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HomeFinanceHow I Used Barchart’s Stock Tools to Test a 70-Year-Old Wall Street...

How I Used Barchart’s Stock Tools to Test a 70-Year-Old Wall Street Slogan

If you simply Google “sell rosh” like I did, you will likely see it fill in the rest of an investment market saying that dates back to 1955. “Sell Rosh Hashanah, Buy Yom Kippur.” For those not familiar with the story and a couple of nouns I just used, here’s a quick primer.

Back on Sept. 23, 1955, then-U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower, a hero of World War II, suffered a massive heart attack. The market sold off, concerned for the health of the 65-year-old leader. He recovered, and even won election to a second term in 1956. But back then, heart care was not what it is today, and thus alerted the rest of the world to the benefits of early diagnosis.

However, the stock market was naturally shocked by this, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DOWI) fell 6.5% the next trading day, Sept. 26. It also occurred on the holiest day of the Hebrew calendar, Yom Kippur, a day of self-reflection and fasting.

Wall Street slogans and its habitual ability to laugh at itself somehow led to a theory that, to this day, is part of the investing culture. The saying “sell Rosh Hashanah, buy Yom Kippur” refers to the seasonal tendency for stocks to sell off at the start of the Jewish New Year, and start to recover as Eisenhower did, just after Yom Kippur.

While there is some evidence to support that trading strategy, which has worked so far this year, it could just be correlation without causation. Or, one of the many self-fulfilling prophecies that this industry tends to make a habit out of. Seen any “October stock market warning” articles lately? “Santa Claus rally,” anyone?

None of that history will make us money. What might? Scouting for good stocks, those with technical setups. And in the spirit of the Jewish high holiday season, I used Barchart’s quick and easy stock analysis tools with the following goal: Find the list of stocks of companies based in Israel, a global technology leader despite its small size, and run charts on them to see if any look particularly timely. The result: a watchlist of stocks that might just coincidentally rally into and after Yom Kippur.

That’s a Yiddish expression loosely defined as idle chatter. In other words, let’s get right to it. Given that there are more Israel-headquartered stocks listed on U.S. stock exchanges than nearly any other country, I started my search by pulling up the constituents page for the iShares MSCI Israel ETF (EIS). This 17-year-old fund has more than $360 million in assets, and is one of dozens of single-country ETFs I track.

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