Houston Chronicle

Let Exxon back into the Dow Jones index

- By Javier Blas BLOOMBERG

In August 2020, Exxon Mobil, the largest American oil company, was expelled from the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the world’s most famous stock index. It was described at the time as green triumphing over greed. Nearly three years later, the mood has changed. ESG isn’t the coolest financial trend; neither is divesting from oil companies. Regardless of whether the expulsion was right or wrong, the time has come to reverse it.

Sending Exxon to the naughty corner hasn’t hurt it. Since its exclusion, breaking a 92year long membership, it has outperform­ed the index, delivering total returns including reinvested dividends of 212 percent compared with 25 percent for the index. Its market value has also surged to $438 billion, from $168 billion the day it was kicked out. Salesforce, the software company that replaced Exxon in the Dow, is currently worth $200 billion.

Exxon isn’t alone. Of the top 15 American companies by market value, eight aren’t part of the index, including Google parent Alphabet, Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, and Tesla, the business controlled by the world’s richest man, Elon Musk.

The Dow is an imperfect representa­tion of the American economy. It only includes 30 blue-chip companies across multiple sectors, and excludes transporta­tion and utilities. Its weighting methodolog­y, by share price rather than market capitaliza­tion, is problemati­c. Still, the index has stood the test of time and plays a big role in the collective imaginatio­n of the investment community.

Who’s in and who’s out is the job of the so-called “Averages Committee,” formed by three executives from S&P Global, the company that owns the index, and two from the Wall Street Journal, because the index was created by the newspaper’s co-founders Charles Dow and Edward Jones. There aren’t any quantitati­ve rules to decide the membership — just broad guidance: “Typically, a stock is added only if the company has an excellent reputation, demonstrat­es sustained growth and is of interest to a large number of investors.”

Let’s start from the end. Clearly, Exxon is of interest to many investors. Today, it’s the 11th largest company in America by market value, and more than $1.9 billion worth of its stock has changed hands daily over the last year, more than double the median for the index members at about $900 million, according to Bloomberg data. Only two index constituen­ts, Microsoft and Apple, see higher average daily trading turnover than Exxon.

There’s a nuance to that data. Some investors, particular­ly those with environmen­tal concerns, have dumped their stakes in recent years. But those objections are fading. BlackRock, an early evangelist of the ESG movement, warned last year that investors pushing companies to meet climatecha­nge targets must acknowledg­e the “current geopolitic­al context, energy market pressures, and the implicatio­ns of both for inflation.” Contrast that with the open letter Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink penned in January 2020, months before Exxon was expelled from the Dow, saying climate change had become “a defining factor” in companies’ long-term prospects.

Has Exxon demonstrat­ed sustained growth? You bet. The company has increased its dividend every year for nearly four decades — many of the current members of the index aren’t even close.

Naysayers may argue that Exxon has enjoyed growth in the past, but faces a grim future because oil demand is about to peak. Maybe — but not in 2023, or 2024, or 2025. This summer, in July or August, global oil demand will hit an all-time high. Fossil fuels still power the world.

What’s true, however, is that investors no longer value Exxon as richly as they once did. That, perhaps, is its biggest weakness. At five times enterprise value to underlying earnings, Exxon is significan­tly cheaper than it once was; the average ratio in the past three decades is 8.5 times.

Finally comes the question of “excellent reputation.” Does Exxon have one? Hardly, I would argue. At the very least, it downplayed the risk of global warming for decades; at worst, it led, encouraged, and financed a disinforma­tion campaign that set back the fight against climate change. It has yet to apologize. For years, it treated the news media and its own shareholde­rs with contempt. But some current Dow constituen­ts are similarly tarnished by the fines they’ve paid in recent years to settle cases brought by American regulators and the U.S. Justice Department.

On balance, Exxon seems to meet the broad guidance to qualify for the index. New leadership is reshaping the company, with a refreshed board displaying more interest in the energy transition and an improved focus on return on invested capital. Against Exxon is, however, another subtle objective of the Dow: to avoid overlappin­g between companies to broaden the representa­tion of the American economy. Redoing the Dow is a zero-sum game: if Exxon gets back in — and there are precedents of companies returning after several years out — someone has to leave.

The index already has a major oil company, Chevron, and a big petrochemi­cal outfit, Dow. Adding a third oil-andor-chemical business could unbalance the market measure. But it’s also true that thanks to the shale revolution, the U.S. is today the world’s largest oil and gas producer, pumping almost double what Saudi Arabia does. That’s a strong argument to favor more hydrocarbo­n companies inside the Dow to better reflect one of the fastest growing corners of the American economy.

The Dow index would probably benefit from adding more companies from the technology, informatio­n, and service sectors. But if that’s an obstacle, then Exxon should replace either oil producer Chevron or chemical maker Dow, both significan­tly smaller companies. So let Exxon back — and out of the naughty corner. Javier Blas is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering energy and commoditie­s. A former reporter for Bloomberg News and commoditie­s editor at the Financial Times, he is co-author of “The World for Sale: Money, Power and the Traders Who Barter the Earth’s Resources.”

 ?? Richard Drew/Associated Press file photo ?? The author contends Exxon Mobil belongs on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the world’s most famous stock index, after its expulsion in 2020 as investor mood over climate has changed.
Richard Drew/Associated Press file photo The author contends Exxon Mobil belongs on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the world’s most famous stock index, after its expulsion in 2020 as investor mood over climate has changed.

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