Dow Jones Industrial Average

Stock Prices in Sculpture: 2008

by Catherine Mulbrandon on June 9, 2009

3D visualization of S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial and NASDAQ prices from January to November 2008 from anfischer.anfischer_indizes_2.jpg

via Economix

{ 2 comments }

DJIA October 2007 to March 2009 with AirCoaster

by Catherine Mulbrandon on April 22, 2009

A roller coaster track based on the Dow Jones Industrial Average from October 2007 to March 2009 found via infosthetics

{ 1 comment }

US/UK Historical Economic Series

by Catherine Mulbrandon on January 13, 2008

Measuring Worth
US/UK econ & population series from 1700s. UK Gold, Earnings and Retail prices back to 1260s.
This site lets you graph data and calculate Annualized Growth Rates for various time periods

{ 0 comments }

Graphing historical data: DJIA

by Catherine Mulbrandon on May 10, 2006

Playing around Yahoo finance with a friend of mine (Hey Fleur!), we started looking at historical stock data. Yahoo has daily values for DJIA going back to 1929 so the obvious thing to do is look at the crash of 1929.

Yahoo plotted the DJIA on a logarithmic scale because of the large change in values over the last 80 years:

Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1929 (Log scale)

We switched to the normal view:

Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1929

You can see why the log scale is needed. Without it the 1929 crash and the Great Depression are invisible. But what about 1987? Wasn’t that the biggest drop in the history of the stock market?

October 28, 1929 – Dow Jones plummets 38.33 to 260.64 (13% drop)
October 19, 1987 “Black Monday” – Dow Jones down 508.32 to 1738.74 (22% drop)

In both of the above graphs we are plotting cumulative wealth (the current value is based on the previous day’s value). What we need is the percent change day-by-day, which is why daily history at Yahoo is important:

Dow Jones Industrial Average since 1929 (Daily Percent Change)

[tags]DJIA, stock market crash, Yahoo Finance[/tags]