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                    		|  I have a new book called Making Money Work: A Christian Guide For Personal Finance (www.MakingMoneyWork.us) which explains savings and many other financial concepts.   The book comes with a CD ROM that has calculators to help you analyze, plan, and achieve your financial goals. |  
                    		|  |  |  INvesting Understanding the DowBy Bill G. Page Contributing Writer
 
 CBN.com 
		   Newsman Charles  H. Dow, the founder of Dow Jones & Co, created the world-famous Dow in  1884. Charles Dow originally compiled a list of 11 stocks and published the  average in a financial bulletin he established with his partner, Eddie Jones.  In 1896, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (Dow or DJIA) index was comprised of  12 stocks: American Cotton Oil, American Sugar, American Tobacco, American  Sugar, Chicago Gas, Distilling & Cattle Feeding, Laclede Gas, U.S. Leather,  U.S. Rubber, National Lead, Tennessee Coal & Iron, and General Electric.  Most of the companies merged with other companies or went completely out of  business.  Note that General Electric is the only remaining company  that is part of today’s Dow—proof that at some point in time, you may need to  sell shares of your stock or face losses. The stock market is in a constant  state of change; there are no investments that you can purchase and then  forget. Since 1928, the Dow has been comprised of 30 blue-chip companies. The original Dow average was calculated by totaling the  prices of the component stocks and then dividing by 30. Later, the Dow divided  the sum of the component stocks by a “divisor.” The divisor is used to account  for stock splits, stock dividends, changes to the companies that make up the  Dow average, spin-offs of companies, mergers of companies, and so on. The  divisor frequently changes to maintain the historical continuity of the  average. Proponents of the Dow say the component stocks are chosen as  being representative of the broad market and American industry, are widely held  by investors, and are major factors in their industries. Some critics of the  Dow argue that the index is not representative enough of the market in total (component  stocks can represent less than 15% of the market value of stocks traded on the  New York Stock Exchange), that there are not enough companies represented in  the Dow, and that the companies represented in the Dow are the wrong ones.  Still, the DJIA is the oldest and most frequently quoted market index in the  country.  The Dow does not indicate activity on the American Stock  Exchange or the NASDAQ over-the-counter market. The Dow can climb while other  indexes fall.  Investing  is indeed a journey. Think in terms of the destination, not the level of  today’s Dow or the value of your portfolio. The stock market’s ups and downs  are just interim stops during your journey’s travels to your destination.  Successful investing in equities is a result of time “in,” not timing “of,” the  stock market.  Of course, for the Christian, the ultimate destination is life  eternal with God. “If,  then, you have not proved trustworthy with the wealth of this world, who will  trust you with the wealth that is real?”—Luke 16:11. I have a book that includes a CD-ROM called Making  Money Work: A Christian Guide For Personal Finance (www.MakingMoneyWork.us). It explains many  personal finance concepts, such as when to buy stocks and when to sell stocks.  The book comes with a CD-ROM that has calculators to help you analyze, plan,  and achieve your financial goals. This article is adapted from Making Money Work: A  Christian Guide For Personal Finance with permission of Willie Glenn Page,  Inc. ©  2005. 
 
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