Capitalization-weighted index
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A Market value-weighted index is an index whose components are weighted according to the total market value of their outstanding shares. Also called a capitalization-weighted index. The impact of a component's price change is proportional to the issue's overall market value, which is the share price times the number of shares outstanding. For example, the AMEX Composite Index (XAX) has more than 800 component stocks. The weighting of each stock constantly shifts with changes in the stock's price and the number of shares outstanding. The index fluctuates in line with the price move of the stocks.[1]
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[edit] Other Types of Indices
An index may also be classified according to the method used to determine its price. In a Price-weighted index such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the price of each component stock is the only consideration when determining the value of the index. Thus, price movement of even a single security will heavily influence the value of the index even though the dollar shift is less significant in a relatively highly valued issue, and moreover ignoring the relative size of the company as a whole. In a market-share weighted index, price is weighted relative to the number of shares, rather than their total value. In a fundamentally weighted index, stocks are weighted by fundamental factors like sales or book value.
Traditionally, market value-weighted or market share-weighted indices in the United States tended to have a full weighting i.e. all outstanding shares where included; overseas, because partial government ownership of large companies was more common, so-called float-weighted indexing has been the norm for many non-U.S. indices. Recently, many of the U.S. indices, such as the S&P 500, have been changed to a float-adjusted weighting which makes their calculation more consistent with non-U.S. indices.
[edit] Some Market Value-Weighted Indices
- NASDAQ Composite Index
- NASDAQ 100 Index
- NYSE Composite Index
- Russell Indexes
- S&P 500 - Now float-weighted
- Standard & Poor's 100 Index (OEX) - now float weighted
- IBEX 35 Index - index comprising the 35 most liquid Spanish stocks traded in the continuous market, and is Bolsa de Madrid's benchmark.
- Indice de Precios y Cotizaciones (IPC) - index of 35 of the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores (BMV) most highly marketable issuers with a minimum market value of $100 million; revised every six months.
- Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (KLCI)
- FTSE TechMark
- CAC40
[edit] Notes
Prose contains specific citations in source text which may be viewed in edit mode.
- ^ John Downes & Jordan Elliot Goodman, Finance and Investment Terms, Barrons Financial Guides, 2003