All 30 Dow Jones Stocks Ranked: Buy, Sell or Hold?
Nvidia, Visa and Microsoft lead the list of Wall Street's top Dow Jones stocks to buy now. Some other names might surprise you.
Dow Jones stocks won't always keep up in a rising market, but you can't beat them when it comes to stability and defense in a down market.
Case in point: the benchmark S&P 500 is up 22% on a price basis since over past 52 weeks, while the "growthier" but riskier tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has added more than 30%.
Meanwhile, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, that elite list of 30 more mature industry leaders, rose less than 18% over the same span.
You can blame the Magnificent 7 stocks for much of the Dow's lagging ways in the bull market. Of the mega-cap tech names driving so much of the bull market's returns, only Microsoft (MSFT), Apple (AAPL), Amazon.com (AMZN) and Nvidia (NVDA) can be found in the blue-chip average.
The fact that the Dow is weighted by price rather than market cap limits the Mag 7's contributions on the way up, but then it also helps limit any damage on their way down.
That sort of underperformance hurts, but remember that stocks don't always go up. Take 2026, for example. When the market swooned in March, the Nasdaq was off nearly 11% for the year to date at one point, while the S&P 500 shed more than 7%. The more resilient Dow lost 6% at its year-to-date nadir.
That's generally what the Dow is supposed to do. Half of the average's components are low-beta stocks. That means they tend to lag in up markets, but hold up better when everything is selling off.
This low-beta influence can have advantages for long-term investors. After all, as bright a time as it's been for equity investors over the past several years, downside risks very much remain.
A new international trade regime had already injected uncertainty into markets – and that was before the war with Iran threatened to upend the global economy.
Although fears of an economic slowdown are receding, worries about an AI-fueled bubble are rising. BofA Securities recently cut its year-end price target on the S&P 500 to 7,100. That gives the index implied downside from current levels.
Savita Subramanian, head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategy, noted that seven out of 10 of BofA's bear market indicators have now been triggered – a signal that historically matches levels seen right before market peaks.
Should such a change in market fortunes come to pass ... well, that's where Dow Jones stocks come in.
Dow Jones stocks ranked
This collection of industry-leading companies and dividend growth stalwarts with their fortress-like balance sheets can offer relative stability in tempestuous market times.
From the best Dow dividend stocks to the most widely held blue chip stocks, components of the industrial average occupy top spots in the portfolios of hedge funds and billionaire investors.
Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B), in particular, is a huge fan of select Dow stocks.
To get a sense of which Dow Jones stocks Wall Street recommends at an increasingly uncertain time for equities, we screened the DJIA by analysts' consensus recommendations, from worst to first, using data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.
Here's how the ratings system works: S&P surveys analysts' stock calls and scores them on a five-point scale, where 1.0 equals a Strong Buy and 5.0 is a Strong Sell. Scores between 3.5 and 2.5 translate into Hold recommendations.
Scores higher than 3.5 equate to Sell ratings, while scores equal to or below 2.5 mean that analysts, on average, rate shares at Buy. The closer a score gets to 1.0, the higher conviction the Buy recommendation.
In other words, lower scores are better than higher scores.
See the table below for analysts' consensus recommendations on all 30 Dow Jones stocks, per S&P Global Market Intelligence, as of June 9, 2026.

Company (Ticker) | Analysts' consensus recommendation score | Analysts' consensus recommendation |
|---|---|---|
Travelers (TRV) | 2.63 | Hold |
Goldman Sachs (GS) | 2.60 | Hold |
Amgen (AMGN) | 2.46 | Buy |
Nike (NKE) | 2.29 | Buy |
American Express (AXP) | 2.28 | Buy |
Verizon Communications (VZ) | 2.24 | Buy |
3M (MMM) | 2.17 | Buy |
JPMorgan Chase (JPM) | 2.17 | Buy |
McDonald's (MCD) | 2.12 | Buy |
Caterpillar (CAT) | 2.11 | Buy |
Sherwin-Williams (SHW) | 2.04 | Buy |
Procter & Gamble (PG) | 2.04 | Buy |
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) | 2.00 | Buy |
International Business Machines (IBM) | 2.00 | Buy |
Honeywell International (HON) | 2.00 | Buy |
Apple (AAPL) | 1.98 | Buy |
Home Depot (HD) | 1.89 | Buy |
Cisco Systems (CSCO) | 1.88 | Buy |
Chevron (CVX) | 1.84 | Buy |
Merck (MRK) | 1.83 | Buy |
Coca-Cola (KO) | 1.75 | Buy |
Salesforce (CRM) | 1.65 | Buy |
UnitedHealth Group (UNH) | 1.64 | Buy |
Boeing (BA) | 1.63 | Buy |
Walmart (WMT) | 1.48 | Strong Buy |
Walt Disney (DIS) | 1.47 | Strong Buy |
Amazon (AMZN) | 1.35 | Strong Buy |
Microsoft (MSFT) | 1.34 | Strong Buy |
Visa (V) | 1.33 | Strong Buy |
Nvidia (NVDA) | 1.29 | Strong Buy |
Related Content
Profit and prosper with the best of Kiplinger's advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and much more. Delivered daily. Enter your email in the box and click Sign Me Up.

Dan is a veteran of MarketWatch, CBS MoneyWatch, SmartMoney, InvestorPlace, DailyFinance and others, before joining Kiplinger in 2016. He has written for The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and Consumer Reports and his stories have appeared in the New York Daily News, Investor's Business Daily and more. Dan reported from the New York Stock Exchange floor as a senior writer at AOL's DailyFinance.
Once upon a time, he worked for Spy magazine and Time Inc., and contributed to Maxim when lad mags were a thing.
Dan holds a bachelor's degree from Oberlin College and a master's degree from Columbia University.
Disclosure: Dan does not trade individual stocks or securities. He is eternally long the U.S equity market, primarily through tax-advantaged accounts.