Can We Expect Green For Saint Patrick’s Day?

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Saint Patrick was a fifth-century missionary and bishop in Ireland. By the seventh century he was revered as the patron saint of Ireland. His death occurred on March 17, and for this reason we celebrate his life, Irish heritage, and pretty much the color green on this day.

Per Ryan Detrick, Senior Market Strategist, “Although it is purely random, you have to find some humor in the fact that a day that celebrates the color green is also historically a strong day for equities. In fact, going back 20 years, on March 17 the stock market has been higher 80% of the time – one of the most likely days to finish green out of the entire year. Luck of the Irish indeed!”

Saint Patrick’s Day

As we noted at the start of the month, March has been the strongest month for the S&P 500 Index  on average in each of the past 10 years and one of the strongest the past 20 years, though the majority of those gains have taken place during the second half of the month (right in time for the NCAA Tournament).

Saint Patrick's Day

Where could you potentially find some green in your investments here and now? Technology, financials, and bank loans all look attractive. Here are some quick bullets on why we like each:

Technology – Strong fourth quarter 2016 earnings, higher business confidence (possibly lifted by expected corporate tax reform), technology’s role as a productivity enabler, and valuations are all supportive. Trade policy is the big risk here.

Financials – Steepening yield curve, deregulation, expanded credit access, strong fourth quarter 2016 earnings, and positive revisions are all supportive. The sector is consolidating recent gains.

Bank loansLibor is elevated, making floating rate securities (like bank loans) more attractive. Should interest rates continue to rise, floating rates may perform better than longer-term bonds – as they are less sensitive to rising rates.

Article by LPL Financial

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