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Dow Jones Transportation Average 1896–2012. 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.
This is the category for the 20 current components of the Dow Jones Transportation Average. Companies formerly included in the DJTA are categorized in the category "Former components of the Dow Jones Transportation Average."
Dow Jones Transportation Average This page was last edited on 22 May 2021, at 19:40 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
Transportation stocks slightly outperformed the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Thursday, building on a week of relative gains, and suggesting closer convergence between the manufacturing and ...
The Dow Jones Transportation Average is struggling to get into gear and that could be a sign the market is ready to stall further. The Dow transports slumped more than 2% on Wednesday, in line ...
The Dow Jones Transportation Average swooned 10.2% in May, a far steeper decline than that of the Dow Jones Industrial Average or the S&P 500. For analysts who closely watch the transports, this ...
First calculated on May 26, 1896, [2] the index is the second-oldest among U.S. market indices, after the Dow Jones Transportation Average. It was created by Charles Dow, co-founder of both The Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones & Company, and named after him and his business associate, statistician Edward Jones.
Several constituents of the Dow Jones Transportation Average (DJT) have provided disappointing guidance in recent months. The U.S. transportation sector, which many see as a proxy indicator of the ...