-8   16-13
Streak   U3   U3   U3   U3   D1
Avg %   0.4   0.4   0.4   0.3   0.2
Options Expiration Day: 1990-2018
#Up-#Down   15-14   15-14   14-15   15-14   14-15
Streak   U6   D1   D1   D1   U3
Avg %   -0.1   -0.1   -0.1   -0.1   0.02
Options Expiration Week: 1990-2018
#Up-#Down   15-14   15-14   16-13   14-15   17-12
Streak   D3   D2   D2   D2   U1
Avg %   0.2   0.2   0.3   0.2   -0.1
Week After Options Expiration: 1990-2018
#Up-#Down   17-12   19-10   20-9   19-10   23-6
Streak   U3   U5   U5   U5   U5
Avg %   -0.04   0.2   0.4   0.3   0.5
May 2019 Bullish Days: Data 1998-2018
  1, 2, 7, 8, 10, 30 1, 30 1, 8, 21, 29, 30 1, 30 1, 2, 8, 30
           
May 2019 Bearish Days: Data 1998-2018
  3, 6, 20, 22, 31 3, 14, 20, 22 3, 20, 22 3, 14, 20 3, 14, 22