Day After Christmas – Russell 2000 Best Up 73% Of Time
Santa Claus Rally starts today. The Santa Claus Rally was discovered and named by Yale Hirsch in 1972 and published in our 1973 Stock Trader’s Almanac as the last five trading days of the year and the first two trading days of the New Year. This short, sweet rally is usually good for about 1.3% on the S&P 500, but the real significance of the SCR is as an indicator.
It is our first seasonal indicator of the year ahead. Years when there was no Santa Claus Rally tended to precede bear markets or times when stocks hit lower prices later in the year. As Yale’s famous line states (2026 Almanac page 118): “If Santa Claus Should Fail To Call, Bears May Come to Broad and Wall.”
Russell 2000 has logged the greatest frequency (73%) and magnitude of gains (+0.41%) on the day after Christmas. Since 1988, NASDAQ has advanced 70.3% of the time with an average move of +0.37%. DJIA and S&P 500 have slightly softer records, but bullish, nonetheless.
Two days after Christmas, the market is less bullish with NASDAQ down more often than up. Three days after Christmas R2K small caps take the lead advancing 62.2% of the time with an average gain of +0.46%.
Looking further out, from 1950-1985 last 5 trading days of the year S&P 500 up 34 of 36 years, average gain 1.24%. 1986-2024 up 21 of 39 (no change in 2006), average gain 0.39%.
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