Members
-
Topics
Archives
-
-
Recent Posts
-
-
Investor Education
Market Return After Exceptional Years
Dollar Cost Averaging Tool
Dow Theory: The Formation of a Line
Dividend Capture Strategy Analysis
Golden Cross – How Golden Is It?
Debunked – Death Cross
Work Smart, Not Hard
Charles H. Dow, Father of Value Investing
It's All About the Dividends
Dow Theory: Buying in Scales
How to Avoid Losses
When Dividends are Canceled
Cyclical and Secular Markets
Inflation Proof Myth
What is Fair Value?
Issues with P-E Ratios
Beware of Gold Dividends
Gold Standard Myth
Lagging Gold Stocks?
No Sophisticated Investors
Dollar down, Gold up?
Problems with Market Share
Aim for Annualized Returns
Anatomy of Bear Market Trade
Don’t Use Stop Orders
How to Value Earnings
Low Yields, Big Gains
Set Limits, Gain More
Ex-Dividend Dates -
-
Historical Data
1290-1950: Price Index
1670-2012: Inflation Rate
1790-1947: Wholesale Price Cycle
1795-1973: Real Estate Cycle
1800-1965: U.S. Yields
1834-1928: U.S. Stock Index
1835-2019: Booms and Busts
1846-1895: Gold/Silver Value
1853-2019: Recession/Depression Index
1860-1907: Most Active Stock Average
1870-2033: Real Estate Cycles
1871-2020: Market Dividend Yield
1875-1940: St. Louis Rents
1876-1934: Credit-New Dwellings
1896-1925: Inflation-Stocks
1897-2019: Sentiment Index
1900-1903: Dow Theory
1900-1923: Cigars and Cigarettes
1900-2019: Silver/Dow Ratio
1901-2019: YoY DJIA
1903-1907: Dow Theory
1906-1932: Barron's Averages
1907-1910: Dow Theory
1910-1913: Dow Theory
1910-1936: U.S. Real Estate
1910-2016: Union Pacific Corp.
1914-2012: Fed/GDP Ratio
1919-1934: Barron's Industrial Production
1920-1940: Homestake Mining
1921-1939: US Realty
1922-1930: Discount Rate
1924-2001: Gold/Silver Stocks
1927-1937: Borden Co.
1927-1937: National Dairy Products
1927-1937: Union Carbide
1928-1943: Discount Rate
1929-1937: Monsanto Co.
1937-1969: Intelligent Investor
1939-1965: Utility Stocks v. Interest Rates
1941-1967: Texas Pacific Land
1947-1970: Inventory-Sales Ratio
1948-2019: Profits v. DJIA
1949-1970: Dow 600? SRL
1958-1976: Gold Expert
1963-1977: Farmland Values
1971-2018: Nasdaq v. Gold
1971-1974: REIT Crash
1972-1979: REIT Index Crash
1986-2018: Hang Seng Index Cycles
1986-2019: Crude Oil Cycles
1999-2017: Cell Phone Market Share
2008: Transaction History
2010-2021: Bitcoin Cycles -
Interesting Read
Inside a Moneymaking Machine Like No Other
The Fuzzy, Insane Math That's Creating So Many Billion-Dollar Tech Companies
Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Letters
Forex Investors May Face $1 Billion Loss as Trade Site Vanishes
Why the oil price is falling
How a $600 Million Hedge Fund Disappeared
Hedge Fund Manager Who Remembers 1998 Rout Says Prepare for Pain
Swiss National Bank Starts Negative
Tice: Crash is Coming...Although
More on Edson Gould (PDF)
Schiller's CAPE ratio is wrong
Double-Digit Inflation in the 1970s (PDF)
401k Crisis
Quick Link Archive
Category Archives: Russell 2000
Dow Theory: Technical Take
We outline the current market conditions based on the technical attributes applying the work of Charles H. Dow.
Russell 2000 Downside Target Update
Below is our update on the Russell 2000 Index applying Dow’s Theory. Continue reading
Russell 2000 Downside Targets & 50% Principle
Below are the downside targets for the Russell 2000 Index applying Dow’s Theory. Continue reading
Russell 2000 Price Momentum $IWM
Below is a chart of the Russell 2000 Index from 1989-2023, reflecting Price Momentum data.
Golden Cross Analysis: Transports & Russell 2000
As the market continues to move higher, there will be more companies and indexes reaching the Golden Cross technical pattern. This is evident by the recent article, Dow transports and Russell 2000 see ‘golden cross’ materializing, which suggests that this pattern is bullish for the two indexes. Our recent article on this technical indicator shed light on how successful this pattern is when it’s applied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
The tool we developed allows us to quickly analyze the pattern against various indexes. Let’s see how successful the Dow Jones Transportation Average and Russell 2000 are with technical pattern known as the Golden Cross. Continue reading
Posted in Death Cross, Dow Jones Transportation Average, Dow Transports, Golden Cross, Russell 2000
Tagged members
Dow Theory: September 18, 2014
NOTE: In our Dow Theory posting of May 18, 2014, we revealed an issue with Dow Theory that had gone unaddressed since S.A. Nelson’s book, The ABC of Stock Speculation, coined the term “Dow’s Theory.” We believe the acknowledgment of this issue adds clarity to the writings of Charles H. Dow and may produce new insights that have not previously been explored.
Dow Theory: August 14, 2014
In our last Dow Theory posting on May 18, 2014, we revealed an issue with Dow Theory that had gone unaddressed since S.A. Nelson’s book The ABC of Stock Speculation coined the term “Dow’s Theory.” We believe the acknowledgment of this issue adds clarity to the writings of Charles H. Dow and may produce new insights that have not previously been explored.
Posted in Dow Theory, Dow Theory Bull Market indication, Dow Theory Confirmation, Russell 2000
Tagged members
Dow Theory
On September 30, 2013, we posted our Dow Theory analysis. In that assessment, we acknowledged that our June 2013 review of Dow Theory was incorrect. Additionally, we pointed out the importance of using Dow Theory as an asset allocation tool rather that a strict “buy” or “sell” indicator. A couple of excerpts appear below:
“Since June 21st, as indicated in the chart below, the Dow Industrials and Dow Transports have managed to achieve successive new highs in early August 2013 and mid-September 2013. In addition, the call for a bear market came slightly before the bottom in the market in late June 2013.”
“In short, we use Dow Theory indications as asset allocation signals rather than strict buy/sell signals.”
Accepting the reality that we were not in a bear market was challenging. However, realizing it in enough time, along with the fact that Dow Theory is used as an allocation tool, has spared us excessive losses and/or missed opportunities.
Traditional Dow Theory
Recently Dow Theory has registered a confirmation of the bullish trend. On May 12, 2014, the Dow Jones Industrial Average confirmed the new highs in the Dow Jones Transportation Average. In fact, on the same day, both indexes made new all-time highs.
That this is still a bull market requires a review of various factors that could be at play, both positive and negative. As an example, already the Dow Jones Industrial Average has increased +151% since the March 9, 2009 low. The amount of the increase is less than the average for the period of 1836 to 1914, a time when the Federal Reserve never existed. As stated in the article titled “Is the Fed Responsible for the Stock Market Rise Since 2009?” the average increase when the Federal Reserve didn’t exist was +167%. This suggests that the current rise may have some room to go on the upside.
Dow Theory Reconsidered
There are many who follow the traditional Dow Theory which is really a refined version of William Peter Hamilton’s writings from his Wall Street Journal and Barron’s newspaper columns as well as his book Stock Market Barometer. The theory itself is generally sound. More often than not it is the interpreter of the theory that gets it wrong. However, we can’t help but feel it necessary to point out the specific words of Charles H. Dow which possibly leads to a market theory slightly different from what the legions of modern Dow Theorists are willing to accept.
The following excerpts from the Wall Street Journal outline Dow’s theory on the role of the industrials as it originally was stated:
“This is preeminently the period of industrial speculation, yet the creation of industrial stocks has become pronounced only within a year.”
“…it follows that there must be a very strong body of [venture] capitalists prepared at present to resist anything like a collapse in the industrial market and to promote by every means in their power firm or advancing prices for the market as a whole. and this effort on their part is being powerfully supported by the excellent conditions of practically all branches of trade.”
Dow, Charles H. Review and Outlook. Wall Street Journal. April 22, 1899.
Our interpretation of the preceding quotes is that industrial stocks were, in 1899, considered to be the equivalent to modern small cap stocks which are more speculative in nature and often prone to manipulation and collapse. The best confirmation of this concept is found in the following New York Times quote:
“Our London correspondent, in yesterday’s Financial Supplement, gave expression to the feeling which the English investor or speculator very naturally has as to the securities that usually go under the title of industrials in our markets. It is one of distrust and hesitation. It would be very strange if it were not.
“As to the investor, we suppose that no one on this side of the water would claim that our industrials, taking them ‘by and large,’ the older with the new, the more solid with the more inflated, can be regarded as ‘investment’ securities.”
New York Times. “The Industrials and The Boom”. March 14, 1899. page 6.
By most measures, the New York Times article, from one month earlier in 1899, confirms our view that industrial stocks were of low quality. Now we need to see what Dow intended for the role of transportation and industrial stocks.
“…railway [transportation] stocks generally occupy a position much stronger than that held by the industrials.”
“The growth of the business of the country accrues on the old stocks [transportation stocks]. The Industrial list occupies an entirely different position. There has been a very large creation of securities [initial public offerings]. Stocks have been bought on very limited information as to the value of the property acquired. Attack of these stocks brings selling from those who know little in regard to the worth of what they have bought; also from those who got in at low figures [company insiders] and who propose to get out as well as they can. This is the ideal condition for bear attacks, checked only by the possibility of not being able to borrow stock [for short selling]. The thoughtfulness of promoters [investment banks] in providing ample capital relieves this danger to great extent and will relieve it altogether when the new Industrials come to be distributed.”
Dow, Charles H. Review and Outlook. Wall Street Journal. May 31, 1899.
Our views is that Dow’s theory was intended to be based on blue chip high quality stocks to be compared against small cap speculative stocks. At the time, railroad stocks were the “old stocks” that had a blue chip status while the industrials were the newer [non-railroad] more speculative stocks. We no longer live in a world where railroad stocks dominate the landscape of companies to invest in. Also, transportation stocks generally don’t provide consistent and/or rising dividend payments as was the case of railroad stocks in the last quarter of the 1800’s.
What would be the equivalent indexes of Dow’s comparison between old blue chip stocks to newer more speculative stocks? We believe that the Dow Jones Industrial Average qualifies as the blue chip barometer and the Russell 2000 small cap index qualifies as the speculative barometer. Using all of the other elements of Dow Theory except for the Dow Jones Transportation Average, we believe that we would be following Dow’s theory exactly as it was intended.
Just to reiterate, Dow was not specifically concerned with the comparison between industrial stocks because they made the goods and transportation stocks because they shipped those same goods, a popular and logical story that is expounded on what Dow had intended. However, based on the quotes above, we believe Dow was comparing companies of older blue chip quality that were well established and could be relied upon for their dividends in contrast to newer companies with little in the way of verifiable earnings, nascent but unstable dividends and highly susceptible to manipulation (i.e. small illiquid stock).
If we look at a comparison between the Industrials and the Russell 2000 index, the picture is very different from the confirmation of the bullish trend in the review of the transportation and industrial index above.
As can be seen above, while the Dow Industrials has managed to exceed the previous peaks of December 2013 and April 2014, the Russell 2000 has not been able to exceed the peak of March 2014. Under the rules of Dow Theory, this would be considered a non-confirmation of the rising trend. However, this does not signal a new bear market. Instead, it only suggests that investors remain cautious about new investments.
A bear market would be signaled if the Dow Industrials and Russell 2000 were to simultaneously decline below the previous retracement levels during the rise from the March 2009 low to the current market levels. In the chart above, the initial warning would come if the Russell 2000 and Dow Industrials declined below their respective February 2014 lows.