Russell Indexes

Russell Indexes

Russell's family of global equity indexes, including the industry-leading U.S. equity indexes (note that Russell uses "indexes" rather than "indices"), allows investors to track the performance of distinct market segments worldwide.

Many investors use mutual funds or exchange-traded funds based on the Russell Indexes as a way of gaining exposure to certain portions of the U.S. stock market. Additionally, many investment managers use the Russell Indexes as benchmarks to measure their own performance. Russell's innovative index design has led to more assets benchmarked to its U.S. index family than all other U.S. equity indexes combined. As of May 2007, Russell's indexes had US$4 trillion in assets benchmarked to them and accounted for 52 percent of assets benchmarked by institutional investors.

The main U.S. index is the Russell 3000 Index, which is divided into several sub-indexes, including the well-known small-cap Russell 2000 Index. The list of stocks in the Russell 3000 is compiled by the Tacoma, Washington-based Russell Investment Group. Using a rules-based and transparent process, Russell forms its indexes by listing all companies in descending order by market capitalization adjusted for float, which is the actual number of shares available for trading. In the United States, the top 3,000 stocks (those of the 3,000 largest companies) make up the broad-market Russell 3000 Index. The top 1,000 of those companies make up the large-cap Russell 1000 Index, and the bottom 2,000 (the smallest companies) make up the small-cap Russell 2000 Index.

History

Russell's index story began in 1984 when the firm launched its family of U.S. indexes to measure U.S. market segments and hence better track the performance of investment managers. The resulting methodology produced the broad-market Russell 3000 Index and subcomponents such as the small-cap Russell 2000 Index.

Construction Methodology

The Russell Indexes are objectively constructed based on transparent rules. The broadest U.S. Russell Index is the Russell 3000E Index which contains the 4,000 largest (by market capitalization) companies incorporated in the U.S., plus (beginning with the 2007 reconstitution) companies incorported in an offshore financial center that have their headquarters in the U.S. - a so-called Benefits driven incorporation. Each Russell Index is a subset of the Russell 3000E Index and broken down by market capitalization and style. The members of the Russell 3000E Index and its subsets are determined each year during annual reconstitution and enhanced quarterly with the addition of Initial Public Offerings (IPOs). The Russell 3000E Index represents approximately 99 percent of the U.S. equity market. Russell excludes stocks trading below US$1; stocks that trade on the pink sheets and OTC Bulletin Board; closed-end mutual funds, limited partnerships, and royalty trusts; and non-U.S. incorporated stocks (other than the benefits driven incorporations described above), foreign stocks, and American Depositary Receipts (ADRs). Also, Berkshire Hathaway is excluded despite its large market capitalization because its high price per share limits its liquidity.

Annual Reconstitution

Russell rebalances its indexes once each year in June, called “reconstitution.” The reconstitution consists of updating the global list of investable stocks and assigning them to the appropriate indexes. The Russell indexes do not immediately replace a company that merges with another firm or has its stock delisted. However, Russell adds Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) on a quarterly basis, capturing these stocks in a systematic way.

Primary Indexes

In addition to the primary indexes listed below, Russell publishes Value and Growth versions of each U.S. index. This divides each index roughly in half, separating companies classified as value stocks from those classified as growth stocks. Companies can appear in both the value and growth versions of an index, though the total number of shares between the value and growth versions will equal the number in the main index. The primary indexes are:
*Russell 3000 Index: The broad U.S. stock market, including both large and small capitalization companies.
*Russell 1000 Index: The large-cap index of the top 1,000 stocks in the Russell 3000 Index.
*Russell 2000 Index: The small-cap index of the bottom 2,000 stocks in the Russell 3000.
*Russell Top 200 Index: The mega-cap index of the very largest 200 stocks in the Russell 3000.
*Russell Top 50 Index: Measures the performance of the 50 largest companies in the Russell 3000 Index.
*Russell Midcap Index: The bottom 800 stocks in the Russell 1000 Index. The Russell Top 200 Index plus the Russell Midcap Index yields the Russell 1000.
*Russell 2500 Index: A mid- to small-cap index of the bottom 2,500 stocks in the Russell 3000.
*Russell Microcap Index: A micro-cap index of the stocks ranked from 2,001-4,000 in the Russell indexing universe, consisting of capitalizations ranging from $50 million to $2.5 billion. Hence, this is an index of the 1,000 smallest Russell 3000 stocks, plus 1,000 smaller stocks.
*Russell Small-Cap Completeness Index: The index includes stocks from the Russell 3000 Index that do not appear in the S&P 500 Index. An investor wishing to use the Russell 3000 Index as a measure of exposure to the complete U.S. stock market who wishes to use the S&P 500 Index rather than the Russell 1000 Index as a way of getting exposure to large-cap companies can combine the S&P 500 Index with the Russell Small Cap Completeness Index to get the Russell 3000 Index.

Russell indexes in Japan

Russell/Nomura equity indexes for Japan (calculated with Nomura Securities Co., Ltd.) offer broad market or style benchmarks for investors in that country. These pioneering, comprehensive, equity style indexes offer free-float adjustment in the Japanese market.

External links

* [http://www.russell.com/Indexes/ Russell Indexes Official Site]
* [http://www.russell.com/ Russell Investment Group]
* [http://www.russell.com/us/sitenav.asp Russell Investment Group - US]
* [http://www.russell.com.au Russell Investment Group - Australia]
* [http://www.russell.com/ca Russell Investment Group - Canada]
* [http://www.russell.com/jp Russell Investment Group - Japan]
* [http://www.russell.com/uk Russell Investment Group - United Kingdom]
* [http://www.russell.com/indexes/about/russell_indexes_construction_methodology_overview.asp Index Construction and Methodology]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Russell Indexes — US equity index widely used by pension and mutual fund investors that are weighted by market capitalization and published by the Frank Russell Company of Tacoma, Washington. For example, the Russell 3000 index includes the 3,000 largest US… …   Financial and business terms

  • Russell — is an English, Irish, or Scottish name derived from old French, the old French word for Red was rouse ; hence the carry over from French the English Russell, the name also derives from the animal, the fox. Its uses include:People*Arthur Russell… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell Investments — Infobox Company company name = Russell Investments company company type = Private foundation = 1936 location = key people = John Schlifske, President CEO Mike Phillips, Chairman Karl Ege, Vice Chairman num employees = 2,000 (January 2007)… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell 1000 Index — The Russell 1000 Index is a stock market index of US stocks.The ticker is RUI or similar.See Russell Indexes page for main discussion.ComponentsThe table below lists the component stocks of the Russell 1000 Index as of January 2008.External… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell 2000 — The Russell 2000 Index is a stock market index consisting of 2000 small cap US stocks.The ticker is RUT or similar. See Russell Indexes page for main discussion.External links* [http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^RUT Yahoo! Finance page for ^RUT] *… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell 3000 Index — The Russell 3000 Index is a stock market index of US stocks.The ticker is RUA or similar.See Russell Indexes page for main discussion.This index measures the performance of 3,000 publicly held US companies based on total market capitalization,… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell Midcap Index — The Russell Midcap Index is a stock index of US stocks.The ticker is RMC or similar.See Russell Indexes page for main discussion.External links* [http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^RMC Yahoo! Finance page for ^RMC] *… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell Investments — Sommaire 1 Présentation 2 Histoire 3 Métiers 4 Nouveau marché 5 Accords et Partenariats …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Russell Roberts (economist) — Russell Roberts, a student of Milton Friedman [ [http://www.econtalk.org/archives/2006/09/friedman on cap 1.html Friedman on Capitalism and Freedom, EconTalk Permanent Podcast Link: Library of Economics and Liberty ] ] and Austrian School… …   Wikipedia

  • Russell 3000 Growth Index — A market capitalization weighted index based on the Russell 3000 index. The Russell 3000 Growth Index includes companies that display signs of above average growth. The index is used to provide a gauge of the performance of growth stocks in the U …   Investment dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”