Lidt forklaring om Dow Theory og vigtigheden af Dow Transportation index:
Transportation Components
As previously mentioned, the Dow Jones Transportation Index includes 20 members or component companies. Each of these companies is assigned a weight that is used along with the stock’s price to calculate the index. For example, FedEx has a weight of around 12.96%. That means that approximately 12.96% of the movement in the index can be explained by the stock price of FedEx.
Component weightings become important when a stock is replaced in an index, an event that does not happen frequently. By using a component weight method, this allows for the replacement of a company in the index without the need to restate historical price movements. This feature adds to the overall stability and long-term usefulness of the measure. The stocks included in today’s Transportation Index, along with their weights, appear in the following table:
Dow Jones Transportation 20 Components
Company Name | Weighting % |
American Airlines Group | 2.80% |
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | 5.18% |
Avis Budget Group, Inc. | 2.85% |
CH Robinson Worldwide Inc. | 5.34% |
CSX Corp. | 2.19% |
Delta Air Lines Inc. | 2.82% |
Expeditors International of Washington Inc. | 3.94% |
FedEx Corporation | 12.96% |
JB Hunt Transport Services Inc. | 6.32% |
JetBlue Airways Corporation | 1.23% |
Kirby Corporation | 4.26% |
Kansas City Southern | 7.61% |
Landstar System Inc. | 5.33% |
Southwest Airlines Co. | 2.82% |
Matson, Inc. | 2.80% |
Norfolk Southern Corporation | 7.08% |
Ryder System, Inc. | 5.04% |
United Continental Holdings, Inc. | 3.65% |
Union Pacific Corporation | 7.38% |
United Parcel Service, Inc. | 8.41% |
The above weightings are as of August 2016. A spreadsheet of this information is also available for download: Dow Jones Transportation Average.
Dow Transportations and the Dow Theory
Ever since it was first introduced by Charles Dow; the Industrial Average has been used by various investors to predict movements in the stock market. One of these concepts is called the Dow Theory.
The Dow Theory is supposedly based on the early writings of Charles Dow; however, this is often disputed. Interestingly the first book on the subject appeared in 1902; the same year he died. The most common, and simplified, version of the theory goes something like this:
A rise in the Dow Jones Industrial Average must be “confirmed” by the Dow Jones Transportation Average in order for the rise in the market to be sustainable. This theory is based on the simple relationship that exists between “industrials” that make products and the “transportations” that ship the product. An easy to remember version is that one “makes” and the other “takes.”
In reality, the interaction is much more complex than it appears on the surface; however, many investors today still closely monitor the interaction of the Industrials and Transports. You’ll often hear talk of the Dow Theory when the Industrials and Transports diverge; a situation that raises a warning flag for stock market investors.