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Atricle Dump - Is the Dow Obsolete?
Finding The Right Online Collaboration Tool For your Business Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot.What are Online Collaboration Tools?Online collaboration tools constitute a central web-based platform which enables businesspersons to work together, cooperate and collaborate with one another from anywhere across the globe via the Internet. Using collaboration tools you can communicate thoughts, share ideas and seamlessly interact with anyone from anywhere based on demand.The term online collaboration tool can be used to refer to any Internet application that facilitates on-demand collaboration of a geographically dispersed team. These tools are a windfall for businesses which have to communicate / share / transfer business re You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investo Business Management Skills Tested In 2005, American investors set a new record with net purchases of foreign stocks of more than $110 billion. American investors' home bias is waning, research shows that foreign shares represent about 16% of the average portfolio and many financial advisors are now recommending that their clients allocate 10%-30% of their portfolios to non-U.S. stocks and bonds.Trends in Small Business Management SkillsNew data has shown that the majority of business owner-operators neglect their personal needs and have no plan to exit their business upon retirement. The survey indicates that only 37% of owner-operators have planned for their own exit from the business and only 38% have any form of personal development plan to ensure ongoing career development and satisfaction.64% of SME owners work more than a 40-hour week and only 45% take four weeks holiday each year. While many business owners consider they’re in business for lifestyle reasons, this is clearly not their reality.These insights have emerged American companies have gone global in a big way and stellar returns from investing in global stock markets over the past few years has left U.S. only investors green with envy and red ink portfolios. But what is still the most-quoted market indicator in newspapers, on TV and on the Internet - the Dow Jones Industrial Index (DJIA). Let's look briefly at the history of this index, why it may be out of date and discuss a possible alternative to financial products that track it such as the Dow Diamonds (DIA). Charles Dow created in 1896 the first Dow Jones Index that included nine railroad stocks, a steamship line and a communications company. In 1916, the industrial average expanded to 20 stocks; the number was raised again, in 1928, to 30, where it remains. Charles Dow had the vision to create a benchmark that would project general market conditions and therefore help investors bewildered by fractional dollar changes. A revolutionary idea at the time, its implementation was simple. The averages were, well, plain old averages. To calculate the first average, Dow added up the stock prices and divided by eleven, the number of stocks included in the index. A special divisor other than the number of stocks is used to avoid distortions when constituent companies split their shares or when one stock is substituted for another. Today, the DJIA is a benchmark that tracks American stocks that are considered to be the leaders of the economy and are listed on the Nasdaq and NYSE. The DJIA covers 30 large-cap companies, which are subjectively picked by the editors of the Wall Street Journal. Over the years, companies in the index have been changed to ensure the index stays current in its measure of the U.S. economy. In fact, of the initial companies included, only General Electric remains as part of the modern-day average. The most recent deletions were when Kodak, International Paper, and AT&T were replaced by Pfizer, AIG, and Verizon. A few years ago, the Dow's overseers made history by adding the first two stocks listed not on the New York Stock Exchange, but on the Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot. You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investo Trading Psychology & Self-Concept tor in newspapers, on TV and on the Internet - the Dow Jones Industrial Index (DJIA).To be a successful trader you have to have good technical skills and sound money management skills. Also, though, you have to have a positive psychological outlook to give you the mental and emotional balance to be successful.One of the most important discoveries of the twentieth century psychology was the discovery of the “self-concept”. The self-concept is the master program of one’s life. It is the bundle of beliefs that you hold about yourself and the world at large. If determines your reality in that you always see the world through a screen of prejudices formed by your belief structure. It is the belief structure that predicts your performan Let's look briefly at the history of this index, why it may be out of date and discuss a possible alternative to financial products that track it such as the Dow Diamonds (DIA). Charles Dow created in 1896 the first Dow Jones Index that included nine railroad stocks, a steamship line and a communications company. In 1916, the industrial average expanded to 20 stocks; the number was raised again, in 1928, to 30, where it remains. Charles Dow had the vision to create a benchmark that would project general market conditions and therefore help investors bewildered by fractional dollar changes. A revolutionary idea at the time, its implementation was simple. The averages were, well, plain old averages. To calculate the first average, Dow added up the stock prices and divided by eleven, the number of stocks included in the index. A special divisor other than the number of stocks is used to avoid distortions when constituent companies split their shares or when one stock is substituted for another. Today, the DJIA is a benchmark that tracks American stocks that are considered to be the leaders of the economy and are listed on the Nasdaq and NYSE. The DJIA covers 30 large-cap companies, which are subjectively picked by the editors of the Wall Street Journal. Over the years, companies in the index have been changed to ensure the index stays current in its measure of the U.S. economy. In fact, of the initial companies included, only General Electric remains as part of the modern-day average. The most recent deletions were when Kodak, International Paper, and AT&T were replaced by Pfizer, AIG, and Verizon. A few years ago, the Dow's overseers made history by adding the first two stocks listed not on the New York Stock Exchange, but on the Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot. You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investo Removing the Blogger Navbar tions and therefore help investors bewildered by fractional dollar changes. A revolutionary idea at the time, its implementation was simple. The averages were, well, plain old averages. To calculate the first average, Dow added up the stock prices and divided by eleven, the number of stocks included in the index. A special divisor other than the number of stocks is used to avoid distortions when constituent companies split their shares or when one stock is substituted for another.What is the Blogger navbar? Blogger navbar is the *navbar* you see at the top of your blog, and which allows users to move to a next random blog. It allows user to search your blog and also to mark any blog as spam.So why should I remove it? It depends on your perception. I find it unprofessional, because it sometimes spoils the look of your blog. If you have a subtle layout, they might get too obvious.Are there any problems if I remove it? Some of your viewers might be accustomed to a navbar and may miss it. Blogger calls navbar the bloggers equivalent of remote, as it al Today, the DJIA is a benchmark that tracks American stocks that are considered to be the leaders of the economy and are listed on the Nasdaq and NYSE. The DJIA covers 30 large-cap companies, which are subjectively picked by the editors of the Wall Street Journal. Over the years, companies in the index have been changed to ensure the index stays current in its measure of the U.S. economy. In fact, of the initial companies included, only General Electric remains as part of the modern-day average. The most recent deletions were when Kodak, International Paper, and AT&T were replaced by Pfizer, AIG, and Verizon. A few years ago, the Dow's overseers made history by adding the first two stocks listed not on the New York Stock Exchange, but on the Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot. You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investo Top Four Marketing Secrets of Building a Professional Practice e Nasdaq and NYSE. The DJIA covers 30 large-cap companies, which are subjectively picked by the editors of the Wall Street Journal. Over the years, companies in the index have been changed to ensure the index stays current in its measure of the U.S. economy. In fact, of the initial companies included, only General Electric remains as part of the modern-day average.Building a coaching or consulting practice can be rewarding and lucrative. Sadly, many who get started on this path simply can’t make it. Almost daily I talk to people who give up on their dream of “solopreneurship” and, resentfully, join the ranks of job seekers.What disturbs me the most is that many of them are talented and skilled professionals; real experts in their field. With just a bit of marketing know-how they may have been able to generate healthy six-figure incomes doing the work they love.Instead, they spend tons of money getting more certifications. They are becoming “master technicians” mistakenly thinking that alone will get them The most recent deletions were when Kodak, International Paper, and AT&T were replaced by Pfizer, AIG, and Verizon. A few years ago, the Dow's overseers made history by adding the first two stocks listed not on the New York Stock Exchange, but on the Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot. You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investo CraigsList, Yellow Pages, and Web Directory Lists as Information Providers Nasdaq: Microsoft and Intel. Since 1959, other companies added include Disney, Wal-Mart, McDonald's, and Home Depot.In the space of a few years, phone books have lost out on popularity. Of course, let me not count the occasion when my husband left the toilet paper roll on the floor, directly beneath the waiting empty roll, for the 72nd time in a row. But for its actual use of providing information to me, I cannot remember when I last used it. In this day and age my computer is always so much closer than the phone book, although I must admit, it is much harder to throw across a room when frustrated. But yet I keep the thing around, try to camouflage the ugly machine with my decor or what have you. I have to keep it out and in plain sight for the whole world to agree that ye You may be thinking that the S&P 500 Index has overtaken the DJIA in popularity. But over long stretches, the Dow 30 and the S&P 500 have correlated closely. The S&P 500 Index is also market-cap weighted leading to an unhealthy concentration in the largest stocks. Furthermore, when the two have diverged, the S&P has been the more volatile, with higher highs and lower lows. Since January 2000, the steepest Dow decline was 30 percent, whereas the S&P 500's was 40 percent. Nor have S&P investors, at this point, been compensated for the additional risk associated with that volatility. As this is written both indexes still stand below their January 2000 levels, but the Dow's loss is milder. Because the DJIA is made up of exclusively U.S. companies and by definition focused on industrial companies, it does not accurately reflect the performance of large swaths of the U.S. or global marketplace. There are a lot of good companies in the DJIA but it is no longer a good barometer of the American economy or the typical American portfolio nor a useful index for investment vehicles to track. What's better out there? Using a simple value-based model and some horse sense, I put together in January 2003 an index of 30 companies drawn from the S&P Global 100 Index. Called the Chartwell Global 30, it contains 15 U.S. companies and 15 foreign companies weighted equally just like the Dow. In terms of sector weighting, the differences are surprisingly muted. The Chartwell Global 30 has more exposure to the medical and finance areas and less exposure to multi-sector conglomerates and industrial products. While many American multinationals are outsourcing to reduce short-term costs, many foreign companies in the Chartwell index make significant contributions to the U.S, economy. For example, about 60% of the vehicles Toyota sells in North America are built here and the Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis has its global research headquarters in Boston. Making no changes and rebalancing on an annual basis, here are the results. In 2003, the Dow was up 3.15% and the Chartwell Global 30 was up 28.45%. In 2005, the Dow was down 0.61% and the Chartwell Global 30 was up 16.25%. One may ask if a two year test is inadequate but a back test of performance for the period 2000-2005 shows that the Dow is in negative territory while the Chartwell Global 30 is up 39%. An ETF tracking the Chartwell Global 30 will be available in 2006. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was revolutionary at inception and has a well deserved storied past that parallels the evolution of the American economy. For the era of the global economy and investor, it's time for a new revolution.
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