Dow Jones Index Injected With EPO And Growth Hormones

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Dow Jones Index Injected With EPO And Growth Hormones Again by Wim Grommen

It is becoming more and more meaningless to compare the performance of the Dow 30 from one period to another with the continuing replacement of constituent companies that have under-performing and lower priced stocks (losers out) with companies that have higher priced stocks with greater future prospects for price appreciation (winners in).

We explain below exactly what this reconfiguring (and the further change in the Dow Divisor) encompasses and exactly how it will affect the performance of the index. Read on, its significance is absolutely dramatic! This manipulation of the performance of the Dow 30 has been going on since 1928 and it was further denigrated this week with a 3 constituent swap which will, in effect, assure that the Dow 30 continues to rise in the long term.

On September 23, the Dow Jones gets the biggest facelift since 2004 in one fell swoop with the removal of 3 company constituents:

Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HPQ) (+21.5% ytd)

Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) (+52.0% ytd)

Alcoa Inc (NYSE:AA) (-1.8% ytd)

And the addition of:

Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS) (+25 ytd)

Nike Inc (NYSE:NKE) (+27% ytd)

Visa Inc (NYSE:V) (+18% ytd)

These three additions are expected to have greater future price performance appreciation. (Read: The New Dow Stocks in Three Charts).

What is even more striking is that the three companies removed from the index have a low share price (HP is trading at an approximate price of $22, BoA at $14 and Alcoa at $8 for a sum total of $44) while the three stocks added have a high market price (Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS) at $164, Nike Inc (NYSE:NKE) at $67 and Visa Inc (NYSE:V) at $184 for a sum total of $415). Of course there is the Dow Divisor which supposedly ensures that the value of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDEXDJX:.DJI) with the new shares is the same as the value of the Dow Jones with the old shares but this effect is only short-term as, in the long-term, the profits of the higher priced stocks will be greater/stronger than those of the weaker stocks that they replaced.

The Dow 30 is calculated by dividing the sum of the 30 constituents’ shares by the Dow Divisor. On September 10, the Dow Jones ended at 15,191 points. The Dow Divisor currently has a value of 0.130216081. This means that the current total of 30 shares is worth $1,978 (15,191 x 0.130216081=$1,978).

Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HPQ) is trading at an approximate price of $22, Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) at $14 and Alcoa at $8 (sum total of $44). These shares will be replaced by Goldman Sachs at $164, Nike at $67 and Visa at $184 (sum total of $415) which is 9.4 times more. This means that the new sum of the 30 stocks have a value of $2,349 (1978 – 44 + 415) and, therefore we expect that the Dow Divisor will be adjusted from 0.130216081 to 0.154631 to get back to the original 15,191 index points (15,191 x 0.154631 = $2,349).

Given the above, had the three old shares increased by 10% each in price in the past the Dow 30 would have increased by 33.8 points in total (10% x 44 divided by 0.130216081 = 33.79 points) assuming there was no change in the price of the other 27 stocks.

As of September 23rd, however, a corresponding 10% increase in the price of each of the new shares would contribute 268.4 points to the rise of the Dow 30 (10% x 415 divided by 0.154631 = 268.38) or 7.94 times more points.

The influence of the 3 losers was: $44 of $1978. This is 2.2% of the Dow Jones Index. The influence of the 3 winners becomes: $415 of $2,349. This is 17.67% of the Dow Jones Index. This stinks pretty much of manipulation, even double manipulation!

Dow Jones overview from 2000: winners in – losers out:

September 23, 2013: Hewlett-Packard Company (NYSE:HPQ) Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) and Alcoa Inc (NYSE:AA) will replaced by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Nike Inc. and Visa Inc (NYSE:V). Alcoa has dropped from $40 in 2007 to $8.08.

Hewlett- Packard Co. has dropped from $50 in 2010 to $22.36.

Bank of America has dropped from $50 in 2007 to $14.48.?But Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Nike Inc. and Visa Inc. have risen 25%, 27% and 18% respectively in 2013.

September 20, 2012: UnitedHealth Group Inc. (NYSE:UNH) replaces Kraft Foods Inc. Kraft Foods Inc. was split into two companies and was therefore deemed less representative so no longer suitable for the Dow. The share value of UnitedHealth Group Inc. had risen for two years before inclusion in the Dow by 53%.

June 8, 2009: Cisco Systems, Inc. (NASDAQ:CSCO) and Travelers Companies Inc (NYSE:TRV) replaced Citigroup and General Motors Company (NYSE:GM). Citigroup and General Motors have received billions of dollars of U.S. government money to survive and were not representative of the Do.

September 22, 2008: Kraft Foods Group Inc (NASDAQ:KRFT) replaced American International Group Inc (NYSE:AIG). American International Group was replaced after the decision of the government to take a 79.9% stake in the insurance giant. AIG was narrowly saved from destruction by an emergency loan from the Fed.

February 19, 2008: Bank of America Corp (NYSE:BAC) and Chevron Corporation (NYSE:CVX) replaced Altria Group Inc (NYSE:MO) and Honeywell International Inc. (NYSE:HON). Altria was split into two companies and was deemed no longer suitable for the Dow Jones Index. Honeywell was removed from the Dow Jones Index because the role of industrial companies in the U.S. stock market in the recent years had declined and Honeywell had the smallest sales and profits among the participants in the Dow.

April 8, 2004: Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE:VZ), American International Group Inc. and Pfizer Inc. (NYSE:PFE) replace AT&T Inc. (NYSE:T), Eastman Kodak Co. (NYSE:KODK) and International Paper Co (NYSE:IP). AIG shares had increased over 387% in the previous decade and Pfizer had an increase of more than 675& behind it. Shares of AT&T and Kodak, on the other hand, had decreases of more than 40% in the past decade and were therefore removed from the Dow Jones Index.

Dow Jones Index is a ‘Fata Morgana’:

In many graphs the y-axis is a fixed unit, such as kg, meter, liter or euro. In the graphs showing the stock exchange values, this also seems to be the case because the unit shows a number of points. However, this is far from true! An index point is not a fixed unit in time and does not have any historical significance. An index is calculated on the basis of a set of shares. Every index has its own formula and the formula gives the number of points of the index. Unfortunately many people attach a lot of value to these graphs which are, however, very deceptive.

An index is calculated on the basis of a set of shares. Every index has its own formula and the formula results in the number of points of the index. However, this set of shares changes regularly. For a new period the value is based on a different set of shares. It is very strange that these different sets of shares are represented as the same unit. In less than ten years twelve of the thirty companies (i.e. 40%) in the Dow Jones were replaced. Over a period of sixteen years, twenty companies were replaced, a figure of 67%. This meant that over a very short period we were left comparing a basket of today’s apples with a basket of yesterday’s pears.

Even more disturbing is the fact that with every change in the set of shares used to calculate the number of points, the formula also changes. This is done because the index, which is the result of two different sets of shares at the moment the set is changed, must be the same for both sets at that point in time. The index graphs must be continuous lines. For example, the Dow Jones is calculated by adding the shares and dividing the result by a number. Because of changes in the set of shares and the splitting of shares the divider changes continuously. At the moment the divider is 0.130216081 but in 1985 this number was higher than 1. An index point in two periods of time is therefore calculated in different ways:

Dow1985 = (x1 + x2 +..+x30) / 1

Dow2013 = (x1 + x2 +.. + x30) / 0.130216081

In the 1990s many shares were split. To make sure the result of the calculation remained the same both the number of shares and the divider changed. An increase in share value of 1 dollar of the set of shares in 2013 results is 7.7 times more points than in 1985. The fact that in the 1990s many shares were split is probably the cause of the exponential growth of the Dow Jones index. At the moment the Dow is at 15,191 points. If we used the 1985 formula it would be at 1,978 points.

The most remarkable characteristic is of course the constantly changing set of shares. Generally speaking, the companies that are removed from the set are in a stabilization or degeneration phase. Companies in a take off phase or acceleration phase are added to the set. This greatly increases the chance that the index will rise rather than go down. This is obvious, especially when this is done during the acceleration phase of a transition. From 1980 onward 7 ICT companies (3M, AT&T, Cisco, HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft), the engines of the latest revolution and 5 financial institutions, which always play an important role in every transition, were added to the Dow Jones Index.

Real truth and fictional truth

Is the number of points that the Dow Jones now gives us a truth or a fictional truth? If a fictional truth then the number of points now says absolutely nothing about the state that the economy or society is in when compared to the past.

In that case a better guide would be to look at the number of people in society that use food stamps today – That is the real truth!

By Wim Grommen

The first part of this article refers to the article Manipulation of the Dow Jones: This is how it works! (dutch) written by Ronald Hendrickx of beurs.com.

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