January Barometer
The January Barometer is a market hypothesis that proposes the S&P 500’s performance during January predicts its performance for the remainder of the year. If the S&P 500 finishes January higher than it started, the theory forecasts a positive full-year return; if January is down, the year is likely to be negative.
Key takeaways
- The January Barometer links January returns for the S&P 500 to full-year returns.
- It was popularized in 1972 in the Stock Trader’s Almanac.
- Supporters point to high historical accuracy in the U.S., but critics note important limitations and mixed recent results.
How it works
The indicator is simple: compare the S&P 500 level on January 1 with its level on January 31. A positive January is taken as a bullish sign for the year; a negative January is taken as bearish. Traders sometimes use it as one input for short-term market timing—either increasing exposure after a positive January or reducing exposure after a negative one.
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Evidence and limitations
- Historical record: Proponents note a high hit rate in some long-term samples (for example, a commonly cited statistic is that the barometer “failed” relatively few times between 1950 and 2021).
- Base-rate effect: U.S. equities have historically produced positive annual returns roughly 70% of the time. That overall tendency can make a simple January–year correlation appear stronger than it is.
- Self-reinforcement: If many investors believe and act on the barometer, their buying or selling could amplify January moves and strengthen the apparent correlation.
- Geography and persistence: Similar patterns are not consistently observed outside the U.S., suggesting the effect may reflect local investor behavior or be a statistical anomaly rather than a universal market law.
- Mixed recent outcomes: Some years conform (e.g., January up and year up), while other years contradict the rule (e.g., January down but the market rallies for the year).
Recent examples
- 2019: January up (~+7.9%); full year up (~+28.9%).
- 2020: January slightly down (~‑0.16%); full year up (~+16%).
- 2021: January down (~‑1.1%); full year up (~+27%).
- 2022: January down (>‑5%); full year down (~‑20%).
- 2023: January up (~+6.2%); full year up (~+26%).
These examples show the indicator can align with full-year returns but also frequently fails.
Related concepts
- Santa Claus rally: A short seasonal uplift often measured across the last trading days of December and the first trading days of January.
- Sentiment indicator: Measures investor mood; recent performance can be interpreted as a proxy for sentiment and used to forecast continuation or reversal.
- Seasonality: Recurrent calendar-based effects in markets and business cycles (holidays, fiscal year patterns, etc.).
Practical guidance
- Treat the January Barometer as an interesting historical observation, not a standalone trading rule.
- Use it alongside other indicators, fundamental analysis, and risk-management rules.
- Be wary of data-mining and base-rate effects—simple correlations can be misleading without a causal mechanism.
Further reading
- Stock Trader’s Almanac (origin of the January Barometer)
- Jeffrey A. Hirsch, The Little Book of Stock Market Cycles
- Research and data sources on S&P 500 monthly and annual returns (e.g., YCharts, Yardeni Research)