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I was looking through the yahoo finances section and stumbled on this article. Does anyone know how many days of the year (out of about 250 I'd guess after holidays) Congress is actually in session? 90% is an extremely large % of the time, large enough to take into consideration I would think. Anyway, just thought it was interesting, any comments?
Abstract:
[font="ARIAL, HELVETICA"]We find a strong link between Congressional activity and stock market returns that persists even after controlling for known daily return anomalies. Stock returns are lower and volatility is higher when Congress is in session. This is consistent with firms facing a more uncertain tax and regulatory environment when Congress is in session. This "Congressional Effect" can be quite large - about 90% of the capital gains over the life of the DJIA have come on days when Congress is out of session. The Effect varies systematically with the public's opinion of Congress: returns are lower and volatility higher when a relatively unpopular Congress is in session. This suggests investors evaluate Congressional activity through time and adjust their expectations accordingly.[/font]
I was looking through the yahoo finances section and stumbled on this article. Does anyone know how many days of the year (out of about 250 I'd guess after holidays) Congress is actually in session? 90% is an extremely large % of the time, large enough to take into consideration I would think. Anyway, just thought it was interesting, any comments?
Abstract:
[font="ARIAL, HELVETICA"]We find a strong link between Congressional activity and stock market returns that persists even after controlling for known daily return anomalies. Stock returns are lower and volatility is higher when Congress is in session. This is consistent with firms facing a more uncertain tax and regulatory environment when Congress is in session. This "Congressional Effect" can be quite large - about 90% of the capital gains over the life of the DJIA have come on days when Congress is out of session. The Effect varies systematically with the public's opinion of Congress: returns are lower and volatility higher when a relatively unpopular Congress is in session. This suggests investors evaluate Congressional activity through time and adjust their expectations accordingly.[/font]