12 Best Spring Stocks To Buy Now

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In this article we present the list of 12 Best Spring Stocks To Buy Now. Click to skip ahead and see the 5 Best Spring Stocks To Buy Now.

If historical trends are anything to go by (and they usually are), then financial stocks like Mastercard Incorporated (NYSE:MA), PayPal Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ:PYPL), and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM), as well as a wide range of energy stocks will be some of the best stocks to buy this spring.

The Running of the Spring Bulls

The stock market has traditionally performed very well during the spring, which is then followed by a summer swoon as institutional investors like hedge funds pare back their holdings in anticipation of lower summer trading volumes (and the resultant spike in volatility) and more time off for staff.

That’s particularly true of the NYSE, with April and May being the index’s strongest and third-strongest months over the past 20 years. The index has posted monthly gains during April over 16 of the past 20 years, while the index has risen during 14 of the past 20 Mays.

It’s a similar story when it comes to the stocks that make up the S&P 500, which have posted gains during 14 of the past 20 Marchs, 15 of the past 20 Mays, and 16 of the past 20 Aprils, the latter being the strongest performing month for the index. Spring has also been a good season for tech stocks, with the Nasdaq posting gains over 13 of the past 20 years in each of March, April, and May, ranking them in a tie as the third-best performing months for the index.

Energy and Finance Stocks Do a Lot of Spring Cleaning (Up)

When it comes to the performance of specific industries, energy and finance stocks have often been the runaway spring winners. According to CNBC, between 2001 and 2010, nearly half of all stocks that posted at least 20% gains during any given spring were either finance or energy stocks, with finance stocks leading the way.

There’s a surprisingly strong historical correlation between the energy and financial sectors which makes their equally strong springs somewhat less surprising. Naturally, the energy sector is highly correlated with the price of West Texas crude, at 71%. What many investors may not know is that it’s also highly correlated with the finance sector, with the correlation between the S&P 500 energy and finance indexes standing at 70% according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

In terms of where the two sectors stand today, they’re somewhat at odds despite their strong stock market correlation. The banking sector is experiencing somewhat of a crisis, with many U.S. banks borrowing heavily but tightening their lending policies, which has some experts concerned about a forthcoming credit crunch.