50th Anniversary of the S&P 500
We normally never do press releases -- I find they are pretty worthless, and given the sheer ignorant laziness of the PR flacks who send us outrageously off topic garbage, they all get deleted (99% of them unread).
But there were so many interesting details in this one that we succumbed to its numerological charms.
Here now, some fascinating trivia about the S&P500:
The S&P 500 was launched on March 4th, 1957.
Closing price on March 5, 1957 = 44.42
Average closing price since 1957 = 377.69
Average point change since 1957 = 0.11
Average percentage change since 1957 = 0.03%
S&P 500 closed up 6,608 days; average gain = 2.71 or 0.63%
S&P 500 closed down 5,900 days; average loss = -2.80 or -0.64%
73 days of no change in the price of the S&P 500
Best one day point gain = March 16, 2000, +66.33
Worst one day point loss = March 14, 2000, -83.95
Best one-day percentage gain = October 21, 1987, +9.10%
Worst one-day percentage loss = October 19, 1987 -20.47%
Average yield = 3.19% (currently 1.73%)
Average P/E on GAAP 17.37 (currently 17.74)
Average payout 49.64% (currently 30.58%)
First closed at or over 100 on June 4, 1968
First closed at or over 200 on November 2, 1985
First closed at or over 500 on March 24, 1995
First closed at or over 1,000 on February 2, 1998
First closed at or over 1,500 on March 22, 2000
Highest close = 1527.46 on March 24, 2000
Best year = 1958, 38.06%
Worst year = 1974, -29.72%
Best quarter = Q1 1975, +21.59%
Worst quarter = Q3 1974, -26.12%
Best month = October 1974, 16.30%
Worst month = October 1987, -21.76%
Estimated shares traded for the underlying issues is 4,287,212,318,580
Estimated value: $1.2 trillion is directly invested in the index.
10.83% total return, of which 32.87% is from reinvested dividends
Best stock Altria (formerly Phillip Morris), $1 invested now worth $8,400+
86 issues are still in the index since 1957
On the aside, why would S&P release "30 Interesting Data Points" on the S&P500's 50th anniversary? 50 Would have been ideal, while 25 more workable. The only significant numerical correlation I can think of for the number 30 is thats how many stocks there are in the Dow Industrials . . .
>
Source:
S&P Celebrates 50th Anniversary of the S&P 500
PRNewswire-FirstCall
February 28, 2007
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/
www/story/02-28-2007/0004536425&EDATE=
Tuesday, March 06, 2007 | 09:00 AM | Permalink
| Comments (5)
| TrackBack (1)
add to de.li.cious |
digg this! |
add to technorati |
email this post
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/763/16493572
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 50th Anniversary of the S&P 500:
» Russel Rebalance Today from The Big Picture
As if the well-contained subprime mortage issue wasn't adding enough volatility, today is the Russell Indices rebalancing. Newly re-constructed Russell indices (Global, 1000, 2000, 3000 and Microcap) will take effect after the the NYSE close at 4pm. Ba... [Read More]
Tracked on Jun 22, 2007 3:00:39 PM
Comments
they should have gone for 500 interesting data points
Posted by: rob | Mar 6, 2007 9:25:11 AM
"86 issues are still in the index since 1957"
That means 414 are not. To be sure, there's been plenty of M&A in the past 50 years, but this stat ought be somewhat cautionary to CEO's.
Posted by: Tom Barta | Mar 6, 2007 11:49:37 AM
30 probably has nothing to do with the Dow. More likely, they could only come up with 30 items.
Posted by: David Andrew Taylor | Mar 6, 2007 12:58:45 PM
Love the 86 originals remain stat. Index investors revel in the glory of survivorship bias!
Posted by: C. Maoxian | Mar 6, 2007 9:06:31 PM
What was the S&P 500 on March 28,2007???
Posted by: George Arbutina | Oct 27, 2007 9:09:21 PM




























