The Dow Jones Industrial Average, a collection of major stocks that provide a gauge for how the markets are performing, is replacing three of its components, including its most longstanding member.
Longstanding Dow staple and oil giant Exxon Mobil, pharmaceutical company Pfizer and defense contractor Raytheon Technologies are out.
Cloud software seller Salesforce, biopharmaceutical company Amgen and manufacturing conglomerate Honeywell are in.
The removal of Exxon, which had been part of the Dow since 1928, comes amid a massive slump for the oil sector during the recession tied to COVID-19. The pandemic has dampened energy usage.
Chevron will be the only energy company remaining in the Dow. Other members include Walmart, Home Depot, Johnson & Johnson, Microsoft, McDonald's, Cisco, Verizon, Visa, Nike, Goldman Sachs, Boeing and Disney.
S&P Dow Jones Indices, which controls the index and made the announcement, said the decision was due to Apple's decision to conduct a 4-for-1 stock split. That split would have reduced the percentage of the index devoted to technology.
"The announced changes help offset that reduction," the organization said in a statement. "They also help diversify the index by removing overlap between companies of similar scope and adding new types of businesses that better reflect the American economy."
The changes won't alter the current value of the index when they take effect before trading begins Aug. 31, as the Dow uses a price-weighting technique to balance out the value of the components.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/08/25/exxon-pfizer-dow-jones-industrial-average-salesforce-djia/5630916002/....
Exxon mobil and pfizer are such staple assets, big sprawling multi nationals. Its surprising to see them cut from the DOW average.
Does this mean no one wants pfizer's 4th booster shot?
There have been past discussions on cryptocurrency based indexes which might learn from this trend. In the past I favored independently created indexes, over ones regulated by industry personnel.
This could signal the demise of america's crude oil industry. Whereby wind or solar based energy stocks might later be included in the DOW to fill the vacuum created by exxon's departure. The attempted explanation invoking apple's stock split didn't fit known DOW criteria that I know of. Which makes the move seem more arbitrary.