Money Control Place
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Stocks
  • Investing
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Stocks
  • Investing

Money Control Place

Stocks

Evaluating Risk is a Key Difference Between Successful and Unsuccessful Traders

by February 26, 2024
February 26, 2024
Evaluating Risk is a Key Difference Between Successful and Unsuccessful Traders

This secular bull market advance is running over everyone attempting to get in its way. It’s why I always say never to bet against one. Trying to short this type of bull market is the equivalent of financial suicide. I usually have music playing in the background while I’m working and, on Friday, as the stock market closed, Elton John’s “I’m Still Standing” started playing. I thought, “WOW, this is timely!” EVERYTHING has been thrown at this secular bull market and it’s still standing, “better than it ever did.”

Resiliency is a key element of bull market moves and we’ve certainly witnessed that. But, bull market or not, we absolutely should lower our bar of expectations right now. I would definitely remain fully invested, but just try not to grow too bearish when we inevitably enter a period of consolidation or (gasp!) selling. The first half of calendar quarters 1-3 is historically MUCH more bullish than the second half of calendar quarters 1-3. During the current secular bull market that began in 2013, here’s the S&P 500 breakdown by annualized returns by calendar quarters 1-3:

1st half of calendar quarters 1-3: +18.14%
2nd half of calendar quarters 1-3: -3.37%

That’s a very large discrepancy in performance and it’s calculated over 11+ years of data. We know what’s been driving our major indices higher. It’s been the Magnificent 7 and friends. In a 70-page Seasonality PDF that I’ve offered to everyone on 16 of the largest market cap companies, a TON of seasonal information was shared on each. Following the theme of 1st half vs. 2nd half of calendar quarters, let me share with you the annualized returns for both halves for each of these 16 companies:

1st Half of Calendar Quarters 1-3:

AAPL: +50.54%
MSFT: +37.67%
GOOGL: +50.42%
AMZN: +51.51%
NVDA: +75.63%
META: +56.44%
TSLA: +62.69%
AVGO: +18.26%
COST: +25.50%
ADBE: +33.82%
CSCO: +18.85%
AMD: +72.48%
NFLX: +47.21%
INTC: -1.11%
AMGN: +21.81%
SBUX: +17.13%

2nd Half of Calendar Quarters 1-3:

AAPL: +9.52%
MSFT: +12.35%
GOOGL: -8.70%
AMZN: +13.29%
NVDA: +47.80%
META: +8.93%
TSLA: +40.41%
AVGO: +40.21%
COST: +9.64%
ADBE: +20.37%
CSCO: +2.69%
AMD: +26.77%
NFLX: +19.45%
INTC: +13.98%
AMGN: +2.52%
SBUX: -4.05%

Of these 16 stocks, only AVGO and INTC perform better during the 2nd halves of quarters.

I deliberately ignored Q4, because this quarter has a long history of seeing considerable strength during both halves. But in quarters 1-3, we should simply recognize the historical patterns and be sure to lower our expectations, especially after such a significant rally since late-October 2023.

We’re still seeing a “risk on” market environment, which favors the bulls. If we begin to see relative strength in more defensive sectors, that could be the signal to perhaps take on less risk. Using StockCharts.com’s seasonality tool, we can compare defensive utilities (XLU) vs. ultra-aggressive technology (XLK) since 2013:

Utilities don’t outperform technology very often, but it seems to happen somewhat frequently in the 3rd months of calendar quarters. Check out March, June, September, and December above. March is the best calendar month for XLU outperformance vs. the XLK. But the second months, February, May, August, and November, favor technology in a HUGE way!

Now let’s look at consumer staples (XLP, defensive) vs. consumer discretionary (XLY, aggressive), using the same seasonality chart since 2013:

Again, it’s the third months of calendar quarters where defensive areas show some relative strength and the second months where we’ve seen MASSIVE relative weakness. We need to recognize these seasonal patterns to become better traders, knowing when it’s appropriate to take on more risk…..and when it’s not.

Based on all of this, it seems rather prudent to me to be a bit more cautious now. I’m not at all saying that our major indices are primed for a big fall. Instead, I’m simply pointing out that we’re in a time of the year when risk does escalate. It’s up to each individual as to what that might mean in your own trading and/or investing.

By the way, I am still offering the “Bowley Trend”, our seasonal PDF, for FREE. CLICK HERE and claim your copy!

Happy trading!

Tom

0
FacebookTwitterGoogle +Pinterest
previous post
​Tech 5: NVIDIA Jumps on Latest Results, Google Releases New AI Tools
next post
Volkswagen recalls 261,000 vehicles over fuel tank issue

Related Posts

Is It Time to Lower Our Market Expectations?

July 14, 2025

Charts Flashing “No Go” for S&P 500!

April 19, 2024

Exponential vs. Simple: This is the Moving Average...

October 10, 2023

Watch For These Seasonality Patterns in 2025

February 5, 2025

How Market Breadth Indicators Can Lead You Out...

October 4, 2023

Two Options Plays Amid Market Selloff

April 5, 2024

Three Stocks With Post-Earnings Upside Potential

May 3, 2025

In Bullish Trends, Seek Value and Momentum; Three...

November 13, 2023

NVDA is Holding Strong: It’s Time to Think...

April 12, 2024

Bearish at the Bottom; Institutions Wrong on Oil

June 21, 2023

    Get free access to all of the retirement secrets and income strategies from our experts! or Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get the Premium Articles Acess for Free


    By opting in you agree to receive emails from us and our affiliates. Your information is secure and your privacy is protected.

    Latest

    • S&P 500 Breaking Out Again: What This Means for Your Portfolio

    • Tech 5: US Government Strikes Big Tech Deal, Perplexity Plots Expansion

    • Crypto Market Update: Bitcoin Pulls Back After New High, Ethereum ETF Inflows Hit Nearly US$3 Billion

    • Playboy moving its headquarters to Miami Beach and opening a new club

    • S&P 500 Breaking Out Again: What This Means for Your Portfolio

    • Asra Minerals

    Categories

    • Business (1,336)
    • Investing (2,787)
    • Politics (3,699)
    • Stocks (1,761)
    • Uncategorized (20)
    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Disclaimer: MoneyControlPlace.com, its managers, its employees, and assigns (collectively “The Company”) do not make any guarantee or warranty about what is advertised above. Information provided by this website is for research purposes only and should not be considered as personalized financial advice. The Company is not affiliated with, nor does it receive compensation from, any specific security. The Company is not registered or licensed by any governing body in any jurisdiction to give investing advice or provide investment recommendation. Any investments recommended here should be taken into consideration only after consulting with your investment advisor and after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company.

    Copyright © 2025 moneycontrolplace.com | All Rights Reserved