0% found this document useful (0 votes)
128 views4 pages

Stock Indexes

Stock indexes are used to benchmark portfolios, generalize market returns, and determine the capital asset pricing model return. A hypothetical portfolio including all securities is too broad, so proxies like indexes indicate overall market performance. Specialized indexes also measure specific market parts like small companies. Indexes consider only stock prices, not dividends, which account for a large return percentage. Indexes differ in how constituent stock weights are calculated, such as price-weighting or market capitalization weighting. Commonly used U.S. indexes include the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and Russell 2000.

Uploaded by

kishorepatil8887
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
128 views4 pages

Stock Indexes

Stock indexes are used to benchmark portfolios, generalize market returns, and determine the capital asset pricing model return. A hypothetical portfolio including all securities is too broad, so proxies like indexes indicate overall market performance. Specialized indexes also measure specific market parts like small companies. Indexes consider only stock prices, not dividends, which account for a large return percentage. Indexes differ in how constituent stock weights are calculated, such as price-weighting or market capitalization weighting. Commonly used U.S. indexes include the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite, and Russell 2000.

Uploaded by

kishorepatil8887
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

Stock Indexes

Stock indexes are useful for benchmarking portfolios, for generalizing the experience of
all investors, and for determining the market return used in the Capital Asset Pricing
Model (CAPM).

A hypothetical portfolio encompassing all possible securities would be too broad to


measure, so proxies such as stock indexes have been developed to serve as indicators
of the overall market's performance. In addition, specialized indexes have been
developed to measure the performance of more specific parts of the market, such as
small companies.

It is important to realize that a stock price index by itself does not represent an average
return to shareholders. By definition, a stock price index considers only the prices of the
underlying stocks and not the dividends paid. Dividends can account for a large
percentage of the total investment return.

Weighting

One characteristic that varies among stock indexes is how the stocks comprising the
index are weighted in the average. Even if no explicit weighting is applied when
calculating an average, there may be an implicit one. While a one dollar price change in
one stock in a simple stock price index will have the same effect as a one dollar change
in any other stock, a given percentage increase of a higher price stock influences the
index more than a corresponding percentage increase of a lower price stock. For
example, a 1% change in a $100 stock will change the index more than a 1% change in
a $10 stock. For this reason, indexes that are based on the simple summation of stock
prices are referred to as price-weighted.

In a price-weighted index, a change in the stock price of the largest company in the
index would influence the average no more than an equal change in the stock price of
the smallest company in the index. However, the larger company's performance will
have a greater impact on the economy. To consider the size of a company, a market
capitalization weighted index (or value-weighted index) can be used, in which a
company's impact on the index is proportional to the size of the company. In value-
weighting, in effect the market capitalization of the stocks influence the index, not the
prices. For this reason, there is no need to adjust for stock splits.

Some indexes do not weight for market capitalization, but do adjust for price differences
to remove the implicit price weighting. This unweighted method tracks the performance
of an index in which equal dollar amounts are invested in the underlying stocks. Some
consider an unweighted index to be a good indicator of the market's performance from
the perspective of the investor who places an equal amount of money in each stock in
his or her portfolio, regardless of its market capitalization. However, if every investor
placed an equal amount of money in each investment, relatively few investors would
own small-cap stocks, so an unweighted index would not reflect the portfolio
performance of the average investor when all investors are considered.

There are hundreds of indexes that are designed to measure the broad market or
specific parts of it. Here are some of the more commonly-used indexes, listed in
alphabetical order.

Dow Jones Industrial Average

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted index of industrial stocks and is
the most widely quoted stock index.

In the early 1880's, there was no broad market measure - investors focused on the
prices of individual stocks. On July 3rd, 1884 Dow Jones & Co. first published an index
of 11 companies in the Customer's Afternoon Letter, which later became the Wall Street
Journal. At that time, there were 9 railroad stocks and 2 industrial stocks in the index. In
1884, the railroads were the largest and most stable companies. The stocks of industrial
companies were considered speculative investments. In 1896, Charles Dow introduced
an index for industrial stocks and the original Dow average became a railroad stock
index. More companies were added to the industrial index until 1928, when the number
was increased to 30.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average uses a divisor to adjust for events that result in no
change in a company's value but that would otherwise influence the index. One such
event is a stock split; another is the replacement of one company in the index by
another. While this adustment does not result in a change in the index value when a
stock splits, because the index is price-weighted the newly split stock will have a lower
price and therefore less influence on the index.

Dow Jones Transportation Average

The Dow Jones Transportation Average is a price-weighted index. It originated from the
index of 9 railroad stocks and 2 industrial stocks that Dow Jones & Co. introduced in
1884. In 1896 when the original index became the Dow Jones Railroad Average the
industrial stocks were removed from it. Later, the Railroad Average was renamed to the
Transportation Average. In addition to railroads, today the average includes other
transportation stocks such as airlines and trucking companies.
Dow Jones Utility Average

The Dow Jones Utility Average is a price-weighted index of 15 utility stocks, especially
electric utilities and gas utilities. It was created in 1929 with 18 stocks, was increased to
20 stocks six months later, then reduced to 15 stocks in 1938.

Nasdaq Composite Index

The Nasdaq Composite Index is a market capitalization weighted index of more than
5000 stocks. Comprising all Nasdaq-listed common stocks, it is the most commonly
used index for tracking the Nasdaq.

Russell 2000

The Russell 2000 is a market capitalization weighted index. It was created in 1984 by
the Frank Russell Company. The Russell universe of stocks covers 3000 companies,
and the Russell 2000 represents the smallest two-thirds of those companies. As such, it
is a small-cap index.

S&P 100

The S&P 100 is a market capitalization weighted index of large-cap companies. This
index also is known by its ticker symbol, OEX. It comprises 100 large blue-chip
companies across a wide range of industries.

S&P 500

The S&P 500 is a market cap weighted index of large-cap companies from a variety of
industries. It includes industrial, utility, transportation, and financial stocks. The S&P 500
is widely used as a benchmark by institutional investors.

Value Line Composite Index

The Value Line Composite Index is a broad, unweighted index of approximately 1700
companies covered in the Value Line Investment Survey.
Wilshire 5000

The Wilshire 5000 is a market capitalization weighted index. It was created by Wilshire
Associates in 1974. It is the broadest index, including virtually every actively traded U.S.
stock.

Recommended Reading

Isaacman, Max, How To Be An Index Investor

Covers the following topics:

 Overview and Trading of Exchange Index Shares


 Individual and Professional Strategies for Using Exchange Shares
 Behavioral Finance
 The Electronic Index Investor and Trader
 The Select Sector SPDRs
 DIA
 SPY and MDY
 QQQ
 WEBS .

You might also like