Market Structure
Dow Theory Six Basic Tenets
Dow Theory Six Basic Tenets
The six core tenets of Dow Theory: 1) Price discounts everything, 2) The market has three trends, 3) Major trends unfold in three phases, 4) A trend persists until a clear reversal signal appears, 5) Indices must confirm each other, 6) Volume must confirm the trend. Additionally, only closing prices are considered valid signals.
Key Takeaways
Dow Theory Complete Framework
1. Overview
Dow Theory is the foundational theory underpinning modern technical analysis. It originated in the 1890s when Charles Dow, then editor of the Wall Street Journal, published a series of editorials outlining his observations on market behavior. Dow never compiled his ideas into a formal academic paper, but William Hamilton later established the theoretical framework in The Stock Market Barometer (1922), and Robert Rhea systematized it into its complete form in The Dow Theory (1932).
The core value of this theory lies in its systematic classification of market movements, providing investors with a framework to identify primary trends and assess market phases. Although Dow Theory was originally developed for the stock market, its principles apply equally to forex, commodities, and cryptocurrency markets—because the theory is rooted in market participant psychology and crowd behavior.
Dow Theory consists of six basic tenets, three market trends, three phases of primary trends, three reversal formations, and four volume confirmation rules. Over 130 years since its inception, it remains an essential analytical tool for professional traders and analysts worldwide.
2. Core Rules and Principles
2.1 Six Basic Tenets of Dow Theory
Tenet 1: The Averages Discount Everything
- Definition: Market prices already reflect all known information, including expectations about the future
- Scope: This encompasses economic, political, and psychological factors. Only unforeseeable events (Acts of God) are exceptions, and even these are rapidly priced in once they occur
- Verification: When news is released and the market reaction is muted or has already moved in the anticipated direction, this tenet is at work
- Crypto Application: Regulatory news, halving schedules, and institutional investment trends are often priced in well before they materialize. The adage "Buy the rumor, sell the news" exemplifies this principle
Tenet 2: The Market Has Three Trends
- Primary Trend: The major trend lasting from several months to several years
- Secondary Correction: Lasting from several weeks to several months, representing a retracement against the primary trend
- Minor Trend: Short-term fluctuations lasting from several days to several weeks
Dow compared these three trends to the ocean. The primary trend is the tide, the secondary correction is the wave, and the minor trend is the ripple. Just as one judges the direction of the tide at the shore, traders must read the direction of the major trend without being distracted by minor ripples.
Tenet 3: Primary Trends Have Three Phases
- Accumulation Phase: Informed investors (Smart Money) buy at depressed prices
- Trending Phase (Public Participation Phase): The general public joins in and the trend accelerates
- Distribution Phase: Smart Money gradually sells their holdings
Tenet 4: A Trend Continues Until a Clear Reversal Signal
- Persistence Principle: The existing trend is assumed to remain in effect until a definitive reversal signal appears
- Reversal Signal: Confirmed by a clear breach of previous highs or lows
- Practical Essence: This tenet provides the theoretical basis for the trading maxim "Don't fight the trend." Rather than attempting to predict reversals, the key is to respond only after they are confirmed
Tenet 5: The Averages Must Confirm Each Other
- Confirmation Principle: In Dow's era, both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Dow Jones Transportation Average had to simultaneously reach new highs or new lows for the signal to be considered valid
- Logical Basis: If industry is booming, the transportation of goods should also increase—both indices moving in the same direction confirms a healthy trend across the broader economy
- Divergence Warning: When only one average makes a new extreme, it signals potential trend weakening or an imminent reversal
- Crypto Application: This can be adapted by checking whether BTC and ETH move in sync, or whether large-cap and small/mid-cap assets confirm each other's direction
Tenet 6: Volume Must Confirm the Trend
- Confirmation Condition: Volume should increase when price moves in the direction of the trend
- Warning Signal: Declining volume during trend-direction moves suggests weakening momentum
- Important Note: In Dow Theory, volume serves as a secondary confirmation tool—it does not generate standalone trading signals
Additional Tenet: Only Closing Prices Are Considered
- Standard: Signals are evaluated based on closing prices only, not intraday highs or lows
- Rationale: The closing price reflects the final consensus of market participants for the session, while intraday extremes may represent temporary emotions or noise
- Crypto Consideration: Since the cryptocurrency market operates 24/7, there is no traditional "closing price." In practice, UTC 00:00 or the daily candle close is used as the closing price, and consistent application of whichever standard is chosen is critical
2.2 Three Market Trends
| Trend Type | Duration | Analogy | Significance | Trading Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | Months to years | Tide | Core basis for investment decisions | Determines position direction |
| Secondary | Weeks to months | Wave | Captures entry timing | Pullback/retracement trading |
| Minor | Days to weeks | Ripple | Reference only | Precision entry/exit |
Primary Trend
- Determines the overall market direction, classified as either a bull market or a bear market
- Serves as the core reference for all investment decisions
- The most important trend in Dow Theory
Secondary Correction
- Typically retraces 1/3 to 2/3 of the primary trend move (similar to the 33%–66% range in Fibonacci retracements)
- Includes intermediate declines in a bull market and intermediate rallies in a bear market
- Practical Tip: Secondary corrections offer excellent opportunities to enter in the direction of the primary trend. However, care must be taken not to confuse them with primary trend reversals
Minor Trend
- The most difficult to predict, with potential for manipulation by large participants
- From a Dow Theory perspective, trading based on minor trends is not recommended
- Short-term traders may use minor trends as a reference for fine-tuning entry and exit timing
2.3 Three Phases of Primary Trends
Accumulation Phase
- Participants: Informed investors (Smart Money)
- Characteristics:
- Low volume and narrow price ranges
- Predominantly negative news environment
- Public indifference or extreme pessimism
- Price bases and consolidates near the bottom
- Key Indicator: The critical clue is when negative news is released yet the price no longer declines
- Duration: The longer the accumulation period, the greater the subsequent rally tends to be ("The longer the base, the higher the space")
- Crypto Example: A 6–12 month sideways consolidation following a prolonged Bitcoin decline is a classic accumulation phase
Trending Phase (Public Participation Phase)
- Participants: Gradual increase in general public participation
- Characteristics:
- Noticeably increasing volume
- Rising margin debt levels and leverage usage
- Increased trend-following buying based on technical analysis
- Growing positive news and media coverage
- Practical Essence: This is the longest and most profitable segment of the three phases. Trend-following strategies are most effective here
Distribution Phase
- Participants: Smart Money gradually offloads positions
- Characteristics:
- Excessive optimism pervades the market
- Elevated valuations and overheated indicators
- "This time is different" narratives emerge
- Massive influx of inexperienced retail participants
- Key Signal: Volume increases but price advances slow down or stall
- Crypto Example: Excessive crypto hype on social media, celebrity coin endorsements, and extreme bullish predictions like "It's going to $1 million" are classic signs of a distribution phase
2.4 Three Reversal Formations
Failure Swing
- Definition: A pattern where price fails to surpass the previous high or low—the strongest reversal signal
- Bearish Failure Swing:
- Price forms a high (A), then declines to form a low (B)
- Price rallies but fails to exceed the previous high (A), stalling at point (C) where C < A
- A confirmed sell signal occurs when price drops below low (B)
- Bullish Failure Swing:
- Price forms a low (A), then rallies to form a high (B)
- Price declines again but holds above the previous low (A), forming a higher low (C) where C > A
- A confirmed buy signal occurs when price breaks above high (B)
- Reliability: The most reliable of the three reversal formations
Non-Failure Swing
- Definition: A pattern where price makes a new high or low, but then reverses by breaking through the previous support or resistance level
- Characteristics: The signal arrives later than a failure swing, but confirms that a trend reversal is already underway
- Caution: Because a new high or low is initially formed, it is easy to misinterpret the move as trend continuation. Always wait for a clear closing-price break of support or resistance
Double Tops / Double Bottoms
- Definition: A pattern where price is rejected twice at a similar price level
- Confirmation Condition: The intermediate support or resistance level (neckline) between the two peaks (or troughs) must be clearly broken on a closing basis
- Minimum Target: A price move equal to the height of the pattern measured from the neckline
- Volume Confirmation: If volume declines at the second peak (or trough), the probability of reversal increases
- Related Pattern: The Head and Shoulders pattern is a more refined evolution of the Dow Theory reversal concept
2.5 Four Volume Confirmation Rules
Volume can be thought of as "the fuel for price movement." Without sufficient fuel (volume), price movement (the trend) cannot be sustained.
| Market Condition | Trend-Direction Move | Correction/Retracement | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Uptrend | Volume increases ✅ | Volume decreases ✅ | Healthy uptrend |
| Uptrend | Volume decreases ⚠️ | Volume increases ⚠️ | Trend weakening warning |
| Downtrend | Volume increases ✅ | Volume decreases ✅ | Healthy downtrend |
| Downtrend | Volume decreases ⚠️ | Volume increases ⚠️ | Trend weakening warning |
Rule 1: Increasing Volume on Uptrend Advances
- Condition: Volume must increase when new highs are established
- Verification: Compare current volume at the new high with volume at the previous high
Rule 2: Decreasing Volume on Uptrend Pullbacks
- Condition: Volume should decline significantly during corrective phases
- Meaning: Selling pressure is limited, indicating a high probability of trend continuation
Rule 3: Increasing Volume on Downtrend Declines
- Condition: Volume must increase when new lows are established
- Verification: Compare current volume at the new low with volume at the previous low
Rule 4: Decreasing Volume on Downtrend Rallies
- Condition: Volume should decline significantly during bounce phases
- Meaning: Buying pressure is limited, indicating a high probability of downtrend continuation
3. Chart Validation Methods
3.1 Average Confirmation Signal Validation
Validation Steps:
1. Confirm the first average (e.g., BTC) breaks a new high/low on a closing basis
2. Check the second average (e.g., ETH or Total Crypto Market Cap) for a confirming move
3. Time tolerance: Confirmation should occur within a maximum of 2–3 trading days
4. Judge strictly on closing prices only; ignore intraday breakouts
5. The more simultaneous the confirmation from both averages, the higher the signal reliability
3.2 Trend Reversal Signal Confirmation
Confirmation Procedure:
1. Clearly identify previous significant highs/lows (swing points)
2. Confirm a clear break of that level on a closing-price basis
3. Verify that volume increases accompany the breakout
4. Wait for a confirmation signal from the second average
5. Only declare a trend reversal when ALL conditions are met
Practical Note: Making premature judgments when only some conditions are met is the most common mistake. It is never too late to act after all confirmation steps have been completed.
3.3 Volume Pattern Analysis
Analysis Method:
1. Establish the 20-day moving average of volume as the baseline
2. Verify that volume exceeds the baseline during trend-direction moves
3. Verify that volume falls below the baseline during corrections/bounces
4. Check whether the pattern persists for at least 3 consecutive days
5. Cross-validate with volume-based indicators such as OBV (On-Balance Volume)
or VWAP to enhance reliability
3.4 Reversal Formation Pattern Matching
Pattern Confirmation:
1. A minimum formation period of 2–3 weeks is required (longer = higher reliability)
2. Identify a clear support/resistance level (neckline)
3. Wait for a closing-price breakout signal
4. Target price = Breakout point ± Pattern height (minimum 1:1 ratio)
5. If momentum indicator divergence (RSI, MACD) accompanies the formation,
reversal reliability increases significantly
4. Common Mistakes and Precautions
4.1 Signal Interpretation Errors
Applying the Wrong Time Frame
- Mistake: Mistaking a minor trend for a primary trend, or declaring a trend reversal based on a few days of price action
- Solution: First identify the primary trend on charts spanning at least 6 months
- Reference: Primary trend = months to years, Secondary correction = weeks to months, Minor trend = days to weeks
Relying on a Single Average
- Mistake: Judging the overall market trend based on only one index or asset
- Risk: Misinterpreting conditions unique to an individual asset as a broader market trend, potentially amplifying losses
- Solution: Always confirm directional agreement across at least two related indices before making a judgment
Using Intraday Highs/Lows as Criteria
- Mistake: Judging a breakout based on intraday prices and entering immediately
- Problem: False breakout signals are frequent. This is especially dangerous in crypto markets, where long wicks are common
- Rule: Confirm signals on a closing-price basis only. Waiting for two consecutive daily closes beyond the level further enhances reliability
4.2 Volume Analysis Errors
Ignoring Volume
- Risk: Relying solely on price signals significantly reduces reliability
- Importance: Volume is the essential tool for verifying the authenticity of price movements
- Application: Always check volume patterns simultaneously for all breakout and reversal signals
Judging by Absolute Volume
- Mistake: Applying a fixed threshold such as "valid only if volume exceeds 1 million"
- Problem: Average volume levels vary by market condition, asset type, and time period
- Solution: Use relative volume compared to the 20-day moving average. A practical approach is to classify 1.5× the average as "increased" and 0.7× or below as "decreased"
4.3 Trend Phase Misjudgment
Confusing Accumulation and Distribution
- Distinguishing Criteria:
| Characteristic | Accumulation Phase | Distribution Phase |
|---|---|---|
| News environment | Negative, pessimism dominant | Excessive optimism |
| Volume | Low, gradually increasing | High, but price gains stalling |
| Smart Money | Quietly buying | Gradually selling |
| Public sentiment | Indifference or fear | Greed and excessive expectations |
| Price position | Bottom area after prolonged decline | Top area after prolonged rally |
- Verification: Conduct a comprehensive analysis combining market sentiment indicators (Fear & Greed Index, social media analysis) with volume patterns
Mistaking a Secondary Correction for a Primary Trend Reversal
- Distinguishing Criteria: Check whether the retracement stays within the 1/3 to 2/3 range of the primary trend move. If it exceeds 2/3, a trend reversal should be suspected
- Time Criteria: Secondary corrections unfold over a relatively short period compared to the primary trend
- Practical Tip: During secondary corrections, rather than hastily taking counter-trend positions, it is safer to wait for the correction to complete and re-enter in the direction of the primary trend
4.4 Cryptocurrency Market-Specific Precautions
- 24/7 Market: Since the concept of a "closing price" is ambiguous, consistently use UTC 00:00 or a specific exchange's daily candle close
- High Volatility: Crypto markets are significantly more volatile than traditional markets, so apply a breakout filter (minimum 3–5% beyond the level) for confirmation
- Fragmented Exchange Volume: Trading volume is distributed across multiple exchanges, so analyze aggregate market volume rather than volume from a single exchange
- Wash Trading: Volume on some exchanges may be artificially inflated. Use trusted data sources (e.g., CoinGecko Adjusted Volume) for analysis
5. Practical Application Tips
5.1 Signal Generation and Confirmation Framework
Step 1: Identify Primary Trend Direction
Checklist:
- Analyze the high/low pattern on charts spanning at least 6 months
→ Consecutively higher highs and higher lows = uptrend; lower highs and lower lows = downtrend
- Confirm directional alignment across related assets (BTC–ETH, or large-cap vs. small/mid-cap)
- Verify that volume patterns confirm the trend
- Use the slope of the 200-day moving average as a supplementary reference
Step 2: Capture Entry Timing
Entry Conditions:
- Confirm resumption of movement in the primary trend direction after a secondary correction completes
- Volume must increase when the previous high/low is broken
- A confirming signal from the second related asset must occur (maximum 2–3 day lag allowed)
- Entering on a throwback/pullback after the breakout can secure a more favorable price
Step 3: Risk Management
Stop-Loss Criteria:
- Failure Swing: Stop triggered if the intermediate low (for longs) or intermediate high (for shorts) is breached
- Non-Failure Swing: Stop triggered if the pattern's absolute low/high is broken
- Double Top/Bottom: Stop triggered if the neckline is breached in the opposite direction
- In all cases, limit stop-loss size to 1–2% of account equity
5.2 Multiple Time Frame Application
Implement Dow Theory's three-trend concept through multiple time frame analysis in practice. The key is to determine direction on the higher time frame and timing on the lower time frame.
| Chart Type | Corresponding Trend | Purpose | Period | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly / Monthly | Primary Trend | Position direction | 1–2+ years | Strategic direction |
| Daily | Secondary Correction | Entry/exit timing | 3–6 months | Tactical timing |
| 4-Hour / 1-Hour | Minor Trend | Precision entry points | 1–2 weeks | Execution level |
5.3 Combining with Other Indicators and Patterns
Dow Theory is powerful on its own, but combining it with other analytical tools can significantly enhance signal reliability.
Combining with Moving Averages
- When the Golden Cross / Death Cross of the 50-day and 200-day moving averages aligns with Dow Theory trend reversal signals, confidence increases substantially
- Price above the 200-day moving average serves as supplementary confirmation of a primary uptrend; below it, a primary downtrend
RSI / MACD Divergence
- When Dow Theory reversal formations (failure swings, double tops/bottoms) coincide with RSI or MACD divergence, the probability of reversal rises significantly
Fibonacci Retracements
- The 1/3 to 2/3 retracement range for secondary corrections closely corresponds to the 38.2%–61.8% Fibonacci levels
- Using both tools together allows for more precise prediction of correction targets
Support and Resistance Levels
- Previous highs and lows identified through Dow Theory are inherently significant support and resistance levels
- When candlestick reversal patterns (pin bars, engulfing patterns, etc.) appear at these levels, the case for entry is strengthened
5.4 Modern Application Methods
Cryptocurrency Market Application
Application Method:
- BTC: Primary market indicator (analogous to the Industrial Average)
- ETH or Total Crypto Market Cap: Secondary confirmation indicator (analogous to the Transportation Average)
- BTC Dominance: Use changes in BTC dominance to additionally confirm capital flow direction
- Apply the same six tenets and volume confirmation rules
Sector Rotation Strategy
Strategy:
- Accumulation Phase: Reduce stablecoin allocation, gradually accumulate quality large-cap coins
- Trending Phase: Expand allocation from large-caps → altcoins (Alt Season)
- Distribution Phase: Reduce altcoin allocation → increase stablecoin or cash allocation
Global Market Correlation Analysis
Extended Application:
- Analyze the correlation between Nasdaq/S&P 500 and BTC
- Monitor the inverse correlation between the US Dollar Index (DXY) and the crypto market
- Observe synchronization/decoupling patterns between Gold and BTC
- Consider the impact of US Treasury yield movements on risk appetite
5.5 Dow Theory Checklist
Use the following checklist when confirming trade signals for systematic decision-making.
□ Have I clearly identified the primary trend direction?
□ Have I confirmed the high/low pattern (Higher High/Higher Low or Lower High/Lower Low)?
□ Am I judging signals based on closing prices? (Not intraday prices)
□ Does volume confirm the trend-direction move?
□ Is there a confirming signal from the second related asset (average)?
□ Which phase does the market currently correspond to (Accumulation/Trending/Distribution)?
□ If a reversal formation has appeared, have ALL confirmation conditions been met?
□ Have I pre-set my stop-loss level and target price?
6. Conclusion
Dow Theory is a time-tested market analysis framework with over 130 years of history, offering principles that remain valid even in today's complex financial markets. The reason this theory has endured for so long is that it does not depend on any specific market or instrument—it is grounded in the universal principles of market participant psychology and crowd behavior.
The key is to accurately understand the six basic tenets and to selectively act only on reliable signals identified through a systematic verification process. Rather than reacting impulsively to every market movement, the patience to respond only to confirmed signals is the single most important factor in successfully applying Dow Theory.
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