Strong historical patterns are more useful when there’s a real business “why” behind them…

 

Hey there traders,

A new trading week is almost here, and this is the part of the calendar where preparation matters more than prediction.

One of the biggest mistakes newer traders make with seasonality is treating it like a magic date on a calendar.

“Buy here. Sell there. Repeat.”

A complex golden mechanical engine processing bright data streams of information and analytics inside a blue financial vault.

That is not how smart traders should use it.

Seasonality is not a guarantee. It is a clue. It tells us that, historically, certain stocks have tended to perform better during certain windows of the year. But the real edge comes when the historical pattern lines up with something investors can actually understand: earnings momentum, sector sentiment, institutional buying, macro conditions, or a business story that is already gaining traction.

That is why this week’s watchlist is not just about the numbers.

Yes, the historical statistics matter. But we also want to ask the more important question:

Why might this pattern be showing up in the first place?

With the broad market still acting strong, major indexes recently pressing into record territory, and investors continuing to reward companies tied to data, AI, analytics, digital advertising, and scalable platforms, this week’s strongest seasonal names have a clear theme:

Information is still one of Wall Street’s favorite businesses.

The top three seasonal setups for the week ahead are:

  1. CoStar Group — CSGP
  2. S&P Global — SPGI
  3. Alphabet — GOOGL

Let’s walk through them.

1) CoStar Group — CSGP

The real estate data stock with a surprisingly strong seasonal window
CoStar Group may not be a household name to every retail trader, but it sits in one of the most valuable corners of the economy: real estate information.

This is not a simple “housing stock.” CoStar owns a collection of real estate data and marketplace platforms used across commercial property, rentals, apartments, and residential search. Think data, listings, analytics, and online real estate discovery.

That matters because early summer is an important time for real estate activity. Buyers, renters, property managers, agents, and advertisers all become more active as the calendar moves toward peak moving season. That kind of seasonal behavior can feed directly into investor attention around real estate platforms.

Glowing golden skyscrapers and real estate data emerging from a futuristic mechanical platform inside a financial vault.

The seasonal numbers are hard to ignore:

CSGP has historically traded higher 85.2% of the time during this early-June seasonal window, based on data going back to 1998. The profit factor is also unusually strong at 24.65, with an annualized return profile of roughly 63.4%.

For beginner traders, here is what that means in plain English:

This has not just been a “barely positive” pattern. Historically, the winners have outweighed the losers by a wide margin during this window.

The business backdrop also helps. CoStar recently reported strong revenue growth, improved profitability, and continued momentum in its Homes.com and Apartments.com platforms. That gives traders a story to attach to the seasonality: real estate search, digital marketplaces, AI-assisted discovery, and improving operating leverage.

The risk? Real estate is still sensitive to interest rates. If rates spike or investors suddenly rotate away from growth stocks, CSGP can move quickly in the wrong direction.

But among this week’s seasonal candidates, CSGP offers one of the best combinations of statistical strength, liquidity, and a business catalyst that everyday investors can understand.

Watchlist takeaway: CSGP is the most compelling “growth story plus seasonality” name on this week’s list.

2) S&P Global — SPGI

The quiet tollbooth behind modern markets
S&P Global is not the kind of stock that usually gets meme-stock attention.

That is exactly why it deserves attention.

SPGI is one of those “picks and shovels” companies sitting behind the financial system. It makes money from ratings, indices, benchmarks, data, analytics, and market intelligence. Every time investors talk about ETFs, credit markets, passive investing, market data, or institutional research, there is a good chance S&P Global is somewhere in the background.

That makes SPGI a fascinating seasonal name because the company benefits from something much bigger than one product cycle.

It benefits from market activity itself.

When stocks are strong, investors care about benchmarks and indices. When credit markets are active, ratings matter. When institutions are trying to understand risk, data and analytics become essential.

A heavy golden tollbooth and mechanical scale representing financial ratings and benchmarks inside a corporate vault.

The seasonal profile is one of the strongest in the screen:

SPGI has historically traded higher 89.5% of the time during this early-June seasonal window, based on data going back to 2006. It also carries a massive 35.99 profit factor, one of the best readings in the group.

That tells us this has been a very persistent seasonal pattern.

The “why” may be tied to broad market activity, index-related demand, credit issuance, and institutional positioning as the first half of the year moves toward its close. SPGI also recently reported solid growth, including gains in revenue, operating profitability, and adjusted earnings.

For retail traders, SPGI is not the flashiest setup. It is more of a quality compounder with a strong seasonal tailwind.

That can be a good thing.

Stocks like this often work best when the market is constructive but not euphoric. They do not always need a dramatic headline. They just need the financial machine to keep humming.

The risk? If markets suddenly turn risk-off, credit activity slows, or investors rotate out of high-quality financial data names, SPGI can lose momentum.

Still, this is one of the cleanest setups on the board.

Watchlist takeaway: SPGI is the highest-quality seasonal setup in the group, backed by one of the strongest historical win rates.

3) Alphabet — GOOGL

The liquid mega-cap AI setup that retail traders actually know
Alphabet is the easiest story on this list for most traders to understand.

Search. YouTube. Cloud. Android. Gemini. AI infrastructure. Digital advertising.

GOOGL is no longer just “the Google search company.” It is one of the biggest players in the AI arms race, one of the dominant digital advertising businesses in the world, and a major cloud computing competitor.

That gives this seasonal setup a very different flavor from CSGP and SPGI.

GOOGL is not the most explosive seasonal name on the list, but it is the most liquid and the most familiar. Average daily volume is enormous, which matters for retail traders who want tighter spreads and easier entries and exits.

The historical pattern is strong:

A massive glowing golden magnifying glass and futuristic cloud network nodes inside a blue financial vault.

GOOGL has historically traded higher 85.7% of the time during this early-June seasonal window, based on data going back to 2004. The profit factor is 11.28, with an annualized return profile near 36.0%.

Those are impressive numbers for a mega-cap stock.

The current business story is also straightforward. Alphabet recently posted strong growth in Search and Cloud, with AI demand helping drive investor interest. Google Cloud has become a much bigger part of the narrative, and Gemini remains central to the company’s AI strategy.

This is where the broad market matters.

When investors are comfortable taking risk, large-cap technology and communication services stocks often attract capital. GOOGL benefits from that environment because it gives traders exposure to AI, advertising, cloud growth, and a massive balance sheet in one stock.

The risk? Alphabet is always in the spotlight. AI spending, regulatory pressure, antitrust headlines, and valuation concerns can all create sudden volatility.

But for retail traders who prefer liquid, familiar names, GOOGL may be the most approachable setup of the week.

Watchlist takeaway: GOOGL is the most liquid and beginner-friendly seasonal setup, with a powerful AI and advertising story behind it.

Honorable Mention: MPWR

Monolithic Power Systems also showed up with excellent seasonal stats, including a very high profit factor. It deserves a spot on the radar for more aggressive traders.

The reason it did not make the top three is simple: semiconductor stocks can be fast, expensive, and volatile. That does not make MPWR bad. It just makes it less beginner-friendly than CSGP, SPGI, or GOOGL.

Traders who are comfortable with chip-stock volatility may still want to study it.

A sophisticated golden semiconductor chip pulsing with rapid, high-voltage electrical energy inside a deep blue financial vault.

The Big Picture: Seasonality Works Best When It Has a Tailwind

This week’s best names are not random.

They cluster around data, analytics, digital marketplaces, AI, and scalable information businesses. That is important because investors are still rewarding companies that can turn information into pricing power.

That does not mean traders should blindly buy anything with a strong seasonal score.

The better approach is:

Watch the stock.
Watch the market.
Wait for price confirmation.
Know the historical window.
Respect risk.

A glowing golden mechanical compass pointing decisively forward along a clear, illuminated data pathway inside a dark financial vault.

A seasonal edge is only useful if it is paired with discipline.

The market has been strong, and that helps. But strong markets can also become crowded markets. If a stock gaps too far too fast, chasing can turn a good setup into a bad trade.

This is why preparation matters.

The goal is not to predict every tick on Monday morning. The goal is to know which stocks deserve attention before the week begins.

For the complete seasonal window, including the full timing details and exit guidance, log in to SuperSeasonal.com.

As always, use seasonality as a research tool, not a promise. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and every trade should be sized with risk in mind.

Have a great trading week,

Chad Shirley