What's Preventing Nvidia From Replacing Intel in the Dow Jones Industrial Average?

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In February, Amazon became the third big-tech stock in nine years to join the Dow Jones Industrial Average (Salesforce was added in 2020 and Apple joined in 2015). With the pace of change accelerating, investors may wonder when other "Magnificent Seven" stocks will join the historic index.

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is now the most valuable company not in the Dow. Even better, Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) is a Dow component and would be the most obvious choice for Nvidia to replace.

Here's what is preventing Nvidia from joining the Dow and why the growth stock deserves to be a Dow component in the near future.

Rendering of a circuit board with bars of light coming out of it to illustrate computing power and artificial intelligence.
Image source: Getty Images.

Reasons why Nvidia isn't in the Dow

Dow components are usually replaced because they have lost some of their industry leadership or the industry they operate isn't as important to the economy anymore. At a price of just $42 per share, Intel is the second-smallest component of the price-weighted index, ahead of Verizon.

Intel stock is doing well, up over 66% in the last year. It is in the same industry as Nvidia, but it isn't a direct competitor. There's some crossover in gaming, PCs, and data centers. But Intel's main growth driver is getting into the foundry business. And Nvidia could even be a customer of Intel's advanced packaging services.

Intel doesn't deserve to be replaced. It makes up such a small portion of the Dow that the semiconductor industry is, in many ways, unrepresented. It may be better to swap a different component for Nvidia. But we are getting ahead of ourselves.

The first thing Nvidia has to do is split its stock. Amazon could be added only because it split its stock in June 2022. With a price of nearly $900 a share and the median price of a Dow component around $175 a share, Nvidia would have to issue at least a 5-for-1 stock split to avoid tilting the balance of the index.

Another issue is timing. There's no schedule for Dow shakeups. But they don't happen too often. Given Amazon just got added, it's unlikely we'll get another swap for at least a couple of years. Alphabet may be first in line for a swap considering its history, market position, and the fact it already split its stock in July 2022.

Deciding which component to replace, the stock split ratio, and the timing of the next index restructuring are all relatively minor challenges in the grand scheme of things. The bigger question is whether Nvidia deserves to be a blue-chip Dow stock or if its growth is fleeting.

Monetizing AI

Nvidia is an unrecognizable business from just a few years ago. And it's all because of data centers.