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  2. Public Market Equivalent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Market_Equivalent

    The public market equivalent (PME) is a collection of performance measures developed to assess private equity funds and to overcome the limitations of the internal rate of return and multiple on invested capital measurements. While the calculations differ, they all attempt to measure the return from deploying a private equity fund's cash flows ...

  3. Vintage year - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vintage_year

    Vintage year in the private equity and venture capital industries refers to the year in which a fund began making investments or, more specifically, the date in which capital was deployed to a particular company or project.

  4. NIFTY 50 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NIFTY_50

    The NIFTY 50 index is a free float market capitalisation-weighted index.. Stocks are added to the index based on the following criteria: [1] Must have traded at an average impact cost of 0.50% or less during the last six months for 90% of the observations, for the basket size of Rs. 100 Million.

  5. Private equity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_equity

    Although the capital for private equity originally came from individual investors or corporations, in the 1970s, private equity became an asset class in which various institutional investors allocated capital in the hopes of achieving risk-adjusted returns that exceed those possible in the public equity markets. In the 1980s, insurers were ...

  6. Commonfund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commonfund

    Commonfund also operates CF Private Equity, which builds and manages private markets portfolios, and the Commonfund Institute, which provides the investment management field with investment research and professional development programs such as the Commonfund Benchmark Studies, the Commonfund Higher Education Price Index (HEPI), the Commonfund ...

  7. Investment fund - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Investment_fund

    Many passive funds are index funds, which attempt to replicate the performance of a market index by holding securities proportionally to their value in the market as a whole. Another example of passive management is the " buy and hold " method used by many traditional unit investment trusts where the portfolio is fixed from outset.

  8. National Stock Exchange of India - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Stock_Exchange_of...

    This was the first of its kind index of the UK equity stock market launched in India. FTSE 100 includes the 100 of largest UK-listed blue-chip companies and has given returns of 17.8 percent on investment over three years. The index constitutes 85.6 per cent of UK's equity market cap. [45]

  9. Stock market index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stock_market_index

    Stock market indices may be categorized by their index weight methodology, or the rules on how stocks are allocated in the index, independent of its stock coverage. For example, the S&P 500 and the S&P 500 Equal Weight each cover the same group of stocks, but the S&P 500 is weighted by market capitalization, while the S&P 500 Equal Weight places equal weight on each constituent.