- Dow Jones threw water on Friday after the end of the summer holidays.
- Next week, the main capital indicators expect key economic data in the USA.
- The expectations of the FED rate reduction are coming back at the forefront.
The industrial average Dow Jones (DJIA) persisted on Friday, sticking to the territory just above 42,000 main price handles. American shares are increasingly rotating in relation to the limitation of the Federal Reserve rate (FED), and a number of key US data publications will attract the increased attention of investors next week.
Next week: PMIS, FedSpeak, PCE inflation
Another batch of global S&P (PMI) shopping managers indexes will start next Monday. The aggregated numbers of business moods are expected to slightly alleviate both in terms of services and production.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell also begins his two -day testimonies before the Congress and the Senate of Financial Committees on Tuesday. On the Fed head there will be significant pressure to explain why the Fed is so concerned about the uncertainty of politics, but they are not worried to provide a reduction in feet that could alleviate some US debt costs.
Iteration of the May favored FED inflation indicator, a personal price of consumption expenditure (PCE), will also be published next week, Friday. Politics decision makers and observers are looking for potential economic falls from the Trump’s tariff policy, and the ordering window for trade, production and consumption is expanded when the main data sets begin to include dates after the “Liberation Day” tariffs of President Trump.
Read more warehouse messages: American shares are opening higher, like the Fed governor calls for reduction of rates on a triple day of witches
Dow Jones price forecast
The industrial average Dow Jones remains in a miniature -term consolidation phase. The main capital indicator is the beating of the chart just above 42,000 price handles, but the endowy prices still find technical support from the 200-day interpretation average (EMA) near 41 770.
Dow Jones Daily Table
Dow Jones FAQ
The industrial average Dow Jones, one of the oldest stock market indicators in the world, is developed from the 30 most rotating operations in the USA. The index is rather weighted with the price, not weighted by capitalization. This is calculated by adding up the operating prices and dividing them by the factor, currently 0.152. The index was founded by Charles Dow, who also founded the Wall Street Journal. In later years he was criticized for not representative enough, because he follows only 30 conglomerates, unlike wider indicators such as S&P 500.
Many different factors drive the industrial average Dow Jones (DJIA). The main results of component companies revealed in the company’s quarterly reports are the main results. The condition and global macroeconomic data also contribute because they affect the mood of investors. The level of interest rates, determined by federal reserves (Fed), also affects DJIA, because it affects the cost of a loan on which many corporations are strongly dependent. Therefore, inflation can be the main driver, as well as other indicators that affect the FED decisions.
DOW theory is a method of identifying the basic stock exchange trend developed by Charles Dow. The key step is to compare the industrial direction of Dow Jones (DJIA) and medium transport of Dow Jones (DJTA) and follow only trends in which both move in the same direction. Volume is confirming criteria. The theory uses elements of peak analysis and the trough. Dow theory assumes three phases of the trend: accumulation when sharp money begins to buy or sell; Society’s participation when a wider society is joined; And distribution when sharp money comes out.
There are many ways to trade in DJIA. One of them is the utilize of ETFs that allow investors to trade DJIA as one security instead of buying shares in all 30 components. The leading example is SPDR DOD Jones Industrial ETF (Dia). Djia Futures contracts enable traders by speculating the future value of the index and the options ensure the appropriate, but not the obligation, buying or selling the index at a predetermined price in the future. Investment funds enable investors to buy a diverse DJIA shares portfolio, thus ensuring a general exposure to the general indicator.
