Abstract
This paper analyzes the end-of-month (or monthly) effect in stock returns using a conditional GARCH variance model. Many researchers who have studied seasonal anomalies in stock returns have tried to explain these phenomena by looking at the stock market in isolation. In this paper, we relate the end-of-month effect to macroeconomic variables. Furthermore, we improve the efficiency of our statistical tests by including heteroscedasticity in the model. As a result, we present evidence that there is indeed an end-of-month effect distinct from the Mondays in the end-of-month effect documented by previous researchers. We show a link between this end-of-month effect and the economic business cycle, and present evidence that the end-of-month anomaly exists only during business cycle expansions; this anomaly disappears during business cycle contractions.
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