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Indexes & averages

Dozens of indexes and averages track changes in securities prices. As an investor, you can use them to help gauge the performance of your portfolio. Some of the best-known indexes and averages, such as the Standard & Poor's 500-stock Index (S&P 500) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), are even regarded as indicators of the health of the US economy.

But each index and average is constructed a little differently and provides a different profile of the market. For instance, some include thousands of securities and give a broad picture of the market, while others are narrow measures. Some are price-weighted, giving more emphasis to changes in the prices of higher priced stocks in the index, while others are capitalization-weighted. Still others are equal-weighted and count an increase in the value of one stock as much as the increase in the value of another. Some are computed using a geometric average, while others are computed using an arithmetic average.

While these may sound like technical details, they can have a profound effect on index results — and what you can learn from them.

Using indexes & averages

Indexes & averages are the yardsticks you use to measure how well your investments — and the economy as a whole — are doing.
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Exchange traded funds

These hybrid investments — part individual security and part mutual fund — track a particular index and seek to replicate its performance.


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