If history is any guide, it shows that a year-end rally is likely and offers clues as to where investors should look to put their money to work.
As you can see, technology firms are particularly likely to enjoy an end-of-year rally, as corporate IT managers spend any budget dollars set aside for the year to that point, and online advertising and commerce companies benefit from the shift toward online retail and away from traditional retailers.
Let’s break down the numbers…
Right now, the Nasdaq Composite index is down about 11% on the year. But history shows that this trend doesn’t necessarily continue until the end of the year.
As you can see, there have been six instances over the past 10 years where the Nasdaq Composite’s returns over the first eight months of the year were negative. But on all six occasions, the index promptly rallied into the end of the year. Not only were the returns positive, they were impressive, notching up an average of 14.6%. This unusual occurrence could be due to several factors…
- The benefit of stocks being oversold
- Optimism about the coming year
- The expectation for outperformance as companies experience budget flush
- Fund managers putting more capital to work in order to aggressively chase year-end performance
Regardless of the cause, a correlation exists. And here’s how you can take advantage…
15% Gains From The Last Four Months
In a post tech bubble economy, by being invested in the sector over the final four months of the year, rather than throughout the entire year, you could outperform the market by 15%.
This may be a short period to draw conclusions from but it represents a solid view of a stable environment for investing in technology stocks.
The years of the bubble, crash, and the first year of recovery misrepresent the growth prospects of the environment we’re in today. And the numbers clearly show that the potential for negative returns are in the early part of the year, when companies have less visibility into financial results, drags on the overall performance.
Therefore, you could outperform the market by buying the index on the first trading day of September and selling at the end of the year. In the post tech bubble/recovery era, this strategy would result in the individual outperforming the market by 15.1%.