投资者现在可以讨论“1月如此,全年都如此”的旧交易谚语是否在2019年同样有效,以及《股市交易者年鉴》(Stock Trader's Almanac)编制的显示上涨的“头五天”(First Five Days)指标是否预示着市场今年会有一个好行情。它们在去年并没有那么幸运——去年尽管1月份上涨,但全年最终以下跌收场。
译者/裴伴
以下为此文英文原文:S&P 500 notches biggest January rise since 1987
By Peter Wells
US stocks ruled off on their best January performance in more than four decades, soothed by a dovish outlook from the Federal Reserve and optimism over US-China trade talks.
The S&P 500 rallied 7.9 per cent for the month, ranking as its best start to the year since 1987, and one of its 10-biggest on record. It was the benchmark’s biggest monthly gain since October 2015.
That represents a solid rebound from the previous month’s 9.2 per cent fall, which was the steepest December drop since 1931, but doesn’t quite bring the benchmark back to the 2,760.17 level it finished November at.
And as far as recoveries go, this is the S&P 500’s fourth-biggest gain following a negative December (of which there have only been 24 since 1928) on record, according to Financial Times calculations.
Stocks began their recovery on December 26, with the December quarter sell-off leaving the S&P 500 on the cusp of closing in a bear market on Christmas Eve. The benchmark has added 15 per cent since then.
Soothing commentary from Federal Reserve officials at the start of the year were made more official at their policy meeting this week, when policymakers pledged to take a “patient” approach towards further interest rate rises and vowed to take a flexible approach to running down the central bank’s multi-trillion dollar balance sheet.
Concerns the Fed was still some way away from reaching a “neutral” interest rate that neither hinders nor helps economic growth, and would need to maintain a brisk pace of rate rises, helped spark the market’s sell-off in the December quarter.
The prospect of higher rates weighed particularly heavily on so-called growth stocks, like tech, which came under additional pressure as big names such as Apple and Amazon warned investors their crucial holiday selling seasons might not be as stellar as analysts expected.
Lingering apprehension towards the sector may help explain the performance of tech stocks during this recovery, however signs of an appetite for growth-exposed stocks were on show elsewhere with Australian miners heading for their best weekly performance since November 2016.
As a group, the level of outperformance of the tech sector relative to the broader S&P 500 has not been as strong as it was following a previous sharp sell-off in February last year. In January 2018, they led the market to a then-record high.
So far this January, five sectors are on track for double-digit gains, led by an 11 per cent rise for industrials. Real estate, energy, consumer discretionary and communications services round out that fortunate quintet.
Industrials made a late charge to the top of the leaderboard as a number of companies’ quarterly results were well-received by investors. Oil and gas stocks had been well supported all month, helped by Brent crude having its best January since 2005 and West Texas Intermediate having its best January on record.
Broader concerns about economic growth have been hard to shake, but investors have managed to grind through them. Chinese gross domestic product was shown recently to have risen in 2018 at its slowest pace in almost three decades, while investors are also weighing the potential impact on US economic activity from the recent government shutdown.
Markets have also remained optimistic Washington and Beijing can make progress on trade talks.
Investors can now debate whether the old trader adage of “as goes January, so goes the year” will hold in 2019, and whether a positive First Five Days barometer, popularised by the Stock Trader’s Almanac, also bodes well for the market. They were not so lucky last year, when stocks finished 2018 lower despite a positive January.