Dow Jones Industrial Average

Dow Jones Industrial Average Articles

Apple, IBM, Home Depot, and Caterpillar were the biggest losers in a significantly poor day for the Dow stocks.
Investors may have been worried last week that the sky was falling, but Tuesday was a different story. Suddenly investors felt better and were more upbeat.
Walgreens, Procter & Gamble, Goldman Sachs, and Disney were the support pillars for the Dow Monday.
In 2017, 20 of the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow Jones Industrial Average posted double-digit, year-over-year share price gains. So far this year, only 9 currently show a double-digit gain.
24/7 Wall St. has put together a preview of Johnson & Johnson, Procter & Gamble and the other Dow Jones industrial average companies scheduled to report their quarterly results this week.
DowDuPont replaced Goldman Sachs last week as the worst-performing stock on the Dow index.
Apple survived a bloody week in the markets to return as the best-performing Dow Jones industrial stock for the year to date.
Visa, Walgreens, Cisco Systems, and Microsoft were the top gainers among the Dow 30 stocks on Friday.
For the second consecutive trading day, all 30 Dow stocks closed lower Thursday. Exxon, Chevron, Pfizer, and McDonald's were the biggest losers.
On a really bad, not-very-good day for equities markets, none of the Dow 30 stocks closed with a gain. The leading losers were Nike, Boeing, Microsoft, and Visa.
What investors need to be concerned about now is how much higher the stock market can rise and when the end of the bull market will be.
The Dow's big industrial stocks--DowDuPont, Caterpillar, United Technologies, and 3M--dragged the blue-chip index down Tuesday.
Walgreens, Walmart, Coca-Cola, and Travelers lifted the Dow to a modest gain after an awful start Monday.
Apple posted a new all-time high last week and displaced Nike as the top-performing Dow stock for the year to date even though Apple's share price dipped a bit week over week.
Goldman Sachs is the Dow's worst-performing stock for the year to date for the second consecutive week. New CEO David Solomon took over on Monday and he has his work cut out for him.