Wall Street finally has the calendar on its side again.

The US stock market tends to be volatile during the late summer months, due to a lull in economic news and earnings to catalyze a rally. Investors also take off for vacation then, resulting in lower volumes and thus choppier trading.

That seasonal pattern proved almost prophetic this year: The market peaked promptly on July 31 and has struggled to find its footing since then. The S&P 500 index just logged its longest monthly streak of declines since March 2020, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average has given up most of its gains from earlier this year.

A look at seasonal patterns for this month suggests that the tides could be turning.

November has been the strongest month for stocks since 1950, according to LPL Financial. The benchmark index has declined for the month just once in the past 11 years, in 2021. As for the Dow, the blue-chip index has gained more than 1% on average in November over the last 100 years, Bespoke Investment Group data show.

Things already look promising for the market, two trading days into November. The S&P 500 on Thursday climbed 1.9% to log its best one-day gain since April. The Dow added 1.7%, its best daily gain since June.

Behind the rally? Investors seem optimistic that the Federal Reserve is done raising interest rates this year, after the central bank on Wednesday paused for a second consecutive meeting, leaving the benchmark lending rate at its highest level in more than 22 years.

Markets see a roughly 80% expectation that the Fed will hold rates steady again at its December policy meeting and are pricing in cuts as early as March, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. That’s despite Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s warning on Wednesday that the central bank has yet to even consider lowering rates.

Also helping stocks run higher is a slide in bond yields after the Fed hit pause. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury note fell on Thursday to 4.67%, compared to Wednesday’s close of 4.79%, well below the key 5% level it breached last month. Weaker oil prices — down about 3% this week — may be another supportive factor.

“Three consecutive months of selling pressure may have also exhausted sellers and left stocks approaching oversold levels,” said George Smith, portfolio strategist at LPL Financial.

Seasonal patterns bode well beyond just this month. The S&P 500 has gained an average 6.7% from November to April since 1990, according to CFRA data. Of course, history is merely a guide, not a crystal ball into the future.

Mike Wilson, chief US equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, says the chances of a fourth-quarter rally have fallen, citing faltering consumer and business confidence, narrowing market breadth and lagged effects of the Fed’s interest rates as some of the challenges that he believes outweigh seasonal bullishness.

“We remain comfortable with our long-standing 3,900 year-end target for the S&P 500,” he wrote in a note on October 29. The S&P 500 closed Thursday at about 4,318.

— CutC by cnn.com

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