NEW YORK — It was just last summer that the Dow Jones industrial average shed 2,000 points in three terrifying weeks. Investors had a host of things to worry about, including the possibility of another recession.
Now the Dow is within reach of the rarefied 13,000 mark — a level it hasn't seen since May 2008, four months before the financial system almost came apart.
A strong one-day rally — caused by a deal on bailout money for Greece, perhaps, or an unexpectedly positive economic report — could put it over the top.
What's more, the average is just a 10 percent rally from an all-time high. And 10 percent rallies can happen fast these days.
The stomach-turning summer is a bad memory. Europe appears to be getting its act together, last summer's downgrade of the U.S.' credit rating was quickly forgotten, Washington is mostly behaving, and recession fears are gone.
"There are signs that the economy is getting back on its feet and the market is reacting to that," said John Prestbo, executive director of Dow Jones Indexes. "The mood is just better in this country than it has been for a while."
On Wall Street, too. The Dow traded Tuesday at 12,886, a 21 percent rally from Oct. 3, its low point for last year. In January, the average rose more or less in a straight line and added 3.4 percent, its best start to a year since 1997.
From here, the record is tantalizingly close — 14,164.53, reached Oct. 9, 2007, when the investment houses Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers still existed and the unemployment rate was 4.7 percent.
A 10 percent surge may seem like a lot, but it's really not. The Dow has gained almost 15 percent since Nov. 25, just 10 weeks ago.
Though there's a long way to go to get the country back to economic health, there are pockets of encouragement. Unemployment is still 8.3 percent, but it's the lowest since February 2009. Economic output grew every quarter last year.
Corporate earnings growth has slowed, but analysts think it will pick up again later this year. Investors, always wary of uncertainty, may even be encouraged by some clarity in the Republican presidential nominating race.
Investors are no longer just trying to stem their losses, says Mark Lehmann, president of JMP Securities in San Francisco: "They're playing a little offense. Six months ago, they were playing defense." There's evidence that the rally has room to run. In a popular measure of how expensive stocks are, the 30 companies that make up the Dow are trading at an average of about 13 times their annual earnings per share.
The last time the Dow was at 13,000, in May 2008, stocks were trading for about 15 times earnings. Stock-market research firm Birinyi Associates estimates Dow stocks have traded at an average of 16 times earnings over the past two decades.
The fire-sale discounts have already come and gone, though. Those were back in early 2009, when the Dow bottomed at 6,547.05, its Great Recession low — a little more than half the level now. Back then, Dow stocks traded at nine times earnings.
Not everyone believes the rally will last. Joe Gordon, managing partner at Gordon Asset Management in North Carolina, is dubious. He cites the unresolved European debt crisis, the U.S.' historically high national debt and the millions of people who have given up looking for work, part of the so-called underemployed.
"This is like drinking a lot of coffee in the afternoon," says Gordon. "It perks you up, then once it fades 45 minutes later you're even more tired." Another wrinkle is that the Dow tracks just 30 companies, so it doesn't take the full pulse of the market. The Standard & Poor's 500, with its much larger roster, is still 16 percent away from its all-time high.
"It's 30 stocks," says Rob Leiphart, an analyst at Birinyi. "It doesn't give you a representation of anything." But despite its size, the Dow is the market gauge that penetrates the public consciousness, generating headlines and water cooler buzz more than the less publicized S&P.
That's important because the stock market, even if it has no direct bearing on the fundamentals of the economy, is a psychological motivator of spending because of something known as the wealth effect.
Even people with no stock investments will let their decisions be influenced by swings in the Dow. When it's up, we tend to feel richer and spend more. When it's down — think back to the 500-point daily declines of 2008 — we tend to feel poorer and spend less.
There's good reason the Dow has pull over the financial mood of the country. Its 30 stocks account for 25 to 30 percent of the market value of all U.S. public companies, and about 40 percent of the dividends, Dow Jones Indexes estimates.
"Nothing of substance can happen in this economy without these companies feeling it," Prestbo says.
A handful of companies have an outsized impact on the index. The Dow is a price-weighted average, which means companies with more expensive stocks have more power to drive the average higher or lower.
If you invest $30 in a mutual fund tracking the Dow, you don't have a dollar riding on each company. Four times as much of your money would end up on Home Depot, which is trading around $45, than Alcoa, trading around $11.
IBM, the highest-priced stock in the Dow, had a giant influence last year. The Dow rose 5.5 percent in 2011, but without IBM it would have risen only 3.4 percent, according to Leiphart's calculations.
If you were to cut out the next three stocks on the list, McDonald's, Chevron and ExxonMobil, then the Dow would have finished down 0.25 percent for the year.
The flip side is that stocks like Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Microsoft and Intel trade well below the 13 times earnings for the full Dow. If they catch up, it could be enough to power the average to a record.
Archive: Wednesday
Dow approaches 13,000 mark
Tantalizingly close record is 14,164.53
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Video: Doc Watson, 1991, "Black Mountain Rag"
Doc Watson - 1991 - Black Mountain Rag. This includes Doc's introduction and explanation of his background with this particular tune.
Continued ... - Poll: Do you think Asian carp are in the Great Lakes?
- Ruby Lee Culver
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New Ohio facility makes its debut
Developers of Ohio's newest casino think they'll do just fine competing for gamblers with Detroit's three casinos, even without the spas, hotels and big-name concerts found just up the road.
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Editorial: Carp closer to Lake Michigan
The issue: Carp found in Chicago-area lagoon. Our view: Once again, fish show up where they're not supposed to be.
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Crews work to protect structures in wildfires
Crews worked Tuesday to ensure that no more structures were damaged by a wildfire burning across more than 30 square miles of Michigan's Upper Peninsula as high winds in the forecast threatened to test firefighting efforts, an official said.
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Benzie’s Warsecke takes three races
For much of the 1,600-meter run at Tuesday’s Record-Eagle Honor Roll meet, Benzie Central’s Theresa Warsecke was all alone out front.
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Benzie’s Warsecke takes three races
For much of the 1,600-meter run at Tuesday’s Record-Eagle Honor Roll meet, Benzie Central’s Theresa Warsecke was all alone out front.
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Housing project 'moving forward'
Traverse City commissioners recently approved what officials expect to be the last change in long-running negotiations to sell city property near the former railroad depot off Eighth Street to two affordable housing agencies.
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BizWeek: 05/30/2012
Chevy Volt Ride and Drive event from 5:30 - 7 p.m. at Cambria Suites, 255 Munson Ave. in Traverse City; includes overview of electric and fuel efficient automobiles, electric charging station demonstration and test drives; sponsored by Cambria Suites, Williams Chevrolet and U-Go Stations; more information available at (231) 995-7541.
Continued ... - Lorraine Dean 'L.D.' Hoaglund
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Huddleston wins Ryan Shay Memorial Cup
William Huddleston was not going to settle for second. Not this time.
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Septic tank tax appears inevitable
A $30 to $40 yearly tax assessment on properties with septic tanks in Grand Traverse County and Leelanau's Elmwood Township appears inevitable.
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Letters to the Editor: 05/30/2012
Back to the 1900s.
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Huddleston wins Ryan Shay Memorial Cup
William Huddleston was not going to settle for second. Not this time.
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Snyder questions ballot plan
Gov. Rick Snyder said Tuesday he has serious doubts about requiring Michigan utilities to produce 25 percent of their electricity from renewable sources by 2025, saying it's too early to set such an ambitious goal.
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Rascals beat Beach Bums
In a battle of division leaders, the West came out on top this time. West-leading River City handed East leader Traverse City a 5-1 loss Tuesday.
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DEQ seeks public input on Brown Bridge Dam removal
The state Department of Environmental Quality seeks public comment on Traverse City's request for a permit to remove Brown Bridge Dam and restore three miles of Boardman River channel.
Continued ... - Marilyn G. Gray
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Rascals beat Beach Bums
In a battle of division leaders, the West came out on top this time. West-leading River City handed East leader Traverse City a 5-1 loss Tuesday.
Continued ... -
Man charged in Crystal Lake incident
A downstate man who attempted to evade authorities by jumping into Crystal Lake spent his Memorial Day weekend in jail.
Continued ... - Margaret Doris Quist
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West beats Central in OT
After trailing three times, Traverse City West rallied in overtime to beat TC Central 4-3 in a Division 1 district soccer opener Tuesday. (plus more soccer, baseball and softball)
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Consumer confidence suffers in the U.S.
Americans grew much gloomier about the economy in May, causing a critical measure of consumer confidence to suffer its biggest decline in eight months and ending a period of steady optimism.
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West beats Central in OT
After trailing three times, Traverse City West rallied in overtime to beat TC Central 4-3 in a Division 1 district soccer opener Tuesday. (plus more soccer, baseball and softball)
Continued ...
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Video: Doc Watson, 1991, "Black Mountain Rag"


