Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
Is an adaptive marketplace extinguishing the January effect? In their June 2008 paper entitled "The Persistence of the Small Firm/January Effect: Is it Consistent with Investors’ Learning and Arbitrage Efforts?", Kathryn Easterday, Pradyot Sen and Jens Stephan investigate whether the stock market has adapted over time to diminish the small firm/January effect. Using returns and firm size data for a very large sample of stocks over three subperiods (1946-1962, 1963-1979, 1980-2007), they conclude that:
The following chart, taken from the paper, compares January premiums (value-weighted returns in excess of broad U.S. stock market returns) by market capitalization (decile of market value) for three subperiods (SP1, SP2, SP3). The January premium is most pronounced during SP2 (1963-1979). January return premiums for SP1 and SP3 are similar. In all subperiods, the January premium is concentrated in small-capitalization stocks.

In summary, the January effect for small-capitalization stocks persists throughout the past 60+ years.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: Calendar Effects and Blog Synthesis: The Size Effect.