Chapter 2: Understanding the Index
NISM Series VIII — Equity Derivatives | 5% weightage | ~5 exam questions
What this chapter is about
Shortest chapter in terms of exam weight — 5% means roughly 5 questions. But these 5 questions are almost entirely free marks if you understand two things well: how the Nifty is constructed, and what Beta means. The chapter also covers applications of indices (ETFs, index funds) which appear occasionally. Don't over-invest time here — read it once, know the key facts cold.
Key concepts
What is a Stock Index? — A basket of stocks representing a segment of the market. It measures the overall direction and performance of that segment. The index value itself is a number — it has no intrinsic monetary value.
Nifty 50 construction — the most tested part:
- 50 largest and most liquid stocks on NSE
- Weighted by Free Float Market Capitalisation (not equal weight, not total market cap)
- Free Float = shares available for public trading (excludes promoter holdings, government stakes, etc.)
- Heavier the free float market cap of a stock, higher its weight in the index
- Example: Reliance Industries has ~7% weight, a smaller company might have 0.5%
Why Free Float? — Because only freely tradeable shares affect market prices. Promoter-locked shares don't trade, so they shouldn't influence the index.
Key indices in India:
- NSE: Nifty 50, Bank Nifty, Nifty IT, Nifty Midcap
- BSE: Sensex (30 stocks, also free float market cap weighted)
Beta — the most exam-relevant concept in this chapter:
- Beta measures the sensitivity of a stock's price movement relative to the INDEX movement
- Beta = 1 → stock moves exactly with the index
- Beta > 1 → stock moves MORE than the index (high volatility, aggressive)
- Beta < 1 → stock moves LESS than the index (defensive, stable)
- Beta is NOT related to interest rates — this is the main trap
Portfolio Beta = weighted average of betas of all stocks in the portfolio, where weights are the value invested in each stock (not equal weight)
Applications of indices:
- Index Funds — mutual funds that passively replicate the index
- ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds) — index funds traded on the exchange like stocks
- Index Derivatives — futures and options on the index itself
- Benchmarking — measuring fund manager performance against the index
Tracking Error — the difference between an index fund's returns and the actual index returns. Caused by fund expenses, cash balances held by the manager, and dividend timing. Lower tracking error = better index replication. NOT fixed or regulated by SEBI — varies across funds.
Corporate actions and index impact:
- Stock split → no impact on index value (price falls but shares increase proportionally)
- Bonus shares → no impact on index value (same reason)
- Dividend → can cause slight impact (stock price drops by dividend amount on ex-date)
Real market example
Reliance Industries has a free float market cap of ₹12 lakh crore. Total Nifty free float market cap is ₹180 lakh crore. Reliance's weight = 12/180 = 6.7%.
If Reliance falls 5% on a bad day, it drags the Nifty by approximately 6.7% × 5% = 0.33%. A small company with 0.5% weight falling 5% moves the index by just 0.025% — barely a ripple.
Now consider a stock with Beta of 1.5. If Nifty rises 2%, this stock is expected to rise 3% (1.5 × 2%). If Nifty falls 2%, this stock falls 3%. Higher beta = amplified moves in both directions.
Trap Alert
Trap 1: "Beta measures sensitivity to interest rate movements" → FALSE Beta measures sensitivity to INDEX movements. Interest rate sensitivity is a completely different metric. This is the most common wrong answer in CH2.
Trap 2: "All 50 stocks in Nifty are equally weighted" → FALSE Nifty uses free float market capitalisation weighting. Reliance has 7x the weight of a smaller company. Equal weighting would mean each stock = 2% — that's not how it works.
Trap 3: "Tracking error is the same for all index funds, fixed by SEBI" → FALSE Tracking error varies across funds and is NOT fixed by any regulator. It depends on each fund's expenses, cash management, and replication strategy.
Trap 4: "A stock split reduces the index value" → FALSE Stock splits don't affect index value. The price falls but the number of shares increases proportionally, so the market cap (and therefore index weight) stays the same. The index is adjusted accordingly.
Trap 5: "Private equity funds are applications of indices" → FALSE Private equity funds are NOT linked to any index — they invest in unlisted companies. Index applications = index funds, ETFs, index derivatives, benchmarking.
Must-remember rules
- Nifty = free float market capitalisation weighted, NOT equal weighted
- Beta > 1 = aggressive (moves more than index) | Beta < 1 = defensive (moves less)
- Beta measures index movement sensitivity, NOT interest rate sensitivity
- Portfolio beta = value-weighted average of individual stock betas
- Stock splits and bonus issues = NO impact on index value
- Tracking error = not fixed by SEBI, varies by fund
- ETFs trade on exchange like stocks, index funds don't
- Private equity = NOT an index application
Weightage note
5% of exam = ~5 questions. Mostly easy questions. Beta and Nifty construction are the two must-know topics. Don't spend more than 30 minutes total on this chapter — know the concepts, move on.
Quick revision — 60 second scan
- Nifty 50 = free float market cap weighted
- Beta = sensitivity to index (NOT interest rates)
- Beta > 1 = more volatile than market | Beta < 1 = less volatile
- Portfolio beta = weighted average (by value invested)
- Stock split/bonus = no index impact
- Tracking error = varies by fund, not regulated
- Index applications: index funds, ETFs, index derivatives, benchmarking