Seasonal Patterns and Market Cycles in Trading

June 16, 2026
🏷️ cycles 🏷️ seasonal 🏷️ strategy 🏷️ halving

“Do markets really behave differently at different times of year?”

A trader on Myfxbook asked about “Trading and Halloween” — referring to the well-known “Halloween effect” where stocks historically perform better from November to April. The question reveals something important: time-based patterns exist in all markets.

Not because of magic. Because of human behavior.

Seasonal Patterns in Forex

Forex markets show clear seasonal patterns driven by business cycles, holidays, and fiscal year ends.

January effect: New year brings new investment allocations. Pension funds and institutional investors rebalance portfolios. This creates increased volatility in major pairs, especially USD, EUR, and JPY.

Summer slowdown (June-August): Professional traders and fund managers take vacations. Liquidity drops significantly. Major institutions reduce their positions. This means:

September-October volatility: Markets return from summer break. Major events resume (Fed meetings, EU sessions). Historically, September and October are the most volatile months for forex. The US fiscal year ends September 30, causing repositioning.

November-December (Santa rally): Markets tend to rally in December as institutions close their books and traders take fewer risks. Liquidity drops again in the last two weeks of December. Major pairs often consolidate.

Key forex seasonal patterns:

Seasonal Patterns in Crypto

Crypto has its own seasonal patterns — some shared with traditional markets, some unique.

January (New Year): Historically positive for Bitcoin. New investors enter the market with resolutions to learn about crypto. Tax refunds provide fresh capital. The 2023 and 2024 Januaries both saw significant Bitcoin rallies.

March-April (Tax season): In the US, tax season (April 15) often causes selling pressure as people sell crypto to pay taxes. In India, similar patterns around tax deadlines. After tax day, markets often recover.

Summer (June-August): Like forex, crypto summer sees lower volume. But crypto is 24/7, so the drop is less dramatic. Range-bound trading is common. This is historically a good accumulation period before Q4 rallies.

September-October: Crypto’s risk-on nature means it follows traditional markets during these volatile months. September has historically been bearish for Bitcoin (average -6% since 2013). October is historically bullish.

November-December (Halving years): Bitcoin halving years (2012, 2016, 2020, 2024, 2028) follow a pattern: the 12-18 months after halving are the most bullish period. The 6 months before halving show accumulation. Understanding this cycle is the single most important seasonal pattern in crypto.

Session-Based Patterns

Markets behave differently depending on which global financial center is active.

Forex sessions:

Crypto sessions: Crypto is 24/7, but patterns still emerge based on geographic concentration:

The most important crypto pattern: weekends show lower volume and more erratic moves. Monday mornings often gap as institutions return.

Weekend and Gap Effects

Forex: Forex is closed on weekends (Friday 5 PM EST to Sunday 5 PM EST). Price gaps occur at the Sunday open when news breaks over the weekend. These gaps often fill within the first hour of trading.

Crypto: Crypto trades 24/7 including weekends. Weekend volume is 40-60% lower than weekdays. This means:

Trading Calendar You Should Know

Weekly patterns:

Monthly patterns:

Yearly patterns (for Indian traders specifically):

Verdict

Markets are not random. They follow seasonal rhythms driven by human behavior, institutional cycles, and calendar events.

The practical takeaway:

Seasonal patterns give you an edge — but only if you understand they are probabilities, not certainties.

Related: How Crypto Market Cycles Work | Technical Analysis for Beginners | How Geopolitical Events Affect Markets | What Drives Crypto Prices?

Myfxbook traders have tracked seasonal forex patterns for over a decade. Their conclusion: “Seasonals are a bias, not a strategy. If you go long every November because of the Santa Rally, you will win some years and lose others. They work best when combined with technical setups.”

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This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.