The company was launched in 1995 as a joint venture between the Financial Times and the London Stock Exchange. In 2013, FTSE and TMX group created a joint venture (FTSE TMX) to develop indexes for the North American fixed-income market. The group acquired MTS in 2014 to create European government indexes and combined with Russell that same year to form FTSE Russell. Between 2016 and 2019, FTSE Russell acquired Mergent, The Yield Book, Citi Fixed Income Indices, FTSE TMX Global Debt Capital Markets Limited, and Beyond Ratings—an environmental, social, and governance data provider. Many international investors use the FTSE indexes, and the FTSE 100 in particular, as a proxy for the broader U.K. market, similar to how U.S. investors look at the Dow Jones or S&P 500 indexes. In addition to its index products, FTSE Russell provides financial, academic, and professional data and analytics used by investors and financial institutions globally.

What Does FTSE Russell Do?

Because of the strategic acquisitions made by FTSE Russell, the company offers many different products and services. It creates indexes and performs research and analysis for financial professionals, firms, investors, and academics.

Indexes

Indexes track the performance of a group of securities. FTSE Russell has over 150 index families that include fixed income, equity, multi-asset, and alternative asset class indexes. The Russell US Indexes are equity indexes that focus on micro-, mid-, and mega-cap companies. The indexes include:

Russell 1000Russell 2000Russell Top 50 Mega CapRussell Top 500

Its most popular indexes are those that include U.K. companies, such as:

FTSE 100FTSE 100 Total Return IndexFTSE 100 Net of Tax IndexFTSE 250FTSE 350FTSE All-Share.

FTSE Russell has also created indexes, such as the FTSE4Good and the FTSE ESG Index Series, which focus on companies that demonstrate desirable environmental, social, and governance practices. Examples include:

FTSE4Good Emerging IndexesFTSE4Good ASEAN 5 IndexFTSE4Good Bursa Malaysia IndexFTSE4Good TIP Taiwan ESG IndexFTSE All-share ESG IndexRussell 1000 ESG Index

Data

FTSE Russell provides access to global financial data on equities, fixed income, corporate actions, sustainability, and exchange-traded funds. The data sets collected are significant enough to allow for the creation of indexes, methodologies, risk management, compliance, and research across a broad spectrum of global products.

What It Means for Individual Investors

If you have an international trading account set up at a broker, you’ll be able to gain access to most of FTSE’s indexes through the London Stock Exchange or other international exchanges. However, U.S. retail investors are limited to the products U.S.-based brokers provide. It can be challenging to invest in the stocks on FTSE’s indexes or in funds that mirror their performance. However, a few brokers provide exposure to some of the indexes. For example, the Vanguard FTSE Social Index Fund Admiral Shares (VFTAX) seeks to track the FTSE4Good US Select Index. Vanguard also has an ETF that mirrors the performance of the FTSE Emerging Markets All Cap China A Inclusion Index, an index of around 3,500 stocks from global emerging markets. You can also choose to invest in the Russell US indexes, such as the Russell 3000, which are comprised of the stocks of U.S. companies chosen by FTSE Russell. Many brokers have mutual funds or ETFs that track these indexes—these might not be the international indexes, but they are developed by the same company that designed their international counterparts.