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Tuesday, January 04, 2022 / 10:19 AM / By Sola Oni, OpEd /
Header Image Credit: Investment U
As we ascend the ladder of 2022, global investors are pre-occupied with the
issue of asset allocation and stock pick. January, the first month of the year
is symbolic in investment parlance. The month is globally associated with
general rise in stock prices. January is characterized by many variables,
including consumer sentiment, tax-loss
harvesting in December, and employees' investing of year-end- bonus on stocks
in January, thus causing spike in stock prices. The theory of the January
effect emanated in 1942, when a celebrated investment banker Sidney Wachtel
noticed that stock prices tended to rise in January more than other months. Academics are
believed to have later confirmed the
theory, following the behaviour of stocks and other asset classes in every
January.
A Post Santa Rally
The January effect is also driven by the
perception that some astute portfolio
managers and fund managers "window dress" their portfolios by dumping laggards
in December to avert disclosure in the fund's annual report and invest heavily
in January to drive returns. January effect is also said to impact more on
small cap stocks than their large cap counterparts as small caps are largely
illiquid. At the beginning of the year,
many investors begin on a clean slate to invest for the future. This can lead
to upswing in demand with attendant effect on the stock prices. The average
return for stocks during January was approximately five times greater than any
other month according to a study that analyzed data between 1904 and 1974. This
is corroborated by Salomon Barney's
analysis between 1972 and 2002 which revealed that small cap stocks
outperformed large-caps during January.
Busting a Theory
But popular as the Theory appears, it is
not without some inherent weaknesses . In every market, institutional investors
tend to have stronger capacity to influence the market direction. It is
therefore debatable that the aggregate sell-off by individual investors in
December or purchase in January can alter the market equilibrium. In the United
States, the January effect is no longer consistent with the markets. Asset
classes behave differently in January. The All-Share Index (ASI) of the Nigerian Exchange Limited (NGX formerly NSE)
ended bullish in December 2020, as the best performing worldwide according to
Bloomberg which monitored 93 global equity indices. The Exchange posted +50.03 % to surpass S & P 500 ,-16.26 %,
Dow Jones Industrial Average, +7. 25 %, among other global African markets.
But the Exchange's performance in January 2021 proved the January effect theory wrong, The total
transaction value amounted to N232,46 billion , a 13.7 5 decline compared to
N269.24. billion recorded in December. Similarly, total foreign equities
transaction in the review period was N47.52 billion, a decline of 32 % compared
to N69.92 billion posted in December and 32.4 % recorded in the corresponding
period of 2020. The uninspiring performance has nothing to do with the market's
strong fundamentals. It only reflected profit taking by investors in an
operating environment characterized by uncertainties. However, the uninspiring
performance is at variance with the January effect theory. Some investors have
argued that if the January effect was
real, every investor would buy stocks in December and sell in January to take
advantage of capital gain. Others have
fingered the long-term data flaunted to defend the theory as misleading as it
relied on occurrences of many years ago.
A Teachers Take
A frontline provider of Online financial
analyst certification Programme, Corporate Finance Institute (CFI), in a recent
study noted that January 2020 meant different things to investors. According to
the Institute, while investors realized positive returns in 10 out of 23
countries within the World Index of Global Developed Market, they lost in 13
others. The study stated that in January 2020, Portugal was up 6.2 % while
Austria was down, 5%. It offers timeless investment advice on the January effect saying: "As an investor, it
is important to understand the fundamentals of a company to be better equipped
when making decisions during the January spike. It involves researching the
company's financial health, such as revenues, growth potentials, and profit
margins, along with other aspects such as management, market position and more".
As we anticipate what the market will post in this new month, investors should
move closer to their stockbrokers for sound investment advice to hedge against
risks associated with investment decision.
Oni, an integrated Communications Strategist, Chartered
Stockbroker, and Commodities Broker, is the Chief Executive Officer, Sofunix
Investment and Communications.
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