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What are the different types of indices?

Let’s say, you received an email from your HR department asking you to list the objectives you have achieved this year as part of your appraisal process.

Exciting, right? But how do you summarise information that spans over 365 days? Unless you are an Aryabhatta, you will have to go through key milestones and achievements to analyse the past year quickly.

Achieving important targets, delivering massive growth on a project and leading a team to success would perhaps summarise the achievements. On the other hand, poor performance in some tasks and lack of initiatives to grow the business would fall into the 'areas to work on' category.

With this evaluation, you can assess your performance and the key highs and lows of your professional year. Indexes play a similar role in markets. Let’s tell you how.

What is an index?

Since thousands of stocks are listed on our exchanges, it is virtually impossible to analyse and track each company individually. So, the exchanges like NSE and BSE arrange a group of shares based on criteria like trading frequency, share size, etc., to make an index. It helps to track a certain segment or the market as a whole.

In simple terms, these indices are created by selecting listed companies that meet a predefined criteria. These indices can be based on variables such as industry, segment or market capitalisation. So, if the shares of the top listed companies are doing well, you'd say that the index of that particular group of companies has outperformed this year and vice versa.

Different types of indices

For example, under the NIFTY brand, we have 15 sectoral indices viz. Automobiles, Banking, Private Bank, PSU Bank, Realty, IT, Financial Services, FMCG, Pharma, Metal, Oil & Gas, Healthcare, Consumer Durables Media and  Financial Services 25/50.

Conclusion

The indices provide a historical comparison of the returns on money invested in the stock market versus other forms of investment, such as gold or bonds. These returns can be used as a benchmark against which to compare the performance of an equity fund. These returns also act as a leading indicator of the performance of the economy as a whole or of a particular sector.

Categories: Mutual Funds