I have BDI, BCI, BPI, BSI and BHSI from their begining. (Complete Historical Data) (ready for Excel analysis).
Also TC Avg of Panamax / Supra / Handy (Complete Historical Data) (ready for Excel analysis).
There isn't one.
Under the 'full-market capitalization' methodology, the total market capitalization of a company, irrespective of who is holding the shares, is taken into consideration for computation of an index. However, if instead of taking the total market capitalization, only the Free-float market capitalization of a company is considered for index calculation, it is called the Free-float methodology. Free-float market capitalization is defined as that proportion of total shares issued by the company which are readily available for trading in the market. It generally excludes promoters' holding, government holding, strategic holding and other locked-in shares, which will not come to the market for trading in the normal course. Thus, the market capitalization of each company in a Free-float index is reduced to the extent of its Free-float available in the market.
Example (provided by rediff.com reader Munish Oberoi):Source: http://www.rediff.com/money/2008/feb/21bspec.htm Suppose the Index consists of only 2 stocks: Stock A and Stock B. Suppose company A has 1,000 shares in total, of which 200 are held by the promoters, so that only 800 shares are available for trading to the general public. These 800 shares are the so-called 'free-floating' shares. Similarly, company B has 2,000 shares in total, of which 1,000 are held by the promoters and the rest 1,000 are free-floating. Now suppose the current market price of stock A is Rs 120. Thus, the 'total' market capitalisation of company A is Rs 120,000 (1,000 x 120), but its free-float market capitalisation is Rs 96,000 (800 x 120). Similarly, suppose the current market price of stock B is Rs 200. The total market capitalisation of company B will thus be Rs 400,000 (2,000 x 200), but its free-float market cap is only Rs 200,000 (1,000 x 200). So as of today the market capitalisation of the index (i.e. stocks A and B) is Rs 520,000 (Rs 120,000 + Rs 400,000); while the free-float market capitalisation of the index is Rs 296,000. (Rs 96,000 + Rs 200,000). The year 1978-79 is considered the base year of the index with a value set to 100. What this means is that suppose at that time the market capitalisation of the stocks that comprised the index then was, say, 60,000 (remember at that time there may have been some other stocks in the index, not A and B, but that does not matter), then we assume that an index market cap of 60,000 is equal to an index-value of 100. Thus the value of the index today is = 296,000 x 100/60,000 = 493.33 This is how the Sensex is calculated. The factor 100/60000 is called index divisor.
No....RBI (Richards Bay Index) is only the price for the product. FOB (Free on Board) is including transport and loaded onto a ship, but not the sea transport to the buyer.
Yes. Any individual stock may be priced appropriately based on future free cash flows. However, stock markets are just indices. And some stocks have more of an impact than others. And if those stocks are mispriced, the stock market will be mispriced, even though some members of the index may be correctly priced. However, if all stocks of an index are priced appropriately then the index will be priced appropriately.
Environment Canada has historical data available on their website free of charge. See link below.
Copies of the Social Security Death Index are available from many online sources. There is a free copy on FamilySearch.org's Historical Record Collections. Some of the paid online subscription programs such as Ancestry.com also have copies.
No
Information on Baltic amber can be found at a lot of places online. However, Wikipedia, the online free encyclopedia, provides a lot of information on the history of Baltic amber. Amber Artisans, another online source, also gives guidelines on how to recognise real Baltic amber.
"The town of Baltiisk, just outside Kaliningrad, is the only Russian Baltic Sea port said to be "ice-free" all year round, and the region hence plays an important role in maintenance of the Baltic Fleet."
Gutentenberg online, several universities, and Google Books all have lots of free historical ebooks.
You have to use Vibosoft free data backup software http://www.vibosoft.com/free-data-backup-windows.html
You can find free information, concerning the index common trust, in most business newspapers. Many business publications will have the information.
yes
Sensitive index is also known as sensex. It is a free-float market capitalization weighted index of 30 component stocks, representing a sample of large and financially sound companies.
If you can connect your Nexus 7 to a wifi hotspot, then the data would be free.
Germany wanted to ensure its military was free to invade Poland. The USSR, for its part, annexed the western side of Poland and the Baltic countries.