The World Cup Could Be a Win for the U.S. Markets
World Cup 2014

The World Cup Could Be a Win for the U.S. Markets

REUTERS/Toru Hanai

When it comes to the World Cup, Brazil has won the championship more than any other nation, and the host country is also the most-favored team to win this year, according to a global survey of 120 analysts polled by Reuters.

But winning the World Cup does not seem to have much impact on the country's domestic index in the long run.

Related: TV Ratings and Twitter Show U.S. Going World Cup Crazy

"Initially, whichever country wins the tournament sees a sugar high in their domestic stock market. The majority of the initial boost typically fades after three months and the winning nation normally underperforms the global market average by about 4 percent throughout the year following the World Cup," said Leigh Drogen, founder and CEO of research firm Estimize.

This is the second time Brazil is hosting the World Cup.

The country previously hosted in 1950 when Uruguay won against Brazil in the finals. That year U.S. indexes finished up more than 17 percent.

Global consumer brands such as Coca-Cola, Johnson and Johnson, McDonald's and Visa are some of the sponsors for this year's event.

Related: World Cup 2014: A Global Growth Industry

Here's a historical look at indexes' yearly performance during the World Cup:

Year & Host
Winner
DJIA
S&P 500
2014 (Brazil) ? ? ?
2010 (South Africa) Spain 11.02 12.78
2006 (Germany) Italy 16.29 13.62
2002(S. Korea-Japan) Brazil -16.76 -23.37
1998 (France) France 16.1 26.67
1994 (US) Brazil 2.14 -1.54
1990 (Italy) West Germany -4.34 -6.56
1986 (Mexico) Argentina 22.53 14.62
1982 (Spain) Italy 19.6 14.76
1978 (Argentina) Argentina -3.15 1.06
1974 (W. Germany) West Germany -27.57 -29.72
1970 (Mexico) Brazil 4.82 0.1
1966 (England) England -18.94 -13.09
1962 (Chile) Brazil -10.81 -11.81
1958 (Sweden) Brazil 33.96 38.06
1954 (Switzerland) West Germany 43.96 45.02
1950 (Brazil) Uruguay 17.4 21.68
1938 (France) Italy 27.73 24.55
1934 (Italy) Italy 5.44 -5.02
1930 (Uruguay) Uruguay -33.77 -28.48

This article originally appeared in CNBC.

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