U.S. corporate breakups could be catalyst to change Dow
index
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[March 22, 2019]
By Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Shake-ups come
infrequently for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, but some degree of
change may be in the works for the stock index as two of its 30
constituents prepare to transform from large conglomerates into smaller
companies.
The latest occasion to re-examine the Dow stems from chemical company
DowDuPont Inc, which is breaking up into three publicly listed stocks.
The first step, the separation of the company's Dow materials science
division, is due to take effect on April 1.
Another index component, industrial conglomerate United Technologies
Corp, is also in the process of separating into three companies,
possibly in about a year.
While many professional investors prefer other stock gauges to the Dow,
membership in the blue-chip index - often thought of as Main Street's
market barometer - still carries allure because of its relatively few
constituents. Funds with billions of dollars under management are also
linked to the index, so constituent changes affect flows into and out of
stocks.
While pieces of the original components could stay in the Dow, those
corporate actions could spur the overseers of the index to add fresh
blood, some market watchers say.
"All of the options are certainty on the table," said Todd Rosenbluth,
head of ETF and mutual fund research at CFRA. "This could be a catalyst
for a new addition to the broader index."
S&P Dow Jones Indices, which publishes the Dow index, will make an
announcement before April 1, according to spokesman Ray McConville.
Any time there is a corporate action in an index, McConville said, "S&P
DJI will review the index and make any necessary changes and issue a
public announcement before the transaction takes place."
Known for its inclusion of large U.S. companies as well as its
relatively few members compared to other barometers, the Dow has changed
components roughly every two years over the past 20 years. The most
recent such move came last June, when longtime member General Electric
Co was replaced by Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.
Prior to that, DowDupont took over for DuPont in September 2017, after
the latter company merged with Dow Chemical, and Apple replaced AT&T in
March 2015.
The index is a measure of 30 companies designed to provide suitable
sector representation, except for transportation and utilities stocks,
which are covered by other Dow Jones indexes, according to published
methodology for the index.
The overall level of the Dow does not change when its components do,
because the divisor used to calculate the index is adjusted.
Stock selection is "not governed by" quantitative rules, according to
the published methodology, which also says "a stock typically is added
only if the company has an excellent reputation, demonstrates sustained
growth and is of interest to a large number of investors."
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The subjectivity of the criteria regularly prompts speculation about which
companies may qualify.
Some companies that seem like obvious candidates at first blush may have strikes
against them. For example, two of the largest U.S. companies - Amazon.com Inc
and Alphabet Inc, the parent of Google - have share prices that are both well
over $1,000 each.
That's a problem because such high prices would warp the Dow, whose constituents
carry more weight the higher their share price. At about $375 a share, Boeing Co
is the highest priced stock in the Dow by more than $100.
Many indexes, such as the S&P 500, are weighted by companies' market
capitalization, rather than by their share price.
One remaining piece of DowDuPont - the only materials sector stock in the Dow -
could stay in the Dow Jones index.
"If you take DowDuPont off, then there is nothing really with that materials"
exposure, said James Ragan, director of wealth management research at D.A.
Davidson in Seattle. "I am not sure this is an opportunity to make a big change
here."
The DowDuPont breakup will leave Dow, specialty products company DuPont and
Corteva, which focuses on agriculture.
Dow and DuPont would be the biggest of the three, with market values estimated
at about $50 billion and $60 billion, respectively, according to Nomura Instinet
analyst Aleksey Yefremov. "If they want to have a materials company they have to
pick one of these two, just because they are so broad,” Yefremov said.
United Tech is separating into an aerospace supplier, an elevator manufacturer,
and a provider of building products including air-conditioning systems.
Aerospace is by far the biggest division of the three by sales, but with one
aerospace stock already in the Dow - planemaker Boeing - that new company may be
redundant.
In many investors' eyes, the Dow pales in importance as a market barometer to
the S&P 500, with its 500 constituents weighted by market value. Just over $23
billion is invested in mutual and exchange-traded funds tied to the Dow Jones
Industrial Average compared to nearly $4.3 trillion tied to the S&P 500,
according to Lipper research.
But the more than 120-year-old index remains a popular market gauge.
"The Dow’s price-weighted construct and the fact that it’s only 30 names makes
it reasonably distinct from measures that folks will more likely look at to be
representing the market as a whole," said Simeon Hyman, global investment
strategist at ProShares, which has five ETFs with $1.5 billion linked to the
Dow.
But, adds Hyman: "The fact that it’s distinct means that some folks will find
utility in it."
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Alden Bentley and Leslie Adler)
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