Category Archives: 1992

Dogs of the Dow: 1992

In our continued pursuit to gather data that contradicts our view that low yield stocks outperform the high yield stocks (aka Dogs of the Dow) as presented in Michael O’Higgins’ book Beating the Dow, we have obtained the performance of the top ten, top five, top three and the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th stocks in the high and low yield groups then contrasted their performance against the Dow Jones Industrial Average for the same year.

In this case, the year under consideration is 1992 and we have added the list of ten stocks and their price with the dividend yield.

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1992 Data Breakdown

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For the second year in a row, the top ten stocks in the high yield category underperformed the Dow Jones Industrial Average AND the low yield category.

Average Return 1991-1992

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The average return for the period from December 31, 1990 to December 31, 1992 highlights the strength of the low yield stocks.  However, for the top ten high yield stocks, they could not outperform the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

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On This Day: Richard Russell

On this day in 1998, Richard Russell, in his Dow Theory Letters, said the following:

"...Another very, important consideration is this: Many wealthy and sophisticated investors are ardent practitioners of compounding. In order to compound, you must receive a return on your investment. A 1.5% return or less from stocks, compounding becomes almost impossible. But with 5.5% coming in, compounding works. For this reason, large individual investors, who are well aware of the fortune-building power of compounding, will opt for bonds rather than stocks at this juncture."

"There, I’ve given you a cold, unemotional rundown on the price action for gold. Everything else, all the rumors, all the hopes, all the concepts they’re interesting but we don’t buy and sell concepts, we buy and sell PRICE."

-Richard Russell. Dow Theory Letters. July 1, 1998.