#JanuaryEffect

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jeffhirsch
jeffhirsch

“January Effect” of Russell 2000 Outperformance Continues Until Early March

Despite the Russell 2000 losing some ground today, it is still leading the large-cap Russell 1000 by a substantial margin. At the close on January 22, Russell 2000 was up 9.54% year-to-date (YTD) while Russell 1000 was up 1.23%. This outperformance is referred to as the “January Effect” in the 2026 Stock Trader’s Almanac (pages 112 & 114) and we covered it in early December in a post titled “Russell 2000 Breakout – or Just Another Fake Out?” As you can see from the accompanying chart, Russell 2000 outperformance has lasted through February and into early March. Today’s dip could be an opportunity before its next move begins.

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mikewiprana
mikewiprana

The Green Mirage: Why the Yahoo Finance Rally is a Trap, and Where Real Value Hides in 2026

Introduction: The Sedustion of Green

It is Tuesday, January 6, 2026. The holiday cobwebs are cleared, and the financial machinery of the world is slowly grinding back up to speed.

A cursory glance at the Yahoo Finance homepage this morning offers a comforting narrative. The indices are up. The headlines speak of a “New Year Rally” and the reliable “January Effect.” After a brutal end to 2025, it feels like permission to exhale. It feels like permission to buy.

As someone who has navigated global markets for over three decades—from the trading desks of Credit Suisse to founding Monexplora—I have learned one invariable truth: When the market feels easiest, it is often the most dangerous.

Today’s rally is a siren song. It is a liquidity-driven event masked as a fundamental recovery. Beneath the green veneer on your screen lies a structural reality that has not changed one iota since December 31st: we are in a high-rate, sticky-inflation environment that is deeply hostile to speculative assets.

In this memo, I will dissect the data behind the Yahoo Finance headlines, explain why the “January Effect” of 2026 is a trap for the unwary, and outline Monexplora’s strategy for finding genuine alpha in a “No Landing” world.

Part I: Deconstructing the Yahoo Finance Data

Let us look past the banner headlines and interrogate the data points that actually matter.

1. The Bond Market’s Veto While equity investors are celebrating, bond investors are selling. The US 10-Year Treasury Yield—the risk-free rate against which all other assets are priced—is hovering stubbornly at 4.65%.

  • The Implication: This is financial gravity. When you can get a guaranteed 4.65% return from the US government, the bar for buying a risky stock is incredibly high. A tech company with no profits and a promise of future growth is mathematically less attractive today than it was two years ago when yields were 1%. The bond market is telling us that the era of “free money” is not returning in 2026.

2. The Anatomy of the Rally Look at what is leading the rally today on Yahoo Finance’s “Top Gainers” list. It is largely dominated by the biggest losers of 2025—high-beta, unprofitable technology stocks, and biotech firms.

  • The Monexplora View: This is not new capital entering the market based on improved fundamentals. This is short-covering. Hedge funds that shorted these stocks into the ground last year are buying them back to realize their profits and reset their books for the new year. Once this mechanical buying dries up, there are few natural buyers left at these valuation levels.

Part II: The “January Effect” Trap of 2026

The “January Effect” is the tendency for small-cap stocks to outperform in the first month of the year as investors buy back positions they sold in December for tax-loss harvesting.

Historically, this has been a profitable trade. But 2026 is not a historical norm.

Why This Time Is Different: In typical cycles, the stocks sold in December are good companies that just had a bad year. Buying them back makes sense. In 2025, the stocks that were decimated were largely fundamentally broken companies that relied on cheap debt to survive.

  • The Trap: Buying these stocks today just because it’s January is not “value investing”; it is gambling that a broken business model will suddenly work in a hostile interest rate environment. It is a trap that will lure in retail money right before the next leg down.

Part III: The Monexplora “No Landing” Thesis

If we reject the tech rally, what is our alternative? Our strategy at Monexplora is built on the “No Landing” economic scenario.

The “No Landing” Reality: The data shows an economy that is re-accelerating, not slowing down. The labor market is tight, wages are growing, and consumption remains robust. This sounds good, but it keeps upward pressure on inflation, forcing central banks to keep rates “higher for longer.”

Where Money Flows in a “No Landing” World: In this environment, you want to own things that benefit from nominal growth and inflation, and avoid things that are hurt by high cost of capital.

  1. Energy & Commodities: A growing global economy needs fuel and materials. Oil, copper, and agricultural commodities are the natural hedge against sticky inflation.
  2. Cash Flow Machines: Companies with strong balance sheets, low debt, and the ability to raise prices (pricing power) will thrive. Think insurance, industrials, and select consumer staples.

Part IV: The Indonesian Opportunity (IHSG Focus)

For our investors in Southeast Asia, this global macro setup creates a specific opportunity in the Jakarta Composite Index (IHSG).

While high global rates are generally a headwind for emerging markets due to currency pressure, Indonesia has a unique advantage: We are a commodity superpower.

  • The Currency Hedge: The Rupiah (IDR) is weak against the USD, which hurts importers and consumers. However, it is a massive tailwind for our exporters. An Indonesian coal miner sells its product in strong US Dollars but pays its costs (labor, fuel, taxes) in weaker Rupiah. Their margins are expanding purely on the exchange rate.
  • Monexplora’s Call: We are aggressively overweighting Indonesian energy and mining stocks. They offer a trifecta of value: low P/E ratios, high dividend yields, and a natural hedge against both inflation and currency depreciation.

Part V: Monexplora Portfolio Strategy for January

Based on this analysis, here is how we are advising our clients to position themselves:

  1. Ignore the FOMO: Do not chase the green candles in speculative tech today. If you hold these positions, use this bounce as a gift to exit or trim your exposure.
  2. Respect the Yield: Until the 10-Year Treasury Yield breaks decisively below 4.0%, the upside for the broader S&P 500 is capped. Maintain a healthy cash buffer (around 25-30%) to deploy when valuations become more realistic.
  3. Rotate to Real Assets: Shift capital towards Energy (XLE), Physical Gold, and high-quality commodity producers. These are the assets that fit the current economic regime.

Conclusion

The financial markets are a complex adaptive system. What worked in the last cycle (buying every tech dip) will destroy capital in this new cycle.

The green on Yahoo Finance today is comforting, but it is deceptive. It is a relic of an era of cheap money that has passed. The discipline of 2026 will be in resisting the urge to play the old game and having the courage to position for the new reality.

At Monexplora, our commitment is to provide you with the clarity to make those difficult decisions.

Stay disciplined. Stay liquid. And welcome to the grind of 2026.

Mike Wiprana Founder & Lead Strategist, Monexplora

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jeffhirsch
jeffhirsch

Russell 2000 Surges Higher – Small Cap Seasonality Stirring

Seasonally speaking, small caps could be setting up for their annual year-end rally into Q1, often referred to as the “January Effect,” where small caps outperform large caps in January. As we point out on pages 112 and 114 of the Almanac, a significant amount of the “January Effect’s” small-cap outperformance actually takes place in the last half of December as tax-loss selling typically abates.

As you can see from the accompanying chart, small caps have been tracking the pattern reasonably well since July. August’s low was earlier than usual and strength lasted longer into mid-October, but July and October weakness were also present. This week’s spike lower and then back up appear to be aligning with November’s typical small-cap low. But small caps can exhibit some choppy trading from now through mid-December and patience has generally been rewarded with opportunities presenting through mid-December.

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jeffhirsch
jeffhirsch

Third Times a Charm – Early “January Effect” Likely to Push Russell 2000 to New ATHs

It’s no secret that the Russell 2000 small cap index has not closed at a new all-time high (ATH) in over three years. Russell 2000’s first attempt was on November 11 when it traded up to 2441.72 intra-day. That attempt failed and Russell 2000 retreated. The second attempt started on November 25 and lasted until December 2 with multiple intra-day highs exceeding the old closing ATH of 2442.74 from November 8, 2021. Will a third attempt next week finally see Russell 2000 at a new ATH?

Looking at the seasonal pattern chart above, updated through the markets close on December 6, Russell 2000 does appear to be following its historical pattern and trend this year eerily closely. Since late October small-cap outperformance in November and December this year (orange line) closely following the pattern observed from July 1979 to June 2024. We suspect that once tax-loss selling pressure abates, likely sometime later next week, that Russell 2000 will finally break out and close at a new ATH. Should this occur, small-cap outperformance could persist into early March next year.

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financeindo-blog
financeindo-blog

Menunggu JanuaryEffect :D http://ping.fm/k1XRB

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financeindo-blog
financeindo-blog

ANALISA TEKNIKAL SAHAM HARI INI: Menunggu JanuaryEffect http://ping.fm/vag14

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financeindo-blog
financeindo-blog

Aji Martono: Secara historis JanuaryEffect dilakukan pada pekan kedua http://ping.fm/XUx7M