What GE's Dismissal Could Mean For The Dow

 | Jun 21, 2018 01:58AM ET

Speculation about how much longer General Electric Company (NYSE:GE) could remain part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) has been swirling for months, and now it's official: GE will soon be replaced by pharmacy concern Walgreens Boots Alliance (NASDAQ:WBA). GE has been a Dow component on and off since the blue-chip index's conception in the late 1800s, so while the stock's removal from the Dow will certainly mark the end of an era, what could it mean for GE itself, and its (former) parent index?

Below is a list of stocks that have been booted from the Dow since 1997. Since the March 2009 stock market bottom, these "blue-chip rejects" have done pretty well over the six-month and 12-month periods after their respective exits -- even Citigroup (NYSE:C) and Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), which took well-publicized hits in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Prior to the 2009 market bottom, however, stocks tended to struggle in their post-Dow lives. The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company (NASDAQ:GT), Honeywell International Inc (NYSE:HON), and American International Group (NYSE:AIG) shed roughly half their value in the 12 months following their Dow dismissal.