| Technology
Sector Down Over 50% for the Year? Keep Those Tech Indexes
Coming!
By John Spence
March 2, 2001 |
|
As of yesterday, the Dow
Jones Technology Sector Index was down over 53% for the year,
and predicting when the tech sector will actually bottom out seems
to be the main hobby of financial writers and pundits these days.
Amidst these unhappy times for tech, Upside Media recently launched
a set of indexes designed to measure the performance of the high-technology
industry and the sub-sectors that make it up.
Upside Media, which covers the hi-tech industry, has launched
15 indexes in all. The Upside.com 150 index is designed to track
the entire sector. From there, the remaining indexes are broken
down as follows:
- 2 sectors - computing, communication
- 4 groups - services, software, hardware, components
- 8 subgroups - online services, communication services,
application and system software, communication software, computing
hardware, communication hardware, computing components, communication
components
The move is another example of a media company designing indexes
for the industry it covers. For example, in tech we have the Fortune
e-50 Index, The Inter@ctive Week Internet Index, the CNET
Tech Index, The Industry Standard 100, and TheStreet.com
Internet Index.
But the new Upside.com
150 family sets itself apart from other comparable indexes
because of its comprehensive coverage of the sector. A good thing
too - gone are the days when when investors rushed at any fund
tracking a "tech" or "Internet" index.
"It certainly has been a trend in the last couple of years
- everyone wanted to ride the Internet wave, so you see a lot
of indices now that have the word 'Internet' in them," said
Brian McCune, the Upside.com analyst who was primarily responsible
for designing the new index family. "Those indices are narrowly
focused, which is inappropriate now that the bubble has burst.
We're not interested in playing the Internet hype game, and it's
too late for that anyway."
The Upside.com 150 holds more companies than most tech indexes,
and also breaks the sector down into various groups and subgroups
to form a clear picture of what is going on in the sector as a
whole.
S&P Index Returns
Here's the February returns for the major Standard & Poor's
(S&P) indexes to keep the index data junkies busy through
the weekend:
| Index |
February |
3 Months |
YTD |
1 Year |
| S&P 500 |
-9.12% |
-5.43% |
-5.89% |
-8.20% |
| S&P 500/Barra Value |
-6.63% |
2.32% |
-2.69% |
13.73% |
| S&P 500/Barra Growth |
-11.75% |
-13.17% |
-9.24% |
-25.79% |
| S&P MidCap 400 |
-5.71% |
3.77% |
-3.61% |
8.93% |
| S&P MidCap 400/Barra Value |
-3.31% |
11.33% |
1.00% |
40.09% |
| S&P MidCap 400/Barra Growth |
-8.21% |
-3.55% |
-8.21% |
-12.84% |
| S&P SmallCap 600 |
-6.10% |
9.99% |
-2.08% |
-0.37% |
| S&P SmallCap 600/Barra Value |
-4.22% |
17.95% |
3.36% |
25.97% |
| S&P/SmallCap 600/Barra Growth |
-8.49% |
0.00% |
-8.42% |
-22.72% |
| S&P 100 |
-10.31% |
-7.86% |
-6.48% |
-12.35% |
| S&P SuperComposite 1500 |
-8.81% |
-4.44% |
-5.64% |
-6.98% |
| S&P REIT Composite |
-1.83% |
5.52% |
-1.39% |
29.07% |
Source: Standard & Poor's, all data
as of end of February, 2001