From T-Bills to Stocks: Seasonal Anomalies Revisited |
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Authors: | Carl R. Chen,& Anthony Chan |
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Affiliation: | Professor of Finance at the University of Dayton,;Chief Economist and Vice President at the Banc One Investment Advisors Corporation |
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Abstract: | This paper employed eleven data series which consist of stocks, bonds, bills, equity premiums, term premiums, and various default premiums to investigate whether January seasonality reported in existing literature is robust across different states of the economy as this has important trading implications. For the periods 1926–1990, small stocks, small stock premiums, low grade bonds, and default premiums (spread between high grade, low grade and government bonds) reveal January seasonality and that the seasonality is robust across different states of the economy except for low grade bond returns and default premiums. January seasonality for low grade bond returns and low grade bond default premiums are primarily driven by results found during periods of economic expansion. Overall, January seasonality is more evident during the economic expansion periods although the magnitude of default premiums is larger during periods of economic contraction. Furthermore, prior findings of strong summer equity returns are primarily driven by the results found during the periods of economic contraction. It is also found that equity returns are generally higher during periods of economic expansion. |
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Keywords: | seasonal anomalies January effect stock market efficiency risk premium seasonality bonds and bills |
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