The Dow Jones Industrial Average is simultaneously the most famous and the most misunderstood financial index in the world. Founded in 1896 by Charles Dow and Edward Jones, it’s been tracking American economic health through depressions, wars, tech booms, and financial crises for over 125 years. And it does so in a way that, if you designed it today, you’d probably do completely differently.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is a price-weighted index of 30 large US companies considered representative of the American economy. As of 2024, it trades in the range of 37,000-40,000 points.
The Origin Story
Charles Dow created the index in 1896 with 12 companies – none of which remain in the index today. The original components included American Cotton Oil, U.S. Rubber, and Laclede Gas. General Electric, which was an original component, was finally removed in 2018 – one of the last connections to the 19th century Dow.
The purpose was simple: give investors a quick read on how the stock market was doing without having to track individual stocks. In 1896, this was genuinely useful information that was otherwise difficult to obtain.
The 30 Current Components (Approximate)
The Dow’s current components include some of the most recognizable names in American business:
Apple, Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, UnitedHealth Group, Home Depot, McDonald’s, Visa, Johnson & Johnson, Caterpillar, Boeing, American Express, Chevron, Walt Disney, Coca-Cola, IBM, Intel, JPMorgan Chase, Nike, Walmart, 3M, and others.
The S&P Dow Jones Indices committee selects and removes components – there are no strict rules about which companies qualify beyond a general requirement that they be “substantial” and represent various sectors of the US economy.
How the Dow Is Calculated (And Why It’s Strange)
The Dow is price-weighted – which means a company’s influence on the index is determined by its stock price, not its total market value. This is the methodology’s most significant quirk:
| Company | Stock Price | Market Cap | Influence on Dow |
|---|---|---|---|
| Company A | $500 | $300 billion | High (due to price) |
| Company B | $100 | $2 trillion | Lower (despite massive size) |
A $500-per-share company with a $300B market cap influences the Dow more than a $100-per-share company with a $2 trillion market cap – which is economically backwards.
The S&P 500’s market-cap weighting (bigger companies have bigger influence) is more economically logical. The Dow’s price-weighting is a historical artifact from an era before computing made more sophisticated calculations practical.
The “Dow Divisor” – currently approximately 0.152 – is the divisor applied to the sum of the 30 stock prices to calculate the index level. It has been adjusted hundreds of times over the decades to account for stock splits, dividends, and component changes.
Key Historical Milestones

| Year | Level | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 1906 | 100 | First reached |
| 1929 | 381 peak, then crash to 41 | Great Depression |
| 1972 | 1,000 | First crossed |
| 1999 | 11,722 | Dot-com peak |
| 2009 | 6,547 | Financial crisis low |
| 2017 | 20,000 | Crossed in January |
| 2021 | 36,799 | COVID-era peak |
| 2024 | ~38,000-40,000 | Near all-time highs |
The Rookie Mistake to Avoid
The most common error: using the Dow as a proxy for the entire stock market. It isn’t.
With only 30 components and a price-weighted methodology, the Dow can give a misleading picture of what’s happening in the broader market. Days where “the Dow was up 200 points” may coincide with most stocks actually declining – if the specific high-priced Dow components happened to rise while the broader market fell.
For a better read on broad market health, watch:
- S&P 500: 500 companies, market-cap weighted
- S&P 500 Equal Weight (RSP): Shows whether gains are broad-based or narrow
- Russell 2000: Small-cap health indicator
Why the Dow Still Matters
Despite its methodological limitations, the Dow matters for several reasons:
- Psychological significance: Major round numbers (Dow 40,000) generate public and media attention that affects sentiment
- Historical continuity: No other index has tracked US markets as long – the historical data is irreplaceable
- Media reference point: Financial news uses it as shorthand; understanding it means understanding financial media
- Retirement plan benchmark: Many 401(k) plan participants track the Dow without knowing exactly what it is
Bottom Line
The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a 128-year-old index with a methodology that wouldn’t survive modern scrutiny but retains enormous cultural and psychological significance. Its 30 blue-chip components and price-weighted calculation are both historical artifacts and enduring features. For understanding the market’s direction, supplement Dow-watching with the S&P 500. For understanding what you’re hearing on financial news, knowing the Dow is essential.
