The Dow Theory Explained
The Dow Theory Explained
The Dow Theory Explained
FOREWORD
While most investors have heard of the Dow
Theory, few have more than a nodding acquaintance
with it. It is a method of forecasting the future trend
of business and the future trend of the stock market
from the action of the market itself as revealed by the
Dow Jones Industrial and Transportation Averages.
In this book will be found a discussion of the
Dow Theory in laymans language. If you study
it carefully you will learn to look for information
in the only spot where all pertinent information
is consolidated. While this book will not by itself
make you an authority on the Dow Theory, it should
help you acquire a working knowledge. With all its
limitations, the Theory has proved one of the best
methods yet devised for forecasting the future of the
stock market and of business conditions.
September 2007
Dow Theory Forecasts
INTRODUCTION TO THE
DOW THEORY
A century of Dow Theory history
establishes the validity of these claims:
1. If you are in business, an understanding of the Theory will
dissolve many doubts and will greatly enhance your chances of
success.
2. If you hope to make money in the market, your chances
are slim indeed without a knowledge of Dow Theory principles.
3. If your problem is one of conserving property already acquired, a working knowledge of the Theory is your safest guard
against catastrophe.
The Theory is based on the changes in price of the stocks
which are bought and sold every business day. Each share of
stock represents ownership of a definite fraction of some business enterprise. The owner of each share of stock is virtually a
partner in that business. He may sever his connection with the
business on a moments notice by selling his stock. He does not
sell it to the company or to the New York Stock Exchange, but to
some other individual through a broker on the Stock Exchange
in the perpetual auction which the Exchange conducts. Every
transaction in this auction consists of a sale and purchase. The
price at which every transaction is made is carefully recorded
and widely published.
Naturally, the prices at which transactions are made vary from
day to day, and thereby hangs our Theory.
BEGINNING OF THE
DOW THEORY
The continuous auction of stocks is conducted every business
day on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
Stocks are bid up or sold down according to the publics
estimate of the merit of each particular company. If the publics
demand for a certain companys stock is greater than the supply,
the price is bid up until the demand is satisfied. Conversely, if
more stock is offered than bid for, the price declines until the
pressures of supply and demand are again in balance.
Back in the early days of trading in securities it was assumed
that the shares of different companies fluctuated in price independently of each other. Perhaps they did and surely they still
do to some extent. However, with the advent of organized stock
exchanges, the perfection of instant communication, rapid transportation, and the widespread dissemination of news, a novel
element became discernible in price fluctuations.
It was in the late 1890s that a few market students, led by
Charles H. Dow, discovered that the stock market had a trend,
that the great body of stocks moved more or less in unison,
regardless of the price fluctuations in individual stocks. This
trend action led to the development of a trend theory and
ultimately to the Dow Theory.
Hewlett-Packard
Home Depot
Honeywell Intl
IBM
Intel
Johnson & Johnson
J.P. Morgan Chase
McDonalds
Merck
Microsoft
Pfizer
Procter & Gamble
United Technologies
Verizon Communications
Wal-Mart Stores
PRACTICE CHART
Daily fluctuations for five months, beginning
April 2007
DOW INDUSTRIALS
14,000
13,500
13,000
12,500
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
DOW TRANSPORTS
5,400
5,200
5,000
4,800
4,600
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Granting the existence of trends, let us return again to our analogy of the tide. We come to the seashore and want to know which
way the tide is moving. Is it rising? Is it ebbing? Approximately
what part of its whole movement has it completed? Our market
tide, however, has no such regularity of timing as the tide of the
sea. The old salts who loiter around the beach are full only of
information about the ripples and the spray, and this they would
like to sell or even give away.
Lets drive some stakes in the sand, where the waves slide up
the beach, and see for ourselves which way the tide is moving.
One or two waves and one or two stakes wont be enough, so
we will have to prepare a chart where all the waves have been
stake-marked for many months or even years.
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BULL MARKET
It is all very well to say that the Dow Theory is no more than
a method of applying common sense to the stock market. But
individual investors, engrossed in their own affairs, probably
haven't time to study stock-market history and learn what the
record has to tell about trends.
Investors may apply common sense to the selection of an investment by examining the statements of a number of reputable
companies; they may check their own estimate of values by
searching the financial press and making use of the facilities of
one of the established statistical services. And when an investor
has done all this, he may make his investment in the best stock
in the world just in time to suffer a devastating loss.
In 1929, United States Steel common stock was generally
regarded as a suitable investment for school teachers at a price
above $260 a share and with a dividend of $8 a year. In less than
three years, United States Steel common crashed to a price below
$22 a share. No dividends at all were paid for four years.
When considering the purchase of any seasoned common
stock listed on the New York Stock Exchange, the most important
thing to know about it is when to buy it.
No trifling matter is this trend or tidal action we are attempting to gauge and understand. The big incoming tide which
started in the summer of 1970, with the Industrial Average at
631.16, surged on for almost 31 months and pushed the Average
to 1051.70. The ensuing bear market ran for almost two years
before the low was reached at 577.60.
In the 100 years during which the Averages have been recorded, there have been 27 clearly defined rising tides or bull
markets, one of which was ongoing at the time of publication.
The average length of the 26 completed bull markets was approximately 34 months.
We may define a primary bull market as a long, broad, upward
movement of prices, which is interrupted at uncertain intervals
by important reactions.
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R
R
X.
A.
R.
B.
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SECOND PHASE
The second phase of a bull market might be called its normal
phase. It is often the longest phase of the market, while prices
adjust and readjust themselves to improving business and increased earnings. Here is the phase in which a knowledge of
individual company statistics can be put to important use. Dow
theorists, confident of the trend, can press home this advantage
by judicious selection of individual stocks. They may choose to
add to holdings from time to time as the second phase progresses.
But still they will not be impatient, for they know that even in
a primary bull market, not every day is a bull day. There will,
however, be few surprises for Dow theorists, as they know the
nature and characteristics of secondary reactions, which we shall
examine a little later.
FINAL PHASE
The third and final phase of a bull market has some distinguishing characteristics of its own. It will be very easy for Dow
theorists to be right too soon. They may recognize the third and
dangerous phase and, as a consequence of early recognition,
may be too prompt in taking money off the table.
The third phase may have a long life. It will be punctuated
by frequent sharp reversals. The Dow theorist will watch the
recovery from each reversal to see if both Averages regain the
lost ground and confirm each other at new highs. If they do, the
bull market is still on. Successive new highs by both Averages,
however, must be examined in the light of common sense. These
confirmed new highs are said to have diminishing authority
when the bull market is in its final phase.
The time will come when a market shakeout, with the early
appearance of an ordinary reversal, will fail to be followed by
the expected rebound to new confirmed highs, but instead, with
diminishing volume, one or both Averages will fall short of the
previous highs.
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REVERSALS
Secondary reaction is the time-honored Dow Theory expression for an important decline in a primary bull market and for
an important rally in a bear market. The expression has been so
misused by uninformed financial writers and investors that its
usefulness as a descriptive phrase has been impaired. Perhaps if
we substitute reversal for secondary reaction, our discussion
would be more lucid.
Reversals, then, are historic phenomena. They have always
occurred and will not surprise us. We will examine them in the
light of the past and know, more or less, what to expect.
A reversal comes swiftly and without warning out of a clear
sky. As Dow theorists, we have no way of knowing when one
will strike, but we do know they are to be expected at irregular
intervals. When a reversal comes it may continue for as short
a period as a week or as long as several months. It may retrace
percentage-wise perhaps one-third to two-thirds of the movement
since the end of the last previous reversal.
A regular characteristic of a reversal is that its speed is much
greater than that of the primary trend. The reversal regularly
occupies less time than the preceding primary movement.
The apex of the reversal is likely to be accompanied by heavy
volume and followed by our familiar sawtooth pattern with
diminishing volume on each minor move against the primary
trend.
CAUSES OF REVERSALS
A reversal is regularly caused by conditions within the market
itself. In a bull market, such conditions might include too much
speed in the advance, too many inadequately protected margin
accounts, an excessive volume of loans to brokers, and the like.
In a bear market, such conditions might be an oversold market
or overextended short interest. Any important piece of news may
serve as the spark to touch off a reversal.
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PENDULUM SWINGS
A principle sometimes called Dows Law of Action and
Reaction has such persistence in the movement of the Averages as to invite our attention. Briefly, a primary movement in
the market is inevitably followed by a movement in the opposite
direction (reversal) amounting to at least one-third of the primary
movement. The principle seems to persist for long, uninterrupted
advances or declines no matter how far they may go. It also operates in the shorter swings of the daily fluctuations.
We have already examined the long primary swings of this
pendulum and its corrective backswings or reversals and have
likened this action to the movements of the sea. We have passed
over and found unimportant a similar pendulum movement in
the daily fluctuations. At the same time we must be aware of the
fact that within the broad action and reaction of the pendulum,
the shorter action and reaction of the minor movement continue. Dow thought a safe rule to follow was to expect at least a
three-eighths correction of every primary movement.
On our chart, of course, this movement of pendulum
within pendulum produces a highly irregular pattern that must
not divert us from staking out succeeding new highs and lows
and embracing as our working model our original analogy of
the tide.
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BEAR MARKET
FIRST PHASE
As in bull markets, Dow theorists will often recognize three
phases in a bear market. We may define a primary bear market
as the long, broad, downward movement of prices interrupted
at irregular intervals by important reversals (rallies in this case).
The bear market is caused by various disorders in the world
that are damaging to business. Strangely enough, a bear market
seems to persist until prices discount the very worst that may
happen. Possibly a reason for going to such an extreme is that a
cash market is always available for stocks even after the market
for real estate, diamonds, and other widely held personal possessions seems to have dissolved.
Dow theorists, fully aware of the recurrence of bear markets, will be looking for signs long before the completion of
the primary bull market. They will realize that any reversal in
the final phase of a bull market may be the beginning of the
long downward movement. They will suspect the bear's arrival
when a seeming reversal in a bull market fails to be followed
by a movement into new high ground. They will know the bear
market has arrived when a second trough breaks through the low
points established by the earlier trough. This is the first phase
and represents the surrender of get-rich-quick hopes by late
participants in the bull market.
SECOND PHASE
The second phase of a bear market is likely to be a long,
drawn-out affair. It will be punctuated at uncertain intervals by
sharp reversals that may last from a week to several months, and
which will recover a substantial part of the previous downturn.
The record shows a wide range of recoveries, averaging 40%.
This second phase of a bear market is marked by characteristic
phenomena, such as known recessions in most lines of business,
decreased earnings of many companies, and assurances by socalled experts that bargain day is at hand.
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THIRD PHASE
Not all bear markets have developed a distinct third phase.
Nevertheless, the Dow theorist will be prepared for a final,
crushing slide and the collapse of prices to a point that seems
unbelievable. In it people who have seen their regular sources of
income diminish to the vanishing point add their market offerings
to the debacle in order to obtain funds for living expenses.
Good stocks shrivel with the bad ones just because they can
be sold. This is a condition often ignored by statistical services
in making investment recommendations, but the all-seeing eyes
of the Averages weigh and consider this vital technical fact along
with all other pertinent facts.
Dow theorists will not expect to buy into the absolute low of
a bear market. In fact, the Averages will not reveal to them that
the bear market is over until the lows have passed. They will
look for signs of the bear market end only after panicky selling
has ceased and days of quiet markets ensue. They will not be
tempted by sudden upturns to believe that the bear market has
changed to a bull market in a day because they know that the
maladjustments that produce a bear market will not be cured
overnight.
Small volume, the refusal of the Averages to retreat in the
face of bad news, and an all-pervading pessimism will make
the Dow theorist alert for the signal that will mark the coming
of a new bull market.
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TIME ELEMENTS
IN PRIMARY TRENDS
Perhaps the hardest thing for the new Dow theorist will be
the exercise of patience. Let him remember that he is investing
his money in competition with some very smart buyers. Almost
every tick on the tape represents someones thoughtful decision.
If investors are watchful, they can read these composite thoughts
in time to gain a share of the profit. They must not try to gain it
all by attempting to buy at the absolute bottom.
Prices do not make their moves in response to the number
of people who may be buying or selling, but in response to the
weight of dollars on the buying side and the pressure of stocks
on the selling side. The composite thought we are looking for
in the Averages is the majority opinion of money, not people.
The opinion of a probable majority of people is published every
day by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Discovery of
the money majority opinion is not quite so easy and involves
watching the Averages over a period of time.
Patience is required in successful trading based on this majority money opinion. Lets look at the duration of the generally
recognized primary tides since 1896.
TWENTY-EIGHT PRIMARY BULL MARKETS
Bull market which began in
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LINES
An occasional formation on our chart which is of vital interest
to the Dow theorist, when it develops, is that known as a Line.
This is a sideways movement of both Averages. A line follows
variations confined to 2% or 3% in either direction over a period
of several weeks.
A definite line once formed affords opportunity for one of our
most reliable signals. Abandonment of the line by both Averages,
either upward together or downward together, regularly indicates
an important move in the direction of the breakthrough. A break
through the line by one Average, unconfirmed by the other, does
not constitute a signal or justify the Dow theorist in reaching a
conclusion to act.
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SIGNAL PRACTICE
If you now have a clear conception of the Averages and of the
Dow Theory tidal action, you hold the key to success in your
own business and fortune in investing.
The Averages are not talking all the time. But when they do
talk, believe them. When they say something, that something
stands until they say something else. If, now and then, they seem
to lead you astray, the fault is probably in your understanding,
and you must be prompt to listen again and correct your interpretation.
Remember, the Averages are the sum of all information having any market influence. They represent the majority money
opinion. Over the years Dow theorists have discovered the
existence of certain recurring characteristics of movement, and
we are trying to use this experience to reap profits.
By way of review, lets read a cycle of hypothetical signals,
which we shall invent for practice, beginning at the bottom of
a bear market:
D
B
Ind.
Tran.
A
C
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A
Ind.
B
B
Tran.
A and B are new highs for Industrials and Transports (confirming each other) in a bull market.
The Averages say: We, the Averages, reaffirm the bull
signal heretofore given and predict that prices will move
indefinitely higher.
A
A B
Ind.
C
Tran.
C
Ind.
Tran.
Ind.
Tran.
Ind.
Tran.
Tran.
A
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A
Ind.
Tran. A
C
C
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CONCLUSION
Few investors are wholehearted, practicing Dow theorists;
few investors base their transactions on the story of the Averages
alone, regardless of the action of the crowd and the ballyhoo of
tipsters.
When a great bear market rolls in periodically, one of the
favorite cries of the injured is that the Dow Theory caused it.
Somewhere they have heard that the Dow Theory (as usual)
has been right and that the selling of Dow theorists has been
responsible. Not yet has the time arrived when even casual Dow
theorists control a volume of business sufficient to have more
than brief influence on the minor trend (daily fluctuations).
It is interesting, however, to speculate on what would be the
result if we were all practicing Dow theorists.
Well, the first day we are all Dow theorists will be a dandy.
Either we will all want to buy and there will be no sellers or
we will all want to sell and there will be no buyers. There just
wouldnt be any trades at all if we were all practicing theorists,
and the utility of the Theory based on price fluctuations would
be destroyed with the market.
A more beneficent view of the Theory may be conjured up.
Widespread knowledge of Dow history among business leaders
would forewarn and forearm to such an extent that the peaks
and valleys of industry might tend to level out, a result which
no legislation seems adequate to produce.
******
The certain knowledge that the Dow Theory is workable and
that it has demonstrated its usefulness again and again over
more than 100 years should warrant your continuing the chart
and profiting from its implications.
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