7 Dow Stocks That Didn't Survive the Decade
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- Newsletter sign up Newsletter
The Dow Jones Industrial Average had a heck of a good run over the past decade, even as membership in this bastion of just 30 blue-chip stocks changed dramatically.
On a price basis alone, the large-cap average has gained more than 160% since the last day of trading in 2009. Include dividends – all Dow stocks are dividend payers – and the industrial average has delivered a total return in excess of 230%. Indeed, the Dow has generated a 10-year annualized total return of 10.5%.
It's not unusual for the folks at S&P Dow Jones Indices, which operates the index, to make changes to the Dow. As a price-weighted average, it's necessary that the Dow stocks with the highest prices not get too far away from those with the lowest prices, lest those low-priced stocks become immaterial to the Dow's performance.
The keepers of the index also make changes to ensure the Dow comprises a diverse portfolio of stocks that reflect both the U.S. equity market and the U.S. economy.
To that last point, the average went into overdrive to better reflect the dynamic forces shaping the market and the economy. Seven Dow stocks were removed from the average over the past 10 years. In almost every case, the Dow's editors ditched a more sluggish, older-economy company in favor of a name that's riding secular changes in the global economy.
Here are the seven Dow stocks kicked to the curb over the past decade.
Data is as of Nov. 19 unless otherwise indicated. Dow Jones data from S&P Dow Jones Indices.
Kraft Foods
- Year removed: 2012
The processed-food giant then known as Kraft Foods was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 2008, taking the place of insurer American International Group (AIG (opens in new tab)). AIG was decimated by the financial crisis to the point that the federal government doled out an $85 billion loan, in exchange for a 79.9% stake, to keep the systemically important financial institution afloat.
Kraft wouldn't be a Dow stock for very long, however.
In 2012, its fate was sealed when management decided to split the firm into two separate businesses: an international snacks company and a North American food company. Kraft Foods, the grocery company, had too low a market value to be a good fit for the Dow. Meanwhile, the snacks company known as Mondelez (MDLZ (opens in new tab)) was and remains a primarily international company. Dow stocks must be predominantly domestically focused.
Kraft – which eventually merged with H.J. Heinz to become what's currently known as Kraft Heinz (KHC (opens in new tab)) – was replaced in the average by UnitedHealth Group (UNH (opens in new tab)). Replacing an old-economy food company with a health-insurance behemoth makes the Dow better reflect the U.S. economy.
Alcoa
- Year removed: 2013
Aluminum giant Alcoa (AA (opens in new tab)) was removed from the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 2013 after a 54-year run in the blue-chip index. S&P Dow Jones Indices attributed the move to Alcoa's sagging stock price – hurt by a global aluminum slump – and a desire to add diversity to the average.
Alcoa was a poky, old-economy stock that didn't really clock the dynamism of the U.S. economy in the 21st century, but there was something elegiac about its exclusion. Alcoa was always the first Dow component to announce quarterly results. As such, Alcoa was considered to be the company that kicked off earnings season every three months.
Alcoa's place in the Dow was taken over by Nike (NKE (opens in new tab)), a global lifestyle brand more in tune with today's economy than a stuffy old materials sector stock.
Bank of America
- Year removed: 2013
- Bank of America (BAC (opens in new tab)) was a Dow component for only about five years when it was pulled from the industrial average in 2013. The financial crisis, which punished its business and share price, was to blame.
Again, the Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted index, which means anytime a company's share price gets too low, it basically becomes immaterial. Bank of America fell below $3 a share in intraday trading in early 2009.
BAC was embroiled in lawsuits stemming from the crisis and its acquisition of subprime lender Countrywide. In the aftermath of the crisis, Bank of America would pay more than $76 billion in penalties and fines.
The sprawling money-center bank eventually was replaced in the Dow by investment bank Goldman Sachs (GS (opens in new tab)).
Hewlett-Packard
- Year removed: 2013
- Hewlett-Packard's business had been circling the drain for years before 2013. HP had once been one of Silicon Valley's most innovative companies, but the world largely passed it by in the 21st century. The sclerotic company was increasingly dependent on selling low-margin PC workstations and printers. Ink cartridge replacements alone couldn't sustain the growth investors expect from technology companies.
HP had been added to the Dow in 1997, a time when irrational exuberance was fueling the bubble in tech stocks. By 2013, it was a disaster. In a sort of last straw, Hewlett-Packard made one of the worst acquisitions of all time in 2011, spending $61 billion on British software company Autonomy. Less than a year later, the company would have to take a write off of $8.8 billion to reflect the fact that HP had grossly overpaid for the asset. The once-illustrious tech company's market cap fell from $61 billion pre-merger to $25 billion after the deal flopped.
Visa (V (opens in new tab)), the payments processor (and vibrant, relevant tech company) took HP's place in the average. A couple years later, in 2015, HP split into two companies: HP Inc. (HPQ (opens in new tab)) and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE (opens in new tab)).
AT&T
- Year removed: 2015
- AT&T (T (opens in new tab)) has been added to and dropped from the Dow many times in its long corporate history. The telecommunications giant was first added in 1916. It was then dropped in 1928, added again in 1939 … and dropped in 2004. The following year, SBC Communications, a Dow stock, changed its name to AT&T after it acquired the original AT&T.
AT&T found itself back in the Dow in 2005 but it wouldn't stay for all that long. The landscape had changed dramatically by 2015. At that point, the wireless business was saturated and then some. T was attempting to sort out a strategy to make itself a content producer, not just a distributor. And with Verizon (VZ (opens in new tab)), the Dow already had a giant telecommunications company as a member.
AT&T's sluggish stock had traded sideways for years prior to 2015. It hardly participated in the big run-up in share prices in the early phase of the bull market.
There's little wonder why the keepers of the Dow would kick out AT&T and replace it with Apple (AAPL (opens in new tab)).
General Electric
- Year removed: 2018
- General Electric (GE (opens in new tab)), once the most valuable publicly traded company in the U.S. and a symbol of America's industrial might, was an original member of the Dow in 1896. It remained in the average continuously since 1907.
But the industrial conglomerate and financial leviathan quickly unraveled in the years after the financial crisis, which forced it to cut its longtime dividend in 2009.
General Electric eventually rid itself of the GE Capital financial division to prevent being labelled a systemically important financial institution and thus subject to increased oversight. Once upon a time, GE Capital was the company's main profit driver.
A series of poor deals left the company strapped for cash. GE was forced to sell once-proud divisions such as the railroad business. And it again pulled the rug out from under income investors, with a dividend cut in 2017.
Investors fled GE stock as if it had the plague. By the time General Electric got the boot and was replaced by Walgreens Boots Alliance (WBA (opens in new tab)) in June 2018, shares changed hands at around $13 a pop – far too low to have any material impact on the Dow. Months later, GE hacked its dividend once more, to a mere penny per share.
DuPont
- Year removed: 2019
Specialty chemicals company DuPont (DD (opens in new tab)) had been a Dow stock since 1935, but a major corporate makeover found the storied name left out of the average.
DuPont and chemicals competitor Dow Inc. (DOW (opens in new tab)) merged in late 2017 with the intention of later splitting off into three companies. The company that existed after the merger but before the split was called DowDuPont and took DuPont's place in the Dow industrials.
DowDuPont spun off its materials division as Dow Inc. in April 2019, then its agriculture business as Corteva (CTVA (opens in new tab)) in June. The remaining specialty products division was renamed DuPont.
Dow Inc. remained in the average, ending DuPont's tenure there. S&P Dow Jones Indices said the change would allow the DJIA to maintain its current exposure to the materials sector.
Dan Burrows is Kiplinger's senior investing writer, having joined the august publication full time in 2016.
A long-time financial journalist, Dan is a veteran of SmartMoney, MarketWatch, CBS MoneyWatch, InvestorPlace and DailyFinance. He has written for The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Consumer Reports, Senior Executive and Boston magazine, and his stories have appeared in the New York Daily News, the San Jose Mercury News and Investor's Business Daily, among other publications. As a senior writer at AOL's DailyFinance, Dan reported market news from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and hosted a weekly video segment on equities.
In his current role at Kiplinger, Dan writes about equities, fixed income, currencies, commodities, funds, macroeconomics, demographics, real estate, cost of living indexes and more.
-
-
Chase Launches $1K Bonus Offer For Sapphire Card
The Chase Sapphire Preferred® Card recently launched a jaw-dropping deal for new customers.
By Ellen Kennedy • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Nasdaq Outperforms on Microsoft Earnings
The Nasdaq led in a mixed session for stocks Wednesday as Big Tech earnings impressed.
By Karee Venema • Published
-
If You'd Put $1,000 Into Microsoft Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
Microsoft Microsoft stock has lost almost $500 billion in value since its all-time high, but bulls say it's only a matter of time before it reclaims its heights.
By Dan Burrows • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Stocks Close Mixed on Rate Hike Jitters
A solid March jobs report, upcoming inflation data and a plunge in shipments of Apple's Mac computers restrained sentiment.
By Dan Burrows • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Stocks Close Higher in Volatile Session
The major indexes spent most of Thursday in rally mode, but selling pressure emerged in afternoon trading.
By Karee Venema • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Silicon Valley Bank Failure Sinks Stocks
The largest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis stole the spotlight from the February jobs report.
By Karee Venema • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Stocks Sink Ahead of February Jobs Report
The major benchmarks finished solidly lower Thursday as bank stocks sold off.
By Karee Venema • Published
-
5 Stocks to Sell or Avoid Now
stocks to sell In a difficult market like this, weak positions can get even weaker. Wall Street analysts believe these five stocks should be near the front of your sell list.
By Dan Burrows • Published
-
Stock Market Today: Stocks Choppy After Strong Jobs Data
Both the ADP private payrolls report and the January job openings update came in stronger than expected.
By Karee Venema • Published
-
If You'd Put $1,000 Into Apple Stock 20 Years Ago, Here's What You'd Have Today
Apple stock has lost more than $500 billion in value since its peak, but its long-term performance tells another story.
By Dan Burrows • Published