The SMI was introduced on 30 June 1988 at a baseline value of 1,500 points. It closed above the symbolic level of 10,000 points[5] for the first time on 2 July 2019. It reached the 12,000 point milestone on 17 June 2021.[6] It is currently in a bear market,[7] which it entered on 22 September 2022 after losing more than 20%. This ended the bull market that had reached an all-time record closing price short of 13,000[8] on 28 December 2021.
Its composition is examined once a year. As of September 2022, it contains 18 large-caps and two mid-caps.[9] Calculation takes place in real-time. As soon as a new transaction occurs in a security contained in the SMI, an updated index level is calculated and displayed. However, the index is updated no more than once per second.[10] The SMI is calculated in Swiss Francs, the currency of the Swiss Confederation.
The securities contained in the SMI currently represent approximately 70%[1] of the free-float Swiss equity market capitalization, as well as 85% to 90% of the total trading turnover[11] of Swiss and Liechtenstein equities listed on the SIX Swiss Exchange. Because the SMI is considered to be a mirror of the overall Swiss stock market, it is used as the benchmark for numerous mutual funds, index funds and ETFs, and as the underlying index for numerous derivative financial instruments such as options, futures and structured products.
The underlying universe of the SMI, from which candidate constituents are selected, is the SPI. To be accepted into the SMI, a given issue must meet stringent requirements with regard to liquidity and market capitalization. On the one hand, it must represent at least 50% of the average liquidity of the SPI constituent issues. On the other hand, it must have a minimum free-float capitalization equal to 0.45% or more of the entire SPI capitalization. Thus, trading volume and capitalization are the determining factors in the quarterly rankings. The composition of the index is reviewed annually on the third Friday in September.[citation needed]
Fixed number of 20 securities
The SMI comprises a fixed number of 20 securities as of the ordinary review date in September 2007. Prior to this date, the index contained 25 listings.[citation needed]
In 2017, in order to address the issue that the top three constituents (Nestlé, Roche, Novartis) account for more than 60% of the index capitalization, SIX Swiss Exchange changed the rules of the SMI to introduce capped weighting.[10] The weight of any constituent in the SMI index can no longer exceed 18%.[citation needed]
Readjusting any weight exceeding 18% down to that value is done, in principle, on a quarterly basis. However, whenever a constituent reaches a weight exceeding 20% during a quarter (intra-quarter breach), then the weight is brought back to 18% without waiting for the next quarterly review.[citation needed]
To make the transition smoother, there was an initial transition period during which these changes were progressively implemented, in steps of at most 3% per quarter.[citation needed]
Additionally, a new index, the SPI 20, was created to continue indexing the 20 SMI constituents without any caps.[citation needed]
SMI constituents
Current constituents
As of 13 June 2023, the following 20 stocks make up the SMI index.[9][13]
The rank is based on free-float capitalization as of 13 June 2023. The first ten weights are given as of 28 April 2023.[1] The other weights are given as of 23 March 2020. The latest update following the ordinary review was implemented in June 2023, when Kuehne + Nagel replaced Credit Suisse Group.
SMI is also the name of a family of indices encompassing the SMI itself, but also the SMI MID with the next 30 large-caps (2) and mid-caps (28), and the SMI Expanded with all 50 shares.
The indices are available in several variations. For example, the SMI, which is a price index, also exists as a performance index, the SMI Cum Dividend (SMIC), which takes into account dividend distributions.[1]
History
History of index constituents
Date
Event
June 2007
The ranking as of 30 June 2007 (according to average capitalization and the turnover achieved during one year, i.e. from 1 July 2006 through 30 June 2007) determined which companies would remain within the SMI after the number of issues was changed to 20. On 5 July 2007, SWX announced that Ciba Specialty Chemicals, Lonza Group, Givaudan, SGS and one of the two classes of shares of Swatch Group would leave the SMI as of 24 September 2007 leaving 20 securities in the index.[14]
Actelion replaced by Lonza Group after Actelion's purchase by Johnson & Johnson.[20] In the same month, Sika AG replaced Syngenta after its purchase by ChemChina.[21]
June 2018
Sika announced a 1:60 stock split.[22] Before this change, it was the SMI constituent with the highest price per share.
The following table shows the annual development of the Swiss Market Index since 1988.[28]
Year
Closing level
Change in Index
(Points)
(%)
1988
1,435.40
1989
1,778.10
342.70
23.87
1990
1,383.10
−395.00
−22.21
1991
1,670.10
287.00
20.75
1992
2,105.40
435.30
26.06
1993
2,956.70
851.30
40.43
1994
2,629.30
−327.40
−11.07
1995
3,299.20
669.90
25.48
1996
3,942.20
643.00
19.49
1997
6,265.50
2,323.30
58.93
1998
7,160.70
895.20
14.29
1999
7,570.10
409.40
5.72
2000
8,135.37
565.27
7.47
2001
6,417.84
−1,717.53
−21.11
2002
4,630.75
−1,787.09
−27.85
2003
5,487.81
857.06
18.51
2004
5,693.17
205.36
3.74
2005
7,583.93
1,890.76
33.21
2006
8,785.74
1,201.81
15.85
2007
8,484.46
−301.28
−3.43
2008
5,534.53
−2,949.93
−34.77
2009
6,545.91
1,011.38
18.27
2010
6,436.04
−109.87
−1.68
2011
5,936.23
−499.81
−7.77
2012
6,822.44
886.21
14.93
2013
8,202.98
1,380.54
20.24
2014
8,983.37
780.39
9.51
2015
8,818.09
−165.28
−1.84
2016
8,219.87
−598.22
−6.78
2017
9,381.87
1,162.00
14.14
2018
8,429.30
−952.57
−10.2
2019
10,616.94
2,187.64
25.95
2020
10,703.51
86.57
0.82
2021
12,875.66
2,172.15
20.29
2022
10,729.40
−2,146.26
-16.67
2023
11,137.79
408.39
3.81
Milestones
The following table shows historic milestones of the Swiss Market Index. Latest seen values are not final: italic indicates that the value may be seen again if the bear market persists; parentheses indicate that the value will be seen again if we reenter a bull market (previous peak reached again); Other values may be seen again in case of a crash (assuming a threshold of -50%).
To keep the scale logarithmic, it uses increments similar to exchange ticks: 1 between 5 and 10, 2 between 10 and 20, 5 between 20 and 50, 10 between 50 and 100, etc.