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The Board of Directors of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) yesterday approved the revision of the index calculation methodology of the All Share Price Index (ASPI).
The decision was made at yesterday’s Board meeting to change its calculation basis from Full Market Capitalisation-weighting to Free-Float-Adjusted Market Capitalisation-weighting with effect from January 2022 following consultations with stakeholders.
The effective date with the detailed index calculation methodology will be published on the CSE website in due course.
The CSE calculates and disseminates its benchmark pricing index – the ASPI – and a total return version of it – the All Share Total Return Index (ASTRI). The ASPI calculation is based on the total market capitalisation of its constituent companies as it considers 100% of the issued quantity of a company’s shares for the weighting of the index, irrespective of that company’s public holding percentage. The ASPI takes into account both voting and non-voting shares of all listed companies. As such, the impact of each security’s price change on the index is presently weighted according to that security’s full market capitalisation.
However, the present methodology does not consider the liquidity and actual tradability of each security. As a result, the current ASPI can reflect movements that are not consistent with actual price movements experienced by investors and can be subject to significant volatility based on low volume transactions in shares with very little free float. Therefore, it was decided to use an alternate methodology – a free-float-adjusted index – commonly used by several exchanges that considers only the tradable portion of the issued quantity of securities, also known as the free-float shares, for the calculation of indices. In this method, in the index calculation, each security is weighted based on its free-float-adjusted market capitalisation.
The CSE commenced work on revising the index calculation methodology in July 2021. In line with internationally accepted industry norms, changing a stock exchange’s index methodology requires extensive back testing in order to grasp the impact of the changes. Hence, the CSE followed best practice and conducted reasonable amounts of back testing of the ASPI under the revised index calculation methodology on a pro forma basis dating back to December 2013. This analysis has provided a substantial amount of historical index data observations to understand the impact of a change to a new methodology.
In addition to ASPI, CSE calculates and disseminates a total return version of it namely, All Share Total Return Index (ASTRI). Global financial data provider Standard & Poor (S&P) calculates and disseminates a series of GICS Industry Group Indices of companies listed on the CSE. The ASTRI and GICS indices would also be converted into free-float market capitalisation basis simultaneously and all of the back-testing work has meticulously been completed for these indices as well.
CSE Chairman Dumith Fernando said: “As the governing body of the CSE, we have a responsibility to investors and other market participants in taking due care when implementing significant changes such as a revision of the market index calculation methodology. As a market operator, we cannot rush to make such changes at the cost of prudential management of the market. With the extensive work done over the last few months to back-test the revised index data, the CSE is confident that it has a good understanding of the impact of this proposed revision on the stock market.”
On the implementation date of the revised index calculation methodology, the ASPI will start moving from the same value that it closed on the day immediately prior to the changes. Therefore, when this methodology revision is implemented, the serial continuity of the index will be maintained and there will be no sudden shift of the index level solely due to the launch of the new index.