What is a Stock Market Index?
In the fast paced ever-changing world of today's stock market you need a quick way to analyze and graph the movement from day to day, month to month or year to year. Stock indexes such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Standard and Poor's 500 give you a tool to do just that.
How are indexes Calculated?
Different Indexes are calculated in different ways and it is important for stock investors and traders to understand how the index they are using is calculated because the calculation method has a large impact on results. You need to know what is being measured and how. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, for instance, was originally just that. In the beginning, when there were no calculators or computers, and calculations needed to be done quickly and by hand, there were 12 stocks in the Dow Jones Index, which were counted up and then divided by 12. The results were expressed as points. Now, with computers the norm, the index is calculated differently.
Most stock indexes such as Standard & Poor's 500 Index and the NASDAQ Composite Index are weighted and give more weight to larger companies. These are capitalization -weighted indexes (Capitalization is the total market value of any outstanding shares of a companies stock.) These indexes are not valid indicators of the price of the average stock in the index. Since there should be more investors in the larger companies they do give us an idea of price levels in an average investor's holdings.
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Types of indexes.
The most widely quoted indexes are the broad based indexes, which attempt to represent the movement of an entire stock market. They normally include the largest companies on the nation's largest stock exchange. Standard and Poor's 500 (S+P 500 index) and the Japanese Nikkei 225, as well as the Dow Jones industrial average, are examples of this type of index.
More specialized sorts of indexes are indexes like Morgan Stanley's Biotech, which consists of 36 American biotech firms, or NEMA's EIS (National Electrical Manufacturer's Association's Electroindustry Stock Index) which tracks Electroindustry stocks.
Indexes that track companies of a certain size or a certain type of management are also fairly common.
Indexes may also include stock on more than one exchange%u2026
Socially Responsible Indexes or Sri indexes
Another specialized index type are those for Socially Responsible Investing indices that include only those companies satisfying ecological or other social criteria. Often called SRI or Socially Responsible Indexes, SRI indexes allow investors to watch stocks according to their beliefs and performance on Social issues, and may exclude companies such as arms or tobacco companies. They include The Calvert Group, Domini, the Dow Jones Sustainability Index, and the FTSE4Good indices
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What Every Newbie Needs to Keep In Mind
What Every Newbie Needs to Keep In Mind
The #1 problem for beginning stock investors is discussed, as well as what every new stock investor needs to know. This video is for the FREE 7-part stock investing kit at http://www.StockInvestingProfits.com
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