Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

PX Index

The PX Index (until March 2006 the PX 50) is a capitalization-weighted index of major stocks that trade on the Prague Stock Exchange. It is calculated by the Vienna Stock Exchange.[1] At the time of its inception, the calculation start date for the index was set to the 5th April 1994 and its opening value was fixed at 1,000 points. At this time the index included 50 companies traded on the Prague Stock Exchange, being named accordingly as PX 50.

In 2014, the Prague Stock Exchange introduced the total return index PX-TR. It shares the same base as the PX Index but, unlike the PX index, the PX-TR takes dividends into account.[2]

History

PX-50

After an initial boom encouraged by voucher privatization (the top was in February 1994 retroactively calculated on 1245 points) the index started to decline fast, and ended the year 1994 with 557 points. In 1995 the decline continued (influenced by the Mexican crisis, that discouraged foreign investors from emerging markets) and the index reached its first bottom on 29 June with 387 points. Then the index increased slowly and ended the year 1995 with 426 points. The slow increase continued in 1996 and the index reached its second top on 25 February 1997 with 629 points. In 1998, influenced by the 1998 Russian financial crisis, the index reached its historical bottom on 8 October with 316 points. In 1999 the index emerged back to 500 points. With the help of the dot-com bubble and starting banks privatization, the index reached its second top on 24 March 2000 with 691 points. With the end of dot-com bubble and the IPB Bank crisis, the index declined back to 500 points. In 2001, the index slightly decreased and with the help of the influence of the September 11, 2001 attacks reached bottom on 17 September with 320 points. In 2002, the index slowly increased back to 500 points. In 2003 the index was rising and ended the year with 659 points. With the help of the Czech Republic European Union accession, the index continued rising in 2004. It reached 1000 points on 19 November and ended the year with 1032 points. The index continued rising in 2005 and ended the year with 1473 points.

PX index

On 20 March 2006 the PX 50 index was merged with PX-D into the PX index. The index reached bottom on 13 June with 1167 points after legislative elections, but ended the year with 1589 points. On 29 October 2007 it reached its top with 1936 points and ended the year with 1815 points. As result of the 2007–2008 financial crisis, the index reached 700 points on 27 October 2008, losing 50% of its value in two months; a second bottom was reached on 18 February 2009 at 629 points.

year
max​
min
1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016[3] 2017[3] 2018[3] 2019[3] 2020[4]
1,245 587 582 629 517 526 691 515 479 659 1,032 1,478 1,626 1,936 1,808 1,195 1,315 1,275 1,041 1,066 1,046 1,058 954 1,087 1,140 1,119 1,142
541 387 438 459 316 333 410 320 388 460 662 1,051 1,167 1,565 700 629 1093 843 859 853 901 846 819 919 978 989 690


PX Index base

The components as of March 2020 are sorted by reduced market capitalization:[5]

Past

  • O2 C.R. (ISIN: CZ0009093209) - removed in 2022
  • CETV (ISIN: BMG200452024) - removed in 2020
  • UNIPETROL (ISIN: CZ0009091500) - removed in 2018
  • PLG [cs] (ISIN: CZ0005124420) - removed in 2016
  • NWR (ISIN: GB00B42CTW68) - removed in 2016
  • ORCO (ISIN: LU0122624777) - removed in 2014
  • TMR (ISIN: SK1120010287) - removed in 2014
  • AAA [cs] (ISIN: NL0006033375) - removed in 2013
  • KITD (ISIN: US4824702009) - removed in 2012
  • ECM (ISIN: LU0259919230) - removed in 2011
  • ZENTIVA (ISIN: NL0000405173) - removed in 2009

PX-TR

In March 2014 Prague Stock Exchange introduced new total return index PX-TR. The index shares same base as PX index, but unlike PX index take into account dividends. As the starting exchange day (a benchmark date) was selected 20 March 2006, when PX-50 and PX-D were merged. Main aim of creation of PX-TR index was to promote above average dividend yield of Prague Stock Exchange.[2]

References