Dow Jones Transportation Average
The Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJTA, also called the "Dow Jones Transports") is a U.S. stock market index from S&P Dow Jones Indices of the transportation sector, and is the most widely recognized gauge of the American transportation sector. It is the oldest stock index still in use, even older than its better-known relative, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA).[1]
Components
The index is a running average of the stock prices of twenty transportation corporations, with each stock's price weighted to adjust for stock splits and other factors.[1] As a result, it can change at any time the markets are open. The figure mentioned in news reports is usually the figure derived from the prices at the close of the market for the day.
Changes in the index's composition are rare, and generally occur only after corporate acquisitions or other dramatic shifts in a component's core business. Should such an event require that one component be replaced, the entire index is reviewed.[2] As of April 2010, the index consists of the following 20 companies:[2][3] Alaska Air Group replaced AMR Corporation on December 2, 2011, after AMR corp. filed for bankruptcy protection. Effective October 30, 2012, Kirby Corp. replaced Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc.[4] On October 15, 2015, American Airlines Group replaced Con-way.[5]
Corporation | Ticker | Industry |
---|---|---|
Alaska Air Group, Inc. | ALK | airlines |
American Airlines Group Inc. | AAL | airlines |
Avis Budget Group, Inc. | CAR | rental and leasing services |
C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. | CHRW | trucking |
CSX Corp. | CSX | railroads |
Delta Air Lines. | DAL | airlines |
Expeditors International | EXPD | delivery services |
FedEx Corporation | FDX | delivery services |
JB Hunt Transport Services, Inc. | JBHT | trucking |
JetBlue Airways Corp. | JBLU | airlines |
Kansas City Southern | KSU | railroads |
Kirby Corp. | KEX | marine transportation |
Landstar System, Inc. | LSTR | trucking |
Matson, Inc. | MATX | marine transportation |
Norfolk Southern Corp. | NSC | railroads |
Ryder System, Inc. | R | transportation services |
Southwest Airlines, Inc. | LUV | airlines |
Union Pacific Corp. | UNP | railroads |
United Continental Holdings | UAL | airlines |
United Parcel Service, Inc. | UPS | delivery services |
(as of Sept 2014)
History
The average was created on July 3, 1884, by Charles Dow, co-founder of Dow Jones & Company, as part of the "Customer's Afternoon Letter". At its inception, it consisted of eleven transportation companies—nine railroads and two non-rail companies:
- Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway
- Chicago and North Western Railway
- Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad
- Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway
- Louisville and Nashville Railroad
- Missouri Pacific Railway
- New York Central Railroad
- Northern Pacific Railroad preferred stock
- Pacific Mail Steamship Company (not a railroad)
- Union Pacific Railway
- Western Union (not a railroad)
As a result of the dominating presence of railroads, the Transportation Average was often referred to as "rails" in financial discussions in the early and middle part of the 20th century.
Use in Dow theory
The Transportation Average is an important factor in Dow theory.
Price history
In 1964, the index first broke 200, slightly over where it was in 1929.
In 1983, the index first broke 500. In 1987, the index broke 1000. It closed at 2146.89 on March 9, 2009, having a low coincident with some other indices; this was a bit above its low of 1942.19 on March 11, 2003.
The index broke above the mid-5000s to begin a run of record highs on January 15, 2013, at a time when the better-known Industrials stood about 5% below all-time highs achieved more than five years earlier. By May, the Industrials and all other major indexes except the NASDAQ group were making all-time highs, including the Transports, which reached new closing and intraday records above the 6,500 level. On October 24, 2013, the Transports closed at 7,022.79, for its first close above 7,000 points. It closed the year at a record high of 7,400.57. On May 27, 2014, it first closed above 8,000 points.[6] The index closed above 9000 on November 10, 2014.[7] At the close of 2014, the index hit 9139.92. At the close of 2015, the index hit 7508.71, a loss of 17.85% on the year.
Investing
The index is tracked by an exchange-traded fund, iShares Transportation Average (NYSE Arca: IYT).[8]
See also
References
- 1 2 "Dow Jones Transportation Average". Street Authority web site. Retrieved 2010-04-28.
- 1 2 "Dow Jones Transportation Average". official web site. Retrieved 2010-04-28.
- ↑ Seeking Alpha, Dow Jones Transport Index at New Highs. May 19, 2008.
- ↑ "Dow Jones Indexes Press Room | Kirby Corp Set to Join the Dow Jones Transportation Average". S&P Dow Jones Indexes.
- ↑ Dow Jones Indexes Press Room | American Airlines Set to Join the Dow Jones Transportation Average
- ↑ S&P 500 falls shy of a record, breaks four days of gains
- ↑ "Stock Market News for November 11, 2014 - Market News - NASDAQ.com".
- ↑ "iShares page for iShares Transportation Average ETF".
External links
- Yahoo! Finance page for ^DJT
- Bloomberg page for TRAN:IND
- Dow Jones & Company website
- Yahoo: Chart of DJTA performance (1928-present)
- chart of DJT vs SPX from Yahoo! Finance
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