What is the S&P/TSX Composite Index?

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Andrew Goldman

Andrew Goldman has been writing for over 20 years and investing for the past 10 years. He currently writes about personal finance and investing for Wealthsimple. Andrew's past work has been published in The New York Times Magazine, Bloomberg Businessweek, New York Magazine and Wired. Television appearances include NBC's Today show as well as Fox News. Andrew holds a Bachelor of Arts (English) from the University of Texas. He and his wife Robin live in Westport, Connecticut with their two boys and a Bedlington terrier. In his spare time, he hosts “The Originals" podcast.

TSX is short for the Toronto Stock Exchange, Canada’s primary exchange, and the 9th largest stock exchange in the world, based on the market capitalization of its companies. S&P stands for Standard & Poor’s, the American financial service company that took over from the previous index, the TSE 300, which lasted from 1977 until S&P took over in 2002.

Like any other benchmark index, the S&P/TSX has three primary functions: to provide an easily understood snapshot of how an country’s public companies are performing, to provide a benchmark against which fund managers can compare their results to assess their success, and to provide a formalized structure that low-cost ETFs and index funds can follow (S&P makes a great deal of money licensing its indices for use in investment products).

While its predecessor had a very specific number of companies included — the TSE 300 included, yep, 300 companies — the S&P/TSX is more fluid. It includes about 250 of the 1,500 or so companies represented on the Toronto exchange, but its companies represent about 70% of the entire market capitalization of the exchange. So obviously, bigger is better when deciding what companies get included, and to be part of the index, a company must represent at least .05 of the entire index, and those with higher market capitalization are more heavily weighted when determining any rises or falls. Membership is by no means permanent; companies will be added or fall off the index based on their market capitalization, volume of trading of their stock, and how much liquid assets they possess. In 2015, for example, the S&P/TSX added 16 new members, and dropped even more companies.

Though the exchange has become less and less natural resource company heavy as Canada’s businesses diversify into areas that have nothing to do with the country's substantial oil reserves, the index is still disproportionately affected by any swings in oil prices.

Last Updated March 6, 2018

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