The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the U.S. labor market made broad-based gains in March as 162,000 jobs were added, the most since May of 2007, and the unemployment rate was unchanged at a still very high level of 9.7 percent.

While the increase in payrolls was well below the consensus estimate of 200,000, data for prior months was revised upward by a total of 56,000 as December’s decline of 20,000 turned into a gain of 14,000 and January’s loss of 36,000 improved to a loss of 14,000.





According to a comprehensive review of its historical legitimacy that appeared in the December 2002 issue of the prestigious academic journal, American Economic Review, this pattern has existed historically in 36 of 37 countries studied. In each of those countries, average stock market returns from Halloween through May Day (the so-called “winter” months) were significantly higher than equity returns from May Day through Halloween (the “summer months”).


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