B blurp Apr 28, 2006 #1 Hello I can't find this value because my sources give me different values if somebody was in front of his screen this 14th january 2000 it would be kind to help me thank you in advance
Hello I can't find this value because my sources give me different values if somebody was in front of his screen this 14th january 2000 it would be kind to help me thank you in advance
P Pabst Apr 28, 2006 #2 Why do you not think it was 11,908.50? Quote from blurp: Hello I can't find this value because my sources give me different values if somebody was in front of his screen this 14th january 2000 it would be kind to help me thank you in advance More...
Why do you not think it was 11,908.50? Quote from blurp: Hello I can't find this value because my sources give me different values if somebody was in front of his screen this 14th january 2000 it would be kind to help me thank you in advance More...
B blurp Apr 28, 2006 #3 ok i have two values 11908 and 11750 ... which one is the right now lol ... ?
P Pabst Apr 28, 2006 #4 I believe the market closed that day at 11750. Quote from blurp: ok i have two values 11908 and 11750 ... which one is the right now lol ... ? More...
I believe the market closed that day at 11750. Quote from blurp: ok i have two values 11908 and 11750 ... which one is the right now lol ... ? More...
B blurp Apr 28, 2006 #5 no the close it's sure = 11722.98 on www.prophet.net (its not lhe only one..) they give intraday top value = 11750 but http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closing_milestones_of_the_Dow_Jones_Industrial_Average 1982 - 2000 - bull market. The bulls become supercharged when the Dow posts its most massive growth in history. Going from a meager 777 on August 12, 1982 all the way to 11,722.98 (intra-day high 11,908.50) on January 14, 2000. so who's right ??
no the close it's sure = 11722.98 on www.prophet.net (its not lhe only one..) they give intraday top value = 11750 but http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closing_milestones_of_the_Dow_Jones_Industrial_Average 1982 - 2000 - bull market. The bulls become supercharged when the Dow posts its most massive growth in history. Going from a meager 777 on August 12, 1982 all the way to 11,722.98 (intra-day high 11,908.50) on January 14, 2000. so who's right ??
R risktaker Apr 28, 2006 #7 Sounds like one source is quoting the actual tradable dow and the other is quoting the theoretical high/low (which is definetely not tradable, btw). Most services have dropped the theoretical quotes in the last 5-6 years.
Sounds like one source is quoting the actual tradable dow and the other is quoting the theoretical high/low (which is definetely not tradable, btw). Most services have dropped the theoretical quotes in the last 5-6 years.
P Pabst Apr 28, 2006 #10 I've never seen a theoretical high even close to 150pts over the tradable. Quote from risktaker: Sounds like one source is quoting the actual tradable dow and the other is quoting the theoretical high/low (which is definetely not tradable, btw). Most services have dropped the theoretical quotes in the last 5-6 years. More...
I've never seen a theoretical high even close to 150pts over the tradable. Quote from risktaker: Sounds like one source is quoting the actual tradable dow and the other is quoting the theoretical high/low (which is definetely not tradable, btw). Most services have dropped the theoretical quotes in the last 5-6 years. More...