MSCI World

MSCI World Price Index (1969-2020)
Map of all countries included in the MSCI World index as of 28 Sep 2018

The MSCI World is a widely followed global stock market index that tracks the performance of around 1,500 large and mid-cap companies across 23 developed countries.[1][2] It is maintained by MSCI, formerly Morgan Stanley Capital International, and is used as a common benchmark for global stock funds intended to represent a broad cross-section of global markets.[citation needed]

The index includes a collection of stocks of all the developed markets in the world, as defined by MSCI. The exclusion of stocks from emerging and frontier economies makes the index narrower in global coverage than the name suggests.[clarification needed] A related index, the MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI), incorporates both developed and emerging countries. MSCI also produces a Frontier Markets index, including another 31 markets.[3]

The MSCI World Index has been calculated since 1969,[4] in various forms: without dividends (Price Index), with net or with gross dividends reinvested (Net and Gross Index), in US dollars, Euro and local currencies.

Index Composition Methodology

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The MSCI World Index is constructed by classifying equity securities from developed market countries into large-cap and mid-cap segments based on their free float-adjusted market capitalization.

Market capitalization refers to the total market value of a company's outstanding shares, calculated as the share price multiplied by the total number of shares. In MSCI's methodology, this figure is adjusted for free-float: meaning only shares available for public trading are counted, excluding those held by insiders, governments, or other holders who are unlikely to trade.

Within each developed market country, MSCI ranks companies by their free float-adjusted market capitalization and includes:

  • Large-cap stocks: companies that collectively account for approximately the top 70% of the cumulative market capitalization
  • Mid-cap stocks: companies that bring the cumulative total of market capitalization up to 85%

The MSCI index excludes the remaining 15% of market capitalization segment, corresponding to low-cap stocks.

This segmentation ensures that the MSCI World Index captures roughly 85% of the investable equity universe in each country, providing broad and representative coverage of developed market equities.

Market Classification Methodology

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MSCI evaluates a country's equity market as "developed" if all of the following criteria are met[5][6]:

Criterion Threshold (June 2025 framework) Purpose
Economic development Gross National Income (GNI) per capita ≥ 125 % of the World Bank high-income threshold

(i.e., ≥ USD 17,506 based on the USD 14,005 2023 benchmark) for three consecutive years

Demonstrates sustained high income level
Size & liquidity

(entry requirement)

≥ 5 companies that, in each of the last eight index reviews, individually satisfy: Ensures a sufficiently deep investable universe
Size & liquidity (maintenance requirement) Even after inclusion, ≥ 1 company must continue to meet the above size-and-liquidity figures, and the market must retain ≥ 5 securities in its investable equity universe Preserves index stability
Market accessibility Rated "Very High" or "Unrestricted" across the five sub-criteria:
  • openness to foreign ownership,
  • free capital flows,
  • efficient operational framework,
  • unrestricted investment instruments,
  • a stable institutional environment
Guarantees seamless access for global investors

MSCI monitors all countries continuously, but formal reclassification consultations occur each spring, with decisions announced the following June and implemented in quarterly index reviews. Off-cycle announcements are reserved for exceptional market events.

Country representation

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The index includes companies in the following 23 countries:

  • Australia
  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Canada
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Hong Kong
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Portugal
  • Singapore
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • United Kingdom
  • United States

Sector representation

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  1. Information Technology (22%)
  2. Healthcare (14%)
  3. Financials (13%)
  4. Consumer Discretionary (11%)
  5. Industrials (10%)
  6. Consumer Staples (8%)
  7. Communication Services (7%)
  8. Energy (5%)
  9. Materials (4%)
  10. Utilities (3%)
  11. Real Estate (3%)

The GICS breakdown is shown here, with information technology being the biggest sector.[citation needed]

Total annual returns

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Year Gross Annual
Return (a) [citation needed][7]
1970 −1.98%
1971 19.56%
1972 23.55%
1973 −14.51%
1974 −24.48%
1975 34.50%
1976 14.71%
1977 5.00%
1978 18.22%
1979 12.67%
1980 27.72%
1981 −3.30%
1982 11.27%
1983 23.28%
1984 5.77%
1985 41.77%
1986 42.80%
1987 16.76%
1988 23.95%
1989 17.19%
1990 −16.52%
1991 18.97%
1992 −4.66%
1993 23.13%
1994 5.58%
1995 21.32%
1996 14.00%
1997 16.23%
1998 24.80%
1999 25.34%
2000 −12.92%
2001 −16.52%
2002 −19.54%
2003 33.76%
2004 15.25%
2005 10.02%
2006 20.65%
2007 9.57%
2008 −40.33%
2009 30.79%
2010 12.34%
2011 −5.02%
2012 16.54%
2013 27.37%
2014 5.50%
2015 −0.32%
2016 8.15%
2017 23.07%
2018 −8.20%
2019 28.40%
2020 16.50%
2021 22.35%
2022 −17.73%
2023 24.42%
2024 19.19%

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "MSCI World Index - Factsheet" (PDF). msci.com. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  2. ^ "MSCI World Index - Constituents". msci.com. Retrieved 2 April 2024.
  3. ^ "Frontier markets" (PDF).
  4. ^ start date of MSCI World FREE index history is December 31, 1969
  5. ^ "Market Classification". www.msci.com. Retrieved 25 June 2025.
  6. ^ MSCI (June 2025). "MSCI Market Classification Framework" (PDF). Retrieved 25 June 2025.
  7. ^ "MSCI World Index (USD)".
  8. ^ "Index tools - MSCI". mscibarra.com.[dead link]
  9. ^ "MSCI WORLD INDEX (USD)". Retrieved 12 January 2019.