The S&P 1500, or S&P Composite 1500 Index, is a stock market index of US stocks made by Standard & Poor's. It includes all stocks in the S&P 500, S&P 400, and S&P 600. This index covers approximately 90% of the market capitalization of U.S. stocks and is a broad measure of the U.S. equity market.
Foundation | May 18, 1995[1] |
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Operator | S&P Global |
Exchanges | Nasdaq, NYSE, CBOE |
Trading symbol |
|
Constituents | 1,506[1] |
Type | Small, Medium and Large cap |
Market cap | US$46.0 trillion (as of December 29, 2023) |
Weighting method | Market value-weighted |
Related indices | |
Website | www |
Other subsets
editStandard & Poor's also provides the S&P 900 index (a combination of the S&P 500 index plus the S&P 400 mid-cap index)[2] and the S&P 1000 (the S&P 400 plus the S&P 600 small-cap index).[3]
Versions
editThe "S&P 1500" generally quoted is a price return index; there is also "total return" version of the index.[citation needed] These versions differ in how dividends are accounted for. The price return version does not account for dividends; it only captures the changes in the prices of the index components.[4] The total return version reflects the effects of dividend reinvestment.
Annual returns
editYear | Price return | Total return |
---|---|---|
2023 | 23.41% | 25.47% |
2022 | -19.12% | -17.78% |
2021 | 26.66% | 28.45% |
2020 | 15.81% | 17.92% |
2019 | 28.34% | 30.90% |
2018 | −6.77% | −4.96% |
2017 | 18.80% | 21.13% |
2016 | 10.65% | 13.03% |
2015 | −1.03% | 1.01% |
2014 | 10.88% | 13.08% |
2013 | 30.12% | 32.80% |
2012 | 13.67% | 16.17% |
2011 | −0.26% | 1.75% |
2010 | 14.17% | 16.38% |
2009 | 24.33% | 27.25% |
2008 | −38.16% | −36.72% |
2007 | 3.60% | 5.47% |
2006 | 13.28% | 15.34% |
2005 | 3.83% | 5.66% |
2004 | 9.96% | 11.78% |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "S&P Composite 1500". Retrieved July 7, 2023.
- ^ "S&P 900". Retrieved July 7, 2023.
- ^ "S&P 1000". Retrieved July 7, 2023.
- ^ "S&P 500 Index".
External links
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