The popular stock market adage
'Sell in May and go away' proved to be wrong for Indian stocks during
May this year as the benchmark Sensex gained a whopping 1,800 points,
its best monthly gain in recent times. Indian stocks rose sharply and
scaled new record highs last month, with the benchmark index Sensex
rising above 25,000 on hopes of economic revival after NDA stormed to
power at the Centre and Narendra Modi became the new Prime Minister.
The 30-scrip Sensex gained 1,799.54 points, or 8 per cent, to end at
24,217.34 last month, breaking the May jinx. Domestic stock markets
bucked the trend of a downfall this year that was seen for three
consecutive years in the month of May till 2012. The Sensex had gained
24.53 points in May 2013. It saw an over 6 per cent drop in May 2012. In
2010 and 2011, Sensex fell around 2.5 per cent in May. The BSE Sensex
touched a record high of 25,375.63 on May 16 this year, the day results
for the general election gave Bharatiya Janata Party a clear mandate.
"BJP coming into power with full majority has enthused markets. And as
the bull run continues, the euphoria around the Modi government helped
break the jinx of Sell in May go away," said Ashika Stock Brokers,
Research Head, Paras Bothra. The strong upmove in the market has also
been supported with smart foreign fund inflows. Overseas investors have
pumped in nearly Rs 34,000 crore in the Indian market in May. In
previous years, May has been mostly bad for the stock markets globally,
but the Indian markets mostly swung between gains and losses during this
month till 2009. The "Sell in May and go away" strategy says that an
investor who sells stock holdings in May and gets back into the equity
market in November, avoiding the typically volatile May-October period,
would be better off than an investor who stays in equities throughout
the year.
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