
“Sell in May and go away; buy again St Leger’s day,” is one of the oldest stock market sayings in the book. Does it work?
Analysis by Deutsche Bank suggests that, aggregated over the last 39 years, it has indeed paid to be out of the stock market during the summer months. But as is usually the case with such strategies, it depends crucially on precisely when you sell, and when you buy back in.
If you had invested in the strategy since 1987, it would have theoretically outperformed a “buy and hold” approach quite significantly.
But selling at the end of May and buying at the end of September delivered a markedly better return than selling at the beginning of May and buying at the start of September.
In any case, the whole thing is something of a statistical illusion. In 25 of the 39 years since 1987, the strategy underperformed a straight buy-and-hold approach. Its success over time has depended crucially on strong equity market underperformance in just three of the intervening years – 1998, 2001 and 2002. Without these years, it would have underperformed a basic buy-and-hold approach.
All of this is a long-winded way of asking whether this is one of the years in which the saying might come into its own. You might think it is, with stock markets – particularly US-based indices – showing remarkable resilience in the face of renewed war in the Middle East and an accompanying energy price crisis that threatens to plunge the global economy into recession.
For many observers, this looks like complacency verging on the delusional. Even Donald Trump, who regards stock market performance as a proxy for his own success, has expressed surprise at the staying power of share prices, saying he had expected at least a 20pc correction.
The list of negatives is indeed daunting – renewed war in the Middle East, stalemate in the already four-year-old war in Ukraine, Nato under threat as the US pulls its troops out of Germany, spiking energy prices and surging inflation, fiscally broken governments with crushing debts, US consumer confidence at its lowest level since records began and looming supply shortages across a whole range of products vital for connectivity and economic activity… I could go on.
And yet the S&P 500 hit another all-time high last week. It is 5pc up for the year to date. Non-US markets have fared less well, but even the UK’s FTSE 100 is only 6pc off the high it achieved on the eve of the war. It’s pretty similar for the STOXX Europe 600 – a broadly based measure of the performance of European equities – which is just 3.5pc off its pre-conflict high.



