Blue Chip Index
Blue-Chip Index Explained: Overview, Function, and Examples
Key Takeaways
- A blue-chip index tracks the performance of financially stable, well-established companies known for consistent returns.
- Notable blue-chip indices include the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average.
- Blue-chip stocks offer stable earnings growth and often pay regular dividends.
- Investing in blue-chip indices via ETFs or index funds can be more cost-effective than buying individual stocks.
- Blue-chip indices offer a reliable gauge of industry or economic strength.
What Is a Blue-Chip Index?
A blue-chip index is a collection of shares from the most reputable and financially secure companies, known as blue chips, which are admired for providing consistent returns to investors. These indexes offer a clear snapshot of economic health and are preferred benchmarks for market performance. Examples include renowned indexes like the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average, which encapsulate a wide span of industry leaders.
We'll explain how blue-chip indexes work, why they're valuable to investors, and give you examples of major blue-chip indexes worldwide.
How Does a Blue-Chip Index Work?
Investors can invest in a blue-chip index and gain exposure to a variety of stable stocks by purchasing shares of a blue-chip-focused exchange-traded fund (ETF) or index fund. These passive vehicles give you stakes in all of a blue-chip index's constituents at a much lower cost than if you were to buy all of the individual stocks yourself.
Besides the DJIA and S&P 500, other examples of blue-chip indexes include the New Europe Blue Chip Index (NTX), which tracks 30 of the top stocks traded in central, eastern, and southeastern Europe, and the DAX Index, which tracks the top 30 companies on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
The term blue chip originates from the game of poker, where the highest denominated chip is colored blue. While there is no universal definition of what makes up a blue-chip company, there are several qualities each company shares.
For one thing, all blue chips have a track record of stable earnings growth and reward shareholders by issuing dividend payments with excess profits. In addition, many of the companies possess a significant competitive advantage that allows them to maintain a leadership position in a specific industry.
Important Factors of Blue-Chip Indexes
A blue-chip index such as the DJIA tracks the performance of merely 30 stocks when the total investment universe consists of thousands of assets. Instead, investors have started to use the S&P 500—a market-capitalization-weighted index of the top 500 companies—as a benchmark for the stock market. It offers exposure to a broader array of industries and sectors that are often missing from a traditional blue-chip index.
The Dow 30 puts a greater emphasis on price rather than standard market factors such as momentum, size, value, and market capitalization. In doing so, the Dow 30 excludes some of the best-performing and most dynamic companies in the U.S. stock market, including Amazon, Alphabet, and Meta (formerly Facebook).
Important
There are many well-known ETFs on the market, but only a handful of notable blue-chip ETFs following blue-chip indices, including the SPDR S&P 500 and iShares Core S&P 500 ETFs, which both track the S&P 500.
Top Examples of Blue-Chip Indexes
There is a handful of ETFs that do a decent job of tracking the performance of blue-chip indexes. Notable examples include the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) and iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV), which both track the S&P 500, and the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA), which follows the DJIA.
The SPY was one of the first ETFs, with an inception date that goes back to 1993, and has grown into one of the largest ETFs with $380 billion in assets under management (AUM), as of July 2021.1 The IVV, meanwhile, was launched in 2000 and has $297 billion in net assets, while the DIA ETF, launched in 1998, has $30.4 billion in AUM.23
State Street Global Advisors. "SPDR® S&P 500® ETF Trust." Accessed July 26, 2021.
State Street Global Advisors. "SPDR® S&P 500® ETF Trust." Accessed July 26, 2021.
State Street Global Advisors. "SPDR® Dow Jones® Industrial Average ETF Trust." Accessed July 26, 2021.
State Street Global Advisors. "SPDR® Dow Jones® Industrial Average ETF Trust." Accessed July 26, 2021.
BlackRock. "iShares Core S&P 500 ETF." Accessed July 26, 2021.
BlackRock. "iShares Core S&P 500 ETF." Accessed July 26, 2021.
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