OMX Stockholm 30
OMX Stockholm 30 | |
---|---|
base data | |
Country | Sweden |
Stock exchange | OMX |
ISIN | SE0000337842 |
WKN | 969817 |
symbol | OMXS30 |
RIC | ^ OMXS30 |
Bloomberg code | OMX <INDEX> |
category | Stock index |
Type | Price index |
family | OMX indices |
The OMX Stockholm 30 (OMXS30) is a Swedish share index and consists of the 30 most traded shares on the Stockholm Stock Exchange OMX .
calculation
The OMX Stockholm 30 is a price index in which the 30 largest and most liquid stocks on the Stockholm Stock Exchange OMX are listed. These account for 65 percent of the trading volume and 45 percent of the market capitalization of all stocks traded on OMX. A limited measurement period is considered for the calculation and the individual values are calculated in Swedish kronor . The basis is the bid prices . The weighting is based on the market capitalization of the listed companies.
The index level is determined solely on the basis of share prices and only adjusted for income from subscription rights and special payments. Corporate actions such as stock splits have no (distorting) influence on the index. The calculation is updated every second during OMX trading hours from 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. CET . The composition of the index is revised twice a year, on the first trading day of the month in January and July.
history
20th century
The OMX Stock Market Index (OMX Index) has been calculated since September 30, 1986. The index basis was initially at 500 points. With effect from April 27, 1998, there was an index split at a ratio of 4 to 1. The base value from 1986 was set at 125 points.
By October 8, 1987, the Swedish benchmark index rose to a closing level of the equivalent of 162.91 points. After Black Monday on October 19, 1987 on the New York Stock Exchange , the leading index of the Stockholm Stock Exchange accelerated its decline. On November 11, 1987, it closed with 98.86 points, an all-time low. The loss since October 8, 1987 is 39.3 percent.
Over the next three years, the index rose 133.6 percent. On July 4, 1990, it ended trading at 230.93 points. During the recession in the early 1990s, the OMX Index fell to January 8, 1991, to a closing level of 138.25 points. Since July 1990 this corresponds to a loss of 40.1 percent. After rising to 202.83 points by August 15, 1991, the stock market barometer fell by 39.5 percent in the following 14 months. On October 5, 1992, the OMX Index closed trading at 122.70 points.
On January 23, 1997, the leading index closed above the 500 point mark for the first time. On July 20, 1998, the stock market barometer ended trading at 823.20 points. The profit since October 1992 is 570.9 percent. In 1997 and 1998 parts of the world suffered financial , currency and economic crises ( Asian crisis , Russian crisis ). The crises made investors in Sweden nervous and increased capital outflows. On October 8, 1998, the OMX Index closed at 498.64 points. The loss since July 1998 is 39.4 percent.
In the next three years, the stock index achieved numerous records. On November 17, 1999, he ended trading above the 1,000-point mark for the first time. On March 7, 2000, the leading Swedish index closed at an all-time high of 1,539.00 points. The profit since October 1998 is 208.6 percent.
21st century
After the speculative bubble burst in the technology sector ( dot-com bubble ), the index fell to a low of 432.36 points by March 12, 2003. That was a decrease of 71.9 percent since March 2000. It was the biggest fall in the history of the Index.
On November 15, 2004, the Stockholm Stock Exchange merged with the Helsinki Stock Exchange. In order to better distinguish the leading indices of the two countries, the Swedish index was renamed OMX Stockholm 30 and the Finnish index HEX 25 was renamed OMX Helsinki 25 .
March 12, 2003 means the end of the downward slide. From spring 2003 the OMX index began to rise again. By July 13, 2007, it rose 202.7 percent to a closing level of 1,308.76 points. In the course of the international financial crisis , which had its origin in the US real estate crisis in the summer of 2007, the OMXS30 began to sink again. On January 10, 2008, it closed with 989.70 points below the 1,000 point mark. The share index hit a new low on November 21, 2008, when it ended trading at 567.61 points. Since July 13, 2007 this corresponds to a decrease of 56.6 percent.
November 21, 2008 marks the turning point of the downward trend. From autumn 2008 the OMXS30 was on the way up again. By January 18, 2011, it rose by 107.8 percent to a closing level of 1,179.29 points. The weakening of the global economy and the worsening of the euro crisis led to a slump in the index. On September 22, 2011 the OMX Stockholm 30 ended trading at 862.17 points. The loss since January 18, 2011 is 26.9 percent.
The announcement of new bond purchase programs by the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve , which are basically unlimited, led to a recovery in prices on the stock market. The monetary stimulus played a bigger role in the price formation than the global economic slowdown and the state of the companies. On January 4, 2013, the index closed at 1,136.77 points, 31.9 percent higher than on September 22, 2011.
Highs
The overview shows the all-time highs of the OMX Stockholm 30.
Points | date | |
---|---|---|
in the course of trading | 1,547.87 | Tuesday March 7, 2000 |
on a closing price basis | 1,539.00 | Tuesday March 7, 2000 |
Milestones
The table shows the milestones of the OMX Stockholm 30.
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Annual development
The table shows the annual development of the OMX Stockholm 30 since 1986.
year | Final score in points |
Change in points |
Change in% |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | 126.18 | ||
1987 | 105.15 | −21.03 | −16.67 |
1988 | 159.63 | 54.48 | 51.81 |
1989 | 208.48 | 48.85 | 30.60 |
1990 | 150.33 | −58.15 | −27.89 |
1991 | 166.89 | 16.56 | 11.02 |
1992 | 179.64 | 12.75 | 7.64 |
1993 | 274.99 | 95.35 | 53.08 |
1994 | 284.40 | 9.41 | 3.42 |
1995 | 337.96 | 53.56 | 18.83 |
1996 | 469.29 | 131.33 | 38.86 |
1997 | 599.71 | 130.42 | 27.79 |
1998 | 701.31 | 101.60 | 16.94 |
1999 | 1,198.97 | 497.66 | 70.96 |
2000 | 1,056.11 | −142.86 | −11.92 |
2001 | 846.49 | −209.62 | −19.85 |
2002 | 493.20 | −353.29 | −41.74 |
2003 | 636.29 | 143.09 | 29.01 |
2004 | 741.88 | 105.59 | 16.59 |
2005 | 960.01 | 218.13 | 29.40 |
2006 | 1,147.27 | 187.26 | 19.51 |
2007 | 1,081.44 | -65.83 | −5.74 |
2008 | 662.33 | −419.11 | −38.75 |
2009 | 951.72 | 289.39 | 43.69 |
2010 | 1,155.57 | 203.85 | 21.42 |
2011 | 987.85 | −167.72 | −14.51 |
2012 | 1,104.73 | 116.88 | 11.83 |
2013 | 1,332.95 | 228.22 | 20.66 |
2014 | 1,464.55 | 131.60 | 9.87 |
2015 | 1,446.82 | −17.73 | −1.21 |
2016 | 1,517.20 | 70.38 | 4.86 |
2017 | 1,576.94 | 59.74 | 3.94 |
2018 | 1,408.74 | −168.20 | −10.67 |
2019 | 1,771.85 | 363.11 | 25.78 |
composition
On September 22, 2018, the OMX Stockholm 30 consisted of the following companies:
Surname | Branch | logo | Index weighting in% |
---|---|---|---|
Asea Brown Boveri | Electrical and environmental technology | 2.73 | |
Alfa Laval | Packaging, heat exchangers | 2.52 | |
Assa Abloy (B) | Security technology | 4.55 | |
AstraZeneca | Pharma | 2.17 | |
Atlas Copco (A) | Industry | 5.23 | |
Atlas Copco (B) | Industry | 2.25 | |
Autoliv | Automotive supplier | 1.40 | |
Boliden | Mining | 1.74 | |
Electrolux (B) | Housewares | 1.53 | |
Ericsson (B) | telecommunications | 5.31 | |
Essity (B) | Paper industry | 3.57 | |
Getinge (B) | Medical devices | 0.62 | |
Hennes & Mauritz (B) | Textile retail | 4.81 | |
Hexagon (B) | measuring technology | 4.51 | |
Investor AB (B) | Financial services | 4.34 | |
Kinnevik (B) | Holding | 1.77 | |
Nordea | Financial services | 9.31 | |
Sandvik | Steel industry | 4.95 | |
Svenska Cellulosa Aktiebolaget (B) | Paper industry | 1.44 | |
Skandinaviska Enskilda banks (A) | Banks | 5.02 | |
Securitas (B) | Security technology | 1.37 | |
Skanska (B) | Construction company | 1.63 | |
SSAB (A) | Steel industry | 0.32 | |
Svenska Handelsbanken | Banks | 5.10 | |
Svenska Kullagerfabriken (B) | Industry | 1.86 | |
Swedbank | Banks | 5.75 | |
Swedish Match | Tobacco and matches | 2.12 | |
Tele2 | telecommunications | 1.40 | |
Telia Company | telecommunications | 4.52 | |
Volvo (B) | Automobiles | 6.20 |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ NASDAQ OMX: Rules for the Construction and Maintenance of the OMX Stockholm 30 Index (PDF; 179 kB)
- ↑ a b c Euro investor: Historical prices from 1986
- ↑ a b Yahoo: Historical prices from 2004
- ↑ Historical data: OMX Stockholm 30 Index - Sweden (^ OMXS). Accessed January 21, 2020 .
- ↑ investing.com: [1]