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Dow Jones Industrial Average |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.06 sec. |
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Dow Jones Industrial Average The best known U.S. index of stocks. A price-weighted average of 30 actively traded blue-chip stocks, primarily industrials including stocks that trade on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow, as it is called, is a barometer of how shares of the largest US companies are performing. There are hundreds of investment indexes around the world for stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities. Dow Jones Industrial Average A stock market index founded in 1896 by Charles Dow tracking 30 companies in various industries thought to be representative of the American economy. It is a price-weighted index, meaning that stocks with higher prices per share affect the average more. It also scales its averages to account for stock splits and other changes in the companies tracked. All stocks tracked in the DJIA are traded on either the New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ. It is considered the premier securities index in the United States. Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), sometimes referred to as the Dow, is the best-known and most widely followed market indicator in the world. It tracks the performance of 30 blue chip US stocks. Though it is called an average, it actually functions more like an index. The DJIA is quoted in points, not dollars. It's computed by totaling the weighted prices of the 30 stocks and dividing by a number that is regularly adjusted for stock splits, spin-offs, and other changes in the stocks being tracked. The companies that make up the DJIA are changed from time to time. For example, in 1999 Microsoft, Intel, SBC Communications, and Home Depot were added and four other companies were dropped. The changes are widely interpreted as a reflection of the emerging or declining impact of a specific company or type of company on the economy as a whole. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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EQUITIES: As the Dow Jones Industrial Average posted an all-time high above 12,000 last week and the S&P 500 marched to nearly six-year highs, the Nasdaq 100 Index showed controlled enthusiasm. the largest American insurer based on revenue--has been added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average index, an investment benchmark of the largest "blue chip" stocks, Dow Jones Co. html) conducted during a week in July when the Dow Jones industrial average plummeted nearly 700 points found 68% of likely voters nevertheless favor letting workers invest part of their Social Security taxes in personal retirement accounts, say researchers at the Cato Institute. |
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