CNX Nifty

NIFTY 50 Index
Foundation 1995
Operator India Index Services and Products
Exchanges National Stock Exchange of India
Constituents 50
Type Large cap
Market cap INR billion (2014)
Weighting method Capitalization-weighted
Website Official home page

The NIFTY 50 index is National Stock Exchange of India's benchmark stock market index for Indian equity market. Nifty is owned and managed by India Index Services and Products (IISL), which is a wholly owned subsidiary of the NSE Strategic Investment Corporation Limited. IISL had a marketing and licensing agreement with Standard & Poor's for co-branding equity indices until 2013.

NIFTY 50 Index has shaped up as a largest single financial product in India, with an ecosystem comprising: exchange traded funds (onshore and offshore), exchange-traded futures and options (at NSE in India and at SGX and CME abroad), other index funds and OTC derivatives (mostly offshore).

The NIFTY 50 covers 22 sectors of the Indian economy and offers investment managers exposure to the Indian market in one portfolio. During 2008-12, Nifty 50 Index share of NSE market capitalisation fell from 65% to 29%[1] due to the rise of sectoral indices like CNX Bank, CNX IT, CNX Mid Cap, etc. The CNX Nifty 50 Index gives 29.70% weightage to financial services, 0.73% weightage to industrial manufacturing and nil weightage to agricultural sector.[2]

The NIFTY 50 index is a free float market capitalisation weighted index. The index was initially calculated on full market capitalisation methodology. From June 26, 2009, the computation was changed to free float methodology. The base period for the CNX Nifty index is November 3, 1995, which marked the completion of one year of operations of National Stock Exchange Equity Market Segment. The base value of the index has been set at 1000, and a base capital of Rs 2.06 trillion.[3]

History

Formerly known as the S&P CNX Nifty Index, it was renamed in 2013 with the expiration of agreement between IISL and Standard and Poor’s Financial Service on 31st Jan 2013.

Components

List of 50 companies that form part of NIFTY 50 Index as on 11 March 2016:

Company Name Symbol
ACC Limited ACC
Adani Ports & SEZ Limited ADANIPORTS
Ambuja Cements Ltd. AMBUJACEM
Asian Paints Ltd. ASIANPAINT
Axis Bank Ltd. AXISBANK
Bajaj Auto Ltd. BAJAJ-AUTO
Bank of Baroda BANKBARODA
Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited BHEL
Bharat Petroleum Corporation BPCL
Bharti Airtel Ltd. BHARTIARTL
Bosch Ltd. BOSCHLTD
Cairn India Ltd. CAIRN
Cipla Ltd. CIPLA
Coal India Ltd. COALINDIA
Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd. DRREDDY
GAIL (India) Ltd. GAIL
Grasim Industries Ltd. GRASIM
HCL Technologies Ltd. HCLTECH
HDFC Bank Ltd. HDFCBANK
Hero MotoCorp Ltd. HEROMOTOCO
Hindalco Industries Ltd. HINDALCO
Hindustan Unilever Ltd. HINDUNILVR
Housing Development Finance Corporation Ltd. HDFC
ITC Limited ITC
ICICI Bank Ltd. ICICIBANK
Idea Cellular Ltd. IDEA
IndusInd Bank Ltd. INDUSINDBK
Infosys Ltd. INFY
Kotak Mahindra Bank Ltd. KOTAKBANK
Larsen & Toubro Ltd. LT
Lupin Limited LUPIN
Mahindra & Mahindra Ltd. M&M
Maruti Suzuki India Ltd. MARUTI
NTPC Limited NTPC
Oil & Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. ONGC
PowerGrid Corporation of India Ltd. POWERGRID
Punjab National Bank PNB
Reliance Industries Ltd. RELIANCE
State Bank of India SBIN
Sun Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd. SUNPHARMA
Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. TCS
Tata Motors Ltd. TATAMOTORS
Tata Power Co. Ltd. TATAPOWER
Tata Steel Ltd. TATASTEEL
Tech Mahindra Ltd. TECHM
UltraTech Cement Ltd. ULTRATECH
Vedanta Ltd. VEDL
Wipro WIPRO
Yes Bank Ltd. YESBANK
Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd. ZEEL

Major falls

On the following dates, the NIFTY 50 index suffered major single-day falls (of 150 or more points)

  1. 24 Aug 2015 --- 490.95 Points (driven by meltdown in the Chinese stockmarket)[4]
  2. 16 Aug 2013 --- 234.45 Points(because of rupee depreciation)[5]
  3. 27 Aug 2013 --- 189.05 Points[6]
  4. 03 Sep Aug 2013 --- 209.30 Points
  5. 06 May 2015 - NSE Nifty slipped below the 8,200-level by falling 179.25 points or 2.15 per cent to 8145.55. Besides, overnight losses in the US markets on worries about surging oil prices, poor trade data and growing tensions over the Greek debt crisis weighed on sentiments.[7]
  6. In 1991, New Delhi kickstarted the economic reforms process owing mainly to the serious balance of payments crisis it was facing.
  7. 1997 Asian Financial Crisis - Investors deserted emerging Asian shares, including an overheated Hong Kong stock market. Crashes occur in Thailand, Indonesia, South Korea, Philippines, and elsewhere, reaching a climax in the October 27, 1997 mini-crash.

See also

References

External links

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