Electronic Arts (EA) Seasonality

Recurring seasonal patterns for EA — the calendar windows where Electronic Arts has historically tended to rise or fall, with the win rate (how often it repeated) and average return for each, based on up to 10 years of price history.

Patterns found
598
Bullish windows
12
Bearish windows
0
Best win rate
100%

EA's strongest seasonal patterns

Seasonal windowDirectionAvg returnWin rateHold
Jan 10 – Jan 20Bullish+2.95%100%10d
May 27 – Jun 6Bullish+1.88%100%10d
May 26 – Jun 5Bullish+1.86%100%10d
May 8 – Jun 7Bullish+8.76%90%30d
May 3 – Jun 2Bullish+8.40%90%30d
May 9 – Jun 8Bullish+8.26%90%30d
May 6 – Jun 5Bullish+8.24%90%30d
May 7 – Jun 6Bullish+8.14%90%30d
May 7 – May 28Bullish+6.42%90%21d
Apr 26 – May 26Bullish+6.16%90%30d
May 10 – Jun 9Bullish+6.10%90%30d
Jan 1 – Jan 22Bullish+4.39%90%21d

Win rate = how often the pattern repeated in the same direction. Average return = the mean move across all analysed years. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

Explore EA seasonality in full

See the seasonal curve chart, filter by win rate and return, and track upcoming windows — free during beta.

What is EA stock seasonality?

Stock seasonality is the tendency of a stock to perform in a similar way during the same period each year. By analysing Electronic Arts's price history across many years, SeasonalityX identifies recurring calendar windows — exact start and end dates — where EA has repeatedly risen (bullish) or fallen (bearish). Each pattern is scored by its win rate and average return so you can judge how reliable and how strong it has been.

Seasonality is one input among many — it works best alongside your own research and risk management. Learn more in our guide to seasonal analysis and the tutorials.

Seasonality for other tickers