Switch it up this year: Buy in May, till November stay

Some are bullish on the healthy global economic outlook

May 27, 2017 07:44 pm | Updated 07:44 pm IST - NEW YORK

U.S. mutual funds are cashing in profits from the recent rally. AP

U.S. mutual funds are cashing in profits from the recent rally. AP

“Sell in May and go away” is perhaps the oldest saw on Wall Street, but it appears there’s no shortage of U.S. mutual funds doing exactly that this year.

After all, the S&P 500 has delivered a total return, including reinvested dividends, of 10.8% over the last six months, essentially capturing all of the average rolling 12-month total return on the index since 1990, so why not cash in?

Indeed, political drama and high valuations are clearly driving some investors to take profits. American fund investors have yanked more than $17 billion from U.S. stocks so far this month, data from fund tracker Lipper shows, with some $10.1 billion in withdrawals in the latest week alone, the second biggest outflow for the year.

Some hearty investors, however, stand ready to bet against that flow — and history — and are advocating a buy-in-May approach this year.

“If anything you might want to buy in May and sell in November,” said Chris Zaccarelli, Chief Investment Officer at Cornerstone Financial Partners who bases his bullishness on the healthy outlook for the global economy rather than expectations for a policy boost from the Trump administration.

While stocks appear to have priced in hope for a Trump stimulus this year, Mr. Zaccarelli says his expectations for progress on President Trump’s agenda in 2017 has recently tumbled to 40/60 from 80/20 because he doesn’t see Mr. Trump gaining enough support from a severely divided Republican party, which suggests to him that selling will be more opportune a few months down the road.

In the last 20 years, a $100 investment in the S&P from November through April would have become $343 while a $100 investment in May through October in the same years would have slipped to $98.5, according to Bespoke Investment Group, in New York.

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