A particular stock market index may be broad in scope (measuring a large group of stocks in different industries) like the US Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 Index, UKs FTSE 100 and Japans Nikkei 225 Index. Or it may be more specialized (tracking the performance of specific sectors in the market) such as the AMEX Select Utilities Index or the Morgan Stanley Biotechnology Index. Another type is an index that is extended well beyond a single exchange such as the Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index or the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Total Stock Market Index.
In the Philippines, the broad-based stock market index is called Philippine Stock Exchange Index (PSEi). Also tracked by the exchange are several sectoral indices, namely: the Financials Index, the Industrial Index, the Holding Firms Index, the Property Index, the Services Index and the Mining & Oil Index.
1) It is a leading indicator for the economy The stock market index is a barometer of investor sentiment on the state of the economy. It usually mirrors the economy six to 12 months ahead.
2) It is used as a performance benchmark Investment companies (like Philequity) use the PSEi to benchmark the performance of their mutual fund portfolios.
3) It is used to determine trading trends Since a stock market index is a statistic which measures the aggregate value of its component stocks, it consequently measures the price direction and the volatility of the particular market it represents. The PSEi, for example, is computed each trading day (even intraday) so that changes in the price trend can be monitored instantaneously and trading decisions can be promptly made.
The second method is the "market cap weighted" method which factors in the size of each component in the index (i.e. the market capitalization of each company), such as the case for the Hang Seng Index. Market capitalization is a measure of corporate size and is computed by multiplying the current price of the stock by the number of its outstanding shares. The larger the market capitalization of a stock, the larger is its weighting in the index. Thus, even a relatively small shift in the price of a large cap stock will heavily influence the value of the index.
Recently, a slightly modified market capweighted computation is becoming popular. Instead of full weighting (i.e. all outstanding shares are included), the trend today is to use only the stocks free float. This pertains only to the shares available in the open market (i.e. it excludes those held by insiders, the companys treasury stock and strategic investors).
Incidentally, the PSEi will have four new additions in its list, namely: Holcim Philippines, Inc., JG Summit Hldgs Inc., Security Bank Corp. and Semirara Mining Corp. They will replace Digitel, Empire East Land, Manila Mining Corp. and Metro Pacific Corp. The changes will take effect on Dec. 1, 2006.
Related to the concept of passive investment are the exchange-traded funds or ETFs. Unlike an index fund, which is priced daily, an ETF is priced at market. The more popular ETFs traded in the US are the Diamonds Trust (stock symbol: DIA) which tracks the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Standard & Poors Depository Receipt (stock symbol: SPY) which tracks the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq-100 Trust (stock symbol: QQQ) which tracks the Nasdaq Index. All three funds are listed at the American Stock and Options Exchange.
For inquiries and comments, you can email us at gime10000@yahoo.com or research@philequity.net. Or call Jerome Gonzalez or Ricardo Puig at 634-5038.