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A stock market index should capture the behaviour of the overall equity
market. Movements of the index should represent the returns obtained by
"typical" portfolios in the country.
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They reflect the changing expectations of the stock market about future
dividends of India's corporate sector. When the index goes up, it is because the
stock market thinks that the prospective dividends in the future will be better
than previously thought. When prospects of dividends in the future become
pessimistic, the index drops. The ideal index gives us instant-to-instant
readings about how the stock market perceives the future of India's corporate
sector.
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Every stock price moves for two possible reasons: news about the company
(e.g. a product launch, or the closure of a factory, etc.) or news about the
country (e.g. nuclear bombs, or a budget announcement, etc.). The job of an
index is to purely capture the second part, the movements of the stock market as
a whole (i.e. news about the country). This is achieved by averaging. Each stock
contains a mixture of these two elements - stock news and index news. When we
take an average of returns on many stocks, the individual stock news tends to
cancel out. On any one day, there would be good stock-specific news for a few
companies and bad stock-specific news for others. In a good index, these will
cancel out, and the only thing left will be news that is common to all stocks.
The news that is common to all stocks is news about India. That is what the
index will capture.
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For technical reasons, it turns out that the correct method of averaging is
to take a weighted average, and give each stock a weight proportional to its
market capitalisation. Suppose an index contains two stocks A and B. A has a
market capitalisation of Rs.1000 crore and B has a market capitalisation of
Rs.3000 crore. Then we attach a weight of 1/4 to movements in A and 3/4 to
movements in B.
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It is easy to create a portfolio,
which will reliably get the same returns as the index. i.e. if the index goes up by 4%,
this portfolio will also go up by 4%. Suppose an index is made of two stocks, one with a
market cap of Rs.1000 crore and another with a market cap of Rs.3000 crore. Then the index
portfolio will assign a weight of 25% to the first and 75% weight to the second. If we
form a portfolio of the two stocks, with a weight of 25% on the first and 75% on the
second, then the portfolio returns will equal the index returns. So if you want to buy
Rs.1 lakh of this two-stock index, you would buy Rs.25,000 of the first and Rs.75,000 of
the second; this portfolio would exactly mimic the two-stock index. A stock market index is hence just like other price
indices
in showing what is happening on the overall indices -- the wholesale price index is a
comparable example. In addition, the stock market index is attainable as a portfolio.
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Traditionally, indices have been used as information sources. By looking at
an index we know how the market is faring. This information aspect also figures
in myriad applications of stock market indices in economic research. This is
particularly valuable when an index reflects highly up to date information (a
central issue which is discussed in detail ahead) and the portfolio of an
investor contains illiquid securities - in this case, the index is a lead
indicator of how the overall portfolio will fare. In recent years, indices have
come to the fore owing to direct applications in finance, in the form of index
funds and index derivatives. Index funds are funds which passively `invest in
the index'. Index derivatives allow people to cheaply alter their risk exposure
to an index (this is called hedging) and to implement forecasts about index
movements (this is called speculation). Hedging using index derivatives has
become a central part of risk management in the modern economy. These
applications are now a multi-trillion dollar industry worldwide, and they are
critically linked up to market indices.
Finally, indices serve as a benchmark
for measuring the performance of fund managers. An all-equity fund should obtain
returns like the overall stock market index. A 50:50 debt:equity fund should
obtain returns close to those obtained by an investment of 50% in the index and
50% in fixed income. A well-specified relationship between an investor and a
fund manager should explicitly define the benchmark against which the fund
manager will be compared, and in what fashion.
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The most important type of market index is the broad-market index,
consisting of the large, liquid stocks of the country. In most countries, a
single major index dominates benchmarking, index funds, index derivatives and
research applications. In addition, more specialised indices often find
interesting applications. In India, we have seen situations where a dedicated
industry fund uses an industry index as a benchmark. In India, where clear
categories of ownership groups exist, it becomes interesting to examine the
performance of classes of companies sorted by ownership group.
Other FAQ topics:
Index construction |
Component illiquidity contaminates index |
The S&P CNX Nifty |
Index revision |
High quality information |
Index funds |
Index Futures |
Alternatives to the S&P CNX Nifty |
Parents |
Siblings
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Last updated on March 10, 2008.
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