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Author
Jonathan Hobbs, CFA
Date
16 May 2025
Category
Market Insights
Sell in May and Go Away? S&P 500 Return Comparison From 1950
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What’s the logic behind the “Sell in May” saying?
Institutional investors often take time off during the summer months, and trading volumes may fall as a result. With lower participation, markets may experience thinner liquidity and more erratic price moves – especially in smaller or more volatile stocks. This may explain why some investors choose to reduce risk during this period. But historical data shows that exiting the market altogether has come at a cost.
Time in the market has outperformed
The chart below compares the growth of two strategies since the start of 1950 to May 2025:
- Buy and hold strategy (orange line): Buying the S&P 500 index and holding through all months of the year.
- Sell in May strategy (black line): Selling the S&P 500 at the start of May each year to hold cash. Then buying back into the index at the start of November. Note: these results assume no trading costs or tax implications.

The yearly growth difference may seem small, but over 75 years it compounded into a significant gap. In this example, staying invested captured more of the market’s long-term growth.
TheIncomeShares S&P 500 Options (0DTE) ETP aims to generate monthly income by selling 0DTE put options on the S&P 500 Index or the SPY ETF.
Key takeaways
- The Sell in May strategy involves exiting the stock market at the start of May and re-entering in November each year.
- From 1950 to 2025, staying fully invested in the S&P 500 delivered higher returns than the Sell in May approach.
- The annual performance gap was small, but compounding over 75 years made it significant.
Your capital is at risk if you invest. You could lose all your investment. Please see the full risk warning here.
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