Why Watch The Dow Jones? – I Don't

Think about it.

We’ve got issues facing the entire planet. War in Syria, the Fukushima spill in Japan, elections in Europe, and the never-ending “gong show” of blunders playing out in the U.S.

We’ve also got stock markets ( completely contained and unto themselves ) in emerging markets such as Brasil, Colombia, Indonesia,Europe, Canada and the list goes on.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is composed of a rinky dink “30 companies in the U.S”! – 30 companies listed in the most rigged / manipulated index on the planet!!  30 companies!  Seriously – Who gives a shit?!

Can you imagine anyone outside the U.S ( or more so anyone with any important global influence / significant contribution to their own local economy / position of strength ) during times of global “risk aversion” giving a rat’s ass about the plight of 30 piddly companies in a single (and completely rigged ) stock exchange in a single country so far in debt it goes broke ( and just raises it’s credit card limit ) every 6 months!?

Common!

Open you eyes. Pull up some new charts. Get your head out of the sand. Seriously.

It’s a “not knowing the forest from the trees” type thing.

An index composed of 30 American companies , and those companies likely being “the most influenced” by Fed intervention, and promoted in the media via 6 major companies OWNED BY THE SAME INVESTOR GROUP AS THE FED – is an index I can do without.

Ditch it.  Pronto.

Story by F Kong at Google +

9 Responses

  1. JSkogs September 6, 2013 / 4:05 pm

    Your post is somewhat timely and ya I agree. The Dow does not provide much perspective. I don’t even have it on my radar.

    I do however have a question that is somewhat related. Do you know of any sites that publish regular data on currency correlations to other markets? Example: USDJPY has of late (1 yr maybe?) been positively correlated to the SPX to some degree. Probably because of pump money. These correlations would change over varying time frames and come and go. It would be nice to be able to “watch” these shifts. Do you know of any sites that publish this kind of data with rolling averages and varying time frames? Thanks!

    • Pot Stock Watch September 6, 2013 / 4:17 pm

      I think I’m the only show in town J man.

      These correlations and their “never ending” flipping and flopping contribute (to some degree) to the holy grail of trading!

      I can’t think of a better ( and more creative ) way as to get this info – than sifting through the general day to day “rants” here at F Kong.

      He he he….you’re on it Jskogs. I assume you do well at most things you do as …you’re certainly “barkin up the right tree”.

      Unfortunately….I can’t suggest a single other flippin site.

      Go figure eh?

  2. Andrew September 6, 2013 / 6:48 pm

    Hi Kong, in the spirit of good-natured debated (which I’m assuming was your intent), and with no offense intended, I’ll provide a response. First, I think your characterization that companies like JP Morgan, General Electric, Exxon, McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, IBM, Wal-Mart, Boeing, Exxon Mobil, JP Morgan, P&G, etc. are “rinky dink” simply isn’t reasonable (even allowing you some room for hyperbole). They are among the LARGEST companies in the ENTIRE WORLD. According to Forbes, JPM is 3, GE is 4, XOM is 5, WMT is 15, etc. Almost all are top 100. Second, your suggestion that these are “U.S. companies” really isn’t accurate to the extent you mean to suggest that these companies don’t impact the world economy or get revenue from outside the U.S. Many of the DJX companies get a significant percentage of their revenue from OUS and employ workers all over the world. Try to find a country where there’s no McDonald’s, Coca Cola, Boeing airplanes, or GE priducts. I hear down in Mexico they like their Coca-Cola made with real sugar instead of corn syrup (a store nearby carries it). DJX companies get lots of revenue from foreign business. You don’t think they trade FX to hedge?

    As to why you might watch the DJX, it may be totally irrelevant to your trading style and so a waste of time for you personally. But it sheds light on the risk appetite of the market. If big money is piling into the DJX (which is filled with divvy payers) and selling the RUT and NDX or vice versa, that tells you something. I certainly don’t watch it tick-by-tick, but it’s information that goes into the “weight of the evidence.” Though I trade equity options and the ES as well as spot FX.

    And Columbia? Seriously? Maybe someday, but not today. In any event, you don’t think the banana republics or China manipulate things?

    Glad we can chat about these things ’cause my wife don’t wanna hear about it 🙂 Always a pleasure.

    • Pot Stock Watch September 6, 2013 / 7:26 pm

      Great stuff Andrew – and you’ve got it……of course these companies do indeed have massive global signatures, and contribute to economies world wide. I was just (raising a little shit no doubt) suggesting that “focus” on these “30” is a tad “narrow” when considering global risk / risk off.

      An index can be “perceived”as doing fine – while companies like IBM have essentially been tanking since May. Then of course CAT, KO (hows that for a slide since May?) and a host of others as well – bad shape short of the divy yes.

      If I didn’t know better “sell in May” actually did happen! Short of the Fed pump via a select few – with the attempt to keep the index afloat.

      Consumer staples will always be exactly that so…..JNJ survives.

      We’ve already snipped it down to 20 some…..and even of those…AA has been roasted, JPM is now facing prison / silver manipulation etc..

      Short of exactly what you’ve suggested ( the massive “global profits” made by these multinationals ) it looks pretty bleak to me. Yet the media has “markets near all time highs”!

      Not a fan of Colombia? ( Colombia with an “o” )

      Huh. The two years I spent living in Bogota just blocks from the stock towers ( oh yes…..please google some images of Bogota – it’s a massive city…..with running water / cemement streets n all!) had my head spinning!

      The number of 6″ super models dressed to the nines, over the top restaurants and lavish lifestyle had even me feel like a small fish! Talk about money in the streets! The economy has been on fire!

      GXG has done very well, as Colombia serves as the business hub of S. America.

      Can you name me 3 companies on the exchange there? check out their stock charts! on some weekly charts! wow!

  3. Andrew September 6, 2013 / 7:48 pm

    Thanks Kong. Nothing against Colombia. 6′ supermodels, beautiful beaches, good coffee, nice cigars and rum … hmm … sounds good … I’d be up for a trip. I don’t trade any Colombian companies and I must admit I’m not familiar with any I saw on the list of ADR’s traded on U.S. exchanges. I took a look at GXG. I focus only on stocks with liquid options. Liquidity is what attracted me to the FX markets.

    • Pot Stock Watch September 6, 2013 / 8:00 pm

      Again….great stuff Andrew…..he he he….and ya….if the wife’s not to “into it” – what’s a guy to do!?

      I’m a tad “bias” as I’m sure it comes thru in the writing….and I need to work on that. Spending as much time as I have abroad, my view “from the outside looking in” has me a touch “out of touch” – compared to you and where you’re at.

      I appreciate your input here, and our exchange.

      I hope you have a great weekend!

      • Pot Stock Watch September 6, 2013 / 8:04 pm

        For your own interests…and everyone else reading.

        I strongly suggest researching Colombia. Please do a couple simple “image searches for Bogota” as I’m quite certain you’ll be suprised.

        It’s unreal! The coffe shops are like city blocks! The restuarants are lined up out the door with suits n ties / biz types galore. Over the top really.

        I’m out…..later all!

      • Andrew September 6, 2013 / 8:21 pm

        Actually, your view from “outside” is what’s interesting to me.

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