How Indexes are created:
Ramifications for the Index Investor                 Page 2

 

 A price-weighted index overweights the performance of companies with higher listed stock prices. Richard Ciuba, Account Development Executive in the Indexing Group at Dow Jones explains why the DJIA (Dow Jones Industrial Average),

"The index was created a 100 years ago at a time when the main emphasis was on fixed-income instruments. It was simply computed as the average price of the 12 stocks that made up the index. The creators did not anticipate stock splits, run-offs, takeovers, mergers and acquisitions."

Early in this century, high prices were synonymous with larger companies and higher market caps. Things are different today but the old method is still used for computing the index. Why is the DJIA at 10,000 if it is supposed to be the average price of the 30 stocks in the index today? It is because it has been adjusted every time a stock split, a company paid a dividend of more than 10%, or a company in the group was replaced by another. The Japanese Nikkei 225 is also price-weighted.

An equally-weighted index makes no distinction between large and small companies, both of which are given equal weighting. The good performance of large-cap stocks is negated one-for-one by poor performance of smaller-cap stocks in this index. Since there are many more small companies than large ones, this strategy greatly overemphasizes the importance of small company activity.

The graph below demonstrate how an index of two stocks would be constructed with each index method, and how overweighting of high priced stocks occurs in price-weighting and how overweighting of small cap stocks occurs in the equally-weighted index.

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