The Dow
Theory
Charles Henry Dow, 1851-1902
Charles
H. Dow
It is interesting and amazing
to note that not until Charles Dow started compiling the Dow Jones
Industrial and Dow Jones Rail Index and started writing about the
stock market a little over a hundred years ago, stock speculation
was regarded merely as a game for the rich or as gambling for the
brave. Sure, there were the tape readers, but the majority of the
public regarded Wall Street as a source of excitement - the entertainment
provided freely (unless you were on the wrong side) by figures such
as Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jay Gould, and the infamous Daniel Drew.
In a series of stunning
editorials for the Wall Street Journal at the turn of the century,
Dow laid out the foundation of his own theory on the stock market.
Among them were:
* The market is always
to be considered as having three movements, all going on at the same
time.
* The first thing to consider is the value of the stock in which the
speculator proposes to trade, the second the direction of the main
movement, and the third the direction of the secondary movement (i.e.
stocks fluctuate together, but prices are controlled by values in
the long run).
* There are three phases to both a primary bull market and a primary
bear market (not to be confused with the three movements mentioned
above).
* The formation of a "line" in the averages indicates accumulation
or distribution
* The market represents a serious well-considered effort on the part
of far-sighted and well-informed men to adjust prices to such values
as exist or which are expected to exist in the not too remote future.
The method of making money
in stocks, according to Dow, was to study basic conditions and exercise
enough patience to capture the major movements. One of the few speculators
who discovered this relatively new concept of making money on Wall
Street at the time was Jesse Livermore. He was able to accomplish
this only through trial and error and the making and losing of several
fortunes.
William P. Hamilton
William P. Hamilton, Dow's
understudy and the fourth editor of the Wall Street Journal, continued
Dow's legacy after his death in 1903. The Dow Theory as interpreted
by Hamilton forms the basis of all modern technical analysis today.
He wrote about the Dow Theory for the Wall Street Journal for more
than 20 years. His additions to the Theory included:
* The Averages discount
everything
* The primary trend cannot be manipulated
* Both the Industrials and Rails (the modern day Transports) must
confirm each other in order for the signal to have authority
* The Theory is not infallible. If someone did find such a system,
then he or she will own the world in relatively short order and speculation
as we know it will not exist.
* Determining the trend by spotting "higher highs" or "lower
lows"
Hamilton's predictions
of the trends were uncannily accurate, even as he developed a wide
following from his editorials. A major reason why he was accurate
almost all the time was his lack of a writing schedule - choosing
only to write when he had something to say about the market, sometimes
going for weeks without writing a single word.
The one significant time
when he erred was in late 1925 and early 1926 when he erroneously
labeled a serious secondary reaction in a primary bull market as a
bear market. Followers of Hamilton lost heavily during that period,
as the market bottomed out in March 1926 (Industrials 135.20 and Rails
102.41) and was getting ready to resume its long advance that would
not end (tragically) until September 1929.
Even so, Hamilton would
always be remembered for penning the following editorial on October
25, 1929, just days before the crash. His words proved prophetic -
calling for the beginning of a new primary bear market. Part of his
now-famous editorial is reproduced below:
A
Turn in the Tide - October 25, 1929
On the late Charles H.
Dow's well known method of reading the stock market movement from
the Dow-Jones averages, the twenty railroad stocks on Wednesday, October
23 confirmed a bearish indication given by the industrials two days
before. Together the averages gave the signal for a bear market in
stocks after a major bull market with the unprecedented duration of
almost six years. It is noteworthy that Barron's and the Dow-Jones
NEWS service on October 21 pointed out the significance of the industrial
signal, given subsequent confirmation by the railroad average.
Hamilton passed away six
weeks after he wrote the above editorial. It is a tragedy that probably
not a great number of people at the Wall Street Journal or Barron's
today have even heard of the Dow Theory, let alone have a complete
understanding of it.
Robert Rhea
The next great Dow theorist,
Robert Rhea, initially stumbled upon the Dow Theory during his endeavor
to find "a system" for helping him make money in the stock
market. In his attempts to disprove the theory, he became a convert.
Rhea was a very serious student, and he was able to utilize the Dow
Theory as interpreted by Hamilton to his advantage, buying and holding
stocks in 1921, and basically holding them until late 1928 (he reversed
his short position when he realized Hamilton's advice was incorrect
in early 1926), missing only the final blowoff phase. He also "played"
the short side successfully during the subsequent deflation. In 1932,
he began publishing his newsletter based on the Dow Theory, called
the "Dow Theory Comment."
Rhea called the bottom
of the stock market in July 1932 almost to the exact day and the subsequent
top in 1937. On July 21, 1932, with the Industrials at 46.50 and the
Rails at 16.76, Rhea instructed his broker to tell his friends "the
Dow Theory implied heavy buying for the first time in over three years."
Further, on July 25, 1932, Rhea sent a memo to 50 correspondents,
part of which is reproduced below:
The declines of both Rail
and Industrial averages between early March and midsummer were without
precedent. The thirty-five year record of the averages shows a fairly
uniform recovery after every major primary action, and such recoveries
average around 50% of the ground lost on the decline; are seldom less
than a third and more than two thirds. Such recovery periods tend
to run to about 40 days, but are sometimes only three weeks - and
occasionally three months.
The time element is in
favor of a normal reaction at this time - because the slideoff was
normal (the normal time interval of major declines being about 100
days).
The market gave the unusual
picture of hovering near the lows for more than seven weeks, and might
be said to have made a "line" during the latter weeks of
that period.
Because of all these things,
and because the volume tended to diminish on recessions and increase
on rallies during the ten days preceding July 21, almost any one trading
on the Dow Theory would have bought stocks on July 19 th . Those who
did not, had a clean cut signal again on the 21 st . Since that date
the implications of the averages have been uniformly bullish, and
it is reasonable to expect that a normal secondary will be completed,
even though the primary trend may not have changed to "bull".
So much for the speculative viewpoint.
Followers of Rhea who bought
stocks during that period and held until 1937 made a fortune.
E. George Schaefer
In July 1949, with the
Dow Jones Industrials registering a low at 161.60 and with the country
in the midst of a severe recession, a new primary bull market was
born. E. George Schaefer, a Dow Theory disciple for more than 20 years,
started his newsletter writing career near that time, calling his
subscribers to load up on common stocks in June 1949. He remained
steadfastly bullish in the great corrections of 1953 and 1957 and
cautiously bullish since 1960 until the final top in 1966.
Schaefer believed that
Hamilton strayed away from Dow's original principle of investing in
"values" and that Rhea spent most of his life improvising
Hamilton's "system" of trying to trade the markets when
95% of the population just cannot duplicate what the emotional-less
professional traders can do. He also emphasized that some of the "rules"
that Hamilton and Rhea developed did not apply to the more modern
and more emotional markets of today (such as the claim that secondary
reactions tend to retrace one-third to two-thirds of the preceding
primary swings). The best course of action was to buy "great
values" and staying fully invested through the primary trend.
In his 1960 book "How
I Helped More than 10,000 Investors to Profit in Stocks," Schaefer
stated:
As noted before, my extremely
bullish market letters of June and July, 1949, appeared just a few
days and weeks after the low day of 161.60 was registered on June
13, 1949 by the Dow-Jones Industrials. Since that time, and for the
next 11 years, my letters have been consistently bullish on the Primary
Trend. The stock market has borne me out, and I would say that the
majority of my readers have benefited as they stayed fully-invested
in the way I have counseled.
Schaefer also developed
some additional technical tools and made additional observations along
with his study of the Dow Theory. Among them are:
* The 50% retracement
concept
* The yield cycle
* The ratio of short interest to daily volume
* The study of odd-lot trading
* The 200-day investment line (the 200-day simple moving average)
Schaefer turned bearish
at the most opportune time in 1966 and became bullish in gold and
gold mining shares shortly afterwards. He was, however, too early
with his bullish calls when he asked his subscribers to buy them in
1974. Gold immediately proceeded to suffer a huge short-term correction.
The losses may have broken him since he committed suicide shortly
afterwards. From thereon, the Dow Theory torch was passed on to Richard
Russell.
Richard Russell
Richard Russell was another
Dow Theorist who stumbled upon the Dow Theory during a quest to find
useful literature regarding the stock market. He became a convert
after reading the writings of Robert Rhea. Russell decided to follow
in the footsteps of Rhea and Schaefer - establishing his newsletter
"Dow Theory Letter" in 1958, partly inspired by the extreme
bearishness of the public during the great correction of late 1957
(Russell was bullish at the time).
He also urged subscribers
to sell at the top in February 1966, and he rightly turned bullish
in December 1974. Following are excerpts from his newsletter during
those periods.
February 10, 1966 (two
days after the final top) - While Russell mentioned that although
technical conditions are getting weaker, there is no indication that
the bull market was over yet. However, on the simultaneous decline
of the Dow Jones 40 Bond Average and the Dow Jones Utility Average,
he commented: " In the present ... instance the 40 Bonds turned
down in February, 1965. The real decline in Utilities began in April,
1965. Therefore, the joint decline in both components can be said
to have started in April, 1965, nine months ago. Based on past history,
the decline of Utilities and Bonds together should be taken as a warning
of dangerous monetary conditions ahead as well as a warning of unsatisfactory
stock market conditions. At very least, the shaded areas identify
periods in which informed investment money is distributing or leaving
the market."
Russell began his February
22, 1966 newsletter with the following paragraph : I dislike emphasizing
"the drama of the marketplace" (in contrast with the cold,
analytic approach), but it does seem to me that 1966 is shaping up
as a most exciting year for market students. Not since 1907 has a
booming economy run head-on into a monetary crisis, but I believe
there is a reasonable chance that 1966 will see just that type of
situation repeated. Furthermore, the monetary squeeze is occurring
at a time when (unlike 1907) few businessmen, economists or Governmental
leaders have the foggiest idea of the overall situation or the vaguest
notion of how to deal with it. What we are seeing is an explosive
demand for money from all sectors of the economy with a "built
in" booster of $1 billion a month for the Vietnam war - all this
in the face of world money markets which are literally "panting
for breath."
Note that these were very
strong comments since the public was very enthusiastic about the stock
market at that time. In fact, according to Russell in the same newsletter,
mutual fund purchases by the public in December 1965 were the highest
of any December in history. At the same time, the initial offering
by the newly-formed Manhattan Fund (headed by Gerald Tsai) was nearly
five times oversubscribed. 1966 was a very speculative period, indeed.
The period during late
1974 was a world full of contrasts to that of early 1966. Pessimism
was prevalent. The Dow Jones Industrials was selling at a P/E ratio
of 6 and at below book value. Some subscribers canceled their subscriptions
of Dow Theory Letter after Russell's special report on December 20,
1974 - thinking that Russell had clearly gone out of his mind. Part
of that newsletter is reproduced below:
Now this is how I view
it. I think the odds are probably better than 50/ 50 that the Dow
and most shares hit a bottom in December 1974. I put this thesis together
with a number of other facts. As you will see in a later section,
the unweighted NYSE average is now down around 77% from the high.
In 1929-32 the unweighted NYSE average went 12% further on the downside
- to an 89% loss. I feel that most shares have now discounted all
the forthcoming bad news, and I am including recession-depression
conditions in 1975. We have been in the third phase of a great primary
bear market. We are finally in the zone of "great values".
In many cases, stocks are selling "below known values".
Here's an interesting statistic: The price/ earnings ratio for the
30-Dow Industrials is now around 6.0 while the yield on the Dow is
6.36. This means that the Dow P/E is below the yield on the Dow. This
happened only once before in the last forty years, and that was during
1948-50.
Second item: The Dow is
now selling below its book (or break-up) value. This has not occurred
since 1942. Are these two above Dow "tests" infallible indications
of the final bottom? Not at all, but they do indicate that the Dow
is sure getting down there.
There is no doubt that
the 1974 bottom call was one of the greatest stock market calls in
modern history, right up there with Hamilton's 1929, Rhea's 1932,
and Schaefer's 1949 calls.
Based on the Dow Theory
and his own observations, he told his subscribers the market was a
"sell" in August 1987, even though no Dow Theory sell signal
has been triggered at the time (Hamilton and Rhea has always emphasized
that one does not usually need to wait for a Dow Theory buy or sell
signal to tell one to buy or sell). That signal, however, was triggered
just days before Black Monday, October 19, 1987, as the Dow Transports
confirmed the Dow Industrials on the downside by breaking through
its preceding secondary lows on October 15 (such a signal in the third
phase of a primary bull market is taken to be a primary bear market
signal).
Russell stayed cautiously
bullish during the late 1990s. In September 1999, the Dow Theory generated
a primary bear sell signal. Today, Russell still maintains that we
are in a primary bear market, and that the market will not bottom
until stocks have reached the point of "great values" with
P/E ratios below 10 and with dividend yields of greater than 5%. At
the age of 79, Russell is still going strong, publishing a market
commentary every Monday to Saturday.
The Dow Theory Today
The Dow Theory has withstood
the test of time - the latest "proof" being Russell's primary
bear market call based on the Dow Theory in September 1999. As with
his 1974 primary bull market call, numerous stock market analysts
ignored him, including some of his own subscribers. Various "trading
systems" come and go, but the Dow Theory has been a reliable
tool for the trader/investor for over a century - mainly because the
Dow Theory is not a system, but merely a theory based on the principles
as first developed by Charles Dow, and which is open to interpretation.
Since the 1999 primary
bear market signal, a great deal of interest has been revived in the
Dow Theory. However, not a day goes by without spotting someone who
claims an understanding of Dow Theory but who actually only has a
cursory understanding at best. More recently, numerous traders have
tried to reduce the Dow Theory to a "system," where a series
of confirmations of the Dow Jones Industrials by the Dow Jones Transports
(or vice-versa) is taken to be "buy" or "sell"
signals without regards to other factors such as valuation, economic
conditions, and investor sentiment.
It is to be said here at
none of the above Dow Theorists interpreted the confirmations of the
indexes in that manner. None of them actually waited for such "signals"
to buy or sell - they bought or sold in advance. Waiting for such
"signals," they claimed, would cause them to have missed
a significant part of the move, and such moves can be costly. The
primary purpose of this indicator is to serve as a confirmation of
the current trend, and if one index does not confirm the other (or
if it takes a long time to confirm) then it is a warning sign that
the current trend may be over, and positions may need to be liquidated
(or stops may have to be tightened) or may need to be covered if one
is short. Again, the confirmation of one index by the other is not
to be taken as a buy or sell indicator.
Another variation of this
fallacy is that the July and October 2002 bottom were the true bottoms,
and that unless those bottoms were jointly penetrated by the Dow Jones
Industrials and Transports, we are now in a bull market as interpreted
by the Dow Theory since we have made higher highs in both indexes.
Nothing can be further from the truth. Please remember that Dow's
original emphasis was on valuation and economic conditions. All the
major indexes are still overvalued today judging by their P/E and
P/D ratios. Moreover, the higher highs indicator can only be treated
seriously in the third phase of a primary bear market, when pessimism
runs extreme and when stocks are liquidated without regards to values.
We had none of that in this bear market so far.
We believe any serious
investor/trader should take the time and try to gain a true understanding
of the Dow Theory. I sincerely believe that the Dow Theory is even
more valuable today than it ever was - in a world full of hedge funds
using price, volume, and volatility breakout systems and with anyone
willing to jump in at the sign of a potential trend. Today's markets
are more emotional than ever and only by knowing the true tenets of
the Dow Theory can one stay firmly planted on the ground with both
feet. Ignore the presses and anyone else who has not taken the time
to learn the Theory. Read all the historical writings by the above
Dow Theorists, and I promise you that this education will be immensely
more valuable than any secondary education you can obtain in a top
ten business school or a top five investment bank today. Our site
will try to incorporate the Dow Theory in our analysis, but please
bear with us from time to time since we are still students of the
Dow Theory ourselves.