AN ALTERNATIVE DOW THEORY
December 24, 2006
The
conflict between the men who make and the men who report the
news is as old as time. News may be true, but it is not
truth, and reporters and officials seldom see it the same
way. In the old days, the reporters or couriers of bad news
were often put to the gallows; now they are given the
Pulitzer Prize, but the conflict goes on.
James
Reston 1909-1995, Dutch Born American Journalist
Let’s
start of by looking at some old long term charts of the Dow
transports, utilities and Industrials to see what they might
be revealing. The main relationship appears to exist between
the Dow and the transports but the utilities appear to play
an important part also. The 1st chart is of the
transports, the second of the Dow industrials and the third
of the Utilities.
This
chart starts from 1969 and carries on to November 1981. If
we go three years back to 1966 we see that the Utilities
were the first ones to put a high back in 1966 after that
they just kept testing the highs (looks like a triple top).
The Transports put in a new high around the middle of 1967
and then sort of trended sideways. The industrials only put
in a new high towards the end of 1969 and then started
correcting. The charts below show that all 3 proceeded to
correct around the same time but they topped at different
times. As we stated before there is a relationship between
all 3 though the utilities seem to interact with the other
two best around market bottoms and not so well at market
tops. The industrials and the transports mounted what
appeared be a hard correction and bottomed around the middle
of 1970. The utilities on the other hand did not correct so
hard and even though they rallied after bottoming they never
put in new highs but traded sideways from 1971-1973
indicating that a more severe correction was in the works.
Let’s just stop here for a second and now look at what the
Dow and the transports did after correcting and bottoming in
the middle of 1970. Once again the transports led the way up
and put in new highs almost a year before the Industrials.
The transports started to correct as the Dow was in the
process of putting new highs once again showing that it
leads the Dow both during advances and corrections.



As we
stated before the utilities work well with the other two in
predicting market bottoms. Note that unlike the Industrials
(Dow) and the transports the utilities just traded sideways
and it actually started to correct around the same time the
Dow was putting in a new high. Then the correction picked up
steam which resulted in both the Dow and the Utilities
putting in what was a new 13 year low. Note though how the
Transports actually put in a higher low indicating that
another bullish run was in the works. The bullish pattern is
best illustrated by the Transports and the bearish pattern
best by the utilities. Look how the transports went on to
put in 3 new highs (one in the beginning of 80, one towards
the end of 80 and one in 81) while the Dow and the utilities
basically traded sideways building energy for the next leg
up. We have always stated that the longer the channel
formation the powerful the final move is. Look at how both
the Dow and the Utilities exploded to the upside; look at
the charts below that cover the time period from 1976-1986.


When
the Dow finally broke out of the channel formation around
Oct of 1983 it went ballistic; it gained close to 90% in 3
years. The utilities also rallied rather hard and also
gained over 90% in the same time frame. We are not going to
look at the transports but they continued to rally and went
on to put in several new highs from 1981-1986. What we are
looking for is a relationship and trigger points
So far
we can conclude that the transports seem to have the best
relationship with the Dow but not in the way the Dow
theorists would have you believe. The Transports top way in
advance of the Dow, the utilities serve as a collaborating
agent; if they do not confirm the highs it appears that a
more severe correction is in the works. This was the case
when the Transports put in new highs in 1972 and the Dow
followed in 1973 but the utilities did not follow through.
The
difference between this era and the current era are several
-
The
number of overall players was much smaller
-
Volume was much lighter. The number of shares that trade
in one day now could be equivalent to one months of
trading volume back in the 70’s.
-
There are no longer any barriers to the US markets;
outside players are able to access it just as easily as
local players
-
The
age of the internet also means that the markets are now
within the reach of the big, medium, and very small
players. In fact everything is just a mouse click away.
Moves
that would take years to complete now only take months and
those that took months only take weeks. This has another
side effect and that is that volatility has gone up by a
factor of 1000. We have already demonstrated that on the
shorter time frames a relationship existed between these 3
exist and now we have also confirmed that there appears to
be a very old long term relationship in place too.
So
let’s fast forward to now and see what these 3 are saying.
Lets
start of with the utilities they once again seem to serve
the function of collaborating a move; in other words if they
move in different direction to the others it means the Dow
and the Transports will have to play catch up. Note that the
Utilities have been in a super uptrend for the last 3 years
while the Dow and transports did nothing for 12 months and
15 plus months respectively. The Transports were locked in a
tight channel formation from Nov 05 to Nov 06 while the Dow
was locked in the same position from Nov 05 to about Feb 06.
The utilities continued to move upwards while these two did
nothing and this meant that sooner or later the Dow and the
transports would play catch up and catch up they did. Note
as expected the Transports broke out earlier (Nov 06) and 3
months later the Dow followed. Then just like the 1972 and
73 era as the transports and the Dow broke out the Utilities
started to mount a hard correction (go back and look at the
first 3 graphs and look how eerily similar they look). Once
again the Transports lead the Dow and put in new all time
highs first and about 4 months later the Dow went on to put
in a new all time high. Note while this was going on the
Utilities were moving in a tight channel and have just
recently broken out. The 1st chart below is of
the Dow, 2nd of the Transports and the 3rd
is of the Dow utilities.
Conclusion
Now
this is the hard part trying to make sense of so much data
and all the different patterns and then to present this info
in an easy to digest and understandable format.



All 3
are still in an uptrend. The Utilities appear to have broken
out of a channel, appear is the key word here as it could be
just a false break out. One important thing is that they did
put in another all time new high and if they were to correct
now they would flash several negative divergences. Since the
utilities lead this means that the Dow and transports should
follow by putting in a new high after correcting. If they
follow the same pattern that means this correction is going
to be hard and fast. Look at how fast the Utilities
corrected after putting a new high back in Oct 2005. In less
then one month they dropped from 440 to 380; a pretty
significant correction. To be precise it corrected 13.66% in
that one month and then moved sideways till August where it
tested its old highs and then finally broke into new ground.
As the
transports lead the Dow it appears that the transports have
already mounted this correction. They started to correct in
July a full 9 months after the utilities; actually one could
state that they started to correct in May but then proceeded
to put in a double top in July. From a high of roughly 4950
they corrected all the way down to 4140 a whopping 16.36%
correction. They are now slowly moving higher but have yet
to put in another new all time high. As they lag the
Utilities by several months we think that the new high is
still in the making. This means that the Dow is now ripe for
a correction after having finally put in series of all time
new highs. Thus if this old pattern is true and it appears
that it is a rather significant pattern then both the
transports and the Dow industrials should rally to put in a
new set of highs. The Dow however still needs to mount a
nice decent correction before it can embark on the next leg
up.
We
started this thinking it would be a simple exercise but it’s
truly amazing how much info we are able to pull out of a few
charts and how when you look for patterns you start to see
things that most people will miss even though it’s right
under their nose.
Further
down we have examined 36 different markets and the info we
have obtained from those charts appear to provide even more
ammunition to the theory above. All the Major world markets
are sort of behaving like the Utilities in that they have
put in new highs way before the Dow then they corrected and
now they have put in a new set of highs. The pull backs
ranged from a low of 7% to a whopping 23% correction. Note
also the NYSE which is another leader in the US Markets has
also gone to put a new high but if it were to correct soon
it would flash massive negative divergence signals. As it’s
a leader it usually makes a move several months before the
other indices.
This is
what we think will happen. The Dow is going to correct the
longer it takes to correct the more severe the correction is
going to be. Then it’s going to trade sideways for a bit
while it’s doing this we will have to pay attention to the
Transports to see if they go on to put a new set of highs;
if they do then it means the Dow will follow. If they don’t
we will use our other indicators to guide us. However we
suspect that they will follow the pattern the utilities have
displayed.
We also
think that the next series of highs are going to take place
while several massive negative divergence signals are
flashed. To confirm that a massive correction is the works
our psychological indicators should start flashing sell
signals (which we are sure they will), our technical
indicators should do the same also and the NYSE specialists
should start to load up on shorts. If this happens then it
will be time to for the most part close almost all our longs
with the intention of buying twice as much of the same
companies when the markets start to bottom or the relevant
sectors start to flash new buy signals on the daily charts.
This entire chain of events could take as much as another 12
months to unfold so we would not flee for the exits yet.
What do we mean by the entire chain of events? The Dow
correcting, then trading sideways and then proceeding to put
in a new set of all time highs; along the way we will be
monitoring the Dow transports to see what they do. Now if
things work out as stated above it would generate what we
would like to term the perfect sequence for taking a massive
short position; such sequences do not manifest themselves
often; jumping in too early could be disastrous and rather
painful. As always timing is everything. In a follow up
article next year we will post our new targets for the Dow;
in 2003 well before anyone was even that bullish we posted
targets for the Dow and all of them were hit and surpassed
Full Article. Then on March 15, 2005 we stated that the
Dow could trade in the 12200-12500 ranges
Full Article
To know
yet to think that one does not know is best; Not to know yet
to think that one knows will lead to difficulty.
Lao-Tzu BC 600-? Chinese Philosopher, Founder of Taoism,
Author of the ''Tao Te Ching''
All
charts were provided courtesy of
www.prophetfinance.com |