Historical evolution of monthly anomalies in international stock markets

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Authors

Plastun, Alex
Sibande, Xolani
Gupta, Rangan
Wohar, Mark E.

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Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

This paper is a comprehensive investigation of the evolution of various monthly anomalies (January effect, December effect, and the Mark Twain effect) in the US stock market for its entire history. This is done using various statistical techniques (average analysis, Student's -test, ANOVA, the Mann–Whitney test) and a trading simulation approach). To confirm our results we extended the analysis to the UK, Japan, Canada, France, Switzerland, Germany and Italy stock markets. The results indicate that the January effect was most prevalent in the US and that the December effect and the Mark Twain effect were never prevalent in the US. This result was confirmed in other markets as well. The January effect was most prevalent in the middle of the 20th century but has since disappeared. Furthermore, the January effect provided exploitable profit opportunities. Our results are consistent and add to the existing literature through the use of a complete history of the US market. Overall, the US stock market is consistent with the Adaptive Market Hypothesis.

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Keywords

Mark Twain effect, December effect, January effect, Hypothesis, Efficient market, Stock market, Calendar anomalies, Month of the year effect

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Citation

Plastun, A., Sibande, X., Gupta, R. et al. 2020, 'Historical evolution of monthly anomalies in international stock markets', Research in International Business and Finance, vol. 52, art. 101127, pp. 1-13.