Price-Weighted Index

Price-Weighted Index

A price-weighted index is a stock index in which each company included in the index makes up a fraction of the total index proportional to that company's share stock price per share. A stock with a higher price will be given more weight than a stock with a lower price and will thus have a greater influence on the index's performance. In a price-weighted stock index, each company's stock is weighted by its price per share, and the index is an average of the share prices of all the companies. Price-weighted indexes give greater weight to stocks with higher prices in terms of their contribution to the index value and changes in the index. A price-weighted index can be used to track the average stock price of a given market or industry. In a price-weighted index, a stock that increases from $110 to $120 will have the same effect on the index as a stock that increases from $10 to $20, even though the percentage move for the latter is far greater than that of the higher-priced stock. A price-weighted index is a stock index in which each company included in the index makes up a fraction of the total index proportional to that company's share stock price per share. Another type of weighted index is the market capitalization-weighted index, where the shares of each stock are based on the market value of the outstanding shares. Price-weighted indexes are useful because the index value will be equal to (or at least proportionate to) the average stock price for the companies included in the index.

In a price-weighted stock index, each company's stock is weighted by its price per share, and the index is an average of the share prices of all the companies.

What Is a Price-Weighted Index?

A price-weighted index is a stock index in which each company included in the index makes up a fraction of the total index proportional to that company's share stock price per share. In its simplest form, adding the price of each stock in the index and dividing by the total number of companies determines the index's value.

A stock with a higher price will be given more weight than a stock with a lower price and will thus have a greater influence on the index's performance.

In a price-weighted stock index, each company's stock is weighted by its price per share, and the index is an average of the share prices of all the companies.
Price-weighted indexes give greater weight to stocks with higher prices in terms of their contribution to the index value and changes in the index.
A price-weighted index can be used to track the average stock price of a given market or industry.

Understanding a Price-Weighted Index

In a price-weighted index, a stock that increases from $110 to $120 will have the same effect on the index as a stock that increases from $10 to $20, even though the percentage move for the latter is far greater than that of the higher-priced stock. Higher-priced stocks exert a greater influence on the index's, or the basket's, overall direction.

To calculate the value of a simple price-weighted index, find the sum of the share prices of the individual companies, and divide by the number of companies. In some averages, this divisor is adjusted in order to maintain continuity in the event of stock splits or changes to the list of companies included in the index.

Price-weighted indexes are useful because the index value will be equal to (or at least proportionate to) the average stock price for the companies included in the index. This allows the construction of indexes that will track the average stock price performance of a specific sector or market.

One of the most popular price-weighted stocks is the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), which consists of 30 different stocks, or components. In this index, the higher-price stocks move the index more than those with lower prices, thus the price-weighted designation. The Nikkei 225 is another example of a price-weighted index.

Other Weighted Indexes

In addition to price-weighted indexes, other basic types of weighted indexes include value-weighted indexes and unweighted indexes. For a value-weighted index, like those in the MSCI family of strategy indexes, the number of outstanding shares is a factor. To determine the weight of each stock in a value-weighted index, the price of the stock is multiplied by the number of shares outstanding.

For example, if Stock A has five million outstanding shares and is trading at $15, then its weight in the index is $75 million. If Stock B is trading at $30, but only has one million outstanding shares, its weight is $30 million. So, in a value-weighted index, Stock A would have more say in how the index moves than Stock B.

In an unweighted index, all stocks have the same impact on the index, no matter their share volume or price. Any price change in the index is based on the return percentage of each component. For example, if Stock A is up 30%, Stock B is up 20%, and Stock C is up 10%, the index is up 20%, or (30 + 20 + 10)/3 (i.e., the number of stocks in the index).

Another type of weighted index is the market capitalization-weighted index, where the shares of each stock are based on the market value of the outstanding shares. Other types of weighted indexes include revenue-weighted, fundamentally weighted, and float-adjusted. All have their positives and negatives, depending on the investor's goals and market knowledge.

Related terms:

Basket

A basket is a collection of securities with a similar theme, while a basket order is an order that executes simultaneous trades in multiple securities. read more

Capitalization-Weighted Index

A capitalization-weighted index is a type of market index with individual components that are weighted according to their total market capitalization. read more

Constituent

A constituent is a single stock or company that is part of a larger index such as the S&P 500 or Dow Jones Industrial Average.  read more

Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA)

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) is a popular stock market index that tracks 30 U.S. blue-chip stocks. read more

Equal Weight

Equal weight is a proportional measure that gives the same importance to each stock in a portfolio or index fund, regardless of a company's size. read more

Fundamentally Weighted Index

A fundamentally weighted index is a type of equity index in which components are chosen based on fundamental criteria as opposed to market capitalization. read more

Index

An index measures the performance of a basket of securities intended to replicate a certain area of the market, such as the Standard & Poor's 500. read more

Index Divisor

An index divisor is a number chosen at inception of the index which is applied to the index to create a more manageable index value. read more

Quoted Price

A quoted price is the most recent price at which an investment has traded. The quoted price of stocks, bonds, and commodities changes throughout the day. 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