Conglomerates Sector

Conglomerates Sector

The conglomerates sector refers to the group of stocks in the market that consist of large corporations holding a variety of diverse and sometimes unrelated subsidiary companies. Additionally, the size of a conglomerate can also hurt its stock performance, and is subject to a conglomerate discount, which results in a conglomerate being valued at less than than the sum of its holdings. The Global Industry Classification Standard established a system of classifying industries, identifying 11 top-tier sectors, which are subcategorized into 24 industry groups, 69 industries, and 158 sub-industries. The 11 top-tier GICS sectors are: Industrials Consumer Discretionary Consumer Staples Health Care Information Technology Communication Services Real Estate Conglomerates focusing on a single industry will tend to be placed within a single category in this structure, while conglomerates with more widespread holdings will see their holdings allocated to the appropriate sector. Although conglomerates and the companies that comprise them may participate in one or more of the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) market sectors, some analyses find it useful to segment conglomerates into their own sector to interpret performance in order to develop their investment strategies. In some cases, conglomerates spread their holdings across a wide range of businesses that have little to no relationship to each other, but many conglomerates focus on companies serving a single industry, such as energy, food products, or aerospace.

The conglomerates sector is a stock market industry group composed of conglomerate firms.

What Is the Conglomerates Sector?

The conglomerates sector refers to the group of stocks in the market that consist of large corporations holding a variety of diverse and sometimes unrelated subsidiary companies. Because many conglomerates hold unrelated businesses among one another and may not be direct competitors, the sector itself is quite difficult to analyze as a peer group.

The conglomerates sector is a stock market industry group composed of conglomerate firms.
A conglomerate is a corporation that is made up of a number of different, sometimes unrelated subsidiary businesses.
Once a hot sector, conglomerates have fallen out of favor over the past decades, and have underperformed the broader market in what has become known as the conglomerate discount.

Understanding the Conglomerates Sector

Conglomerates are large holding companies comprised of diverse and unrelated business units. Although conglomerates and the companies that comprise them may participate in one or more of the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) market sectors, some analyses find it useful to segment conglomerates into their own sector to interpret performance in order to develop their investment strategies.

Taking part in many different businesses can help a conglomerate diversify the risks posed from being in a single market. Doing so may also help the parent lower total operating costs and require fewer resources. But there are also times when such a company grows too large that it loses efficiency. In order to deal with this, the conglomerate may divest. This is known as the conglomerate "curse of bigness."

The performance of the conglomerate sector mirrors the performance of large indexes such as the S&P 500 Index, in part because conglomerates such as 3M (MMM), Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A, BRK.B), and General Electric (GE) are well-represented.

Decreasing Popularity of the Conglomerate Sector

In recent decades, the prominence of conglomerates has declined for a number of reasons, including the breakup value of a conglomerate's subsidiaries and the variance of dividend yields that result from exposure in a range of different industries.  

In many cases, the financial advantages that gave rapid rise to the formation of many conglomerates in the 1960s began to wear thin by the 1980s. Especially as interest rates were adjusted in response to steadily rising inflation, and the performance of conglomerate holdings did not especially improve, companies began to divest their holdings and narrow the focus of the sectors in which they participated.

Additionally, the size of a conglomerate can also hurt its stock performance, and is subject to a conglomerate discount, which results in a conglomerate being valued at less than than the sum of its holdings.

The Conglomerates Sector and the Global Industry Classification Standard

The Global Industry Classification Standard established a system of classifying industries, identifying 11 top-tier sectors, which are subcategorized into 24 industry groups, 69 industries, and 158 sub-industries. The conglomerate sector is not formally acknowledged in this classification structure.

The 11 top-tier GICS sectors are:

Conglomerates focusing on a single industry will tend to be placed within a single category in this structure, while conglomerates with more widespread holdings will see their holdings allocated to the appropriate sector.

Related terms:

Communication Industry ETF

A communication industry ETF invests in securities specializing in communication, including telecommunications, media, and internet companies. read more

Conglomerate

A conglomerate is a company that owns a controlling stake in smaller companies of separate or similar industries that conduct business separately. read more

Conglomerate Discount Defined

A conglomerate discount refers to investor's inclination to value a diversified group of businesses and assets at less than the sum of its parts. read more

Corporation

A corporation is a legal entity that is separate and distinct from its owners and has many of the same rights and responsibilities as individuals. read more

Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS)

The Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) is a system for categorizing every public company by economic sector and industry group. read more

Sector Breakdown & Stock Market Use

A sector breakdown is the mix of sectors within a fund or portfolio, typically expressed as a portfolio percentage.  read more

Sector ETF

A sector exchange-traded fund (ETF) invests in the stocks and securities of a specific sector, typically identified in the fund title. read more

Sector

A sector is an area of the economy in which businesses share the same or a related product or service. Read how to use sectors to increase investing gains. read more

S&P 500 Index – Standard & Poor's 500 Index

The S&P 500 Index (the Standard & Poor's 500 Index) is a market-capitalization-weighted index of the 500 largest publicly traded companies in the U.S. read more

Subsidiary

A subsidiary is an independent company that is more than 50% owned by another firm. The owner is usually referred to as the parent company or holding company. read more