Index Management: Rebalancing and Reconstitution

Rebalancing Rebalancing refers to adjusting the weights of the constituent securities in the index. To maintain the weight of each security consistent with the index’s weighting method, the index provider rebalances the index by adjusting the weights of the constituent securities on a regularly scheduled basis (rebalancing dates)—usually quarterly. Rebalancing is necessary because the weights…

Index Construction

Constructing and managing a security market index is similar to constructing and managing a portfolio of securities. Index providers must decide the following: Target Market and Security Selection The first decision in index construction is identifying the target market, market segment, or asset class that the index is intended to represent. The target market may…

Primary Security Markets

When issuers first sell their securities to investors, practitioners say that the trades take place in the primary markets. An issuer makes an initial public offering (IPO)—sometimes called a placing—of a security issue when it sells the security to the public for the first time. A seasoned security is a security that an issuer has already issued. If…