From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The
Six Four basic tenets
of Dow Theory
- The market has three movements
(1) The
"main movement", primary movement or major trend may last from less
than a year to several years. It can be bullish or bearish.
(2) The
"medium swing", secondary reaction or intermediate reaction may last
from ten days to three months and generally retraces from 33% to 66% of the
primary price change since the previous medium swing or start of the main
movement.
(3) The
"short swing" or minor movement varies with opinion from hours to a
month or more. The three movements may be simultaneous, for instance, a daily
minor movement in a bearish secondary reaction in a bullish primary movement.
- Market trends have three phases
Dow Theory asserts that
major market trends are composed of three phases: an accumulation phase, a
public participation (or absorption) phase, and a distribution phase. The
accumulation phase (phase 1)
is a period when investors "in the know" are actively buying
(selling) stock against the general opinion of the market. During this phase,
the stock price does not change much because these investors are in the
minority demanding (absorbing) stock that the market at large is supplying
(releasing). Eventually, the market catches on to these astute investors and a
rapid price change occurs (phase 2).
This occurs when trend followers and other technically oriented investors
participate. This phase continues until rampant speculation occurs. At this
point, the astute investors begin to distribute their holdings to the market (phase 3).
- The stock market discounts all news
Stock prices quickly
incorporate new information as soon as it becomes available. Once news is
released, stock prices will change to reflect this new information. On this
point, Dow Theory agrees with one of the premises of the efficient-market hypothesis.
Stock market averages must confirm each other
Trends are confirmed by volume
- Trends exist until definitive signals prove that they have ended
Dow believed that
trends existed despite "market noise". Markets might temporarily move
in the direction opposite to the trend, but they will soon resume the prior
move. The trend should be given the benefit of the doubt during these
reversals. Determining whether a reversal is the start of a new trend or a
temporary movement in the current trend is not easy. Dow Theorists often
disagree in this determination. Technical analysis tools attempt to clarify
this but they can be interpreted differently by different investors.
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