Outrageous Predictions
Révolution Verte en Suisse : un projet de CHF 30 milliards d’ici 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Chief Investment Strategist
Note: This content is marketing material.
Last week, UnitedHealth Group (UNH) took center stage in U.S. equity markets—not for its gains, but for a sharp selloff that sent the stock nearly 23% lower. The move weighed heavily on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, where UNH holds significant influence due to the index’s price-weighted methodology.
The episode serves as a timely reminder of the structural differences between the Dow Jones and the S&P 500—and why understanding those differences is critical for investors making allocation decisions.
The stock declined sharply amid a convergence of negative developments:
The stock ended the week down 23%, with most of the damage occurring on 13 May, when UNH fell 18% in a single day. You can read more about the great UnitedHealth collapse in this article: How a healthcare titan lost 54% in weeks
UnitedHealth is a constituent of both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500, but the way these indices are constructed means the impact of UNH’s moves is felt very differently.
The Dow is price-weighted, meaning a stock’s influence is based on its share price. UNH is one of the highest-priced stocks in the index, so large moves in its share price can swing the Dow significantly. On 13 May, despite half the Dow’s components closing higher, the index still fell around 270 points—with UNH accounting for over 400 points of downward pressure, according to our estimates.
By contrast, the S&P 500 is market-cap weighted, which spreads exposure more broadly across sectors and companies. While UNH’s sharp drop was felt, the S&P 500 still managed to close up 0.7%, lifted by gains in large-cap tech names. Notably, more than half of the index’s components ended the day in the red—underscoring how market-cap weighting can mute the impact of single-stock declines.
This dynamic played out in reverse just days later. On 19 May, UNH rebounded strongly—rising 8.2% in a single session. The Dow, with its heavy price-based exposure to UNH, gained 0.3%. The S&P 500, however, rose only 0.09%, again illustrating how index structure influences performance.
Index construction at a glance
Investors looking to capitalize on potential rebounds in specific sectors, like healthcare, might consider targeted investments in the DJIA or sector-specific ETFs.
Maintaining a core allocation to the S&P 500 ensures broad market exposure and mitigates risks associated with individual stock volatility.
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