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A Santa Claus rally is a calendar effect that involves a rise in stock prices during the last 5 trading days in December and the first 2 trading days in the following January., [1] [2] According to the 2019 Stock Trader's Almanac, the stock market has risen 1.3% on average during the 7 trading days in question since both 1950 and 1969.
This year's "Santa Claus rally" in stocks could depend on the Fed, BofA says. A December meeting with no surprises would give the green light for markets to keep rising into year-end.
This year's Santa Claus rally saw a strong start on Christmas Eve, with a nearly 400-point gain for the Dow and a 1.1% gain for the S&P 500, marking the benchmark index's best Christmas Eve ...
The average gain during the Santa Claus trading window is even stronger, at 1.6%, when including stock returns going back to 1928, according to data from Bank of America. Here's where US indexes ...
A Santa Claus rally in the stock market refers to the tendency for the S&P 500 to increase in the final five trading days of December and the first two days of January in the new year.
The Santa Claus trading window starts December 24 and should bring a stock market rally this year. Historically, the S&P 500 gains 1.3% during this seven-day period and is positive 79% of the time.
Wall Street kicked off the Santa Rally season on a positive note, with all major indices and sectors closing higher in a shortened session ahead of the Christmas holiday. The S&P 500 climbed 1% ...
The history of the stock market shows that, most years, there is a "Santa Claus" rally that leaves investors on the right side of the “naughty or nice” list. In 2024, ...