CNBC IQ 100 performance
CNBC IQ 100 performance from CNBC.
CNBC IQ 100 performance
Take a look at the performance of the CNBC IQ 100 Index over the past year in comparison to the S&P 500.
CNBC IQ 100 performance from CNBC.
Take a look at the performance of the CNBC IQ 100 Index over the past year in comparison to the S&P 500.
Five components of the CNBC IQ 100 Index are hitting all-time highs today.
Amazon stock continues to soar as a member of the CNBC IQ 100 Index.
The CNBC IQ 100 is up in the year and is outpacing the broader market.
Check out which two components of the CNBC IQ 100 Index hit new all-time highs and find out how well the index is doing so far this year.
The CNBC IQ 100 Index is outpacing the Dow, the NASDAQ, and the Russell.
Only one component in the CNBC IQ 100 hit a multi-year high today, March 24, 2017.
The CNBC IQ 100 index performance is up 27% in the year.
CNBC IQ 100 Index hit all-time highs and 17+ year highs today, March 17, 2017.
The CNBC IQ 100 Index is up 29.5% in the last year and only one component hits an all-time high.
Nine components of the CNBC IQ 100 Index hit all-time or multi-year highs today, March 13, 2017.
Seven stocks hit highs from CNBC.
Seven members of the CNBC IQ 100 Index, which is up 33% in the year, hit all-time or multi-year highs today, March 10, 2017.
Take a look at the CNBC IQ 100 Index which hit new highs today and is up 32% in the year.
General Motors, a member of the CNBC IQ 100 Index, is hi
Micron on the move from CNBC.
Micron Technology, a member of the CNBC IQ 100 Index, is the only component hitting new levels today, March 3, 2017.
Boeing, Apple, Applied Materials, and Broadcom hit all-time or multi-year highs today, March 2, 2017.
CNBC’s Dominic Chu takes a look at the names involved in the rebalancing of the CNBC iQ 100 Index.
CNBC’s Bob Pisani and David Martin, M-CAM founder & chairman, take a look at the rebalancing in the CNBC IQ100 Index.
If you want a look behind the curtain to find the most innovative companies in the marketplace, one measure is CNBC’s IQ 100 Index, a first-of-its-kind rules-based index of large-cap companies that derive substantial revenue growth through the use of protected, proprietary technology.
It was revealed Tuesday that effective January 1 the index was rebalanced, and 10 new companies made the cut, including Target and Nabors Industries.
In the past year, the index has significantly outperformed the S&P 500: It is up 35.73 percent versus 21.46 percent for the S&P 500.
The companies in the index are weighted according to each one’s ability to invest in, develop, control and deploy intellectual property to achieve strategic advantage over competitors. Companies with the highest weighting maintain this type of advantage across multiple industries. It is powered by MCAM-International, a firm that maintains an unprecedented archive of documents related to patents, trademarks, copyrights and other intangible assets from 160 countries.
According to David Martin, M-Cam founder and chairman, Target has become a leader in cybersecurity after suffering losses from its hacking debacle in 2013. It is now “best-of-breed in cyberdefense” from the point-of-sale throughout the retail value chain.
Nabors’ technology in “smart hole” horizontal drilling made it a standout in the energy fracking sector, Martin explained. “It is enabling exploration for resources in places never before possible.”
The No. 1 company on the index is Microsoft, for its leadership in developing software for the cloud, but surprisingly other tech darlings are absent, including Google and Snap. As Martin notes, “Snap has a beautiful interactive platform for consumers, but it does not have core technology.”
from CNBC.
CNBC’s Dominic Chu reports on the rebalancing in the CNBC iQ 100 Index.