AMEX Composite
The American stock Exchange introduced a new amex Composite Index with a new ticker symbol, XAX, on 2 January 1997. The XAX is a market capitalization-weighted, price appreciation index, and replaced the amex Market Value Index (XAM) which, since its inception, has been calculated on a "total return basis" to include the reinvestment of dividends paid by amex companies. The new amex Composite Index is more comparable with other major indexes, which reflect only the price appreciation of their respective components. |
Similar financial terms
AMEXThe American Stock Exchange (AMEX) is the second-oldest U.S. stock exchange, located on Wall Street in New York City. AMEX started as an alternative to the NYSE, the AMEX originating on the curb outside the NYSE, where brokers traded stocks that failed to meet the Big Board's listing requirements. Considerably smaller in market capitalization and trading volume than NASDAQ and the NYSE, the AMEX conducts trading through a centralized specialist system and is home primarily to small and medium-si ...
American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
The second-largest stock exchange in the United States. It trades mostly in small-to medium-sized companies.
