Name stays the same: The Dow will keep its famous moniker in $607M deal

Dow Jones & Co. is selling a 90 percent stake in its stock market index unit to exchange operator CME Group Inc. for $607.5 million, the companies announced Wednesday.
MAR 04, 2010
Dow Jones & Co. is selling a 90 percent stake in its stock market index unit to exchange operator CME Group Inc. for $607.5 million, the companies announced Wednesday. The joint venture will allow the Dow Jones industrial average to keep its famous name through a long-term licensing agreement, the companies said in a statement. Dow Jones will retain a 10 percent stake and a management role in Dow Jones Indexes. The business offers more than 130,000 stock indexes that are used as benchmarks by investors and licensed for use by mutual funds and other investment products. The business includes widely watched indexes like the Dow Jones utilities average and the Dow Jones transportation average. It also owns such diverse barometers as the Dow Jones Islamic market index and the Dow Jones European energy index. The company's best known index is the industrial average, which began as a basket of 11 stocks in 1884. Today, it includes 30 stocks including Caterpillar Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc., and is used as an indicator by investors around the globe. Dow Jones & Co. is owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. The sale of a prime Dow Jones asset would be among the first since News Corp. bought the publisher in 2007 for $5.7 billion from the families that controlled Dow Jones & Co. Since then the value of the business has plunged. The newspaper industry suffering huge declines in advertising. News Corp. also owns the Journal, the Fox television network, 20th Century Fox movie studio and media outlets in Europe and Australia. Under the deal, the joint venture will raise $613 million in debt to pay Dow Jones the $607.5 million sale price. The deal is expected to be finalized in the first quarter. Dow Jones began searching for a buyer of its index business late last year, and a big question was whether the buyer would be able to keep the iconic industrial average's name. The Dow name comes from Dow Jones & Co. co-founders Charles Dow and Edward Jones. The industrial average is synonymous with the stock market for many investors, and is a fixture at the bottom of TV screens during financial news broadcasts. While it's not the most comprehensive measure of the market — the Standard & Poor's 500 index is widely used as a broader benchmark — the Dow Jones industrials are perhaps the most widely followed metric. For instance, investors were glued to the Dow during the market convulsion of late 2008. On Sept. 29 of that year, nine days after the collapse of investment bank Lehman Brothers, the Dow plunged 777.68 points, its largest one-day point drop ever. About two weeks later on Oct. 13, the index shot up 936.42 points, in its biggest-ever one-day gain. Chicago-based CME Group owns the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, the Chicago Board of Trade and the New York Mercantile Exchange, which it acquired in August 2008. CME also offers a range of global benchmark products across all major asset classes, including futures and options based on interest rates, equity indexes, foreign exchange, energy, agricultural commodities, metals, weather and real estate.

Latest News

Semi-annual reporting will bring big changes, but the fiduciary duty remains
Semi-annual reporting will bring big changes, but the fiduciary duty remains

For the first time in 50 years, issuers could end up reporting twice a year – here’s what the SEC will expect of advisors.

Clearing firm Axos to pay $49.2 million in lawsuit linked to failed broker-dealer
Clearing firm Axos to pay $49.2 million in lawsuit linked to failed broker-dealer

It is the latest in a series of stunning and multi-million dollar FINRA arbitration awards that Wall Street firms have lost in the past few years.

JPMorgan's new AI agents can work for hours without human input
JPMorgan's new AI agents can work for hours without human input

After reporting a 20% lift in private banking gross sales tied to AI tools, JPMorgan is preparing more autonomous AI agents that could significantly increase client coverage across wealth management.

RIA moves: Steward Partners hails historic hire with $2.4B ex-wirehouse team
RIA moves: Steward Partners hails historic hire with $2.4B ex-wirehouse team

Meanwhile, Carlyle-backed MAI Capital announces another expansion in Connecticut, while AlphaCore adds a seven-person group overseeing nearly a billion dollars in Colorado.

SEC orders $10 billion RIA, founder to pay $2.1 million over profit-sharing conflicts
SEC orders $10 billion RIA, founder to pay $2.1 million over profit-sharing conflicts

Foundations Investment Advisors and its former CEO Bryon Rice have agreed to pay about $2.1 million in fines after the SEC found they failed to disclose Rice's trading activity and ownership interests tied to investment funds.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.