Expert Guidance:
Managing expectations
Home > Investment Markets: Indexes & averages > Managing expectations > Investment benchmarks
   
Managing expectations
1. Managing expectations
2. Investor expectations
3. Understanding risk
4. Inflation & return
5. Irrational exuberance
6. Investment benchmarks
Using benchmarks
Using benchmarks correctly
Economic indicators
7. Hindsight is 20/20
 
Print and Go Printer
 
INVESTOR TOOLKIT
Dictionary
Calculators & Worksheets
Games & Quizzes
Market Research
Email a Friend

Investment benchmarks

You've learned to accept the ups and downs of investing in the stock market. You understand that even sound, high-quality investments can fluctuate in value — sometimes significantly. Then you may be asking yourself how you can gauge how well you're doing as an investor, if not by any absolute measure of annual gains or a portfolio that never loses value.

This is where benchmarks can help. A benchmark is an index, average, or other measure, the movement of which serves as a standard, or basis of comparison, for evaluating the performance of the overall market. Investors and financial professionals use benchmarks as a gauge against which they set their market expectations, and judge the performance of individual securities, market industries and sectors, and the performance of different securities portfolios.

The Standard & Poor's 500-stock Index (the S&P 500) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (the DJIA or the "Dow") both track the performance of large-cap stocks and are the most widely followed benchmarks of the U.S. stock market. There are also benchmarks for international markets, different subclasses of securities, for instance small-cap stocks, and for other types of investments such as bonds and mutual funds. Sometimes current yields and interest rates are used as benchmarks — such as the yield on the 10-year Treasury note for fixed-income securities and the current interest rate for 30-year mortgages.

Popular benchmarks
Bonds and other fixed income investments Current 10-year Treasury note yield Lehman Brothers Intermediate Government/Corporate Bond Index
The NASDAQ Stock Market® NASDAQ Composite Index
Technology stocks Goldman Sachs Technology Index
Overall market Wilshire 5000 Index
International stocks Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australasia, Far East (EAFE) Index
Japanese market Nikkei Index
Mortgage rates
Current interest rate


 
Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, The Wharton School
         
   
BACK  

 

 
 
Copyright | Contact Us | Link to Us | About Us | Partners | Privacy | Site Map