How is the Sensex calculated?

The Sensex is one of the most widely followed index in India, and in this post we are going to look at how the Sensex is calculated.

The Sensex is constructed using the free float methodology, which simply refers to a company’s share capital that is freely available for trading.

You know that market capitalization is the number of shares that a company has multiplied by the price per share, so when they say that Coal India has become the most valuable company in the country – this is what they refer to.

Free float is that part of the company’s capital that’s not held by promoters, governments or other strategic investors and is available to trade on the stock exchange freely.

Now, the free float market capitalization method simply means that the company with a higher free float will have a higher weight in the index, and a great way to understand is to just take a look at the Sensex constituents for a particular date.

In this table I’ve taken the data as it stands on November 4th 2011.

Scrip Code Company Close Price No.of Shares (normal) Full Mkt. Cap.

(Rs. crore)

Free-Float Adj. Factor Free-Float Mkt. Cap

(Rs. crore)

*Weight in Index

(%)*

500325 RELIANCE 879.6 3274230107 288001.28 0.55 158400.7 10.97
500209 INFOSYS LTD 2829.1 574203082 162447.79 0.85 138080.62 9.56
500875 I T C LTD 210.35 7773036720 163505.83 0.7 114454.08 7.93
532174 ICICI BANK L 885.2 1152447612 102014.66 1 102014.66 7.06
500010 HOUSING DEVE 682.9 1469093501 100324.4 0.95 95308.18 6.6
500180 HDFC BANK LT 482.1 2335493765 112594.15 0.8 90075.32 6.24
500510 LARSEN & TOU 1392.85 611161097 85125.57 0.9 76613.02 5.31
532540 TCS LTD. 1099.1 1957220996 215118.16 0.3 64535.45 4.47
500112 STATE BANK O 1964.25 634998991 124729.68 0.45 56128.35 3.89
532454 BHARTI ARTL 397.95 3797530096 151122.71 0.35 52892.95 3.66
500312 ONG CORP LTD 277.65 8555490120 237543.18 0.2 47508.64 3.29
500520 MAHINDRA & M 835.05 613974839 51269.97 0.8 41015.98 2.84
500696 HIND UNI LT 378.85 2160326258 81843.96 0.5 40921.98 2.83
500570 TATA MOTORS 188 2691485485 50599.93 0.7 35419.95 2.45
500470 TATA STL 467.9 959214779 44881.66 0.7 31417.16 2.18
532555 NTPC LTD 179.55 8245464400 148047.31 0.2 29609.46 2.05
500103 BHEL 333.65 2447600000 81664.17 0.35 28582.46 1.98
532977 BAJAJ AUTO 1743.1 289367020 50439.57 0.5 25219.78 1.75
532286 JINDAL STEEL 577.3 934509595 53949.24 0.45 24277.16 1.68
507685 WIPRO LTD. 371.55 2457457840 91306.85 0.25 22826.71 1.58
524715 SUN PHARMACE 511.55 1035550385 52973.58 0.4 21189.43 1.47
500182 HEROMOTOCO 2116.2 199687500 42257.87 0.5 21128.93 1.46
533278 COAL INDIA 326.35 6316364400 206134.55 0.1 20613.46 1.43
500440 HINDALCO IN 139 1918551613 26667.87 0.7 18667.51 1.29
500900 STERLITE IN 123.15 3360700478 41387.03 0.45 18624.16 1.29
500400 TATA POWER 103.3 2373072360 24513.84 0.7 17159.69 1.19
532500 MARUTISUZUK 1123.35 288910060 32454.71 0.5 16227.36 1.12
500087 CIPLA LTD. 293.7 802921357 23581.8 0.65 15328.17 1.06
532868 DLF LIMITED 246.8 1698001797 41906.68 0.25 10476.67 0.73
532532 JAIPRAK ASSO 79.25 2126433182 16851.98 0.55 9268.59 0.64

Notice how there is not much difference between the market capitalization of  Reliance and Coal India relative to their weight in the Sensex. One has a weight of almost 12% while the other has a weight of just 1.43%.

The difference is due to the fact that while most of Coal India is owned by the government, most of Reliance is owned by the general public and has a much higher free float as a result.

You will also see that there is a column called Free Float Adj Factor there which indicates what fraction should the total market capitalization be multiplied with to come up with the free float market capital to be considered in the Sensex calculation.

So, they just don’t say this company has a free float of 42.5% so let me multiply its market cap with .425 but rather they have slabs and decide how much to multiply the total market capitalization based on which slab it falls under.

Here is the table that shows the slab:

% Free-Float

Free-Float Factor

% Free-Float

Free-Float Factor

>0 – 5%

0.05

>50 – 55%

0.55

>5 – 10%

0.1

>55 – 60%

0.6

>10 – 15%

0.15

>60 – 65%

0.65

>15 – 20%

0.2

>65 – 70%

0.7

>20 – 25%

0.25

>70 – 75%

0.75

>25 – 30%

0.3

>75 – 80%

0.8

>30 – 35%

0.35

>80 – 85%

0.85

>35 – 40%

0.4

>85 – 90%

0.9

>40 – 45%

0.45

>90 – 95%

0.95

>45 – 50%

0.5

>95 – 100%

1

The next thing to look at are the weights, and it’s obvious that the way the index has been constructed – the weights change every second because price is an input for how much a stock will influence the Sensex, and that changes every second.

I have been recording the percentages for a few days to write this post, and here is a result from the past few days.

Nov 1 2011

 Nov 2 2011

 Nov 4 2011

 Company

Weight

 Company

 Weight

 Company

 Weight

RELIANCE

10.78

RELIANCE

10.93

RELIANCE

10.97

INFOSYS LTD

9.63

INFOSYS LTD

9.61

INFOSYS LTD

9.56

I T C LTD

7.88

I T C LTD

7.93

I T C LTD

7.93

ICICI BANK L

7.18

ICICI BANK L

7.12

ICICI BANK L

7.06

HOUSING DEVE

6.64

HOUSING DEVE

6.62

HOUSING DEVE

6.6

HDFC BANK LT

6.27

HDFC BANK LT

6.29

HDFC BANK LT

6.24

LARSEN & TOU

5.32

LARSEN & TOU

5.31

LARSEN & TOU

5.31

TCS LTD.

4.52

TCS LTD.

4.52

TCS LTD.

4.47

STATE BANK O

3.78

STATE BANK O

3.8

STATE BANK O

3.89

BHARTI ARTL

3.65

BHARTI ARTL

3.56

BHARTI ARTL

3.66

ONG CORP LTD

3.31

ONG CORP LTD

3.32

ONG CORP LTD

3.29

HIND UNI LT

2.92

HIND UNI LT

2.94

MAHINDRA & M

2.84

MAHINDRA & M

2.85

MAHINDRA & M

2.87

HIND UNI LT

2.83

TATA MOTORS

2.54

TATA MOTORS

2.52

TATA MOTORS

2.45

TATA STL

2.2

TATA STL

2.19

TATA STL

2.18

NTPC LTD

2.04

NTPC LTD

2.02

NTPC LTD

2.05

BHEL

1.9

BHEL

1.89

BHEL

1.98

BAJAJ AUTO

1.73

BAJAJ AUTO

1.73

BAJAJ AUTO

1.75

JINDAL STEEL

1.63

JINDAL STEEL

1.64

JINDAL STEEL

1.68

WIPRO LTD.

1.6

WIPRO LTD.

1.6

WIPRO LTD.

1.58

HEROMOTOCO

1.49

SUN PHARMACE

1.46

SUN PHARMACE

1.47

SUN PHARMACE

1.46

HEROMOTOCO

1.45

HEROMOTOCO

1.46

COAL INDIA

1.45

COAL INDIA

1.44

COAL INDIA

1.43

STERLITE IN

1.3

STERLITE IN

1.3

HINDALCO IN

1.29

HINDALCO IN

1.27

HINDALCO IN

1.27

STERLITE IN

1.29

TATA POWER

1.17

TATA POWER

1.18

TATA POWER

1.19

MARUTISUZUK

1.14

MARUTISUZUK

1.13

MARUTISUZUK

1.12

CIPLA LTD.

1.05

CIPLA LTD.

1.05

CIPLA LTD.

1.06

DLF LIMITED

0.7

DLF LIMITED

0.7

DLF LIMITED

0.73

JAIPRAK ASSO

0.62

JAIPRAK ASSO

0.62

JAIPRAK ASSO

0.64

This is an important point, and is something that most people aren’t able to wrap their heads around in the first time. When you think about weight of a stock in the Sensex you think of it as a static value like Reliance has 12%, ICICI Bank has 7% and so on, but that is not true because the weight changes every second as the price changes. In this table I have highlighted two companies whose relative importance changed from one day to another in the Sensex.

So, the weight shows you much the stock is currently worth to the Sensex but that is not a static value, and will change every second.

With those things out of the way – now think of the utility of the Sensex – why do you need the Sensex at all?

Like any other index – it tells you how the stock market is performing at any given time – a higher Sensex means share prices are higher, and a lower Sensex means share prices are lower and that share price movement is captured in the form of free float market capital in the Sensex.

To maintain continuity and make the number comparable across time – the Sensex had to have a base – and that base was the market capital of the stock market in 1978 – 79 and the base index value of the Sensex was 100. The value that you see today is the sum of the free float market capital of the thirty companies relative to the base market capital.

The base is not a static value but keeps changing because they need to account for special events like rights issue, bonus issues, change of companies in the index so that these special events don’t affect the continuity of the index.

Based on the market data that I have seen for the past few days I have calculated the current base market capitalization as Rs. 8,221.94 crores.

Formula to calculate the Sensex

The formula to calculate the Sensex is as follows:

(Sum of Free Float Market Capital / Base Market Capital ) x 100

You can get the sum of free float market capital very easily from this page, however this changes every day so you need to save it with you if you need to refer to it later.

For this post – I have saved the data in my spreadsheet.

Let’s look at some of the past data:

Nov 1 2011 (1,437,262.79 / 8221.94) x 100 = 17,480.83

Nov 2 2011 (1,435,949.06 / 8221.94) x 100 = 17,464.84

Nov 7 2011 (1,443,986.58 / 8221.94) x 100 = 17,562.60

Nov 8 2011 ( 1,444,556/ 8221.94) x 100 = 17,569.53

Nov 9 2011 (1,427,501.45 / 8221.94) x 100 = 17,362.10

You can quite easily calculate the Sensex any day by just going to the BSE Website, and getting the total market free float and putting it in this simple formula. If it doesn’t come up correct, then that means the base market capital has been changed and you need to back calculate that and test it out on a few days to make sure that you have the right base market capital and then use it to calculate the Sensex in the ensuing days.

Once you understand all the inputs that go into the calculation it becomes fairly simple to calculate the final Sensex value, but probably more important than calculating the value is to understand the mechanics behind it and what it’s trying to show to you.

As always, questions and comments welcome – especially if there were some parts that you thought were not clear enough and need more explaining.

This post is from the Suggest a Topic page.

80 thoughts on “How is the Sensex calculated?”

  1. Hello. It is an awesome article.

    But, how do we get daily free float market capitalization data? Is there any resource/website which provides us the free float market capitalization on daily basis?

  2. Great article! Concept explained clearly. Where do you get the information about the free float for a specific company (info shown in the table)? Is it also possible to get historic data?

  3. is close price same as the last price of that particular company for that day , or the avg. of the prices in the last 30 mints for the day ? ..

  4. is close price same as the last price of that particular company for that day , or the avg. of the prices in the last 30 mints for the day ?

  5. If i want to calculate the base market capitalisation as on today, how would i go about it? You said in nov 2011 it was 8291. so what would it be today? would i be required to adjust for stock splits or new shares issued during this time?

  6. Hi Manshu,

    Thanks for the wonderful sharing. It helped us in understanding how Sensex is calculated. I understood everything except base market capital. Can you please explain, how is it calculated.??

    Regards,
    Gaurav.

  7. Thanks Manshu for providing the valuable information on Index value calculation. It was really great help me to understand the concept.

  8. nice effort..but let me know that how did you assign the free float factor to the respective companies? as per the table also, the values must be different…

  9. Thank you!

    There can not be more simpler explanation than yours for calculating Sensex. Anybody can understand it. But, I have a query regarding base market capitalization, You have mentioned that it was fixed way back in time. Where do I find from, about the particular companies, whose values were included for calculation, what are the current status of these companies. Why is same data still being followed and the most important, how was it calculated?

    1. Thank you – it was calculated at the time using the market value of the entire share market and calling it a base of 100. Further to that they kept readjusting it for events, so in that sense the same absolute value is not being followed but there is continuity in it because the base is being adjusted so that it is useful to know that if the Sensex is 20,000 and then 40,000 in 5 years we can say that the market doubled in 5 years.

Leave a Reply to bemoneyaware Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *