Equity Returns at the Turn of the Month
By Wei Xu and John J McConnell, July 2006 (Full
paper (240kB), )
A turn-of-the-month effect in U.S. equity returns was initially
identified by Lakonishok and Smidt (1988) using the DJIA for the period
1897-1986. According to the turn-of-the-month effect, equity returns over
the interval beginning the last trading day of the month and ending three
days later are significantly higher than over other days. Using CRSP
daily returns, we find that the turn-of the-month effect persists over the
recent interval of 1987-2005: in essence, over this 19-year period (and over
the 109-year period of 1897-2005) all of the excess market return occurred
during the four-day turn-of-the-month interval. Thus, during the other 16
trading days of the month, on average, investors received no reward for
bearing market risk. We further find that the turn-of-the-month effect is
not confined to small or low-priced stocks; it is not confined to the
December-January turn-of-the-month; it is not confined to
calendar-quarter-ends; it is not confined to the U.S.; and it is not due to
market risk as traditionally measured: the standard deviation of returns at
the turn-of-the-month is no higher than during other days. This persistent
peculiarity in equity returns poses a challenge to both “rational” and
“behavioral” models of asset pricing.
|