Monday, Mar. 16, 1959
If & And
Like Pioneer IV, Wall Street's bull sped into uncharted territory last week. As trading on the New York Stock Exchange boiled up between 3,900,000 and 4,800,000 shares daily, Dow-Jones industrials hit a peak of 611.87, or 175 points above the 436.89 low of a year ago. Not even tough news could jolt it. The index gave up only 2.35 points on the Federal Reserve Board's discount-rate hike (see above), closed at 609.52.
Such a broad and bright market led many an investor to play the old stubby pencil game of "How much would I have now if . . ." If he had bought 100 shares of some stocks, even at the 1929 pre-crash highs, he would now have a pile. Examples, counting stock splits and dividends, but not counting cash dividends and rights, of how each share multiplied: Stock '29 High (One Share) Last Week Number of Shares Now $ Total Value
Dow. Chem. 495 86 110.8 9,529
IBM 255 527 17.3 9,117
Kodak 264 3/4 153 1/4 7.7 1,180
Alcoa 539 1/2 83 1/8 12 998
G.E. 403 80 3/4 12 969
Du Pont 231 225 1/2 4 902
Goodyear 154 1/2 129 3/4 4.6 597
Zenith 62 1/2 233 2 466
Standard (N.J.) 83 52 3/4 6.7 353
G.M. 91 3/4 46 1/8 6 277
But an investor could also have lost on some blue chips. For example:
Stock '29 High (One Share) Last Week Number of Shares Now $ Total Value
A.T. & T. 310 1/2 241 1/2 1 241 1/2
Western Union 272 1/4 36 1/2 4 146
N.Y. Central 256 1/2 26 5/8 1 26 5/8
Nat'l Biscuit 236 1/4 52 2.5 130
Chrysler 135 54 1/2 2 109
RCA 114 1/2 51 1/4 1 51 1/2
Pennsy R.R. 110 16 1/2 1 16
Woolworth 103 7/8 55 1 55
The man who had the courage to invest regularly in blue chips all during the Depression and since could hardly have escaped making a fortune. Last week, to thousands of curious investors, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith proved this in a booth in Manhattan's Grand Central Station. There a whirring IBM Cardatype accounting machine figured what would have happened had an investor put an average $500 a year into a stock every year since 1929--about $15,500 in all. Had he bought Alcoa, his shares would be worth $115,850, and he would have pocketed $17,158 in cash dividends--a paper profit of $117,373 before taxes. Other top gainers on the same basis:
Stock Profit
Goodyear Tire $ 271,142
Dow Chemical 229,500
Caterpillar Tractor 157,102
Phillips Petroleum 132,935
U.S. Steel 127,639
Sears, Roebuck 116,137
Gulf Oil 106,745
G.M. 105,354
Eastman Kodak 104,900
DuPont 98,602
Standard Oil (N.J.) 96,127
G.E. 92,029
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.