10 Best Stocks to Buy for a Month

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In this article, we will take a look at the 10 best stocks to buy for a month. To see more such companies, go directly to 5 Best Stocks to Buy for a Month.

The momentum investing philosophy aims to leverage price movements of stocks. The key idea behind momentum investing is that price trends of stocks can persist for a certain time and investors can/should ride those trends and make the most out of them. If a stock is showing signs of going up, buy that stock and ride the upward price trend and sell it as soon as it shows signs of peaking. That’s momentum investing in simple terms and it sure looks straightforward and easy on paper. But does research provides any backing to this investment philosophy? Let’s find out.

Several research papers have shown stock momentum does play a key role in stock movements. These research papers show that stock prices do not follow random paths. Instead, their past movements and trends can help investors predict and foresee their future trends to some extent. In a paper titled The 52-Week High and Momentum Investing, Thomas George and Chuan-Yang Hwang quote research from Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) which says that stock returns show “momentum behavior at intermediate horizons.”  The paper also says that a strategy that buys the top 10% and sells the bottom 10% of stocks ranked by returns during the past 6 months, and holds the positions for 6 months, produces profits of 1% per month.  The paper also quotes research from Moskowitz and Grinblatt (1999) which says that momentum in individual stock returns is driven by momentum in industry returns.

The paper then shows the importance of 52-week highs and lows in investing and how different biases come into play in investors’ thought process when a stock hits 52-week high or low. The paper says:

“Our results indicate that the 52-week measure has predictive power whether or not individual stocks have had extreme past returns. This suggests that price level is important, and is consistent with an anchor-and-adjust bias. Traders appear to use the 52-week high as a reference point against which they evaluate the potential impact of news. When good news has pushed a stock’s price near or to a new 52-week high, traders are reluctant to bid the price of the stock higher even if the information warrants it. The information eventually prevails and the price moves up, resulting in a continuation. Similarly, when bad news pushes a stock’s price far from its 52-week high, traders are initially unwilling to sell the stock at prices that are as low as the information implies. The information eventually prevails and the price falls.”