The S&P 500 (SPX +0.40%) rose 7.29 points, or 0.4%, to end 2013 at 1,848.36 Tuesday. The index ended the year with a 29.6% annual gain, its biggest yearly jump since 1997. The S&P 500 gained 5 percent in the first month of 2013, logging its best January performance since 1997. Looking back, also in 2013 the “January Barometer” was correct again.
Since 1950, the “January Barometer” predicted the direction for the year with 81 percent accuracy. The correlation is even stronger when the market finishes January in the black, proceeding with full-year gains 90 percent of the time. Consider the last five decades, for example, when there were 12 other instances that the S&P 500 rose at least 5 percent.
Below is a look at the full-year gains when the S&P 500 was up more than 5 percent in January dating back to 1950.
S&P January Gain > 5 % and Year End Gains
Year | Jan. Gain | Year Gain |
1951 | 6.02% | 16.35% |
1954 | 5.12% | 45.02% |
1961 | 6.32% | 23.13% |
1967 | 7.82% | 20.09% |
1975 | 12.28% | 31.55% |
1976 | 11.83% | 19.15% |
1980 | 5.76% | 25.77% |
1985 | 7.41% | 26.33% |
1987 | 13.18% | 2.03% |
1989 | 7.11% | 27.25% |
1997 | 6.13% | 31.01% |
2013 | 5.00% | 29.60% |
Sam Stovall Chart on the January Effect: