Trading Shares strategies
The
Dow Theory / Shares Tips
The ideas of Charles Dow, the first editor of the Wall Street Journal, form the basis of technical analysis today.
Stocks and shares market
Dow created the Industrial Average, of top blue chip stocks, and a second average of top railroad stocks (now the Transport Average). He believed that the behavior of the averages reflected the hopes and fears of the entire market. The behavior patterns that he observed apply to markets throughout the world.
more about shares:
Dow Theory
Three Movements
Markets fluctuate in more than one time frame at the same time:
Nothing is more certain than that the market has three well defined movements which fit into each other.
- The first is the daily variation due to local causes and the balance of buying and selling at that particular time (Ripple).
- The secondary movement covers a period ranging from days to weeks, averaging probably between six to eight weeks (Wave).
- The third move is the great swing covering anything from months to years, averaging between 6 to 48 months. (Tide).

- Bull markets are broad upward movements of the market that may last several years, interrupted by secondary reactions. Bear markets are long declines interrupted by secondary rallies. These movements are referred to as the primary trend.
- Secondary movements normally retrace from one third to two thirds of the primary trend since the previous secondary movement.
- Daily fluctuations are important for short-term trading, but are unimportant in analysis of broad market movements.
Various cycles have subsequently been identified within these broad categories.
Dow Theory
Primary Movements have Three Phases
Look out for these general conditions in the market:
Bull markets
- Bull markets commence with reviving confidence as business conditions improve.
- Prices rise as the market responds to improved earnings
- Rampant speculation dominates the market and price advances are based on hopes and expectations rather than actual results.
Bear markets
- Bear markets start with abandonment of the hopes and expectations that sustained inflated prices.
- Prices decline in response to disappointing earnings.
- Distress selling follows as speculators attempt to close out their positions and securities are sold without regard to their true value.
Ranging Markets
- A secondary reaction may take the form of a ‘line’ which may endure for several weeks.
- Price fluctuates within a narrow range of about five per cent.

Breakouts from a range can occur in either direction.
- Advances above the upper limit of the line signal accumulation and higher prices;
- Declines below the lower limit indicate distribution and lower prices;
- Volume is used to confirm price breakouts.
Dow Theory
Trends
Bull Trends
A bull trend is identified by a series of rallies where each rally exceeds the highest point of the previous rally. The decline, between rallies, ends above the lowest point of the previous decline.
Successive higher highs and higher lows.

The start of an up trend is signaled when price makes a higher low (trough), followed by a rally above the previous high (peak):
Start = higher Low + break above previous High.
The end is signaled by a lower high (peak), followed by a decline below the previous low (trough):
End = lower High + break below previous Low.

Bear Trends
Each successive rally fails to penetrate the high point of the previous rally. Each decline terminates at a lower point than the preceding decline.
Successive lower highs and lower lows.

A bear trend starts at the end of a bull trend: when a rally ends with a lower peak and then retreats below the previous low. The end of a bear trend is identical to the start of a bull trend.
What if the series of lower Highs and lower Lows is first broken by a higher High? This is a gray area - see Large Corrections.
Dow Theory
Large Corrections
A large correction occurs when price falls below the previous low (during a bull trend) or where price rises above the previous high (in a bear trend).

Some purists argue that a trend ends if the sequence of higher highs and higher lows is broken. Others argue that a bear trend has not started until there is a lower High and Low nor has a bull trend started until there is a higher Low and High.
For practical purposes: Only accept large corrections as trend changes in the primary trend:
- A bull trend starts when price rallies above the previous high,
- A bull trend ends when price declines below the previous low,
- A bear trend starts at the end of a bull trend (and vice versa).
Stock Tips round-up
Shares Tips - Round ups
09 September 2008, 08:55:00
ShareCast - Of all the weeks that someone had to accidentally pull the plug at the London Stock Exchange, this was not the one to choose. It came just seven days after the official launch of the rival share trading market, Turquoise.
07 September 2008, 16:50:00
ShareCast - There cannot be many FTSE 250 companies forcasting double-digit growth for this year and the foreseeable future. Yet support services group Serco chief executive Christopher Hyman is confident his company will deliver just that. The group is one of those enviable businesses that is set to thrive as economic conditions deteriorate. Buy, says the Mail on Sunday.
05 September 2008, 08:54:00
ShareCast - Churchill Mining will today announce that resources at its coal prospect in Indonesia have already topped 1.4bn tonnes with just 20% of the target area drilled. It means Churchill, which owns 75% of the project, may not just be sitting on a good asset, but on a world-class one.
04 September 2008, 07:19:00
ShareCast - The more QinetiQ's shares rise, the greater the probability that the cash-strapped Government will seek to offload its residual 19 per cent stake. The removal of that overhang should cause the shares to advance further. At 15 times current-year earnings, QineticQ should be bought on weakness, says the Times.
03 September 2008, 08:51:00
ShareCast - Home energy efficiency specialist Eaga is an excellent short-term play on energy policy, but its longer-term prospects require faith that it can turn itself into a door-to-door version of Capita, including the ability to hang on to the Warm Front contract into the next decade.
02 September 2008, 08:46:00
ShareCast - Headlam, a leading distributor of carpets and other floor coverings such as vinyl and laminates, fell 12% yesterday after warning it might not meet its sales and profit targets for the year.
29 August 2008, 08:58:00
ShareCast - With energy prices not looking as if they are going to fall soon, UK Coal's numbers should look increasingly buoyant, and investors should take the chance now to buy at an attractive price. Buy, says the Independent.
27 August 2008, 08:55:00
ShareCast - The risks at Cairn Energy are clear. Cairn has been a beneficiary of the high oil price and its small, producing fields are already in decline (gross production fell by 11,000 barrels a day to 80,873) in the first half.
24 August 2008, 18:33:00
ShareCast - Like its bigger rival, BAE Systems, aerospace and defence firm Cobham has piggy-backed on the strength of US military spending and has successfully refocused its operations by selling lower-quality assets, leaving the group with four main divisions.
22 August 2008, 09:00:00
ShareCast - Newspaper distributor and aviation services group John Menzies shares have fallen by about 40% in the year to date, giving the group an attractive valuation, while the stock's dividend yield of more than 7% is 1.7 times covered.
21 August 2008, 08:11:00
ShareCast - Worries about the near-term outlook pushed Mecom's shares down 16 per cent to 18½p. That leaves the group trading at five times earnings, cheap for newspapers by historic standards but still at a premium to Trinity Mirror and Johnston.
20 August 2008, 09:03:00
ShareCast - The time has come for investors to decide whether to back Santander's £1.33bn Alliance & Leicester bid says the Telegraph.
19 August 2008, 08:58:00
ShareCast - The comfort for Woolworths shareholders is that something is happening. However, any joy must be offset by the failure of previous approaches - that of Apax two years ago or Baugur's tilt at Moss Bros - and by myriad reasons to doubt that a bid will materialise.
Sunday tips round-up: TUI, Plexus, Southern Cross - Sun 17 Aug, 02:56 PM [ ShareCast]
After a run-up from around 170p last month, the TUI shares trade at around 11 times current year earnings, falling to nine times those for 2009. Such ratios are at the bottom of the historic range for the sector but in line with TUI's peers.
Friday tips round-up: Bellway, British Land, Logica - Fri 15 Aug, 06:53 AM [ ShareCast]
Software group Logica's interim results suggest that under new chief executive Andy Green a rather disparate collection of divisions has slowly started to sing from the same hymn sheet. Investors have a right to be cautious given its history, but things do appear to be changing for the better at Logica. Buy says the Independent.
Thursday tips round-up: Thomas Cook, Vodafone, Balfour Beatty - Thu 14 Aug, 06:19 AM [ ShareCast]
Manny Fontenla-Novoa, the chief executive of Thomas Cook, is one of life's cheerier characters. The oil price may linger well above $100 a barrel, and recession may be looming, but the Spanish-born travel executive remains relentlessly upbeat.
Wednesday tips round-up: Pennon, Thomson Reuters, BPP - Wed 13 Aug, 06:48 AM [ ShareCast]
Unlike most in the FTSE 250, water utility Pennon's share price is up, by 8.7%, over the 12 months, with the group providing a haven for buyers in troubled times.
Tuesday tips round-up: Smurfitt Kappa, Vitec, Kazakhmys - Tue 12 Aug, 06:57 AM [ ShareCast]
Care home operator Southern Cross has had a woeful few months that included a profits warning at the end of June, two months after saying it was as fit as a fiddle. There may well be lots of potential but investors should wait for something more solid. Sell says the Independent.
Sunday tips round-up: HSBC, Fidessa, Keller - Sun 10 Aug, 12:30 PM [ ShareCast]
HSBC already trades at a significant premium to other banks. Exane BNP Paribas estimates that it is on "2.1 times tangible book for 2008, while UK domestic banks struggle to trade at 1 times and the European average is 1.6 times". The question for investors is how much a of a premium do HSBC shares deserve?
Friday tips round-up: Barclays, Hammerson, Friends Provident - Fri 08 Aug, 06:07 AM [ ShareCast]
Resilience in a downturn should be rewarded. By maintaining an unchanged, cash dividend and producing solid results, Barclays has earned investors' faith - even if questions linger about the write-downs. Trading on 7.5 times 2008 earnings, buy, says the Telegraph.
Thursday's tips round-up: Morgan Crucible, F&C, Spring Group - Thu 07 Aug, 06:55 AM [ ShareCast]
Yesterday's rise of more than 5 per cent to 210p suggests Morgan Crucible is being accorded more credit for its resilience. Even so, a foward multiple of nine times seems too low for an engineer delivering solid earnings growth and a 4 per cent dividend yield, raising the possibility that former predators, such as SGL Carbon, may return. Buy on weakness, says the Times.
Tuesday's tips round-up: Johnston Press, Senior, Imperial Energy - Tue 05 Aug, 07:02 AM [ ShareCast]
Johnston Press trades at 4.6 times 2009 earnings, but interim results this month are likely to show what executives can do. Given that there is likely to be better news ahead, buy for recovery, says the Times.
Sunday's tips round-up: Reckitt Benckiser, Greggs, Shaftesbury - Sun 03 Aug, 12:40 PM [ ShareCast]
Cleanliness is next to godliness, as Francis Bacon, once proclaimed. So long as that remains the case, Reckitt Benckiser remains a good place to park your money in uncertain times, says the Sunday Telegraph.