EXPLAINER-What sector overhaul means for tech stocks, Wall Street

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(Repeats story published on Thursday with no changes to text)

By Alden Bentley

NEW YORK, Sept 19 (Reuters) - The most significant changes to Wall Street's broad industry sectors since 1999 will take effect Monday, reclassifying many of the hot growth companies that have been nearly synonymous with the "tech" rally that has fueled the stock bull market.

While any immediate market impact will be hard to gauge, investors are preparing for volatility in stocks being moved from one industry to another when some investors readjust portfolios.

It may affect how mutual fund managers chose stocks and force passively-managed sector exchange traded funds (ETFs) to reallocate billions of dollars.

WHAT ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT CHANGES?

S&P Dow Jones Indices is reorganizing the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS).

It means only one of the so-called FANG stocks - Facebook Inc, Amazon.com Inc, Netflix Inc and Google parent Alphabet Inc - will remain in their current S&P sector.

Facebook and Alphabet will leave tech to join an expanded S&P telecom group, renamed communications services, along with Twitter Inc. They will accompany AT&T Inc, Verizon Communications Inc and CenturyLink Inc, which made up the old telecommunications services sector .

Apple Inc, part of the extended FAANG group, will stay in the S&P technology index. It will account for 20 percent of the index's market capitalization, up from 16 percent, once Alphabet and Facebook leave.

Other names moving from technology to communications services include PayPal Holdings Inc and videogame makers Electronic Arts Inc and Activision Blizzard Inc .

Netflix will move to communications services from the consumer discretionary sector, where it resided alongside Amazon.com, which will remain. Consumer discretionary heavyweights Walt Disney Co and Comcast Corp will also move to the new sector.

For a table of affected stocks, see.

S&P will make the changes after the close on Friday. MSCI, another index provider, will make the changes in November.

WHY IS IT HAPPENING?

The changes are meant to reflect how the tech, media and consumer industries have evolved.

Maintained by S&P and MSCI since 1999 and widely used by portfolio managers, the taxonomy classifies companies across 11 sectors. The most recently created sector was real estate , split off from financials in 2016. The move allowed an easier route to invest in real estate investment trusts (REITs).

"The changes are a step towards acknowledging the convergence of telecommunications, media, and select internet companies and the overlapping services rendered by these companies, within the GICS Structure," S&P wrote in a note.