Did The Dow Really Need A Drug Store Retailer In Place Of GE?

 | Jun 21, 2018 04:04AM ET

The Dow committee ejected General Electric (NYSE:GE) from the 30 component mega cap index, replacing it with Walgreens Boots Alliance (NASDAQ:WBA), a retail pharmacy chain. What's surprising isn't the event itself—we called that the day before the announcement—but rather the committee's startling and very unexpected substitute.

In a statement issued with the announcement on Tuesday, David Blitzer, the committee chairman said the "change to the DJIA will make the index a better measure of the economy and the stock market," adding, "the DJIA will be more representative of the consumer and health care sectors of the U.S. economy." But the health care sector is not exactly missing among the Dow components, nor are retailers.

Is a drug store chain really the right replacement for the once mighty multinational conglomerate? Perhaps more puzzling, does it appropriately represent the current state of the US economy and the variety of companies traded on the broader stock market?

Among health care sector stocks on the Dow there's Johnson and Johnson (NYSE:JNJ), Merck (NYSE:MRK), Pfizer (NYSE:PFE), and UnitedHealth (NYSE:UNH). Consumer/Retail stocks are well represented too. There's Coca-Cola (NYSE:KO), McDonald's (NYSE:MCD), Walmart (NYSE:WMT), Nike (NYSE:NKE), and Home Depot (NYSE:HD). Some companies, like Procter & Gamble (NYSE:PG), fit into both categories.

Some might say the choice was predicated on recent merger and acquisition activity that's gripped US markets. Walgreens Boots Alliance, with a current market cap of $63.62 billion, represents the successful merger of two companies whose holding company began trading in the US on the very last day of 2014. This may be why they opted not to include the larger CVS Health (NYSE:CVS).

The latter is currently involved in a messy, ongoing deal to merge with Aetna (NYSE:AET), which is running up against strong opposition from the American Medical Association. CVS, with a $71.95 billion market cap and shares trading at $71.60, makes more sense from a weighting perspective. But the merger uncertainty makes it the wrong choice for the Dow committee which looks for company stability.

Still, does this addition better position the Dow to represent the 21st century American economy? We don't think so.

Adding yet more retail, a sector that's had struggled quiet a bit in the new economy, doesn't prepare the Dow for the future. One would have expected the Dow to use this opportunity to make a great leap forward. Instead, it merely shifted the highly watched index from representing the 'very old' US manufacturing economy to something a little less old. Call it the mid-to-late 20th century economy.