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Dow Jones Industrial Average

3,813 bytes added, 19:46, April 28, 2019
The strength of this basket of these 30 stocks as an investment tool is in the additional productivity of having multiple approaches to a challenge. Our [[Template:Mainpageleft|Mainpageleft]], with its collection of roughly 135 key entries, illustrates a
The '''Dow Jones Industrial Average''', commonly known as the '''[[Dow Jones]]''' or simply the '''Dow''', is a [[stock]] price index based on thirty 30 prominent [[stocks]] on the [[New York Stock Exchange]]. [[File:Dow1925-2009.jpg|400px|thumb|Dow Jones index since 1925, in constant 2009 dollars]] The DJIA can be traded under the stock symbol DIA. The other two major indexes are the "S&P500" (which can be traded under the symbol "SPY") and "NASDAQ" (the trading symbol "QQQ" somewhat tracks that index).
The strength of this basket of these 30 stocks as an investment tool is in the additional productivity of having multiple approaches to a challenge. Our [[Template:Mainpageleft|Mainpageleft]], with its collection of roughly 135 key entries, illustrates a similar approach to developing helpful insights.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is the average of these thirty stocks, and is a commonly used indicator of general trends in the prices of [[stock|stocks]] s and [[bond|bonds]] s in the [[United States]]. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was first published by ''[[Wall Street Journal]]'' editor Charles Dow in 1896 with twelve stocks. The only stock of the original twelve that is still a part of the Average is [[General Electric]]. Unlike other indexes, the stocks in the Dow are weighted according to the price of one share of each company's stock, rather than by its market capitalization (overall company value). Thus the higher the stock price, the greater weight it has in the Dow. This tends to eliminate companies maintaining high prices for their shares, such as Amazon and Google, from being considered for inclusion in the Dow. The last time the Dow changed its component stocks was in March 2015, The last time the Dow changed its component stocks was in June 2018, when it replaced General Electric with Walgreens. The prior substitution was in March 2015 by the Dow, when it replaced AT&T (T) with Apple (AAPL). Due to the erosion of manufacturing jobs in the [[United States]] resultant from harmful [[free trade]] policies, the Dow is not really "industrial" any more. As of June 2018 here are the 30 stocks in the "Dow" several of which are retail stocks or dependent on retail sales (e.g., AXP, CSCO, HD, KO, MCD, NKE, PG, V, WBA, and WMT): *AXP - American Express Co *AAPL - Apple Inc*BA - Boeing Co*CAT - Caterpillar Inc*CSCO - Cisco Systems Inc*CVX - Chevron Corp*DWDP - DowDuPont Inc*XOM - Exxon Mobil Corp *GS - Goldman Sachs Group Inc *HD - Home Depot Inc *IBM - International Business Machines Corp *INTC - Intel Corp*JNJ - Johnson & Johnson *KO - Coca-Cola Co *JPM - JPMorgan Chase & Co *MCD - McDonald's Corp*MMM - 3M Co *MRK - Merck & Co Inc *MSFT - Microsoft Corp *NKE - Nike Inc *PFE - Pfizer Inc *PG - Procter & Gamble Co *TRV - Travelers Companies Inc*UNH - UnitedHealth Group Inc *UTX - United Technologies Corp *VZ - Verizon Communications Inc *V - Visa Inc *WBA - Walgreens Boots Alliance*WMT - Wal-Mart Stores Inc *DIS - Walt Disney Co
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size:98%; margin:left;"
|+
|+
|+
|align="right"|+802
|align="right"|+6.4%
|align="right"|3.95%
|-
!2008
|align="right"|-4,488
|align="right"|-33.8%
|align="right"|13.70%
|-
!2009
|align="right"|+1,652
|align="right"|+18.8%
|align="right"|11.30%
|-
!2010
|align="right"|+1,149
|align="right"|+11.0%
|align="right"|4.3335%
|-
!2011
|align="right"|+640
|align="right"|+5.5%
|align="right"|4.1615%
|-
!2012
|align="right"|+887
|align="right"|+7.3%
|align="right"|2.4850%
|-
!2013
|align="right"|+3,473
|align="right"|+26.5%
|align="right"|4.8280%
|-
!2014
|align="right"|+1,246
|align="right"|+7.5%
|align="right"|3.3130%
|-
!2015
|align="right"|-398
|align="right"|-2.2%
|align="right"|3.1415%|-!2016|align="right"|19,763|align="right"|+2,338|align="right"|+13.4%|align="right"||-!2017|align="right"|24,719|align="right"|+4,957|align="right"|+25.1%|align="right"||-|} {| class="wikitable" style="font-size:98%; margin:left;"|+|+2008-2009 by quarter!Quarter!closing price!change!% change!coeff. var<br>volatility|-|align="right"|2008 1st|align="right"|12,263|align="right"|-1,002|align="right"|-7.6%|align="right"|2.30%|-|align="right"|2nd|align="right"|11,350|align="right"|-913|align="right"|-7.3%|align="right"|3.40%|-|align="right"|3rd|align="right"|10,851|align="right"|-499|align="right"|-4.4%|align="right"|2.25%|-|align="right"|4th|align="right"|8,776|align="right"|-2,074|align="right"|-19.1%|align="right"|12.15%|-|align="right"|2009 1st|align="right"|7,609|align="right"|-1,167|align="right"|-13.3%|align="right"|8.05%|-|align="right"|2nd|align="right"|8,447|align="right"|+838|align="right"|+11.0%|align="right"|3.25%|-|align="right"|3rd|align="right"|9,712|align="right"|+1,265|align="right"|+15.0%|align="right"|5.30%|-|align="right"|4th|align="right"|10,428|align="right"|+716|align="right"|+7.4%|align="right"|2.90%
|-
|}
==Sources==
* http://usinfo.state.gov/products/pubs/oecon/chap12.htm ==See also==*[https://money.cnn.com/data/markets/dow/ Recent performance of individual stocks in the DJIA]*[https://www.wsj.com/graphics/djia-components-history/ The Ins and Outs of the Dow Jones Industrial Average]. ''The Wall Street Journal''. Retrieved January 25, 2017.
[[Category:Stock marketMarket]]
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