With Nvidia Kicking Intel Out of the Dow Jones, Will Meta Platforms or Alphabet Eventually Replace Walt Disney Stock?

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) is undergoing its third major shakeup in the last five years. In 2020, Honeywell International, Salesforce, and Amgen replaced RTX (formerly Raytheon Technologies), ExxonMobil, and Pfizer. Earlier this year, Amazon replaced Walgreens Boots Alliance. And on Friday, Nov. 8, Nvidia will replace Intel and Sherwin-Williams will take the slot occupied by chemical giant Dow.

There have been plenty of changes happening to the DJIA in a relatively short amount of time, suggesting that additional changes aren't out of the question. That potential has some wondering which component could be swapped out next. Could Walt Disney (NYSE: DIS), for example, be the next company to get dropped? And if it does fall off, could Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) or Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG) be candidates to replace the media giant?

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Dow Jones Industrial Average dynamics

The Dow's 30 components represent the 11 stock market sectors. Over time, sector weights have changed as tech has become a larger share of the U.S. stock market's total value. As such, the Dow is far less industrial than it used to be.

Changes to the Dow's composition can occur for various reasons. Generally, this usually occurs because a company has lost some of its industry leadership and/or has underperformed the Dow index so much that it is no longer large enough to properly represent its sector.

The Dow is a price-weighted index, meaning a stock's price rather than its market cap determines its weighting. Five years ago, UnitedHealth Group had a stock price of around $250 per share, Goldman Sachs was around $220, and Microsoft was around $145. Big gains in all three companies (and a lack of stock splits) have allowed them to become today's top three highest-weighted components -- combining for over 23% of the index.

The median price of a Dow component is around $200, whereas the highest is UnitedHealth at $567 (at the time of this writing), and Intel is (for the moment) the lowest at just $23.30 per share. Prolonged underperformance is a common theme for certain companies getting removed from the Dow.

When RTX, Pfizer, and ExxonMobil were removed on Aug. 31, 2020, they had all suffered terrible five-year performances, with ExxonMobil losing 46.9% of its value, RTX up just 6.2%, and Pfizer up just 17.3%. Moreover, all three companies had stock prices of $61 or lower -- significantly below average. Walgreens had fallen to a 25-year low and a single-digit stock price, making it ripe for replacement by Amazon.