- Wilshire 5000
The "Dow Jones Wilshire 5000 Composite Index", more simply the Dow Jones Wilshire 5000, is a
market capitalization -weighted index of the market value of all stocks actively traded in the USA.pecifics
The index is intended to measure the performance of all publicly traded companies based in the
United States having "readily available price data." Hence the index includes nearly allcommon stock s, REITs, andlimited partnership shares traded primarily on theNew York Stock Exchange ,NASDAQ , orAmerican Stock Exchange .The price of each issue included in the index is weighted by its relative market capitalization. Let:
* "M" = Number of issues included in the index;
* "P"i = Price of one share of issue "i" included in the index;
* "N"i = Number of shares of issue "i".
* = a fixed scaling factorThe index is then calculated as::
One index point corresponds to about US$1 billion. Hence the value of the index, multiplied by one billion dollars, roughly equals the total capitalization of the US
stock market . Dow Jones publishes two versions of the index, one based on fullmarket capitalization and another based on a "float-adjusted market capitalization", reflecting the number of shares actually available to trade.The list of issues is updated monthly to add new listings resulting from corporate spin-offs and
initial public offering s, and to remove issues which move to the pink sheets or stop trading for ten days or more.History
Wilshire Associates began the index in1974 , naming it for the approximate number of issues it included at the time. It was renamed the "Dow Jones Wilshire 5000" in April 2004, afterDow Jones & Company assumed responsibility for its calculation and maintenance.The Wilshire 5000 did not close above its March 24, 2000 peak above 14,000 points (record high of the
20th century ) until February 20, 2007, and a hypothetical investment in the Wilshire 5000, made at the 2000 peak and with subsequent dividends reinvested, did not become profitable on a closing basis until October 3, 2006. [http://www3.marketwatch.com/News/Story/8vQgvhGJ5LZB2tnlXZlzLSm?siteid=mktw&dist=TNMKTW]On April 20, 2007, the index closed above 15,000 for the first time. On that day, the
S&P 500 was still several percentage points below its March 2000 high, because small cap issues absent from the S&P 500 and included in the Wilshire 5000 outperformed the large cap issues that dominate the S&P 500 during the cyclical bull market.Since late 2007, the expansion of subprime lending difficulties into a wider financial crisis plunged the United States stock market into a
bear market that accelerated beginning onUgly Monday , September 15, 2008. On October 8, the Wilshire 5000 closed below 10,000 for the first time since 2003, and trades near the 9,000 level as of October 9, representing a loss of more than $6.5 trillion in market capitalization since thenominal record highs of 2007.External links
* [http://www.wilshire.com/Indexes/Broad/Wilshire5000/ Official page] at Wilshire Associates website
* [http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=%5EDWC Yahoo! Finance page for ^DWC]
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