📘 How to Use This Information

📊 What the Numbers Mean

📐 How the Weekday Pattern Math Works – Simplified

📅 Daily Return Calculation
  1. Take today’s closing price and divide by yesterday’s closing price
  2. Subtract 1 from this number
  3. Multiply by 100 to get percentage return

Example: If a stock closed at $105 today and $100 yesterday:
(105 ÷ 100) – 1 = 0.05 → 0.05 × 100 = 5% daily return

📆 Weekday Analysis
  1. Group all returns by weekday (all Mondays together, all Tuesdays, etc.)
  2. For each group, calculate:
    • Average Return: Sum of all returns ÷ number of days
    • Percentage of Positive Days: Days with gains ÷ total days
🚫 Removing Outliers
  1. Measure how far each return is from the average (in standard deviations)
  2. Remove returns more than 3 standard deviations from the mean
  3. This filters extreme events like crashes or spikes
🎨 Color Mapping
  1. Identify the highest and lowest average weekday returns
  2. Create a red-to-green gradient scale
  3. Map each weekday onto that scale for intuitive visual insights

📊 This structured method ensures results are statistically valid and visually meaningful across thousands of trading days, offering real-world insights into subtle but persistent weekday effects.

📈 Why These Small Differences Matter

Weekday-based return differences may look small (often less than 0.2%), but their impact can be significant when combined with consistency and time:

📊 Statistical Interpretation

The key insight from this analysis is that even small differences in average returns can be statistically significant when:

This is based on the Central Limit Theorem, which states that with a large enough sample size, the sampling distribution of the mean approaches a normal distribution regardless of the population’s distribution.

By compounding these small percentage differences over many years, the cumulative effect on investment returns can be substantial. For example, a 0.1% advantage, compounded weekly over a 10-year period, would yield approximately 5% more total return compared to a random day strategy.

This is the mathematical basis for why the weekday effect, while small in daily terms, can be meaningful for long-term investment strategies.

🛠️ Practical Ways to Apply This Knowledge

If you’re a regular investor who makes monthly contributions to savings or investments:

✅ DO
❌ DON’T

💬 Final Thought: Smart investing is about consistent, small improvements over time. Choosing a statistically better weekday for your regular investments is a simple tweak that could boost your long-term returns without requiring any additional money or risk.